Any thoughts you'd like to share with the class? I'm not sure I have a lot formulated into words.
I binge read 5,000 pages. I haven't even begun to figure out what I think of it.
I was doing that thing where you analyze the author but it kinda creeped me out so I tried to avoid it. I wanted to know nothing. As much as possible.
Huh. You know, this is one time when I didn't have a "Your id is showing..." Reaction, though I did notice a few phrases that the editor let go through more often than I would have ("many and more"/"little and less" for example). I've started reading some fan theories, and there are some I find credible, especially one on Jon's parentage.
Huh. Just finished Oryx and Crake and The Year of the Flood. Still trying to figure out what I think about them.
Is the latter a sequel? I saw the audiobook in the library and thought it was connected to
Oryx and Crake
somehow. I've been vaguely interested in them.
There's a third book in the series coming out in...September?
They ARE a trilogy. I've read O&C several times, as well as TYotF. I quite like Atwood, anyway, and I'll need to re-read them before the last book comes out.
Mebbe I'll suck 'em up in the next few days, and we can have a little geek out over them! That would be fun!
I've started reading some fan theories, and there are some I find credible, especially one on Jon's parentage.
Okay, this I am interested in. I don't know why it's a detail I grabbed onto so tightly but I did. And clearly waiting for GRRM to tell me might never happen.
Huh. You know, this is one time when I didn't have a "Your id is showing..." Reaction
I am trying so hard not to have it. I kinda pretend there isn't an author. Books just magically appeared. From the cabbage patch.
The Dying Earth was a favorite of mine too. Jack Vance was a brilliant and flawed writer. Dying Earth more than any other of his works played to his strengths and not to his weaknesses.
Gorgeous images, marvelous world building, character's revealed whole in a sentence or two. Dying Earth is not a novel in the conventional sense but a series of short stories in a single setting with many characters appearing in more than one story. The Dying Earth is painted so beautifully that it can itself be looked upon as a character in the story.
There was a line written in praise of Spenser's Faerie Queen I wish I could remember because it fits the Dying Earth so well, something along the lines of "brilliant image after brilliant image unfurled". I don't remember who said it and my damn memory has totally umgopochgied the quote as well, but I wish I could remember it cause that particular bit of praise for Spenser applies perfectly to Dying Earth,
Pix, I read them out of order -- Year of the Flood first. Oryx and Crake was much harder for me. They were....depressing as hell.
It may be better to take this to FB IM, but the theory goes like this: "You know, it's weird that
Ned refers to Jon as 'my blood' rather than 'my son.'"
"We'll, yes, but it doesn't make sense that
he'd be Benjen's. Ned would have no reason to lie about that, and they're the Starks we have for the previous generation."
"At the beginning of the books,yes, but
there is their sister."
"The
dead one who Robert was going to marry?"
"Who didn't seem too
excited about the prospect, was named the Queen of Love and Beauty by King Rhaegar, and then was 'kidnapped' by him before dying in the Tower of Joy and making Ned promise to bury her in Winterfell. Yes. Her."
"Yeah,
Ned sure seems to think about her telling him to promise her a lot for it just being about where her body would go."
"Doesn't he just."
"And if
Robert found out, he totally would have killed the baby."
"See exhibits A and B, yes."
And then you go searching for textual support and it's all over the place.