dlbpharmd wrote:One word:
I read that and thought "Holy S--t!!"Spoiler
"Nom"
I really dont think there is any other way to describe that. Excellent job.
Moderators: Orlion, kevinswatch
dlbpharmd wrote:One word:
I read that and thought "Holy S--t!!"Spoiler
"Nom"
Avatar wrote:But then, the answers provided by your imagination are not only sometimes best, but have the added advantage of being unable to be wrong.
lurch wrote:Spoiler
Revelwood ( forgive me if I got that wrong,,but i refer to the commuity litterally in the Trees,,)..
Vector wrote:Spoiler
Also, Elena's insanity in sending Dead Kevin after Lord Foul - clearly a misguided mistake of ghastly proportions.
Vector wrote:]He is one of my all-time favorite fantasy writers. It's been awhile since I picked up the First and Second Chronicles of Thomas Covenant. But these books are so rich in symbolism and meaning. And these books are quite anti-typical and anti-archtypical fantasy, in similar likeness of Martin and Erikson. And Donaldson's voice speaks with a rich prose that ignites the off the pages. The Land is a wealth of wonder and awe wreathed in mysticism, myth, and held in otherworldly Laws.
Optimism is not always a focus in these trilogies but rather seeking solutions, accountability, love, and drama are deeply examined. Never expelled.
Vector wrote:He IS my all-time fantasy writer, though that is partially because I have trouble finding other works by other artists that draw me into the emotional experience as strongly as Donaldson manages to do. I am planning to try Martin and Erikson, especially since SRD himself recommends Erikson.
I feel SRD's writing is like a drug, the way he emotionally connects the reader to the characters makes other works of fantasy that I have read seem pale by comparison.
I am curious if you read the Gap novel, this theme is taken to even further extremes in the first, and to a lesser degree, the second in the series. However, by the conclusion of the Gap novels, Morn transcends the harm done to her, one could even say it catalyzed a transformation in her. And even Angus manages to find some semblance of redemption.Myste wrote:For me, it was the rape--but not so much because of the act itself, but because of what it implied. Here was a protagonist who was, as far I was concerned at the time (I was 16), completely hateful...
And here I was, feeling utterly compelled to read about this utterly repulsive person...
Aha !!Myste wrote:"I have always believed that problems should be solved by those who see them."
I can understand your various reactions these books. The first time that I read TCOTC, I was unable to finish it - though I was pretty young at the time (11 or 12) and therefore not all that mature. Luckily I decided to try it again a year or two later - and this time got irrevocably drawn in.Myste wrote:When I had read the Chrons, I felt I had to get to the end, no matter how hard it was, but the Gap was absolutely too much for me.
I think a major part of it was that, at that time, I was a totally different sort of reader than I am now...then, I read books to find people I liked, and wanted to be like. I was terribly unhappy with who I was, and just wanted to escape into places where I felt...if not absolutely safe, then at least not in mortal peril. The Chrons, and to a greater extent, the Gap, are very extreme. They are about mortal--and moral peril. They were not at all the kinds of books that I needed to read just then.
Mordant's Need was much more what I liked and needed: a clearly defined fantasy world with recognizable good and evil. The good guys were flawed, but they were flawed in ways that I understood completely, and their redemption--finding their strengths by way of their weaknesses (Terisa's ability to "fade" into Imagery, Geraden's determination in the face of failure and ridicule) was something I could associate myself with, and hope for. The guilt-ridden, self-loathing torment of TC and Morn was stronger medicine than I needed.
I will definitely pop my head in, thanks for the invitation !Myste wrote:I hope you'll pop in to our Discussions and Group Read of Mordant's Need, Vector. We're nearly done with the dissections, but that doesn't mean the conversation has to stop, and I'd love to hear your thoughts on the series. We're talking about doing the Gap, next, too.