Now that doesn't mean I don't want to slap him now and then.


Moderators: Orlion, kevinswatch
This, IMO, is probably the only thing that kept me from completely loathing TC. I guess in a way I felt empathy for him, so even at his least likable, I felt pity and sadness for him. Also, because of some personal things I was going through at the time, I found myself understanding the harsh, unyielding exterior he tried to keep between himself and everyone/everything else.amanibhavam wrote:It was not so much dislike for me, rather incomprehension. Throughout the first book I simply could not see how somebody who had been blessed with the event of having been transferred to a place like the Land could've shun so totally as TC did. But then I never had to spend months of my life learning some rigorous discipline just to be able to survive and never experienced total alienation from the people around me.
Well at least he progresses.rdhopeca wrote:First Chronicles - grudging respect mixed with a bit of loathing
Second Chronicles - very much grew to like him, but he was well beyond his Unbelief then and fought as hard as could be expected, and sacrificed more than could be expected.
I know a lot of people stop reading after the rape. But I guess I had to find out what happened. (That act had more ripples than a bag of potato chips.) It was interesting to read other peoples' responses (I think on a usenet news group). One poster complained that he didn't seem to care, but it was so obvious that he was holding everything back. (Luckily another poster pointed that out.Blackhawk wrote:Me too.. when i first read the story the rape didnt make me want to quit reading but read more to find out what happens to this guy, then of course after the trials and tribulations and victory #1 he was Tolerable and even Respectful of his surroundings, taking off some of his whiny and unbelieving attitude for chronicles #2 hes a GREAT anti-heros Hero.
At one point yesterday, I was thinking "You can't say that to Foamfollower!" But at the same time, I could tell he said what he did as a defense mechanism. And defense mechanisms (both physical and mental) are a vital part of his life.ninjaboy wrote:I like him, but I hate some of the things he does, the things he says to people in the first series. But as I said I like him, because... on my current re-read I'm at the point where Elena's telling him that she's the daughter of Lena etc.. He screws up but he hates himself for what he does to the land.. So I gotta feel some sort of empathy and respect for him. And sometimes I think I'm a lot like him, coz hell, I ain't a Saint.
Oh, yes, the pissing and moaning in TIW did get on my last nerve. He was lucky Bannor was a Bloodguard with an oath and all. Otherwise, he might have invented a new sport -- Spin the Unbeliever, or Kick the Unbeliever Off a Cliff or something like that.danlo wrote:Yeah, pretty much what Orlion said. I wanted to kick his ass off a balcony when he was pissing and moaning in his chambers in TIW (actually, I wanted Bannor to kick him off a balcony). In dealing with TC I initially thought the the Lords had to be large transcendent beings, with unbelievable forgiveness. I was then quickly brought down to earth and saw them as mortal with their own limitations and problems...
Yes, the leprosy is a biggie. No, it didn't excuse his bad moments (just as alcoholism doesn't excuse drunk driving), but it explained it. It shaped what he became, more than most other diseases could have. I would have liked to have been a fly on the wall when SRD attended his father's speech and got the idea for TC -- because that must have been a heckuva speech. Too bad they didn't have YouTube back then.amanibhavam wrote:It was not so much dislike for me, rather incomprehension. Throughout the first book I simply could not see how somebody who had been blessed with the event of having been transferred to a place like the Land could've shun so totally as TC did. But then I never had to spend months of my life learning some rigorous discipline just to be able to survive and never experienced total alienation from the people around me.
Does that make him the anti-TC? You know, it probably does. He was the Un-unbeliever. If my nephew makes it that far once I give him the books, I wonder what he'll think of Hile Troy?... He's into heroic fantasy, so he might relate to him more, at least at first.amanibhavam wrote:And though I always get strung up whenever I read the sections where TC behaves like a complete jerk, I can understand his pains much better now. When Hile Troy came onto the scene he provided me a very good contrast to TC and I started to sympathize with Covenant's stance.
I would probably pass out. No, wait, I'd be like Hudson in Aliens, the one who kept saying things like "That's it man, game over man, game over!!" and "They're gonna come in hear and they're gonna get us!" I remember reading that the actor thought people would hate his character because he was scared all the time, but he turned out to be one of the most memorable. People can relate to Hudson because he had the sense to be scared.amanibhavam wrote:And I really do not think I could do better, even without being a leper outcast unclean, if I was thrown into a place the next moment and somebody told me my left ear has a magical power that could save the place and I had no idea what they were talking about...
I still think the First Chrons is ahead of its time, or either it goes over people's heads, because no one can understand that a person like TC is being put into something where the world not only accepts him but wants him to be a messiah. It's not only something that makes his long-trained defenses reel but it's almost a huge, garish joke and one that would, in my case, leave me overwhelmed and feeling a lot of doubt.Sharguild wrote:Covenant was put in an impossible situation from which someone who does not believe it is real, in fact as he says many times CANNOT believe it is real because that belief will kill him dead cannot expose himself.
I believe I read somewhere that SRD doesn't consider TC to be an anti-hero. He is presented as an average person in the "real" world thrown into an unusual circumstance.Critteranne wrote:Yeah, I actually *like* the so-and-so. Does that make me weird? I know a lot of readers loathe Thomas Covenant, even if they love the Land and the other characters -- they like the book despite the main character. (That might be the point of an anti-hero. To them, the other characters are the real heroes.) Is that attitude common even among fans? Or do fans tend to "get" TC more?
Now that doesn't mean I don't want to slap him now and then.But of course, then he'll turn around and be the first (and only) one to say something that makes sense. And it's not like he doesn't have a reason to be angsty.
His were powerful, prophetic words, coming from an objectivity that only a person not of that world can have. As usual, however, TC's truths were not intended to enlighten or help anybody but only to distract himself momentarily from his inner conflicts. TC remains intent on his own selfish purposes.Lord Foul wrote:I also thought his evaluations of the Lords were very astute, especially when he spoke with Mhoram between the krill in TIW, in Seer and Oracle.