This is cool and all. But I'm still kind of shocked this is getting made before Abercrombie's First Law ( and spin offs)
I'm interested to see if he's actually going to finish the story in three books. He seems to have a long way to go. The first two books moved at a glacial pace.
Then again Kvothe is only like 25 in the present day scenes.
That's the annoying thing about all this. The sex isn't over the top. It's perfectly in place with the rest of the artsy, wonderousness of it. The wish fulfillment aspect only extents to the idea that any basic guy wants to have sex with a beautiful woman...but we also want to play music well, or do well in school, or be witty and have good friends. In any given book, it's less important what is being presented and more how it's being presented, and even if you were joking, most of the time people use the mere fact that it's a sex goddess to not examine what actually goes on in that scenes, and then use that as a basis to dismiss the entire series. I hate it when that happens. I'm not even the biggest fan of KKC, it's just the principle of the thing.
I found the sex ninjas' ignorance odd, but to be fair, some anthropologists claim there are (or at least have been) peoples that didn't see the correlation between sex and pregnancy. I'm pretty sure most anthropologists don't believe that but if Rothfuss only read reports from the first group, he wouldn't know the difference. I know he linked to some information about it on twitter or his blog a long time ago.
I found the sex ninjas' ignorance odd, but to be fair, some anthropologists claim there are (or at least have been) peoples that didn't see the correlation between sex and pregnancy. I'm pretty sure most anthropologists don't believe that but if Rothfuss only read reports from the first group, he wouldn't know the difference. I know he linked to some information about it on twitter or his blog a long time ago.
Magic[edit]
Trobriands believe that conception is the result of an ancestral spirit entering the woman's body. Even after a child is born, it is the mother's brother, not the father, who presents a harvest of yams to his sister so that her child will be fed with food from its own matrilineage, not the father's.[2]
No that's got to be one of the more absurd statements of reductionism I've heard.Isn't this the Fifty Sides gray type author fulfillment book written by a dude a reddit that people ironically read?
There's the group "Unless" in We Know. That one's confirmed in the Hamilton book, but there might be others.
He's also done the honk in a number of other appearances. The Tonys for sure, but also things like The Today Show.
I found the sex ninjas' ignorance odd, but to be fair, some anthropologists claim there are (or at least have been) peoples that didn't see the correlation between sex and pregnancy. I'm pretty sure most anthropologists don't believe that but if Rothfuss only read reports from the first group, he wouldn't know the difference. I know he linked to some information about it on twitter or his blog a long time ago.
Isn't this the Fifty Sides gray type author fulfillment book written by a dude a reddit that people ironically read?
It's not any more odd than how the greeks didn't think a women had any participation in the creation of people. They just viewed women as literal containers, but not providing any contribution to the making a person itself.
His response to that confirmation being posted in the MBMBaM Facebook group was great.
Er, but this is philosophical/metaphysical. They're not ignoring the consequences of sex, just interpreting it in a way that dismisses woman's role in genetic inheritance.
Homosexuality wasn't unknown in Greece either so they must have caught on that only women can get pregnant and it is only through the mechanism of sex.
Which is the actual point here. In KKC, women being part of the process is a well known fact to most people. The Adem are the exception, and they outlined why their circumstances led them to being the exception, but as a result of those circumstances hold wrongful beliefs. It's really not that different from real life cultures, but this time the shoes on the other foot and men are the ones who are thought to be worthless. It makes for an interesting situation.
You think we will have to wait until 2035 to get book 3?
And there are real-life examples such as the Trobriand Islanders of Papua New Guinea
An isolated island society. Surely you see the difference between them and a culture that lives more or less on the border of Europe, whose economy revolves around exporting mercenaries?
It... is literally trade, and business, which frequently involves staying for prolonged times with their clients. Jesus christ.it's not like trade or other businesses that require any great interaction with the cultures
Get the Gentlemen Bastards done at the same time for a double confused man-child feature.Now everyone can experience the character with the hardest friendzone ever.
m'lady i'll wait for you
An isolated island society. Surely you see the difference between them and a culture that lives more or less on the border of Europe, whose economy revolves around exporting mercenaries?
Although an understanding of reproduction and modern medicine is widespread in Trobriand society, their traditional beliefs have been remarkably resilient. For example, the real cause of pregnancy is believed to be a baloma, or ancestral spirit, that enters the body of a woman, and without whose existence a woman could not become pregnant; all babies are made or come into existence (ibubulisi) in Tuma. These tenets form the main stratum of what can be termed popular or universal belief. In the past, many held this traditional belief because the yam, a major food of the island, included chemicals (phytoestrogens and plant sterols) whose effects are contraceptive, so the practical link between sex and pregnancy was not very evident.[2]
Honestly the problem is not the culture itself but the reasons they exist in the narrative, which was, in my opinion, to provide Kvothe more sexy time.
