Really not seeing it.
Protagonist thrust into terrible situation manages to organize and uplift others in the same terrible situation and eventually overcomes the situation through teamwork and newly discovered magical skills.
Really not seeing it.
Really not seeing it.
Interestingly, Brandon himself has drawn a lot of comparisons between Elantris and Warbreaker. He originally conceived Warbreaker as a sort of alternate reality Elantris where the "city of gods" is still thriving rather than in decay.
Yeah but the comparisons basically end there. The plots go in completely different directions, and the "Gods" bare very little resemblance to each other.
Really not seeing it.
EDIT Last minute powerup is something that happens many times in Sanderson's works. A bit too many to be honest, though fortunately Sanderson justifies it nearly always pretty well.
Yeah, I have trouble thinking of a protagonist from one of Sandersons' series that doesn't get a Last Minute Powerup. It doesn't happen at the end of *every* book, but it's happened in Mistborn, Elantris, SA, Warbreaker, Reckoners...it's super common, but I've just kinda come to expect both that and the Big Twist. I know they're coming by now which you would *think* dulls the impact of them, but most of the time they still get me.
WoK spoilersWhen Dalinar has that dream where he learns that Odium already killed the Almighty a while ago I was legit shook.
Still trying to make it through Words of Radiance but man this section withis baaaadShallan and Kaladin stuck in a chasm and trading lame insults with each other
Still trying to make it through Words of Radiance but man this section withis baaaadShallan and Kaladin stuck in a chasm and trading lame insults with each other
I thought the end of that scene had really nice payoff. But then I wasn't as turned off by that scene as you.
My favorite section of the book... I really liked it.
Seemed accurate to their characters.
My favorite section of the book... I really liked it.
Seemed accurate to their characters.
I can't stand theromance. Felt so forced.Shallan & Kaladin
I think I'm in the minority in finding Words of Radiance a huge step down in comparison to The Way of Kings. Hopefully Oathbreaker can restore my interest when it comes out. If not, then, well... at least there's always more Mistborn on the horizon!
I didn't see it as romance at all...
Opposite genders getting along does not automatically make it a romance.
Still trying to make it through Words of Radiance but man this section withis baaaadShallan and Kaladin stuck in a chasm and trading lame insults with each other
I didn't see it as romance at all...
Opposite genders getting along does not automatically make it a romance.
... also, the newer Mistborn stuff has been hot trash.
True, but Kaladin definitely caught feelings after their romp in the chasms.
I loved it, though. That moment when they learn that they both went through hell throughout their lives was amazing.
I have two other long books on my TBR before I can really dive in to Way of Kings but I'm liking what I've read so far. It's grabbed me a lot more than when I tried to read The Final Empire.
I'm assuming I'm not supposed to understand a single thing about "Prelude to the Stormlight Archive" right? Because I couldn't tell what was going on.
The gravity changing assassination scene 4500 years later was pretty awesome.
Also would there be a benefit to reading The Emperor's Soul before Way of Kings? I have a copy of both.
They don't get talked about much, but Sanderson's infinity blade books are actually really good. Especially the second one.
I think it's his best work also. The magic system in Mistborn was more interesting to me though. But yeah the overall package of Stormlight is better so far.So I said this before, but Sanderson has the type of prose that I can only stand if the content is really, really good. Stormlight Archives is the only of his work that I read and that's mainly because I heard that he describes it as his best work.
Do people generally agree with this stance?
So I said this before, but Sanderson has the type of prose that I can only stand if the content is really, really good. Stormlight Archives is the only of his work that I read and that's mainly because I heard that he describes it as his best work.
Do people generally agree with this stance?
Many of the bodies around him were human; many were not. Blood mixed. Red. Orange. Violet. Though none of the bodies around him stirred, an indistinct haze of sounds hung in the air. Moans of pain, cries of grief. They did not seem like the sounds of victory. Smoke curled from the occasional patches of growth or heaps of burning corpses. Even some sections of rock smoldered. The Dustbringers had done their work well.
Had the other eight all died? It was possible. The battle had been so furious this time, one of the worst. The enemy was growing increasingly tenacious.
But no. Kalak frowned as he stepped up to the base of the spire.
There were so many corpses, and among them walked the living. Men in primitive wraps, carrying spears topped by bronze heads. Juxtaposed between them were others in gleaming plate armor. One group walked past, four men in their ragged tanned skins or shoddy leather joining a powerful figure in beautiful silver plate, amazingly intricate. Such a contrast.