You have:
1) A freely promiscuous society
2) Low chances of pregnancy apparently because the women, despite having sex all the time, aren't always pregnant
3) 1% STD
And this is right Aphrodite fucks him senseless. Sorry, but it's beyond transparent. There might be a legitimate exploration of the role of sex in gender power balance, but Rothfuss is not the author to tackle it. LeGuin, or Bujold, yeah, sure, their brand of sci-fi is more or less cultural anthropology fiction. Rothfuss? Nope. Not buying it.
It... is literally trade, and business, which frequently involves staying for prolonged times with their clients. Jesus christ.
ha... ha... ha... *cries*He already has an Emmy, actually (Original Music and Lyrics, for his work with the Tony Awards).
Great news, this'll surely motivate Rothfuss to finish the third book, just like GRRM was motivated to finish ASOIAF before GOT spoiled everything.
The episode around the Felurian will surely be involving TV.
If your standard is ASOIAF, then I don't know what to say. You should try reading more fantasy and sci-fi written by women, I suppose.This argument would be more convincing if we actually spent time with Kvothe's Sexytime.
If your standard is ASOIAF, then I don't know what to say. You should try reading more fantasy and sci-fi written by women, I suppose.
If your standard is ASOIAF, then I don't know what to say. You should try reading more fantasy and sci-fi written by women, I suppose.
If onlyNot every writer can be Ursula Le Guin!
I read plenty. My point is that if you want excessiveness, ASoIaF is what I'd term excessive. And not just because there is a lot of it, but how it's presented.
The basic point here is that Kvothe's sexy time doesn't arouse me in any sense except Felurian, which is the only real time he goes into any detail about the actual act you're arguing Rothfuss is flaunting, and even that is fairly minimal when you actually look at all Kvothe does in the Fae Realm.
If you can't give me more than the sheer fact that he has sex, it's just not much of an argument. Sure, lots of guys would love to have casual sex, but there's a lot of things Kvothe does that a lot of guys would love to do that would be unreasonable to call fanservice, or alternatively something being fanservice does not mean that can't hold beyond the pure id delight of sexytimes. Merely that sex is something people want isn't enough to qualify it except in the broadest, most meaningless definition of the word.
The basic thing about it is that I can think of other reasons why Felurian or the Adem's attitude/acts of sex are interesting beyond that they are just sex, something I can't say for all series, even ones I like like ASoIaF. Sometimes, their sex scenes are just unncessary. But when you get down to it, KKC just doesn't have that many sex scenes. It's typically happening in the background and is just noted and moved past to discuss something else. I don't know about you, but that just doens't scream "HOT!" to me.
If you can't give me more than the sheer fact that he has sex, it's just not much of an argument.
Hah! I joked to my fiancé recently that after Lin wins an Oscar for his Moana songs, he'll need to start getting involved in TV so he can go for that EGOPT. Lo and behold.
Love this dude.
To be honest there isn't a lot of "sex" in ASoIaF either. Most of the sex, be it consensual or not, often happens "off screen". I believe the most actual sex happens in the first book with Khal Drogo and Dany and a few other notable scenes. Most of the time though its characters talking about an act happening in the past or discussing rumors or some such. Its rarely something presented to the audience directly as its happening and its even more rare for it to involving one of the characters whose perspectives we get first hand.
Its actually one of the things I noticed about the show after the first two seasons is how it really played up the sex when it was often mentioned in passing in the books. That and all the added sex scenes, Little Finger hanging out in the brothels all the time and so on. I remember being called prude when I thought it was getting to be a bit much and detracting from the more interesting and relevant events in the story.
I tried googling, but I can't figure it out. What's the P in your EGOPT?
Pulitzer?
No.From a quick Google and Wikipedia search, this series appears, dare I say, "Witcher-esque."
Accurate, or no?
From a quick Google and Wikipedia search, this series appears, dare I say, "Witcher-esque."
Accurate, or no?
Not at all.From a quick Google and Wikipedia search, this series appears, dare I say, "Witcher-esque."
Accurate, or no?
From a quick Google and Wikipedia search, this series appears, dare I say, "Witcher-esque."
Accurate, or no?
From a quick Google and Wikipedia search, this series appears, dare I say, "Witcher-esque."
Accurate, or no?
The world of Kingkiller Chronicles, at least in book 2, conspires to give him sex, instead of him acting as an agent and seeking it out for his own ends. Do you disagree with me on this?
Because that's the real sin. Not the sex, nor how graphic it is, but how it seems to be served up on a silver platter for Kvothe. And, despite that, he still hasn't advanced significantly with Denna, the aloof, unattainable object of his unquenchable, pure love. Which means:
1) He gets to pine and yearn after the person/object/idol of Denna
2) At the same time he gets to get laid, and apparently is quite good at it now.
Do you not see the conflict of interests here? He is the shy lovestruck "virgin" and Casanova at the same time.