I've tried a sample of Way of Kings, and sentences like this bother me:
Such a contrast?
Is his sentence structure consistently this cumbersome? The hype for these books is unreal and I want to experience them, but I always move on to another book after reading a chapter or two of the sample on Kindle.
Short version: Yes.
Long version: Yes, but it slowly bothers you less the more you learn about the world and get invested. The content is great, but the language used to describe the content is weak.
I actually almost never read SA because of it. Some years ago, I picked up Way of Kings and got maybe 33% through it before dropping it for basically this exact reason. Then, last year, I tried to read Wheel of Time. Wheel of time is SO much worse and by the time I dropped it, I just needed some kind of cleanser and decided to try Way of Kings a second time. Reading WoT made Sanderson's much easier to tolerate, and once the ball got rolling and I got invested in the world, mysteries, and characters, it slowly bothered me less and less overall. I kind of view Sanderson's writing as like an overenthusiastic fanboy. I'm more abused by his fumbles than annoyed.
I've tried a sample of Way of Kings, and sentences like this bother me:
Such a contrast?
Is his sentence structure consistently this cumbersome? The hype for these books is unreal and I want to experience them, but I always move on to another book after reading a chapter or two of the sample on Kindle.
It's the Sanderson trade-off. He writes so much it's unreal... it almost doesn't seem possible the number of words he produces per day. Surely the most prolific big fantasy author of any kind of decent repute publishing today.
It's just that what he writes is a little on the plain side
The stories themselves are truly excellent. Just plainly and sometimes clunkily told. But it won't matter when you're two thirds through a book and every page is "oh shit... OH SHIT..."
It's the Sanderson trade-off. He writes so much it's unreal... it almost doesn't seem possible the number of words he produces per day. Surely the most prolific big fantasy author of any kind of decent repute publishing today.
It's just that what he writes is a little on the plain side
The stories themselves are truly excellent. Just plainly and sometimes clunkily told. But it won't matter when you're two thirds through a book and every page is "oh shit... OH SHIT..."
Exactly how I feel. He's a monster in the speed he writes. I rather deal with his writing style than deal with GRRM style wait times for book releases.
Discovered today that a bunch of Sandersons books that were on Kindle Match no longer are. I shouldn't have put those purchases off. :/
Yeah. I noticed this a few weeks ago. Luckily I had already bought all the stuff I wanted.
Seems like it's across the board with Tor published books which all used to be part of the scheme (I think). I wonder what happened there as they were one of the more forward thinking when it came to ebooks.
Ah, fuck. It seems the Mistborn video game got cancelled. Not a surprise since it was delayed once or twice already (and the studio making it was something of a no-name studio).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r0psYyyZwYs
Shame really... Some complain it is like reading a video game (i disagree with that assessment) but it certainly would have made a good one.
In hands of competent developer team anyway.
After I finished everything in the Cosmere earlier this year I decided to re-read the Wheel of Time. Just wrapping up The Gathering Storm now. It's kind of odd how the writing style changes from chapter to chapter. I don't mind it because overall the pacing of the novel feels better than several of the previous few books, but it can definitely be distracting at times.
Anyway, the main thing I wanted to say was that the last 20% or so feels so distinctly Brandon. It's very fun and satisfying to read, just like the endings of hi own books. The first time I read TGS was before I had touched any of Brandon's other stuff so I wasn't familiar with his endings back then. It's great.
I have vague recollection of the same.
I reckon the style changes tend to result from stuff Jordan wrote, stuff Sanderson wrote and stuff Jordan wrote partially and Sanderson expanded or tweaked. Kinda unavoidable really, in a situation like that.
Pretty sure Sanderson said he didn't try to imitate Jordan's style, rather it was "Jordan's story, as told by Sanderson". Perhaps he should've, perhaps it wouldn't have done any good.
How weird it is. A world with no more Wheel of Time. It was a series i read for so many years...
As much as i like the Cosmere books, and the Stormlight Archive especially, it doesn't feel quite the same.... I do not mean to imply i see it as worse, but the experience is different somehow.
I wonder how much finishing WoT catapulted Sanderson's career. I know i hadn't heard of his books before him being revealed as WoT's writer after Jordan passed away.