Best line of the year.SleeplessOne wrote:Anyway, I trust that all will be illuminated in the Last Dark

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Best line of the year.SleeplessOne wrote:Anyway, I trust that all will be illuminated in the Last Dark
I guess he's just tough and doesn't have needs. But along the same lines, I questioned the inattention paid to Covenant's ruined fingers. He came across as a lot less crippled than he was made out to be.Lord Zombiac wrote:5. Minor points of inconsistency. While the company emerges desperately thirsty from Lost Deep, Galt's needs are virtually ignored for something like 24 hours as he keeps the Croyel prisoner and everybody else drinks, eats, and bathes.
And what about Mahrtiir's instant adaptation to blindness, to the point he can pull out a garrote and fight incredibly fatal monsters, on more than one occassion, after only a day or two to adjust? Yeah, I get the whole earth power health-sense adapter, but come on...TheWormoftheWorld'sEnd wrote:I guess he's just tough and doesn't have needs. But along the same lines, I questioned the inattention paid to Covenant's ruined fingers. He came across as a lot less crippled than he was made out to be.Lord Zombiac wrote:5. Minor points of inconsistency. While the company emerges desperately thirsty from Lost Deep, Galt's needs are virtually ignored for something like 24 hours as he keeps the Croyel prisoner and everybody else drinks, eats, and bathes.
ParanoiA wrote:And what about Mahrtiir's instant adaptation to blindness, to the point he can pull out a garrote and fight incredibly fatal monsters, on more than one occassion, after only a day or two to adjust? Yeah, I get the whole earth power health-sense adapter, but come on...TheWormoftheWorld'sEnd wrote:I guess he's just tough and doesn't have needs. But along the same lines, I questioned the inattention paid to Covenant's ruined fingers. He came across as a lot less crippled than he was made out to be.Lord Zombiac wrote:5. Minor points of inconsistency. While the company emerges desperately thirsty from Lost Deep, Galt's needs are virtually ignored for something like 24 hours as he keeps the Croyel prisoner and everybody else drinks, eats, and bathes.
Just for laughs I wanted him to run into a tree, trip over rocks and shit or maybe even just accidentally walk off of a cliff. I wonder how many blind people are reading this book in braille, internally calling bullshit on all this...
Funny thing is, I personally have LESS [but not NO] problem with that on the net than in RL.Lord Zombiac wrote:[ Most internet conflicts are the result of people (mostly me) posting words as though they were present and people could judge where they were coming from by my facial expressions, tone of voice, etc.,
That post was very obscure, even though I do know what "axiological" means. Maybe if you replaced "actual presences" with "physical persons," or "archetypes come to life," it might clarify things a bit. And maybe some examples from axiology would be helpful too.Vraith wrote:But as actual presences,
That looks like an accurate characterization of Linden. Even from the beginning of the 2nd Chrons she was introduced as "severe," the very opposite of self-pitying. And she is most severe on herself.Vraith wrote:Very briefly: I used "presences" instead of "physical" because SHE/LF don't have/require "bodies" per se. Especially, I think, in their "native" territory.
The true immortals that we know [Elohim don't count, unless their legend of being before the world, and getting sucked in it literally true...which is for me still up in the air] LF/SHE/Creator:
They ARE what they ARE, and always will be precisely that. [though our knowledge of their Is-ness is, I think, incomplete].
The changes necessary within the Arch constrict/sever/impinge on them. And their immutable essence pushes back.
Real/Land inhabitants are only what they are if you can look at indivisible instants...what they really are is ever becoming [becoming dead for one thing]. Examples:
Linden: struggling with "I AM a killer." But is that so? She has been one. But IS she? And people say she wallows...she does NOT. She struggles, she fights, she chooses. She does not PITY herself...she is, more so even then Covenant merciless to herself. With barely an instants peace, she compares the Ideal, Perfect Linden, falls short of it, then punishes herself in ways that her critics wouldn't punish a cockroach, let alone themselves, because it would be too cruel.
Galt and Stave [all the Haruchai to greater, or lesser extent]. They constantly claim "WE ARE." But...then they are not. Galt is the best example because clear, precise, definite. Stave says [roughly] "He remained himself." But the choice that defined that self-ness, at that moment, defied the "we are" of the people as a whole. [Stave has done the same, as have others in the Chron's...but not as succinctly] Every important standard of the Haruchai is Ideal. Yet every meaningful action transforms it in some ways, while not in others. They SAY they must find out what they are worth, they've learned failure means little as long as they stay pure...despite the fact that every encounter with LF shows their entire definition of purity creates the failure.
If I wanted to do the research/citation [and bore the piss out of everyone] I could go on with this to thesis-paper length and examples.
Naah! For me 'Grueburn' has to be Germanic (blonde I agree) and built big and brawny on bratwurst. Like an oak tree with t - no hang on, I can't say that here.Lord Zombiac wrote: Already I'm beginning to see Grueburn emerge as a lovably ditzy bimbo.
As I've said before, progress/change is not invariably positive - it's always possible for sharks to be jumped. On that basis, there's no absolute necessity for the passage of 20 years to mean that SRD has "surpassed himself and moved on to a more 'sophisticated and literary' style"... you're being very charitable there in trying to see the POV of the fervid Last Chrons supporterspeter wrote:I want us all to remember that it was these first six books that brought us together and that because (maybe) Donaldson has surpassed himself and moved on to a more 'sophisticated and literary' style, it does not mean that the first six books are lessened in value or that the people who prefered this type of work are in some way lacking. We just happen to like the old style better. No rights, no wrongs, just differences. Thats all it is.
I mostly agree with both of the "quotees" here, but I just wanted to grant, for the sake of argument, that it's possible SRD has "moved on to a more 'sophisticated and literary' style," and yet still manage to produce a book that is not as good. "Sophisticated and literary" is not the same as a good story, told well, with fascinating characters who are utilized to maximum effect for the overall story. To put it another way ... we could just go read poetry, if "literary and sophisticated" was all we were seeking. Obviously, we're reading fantasy novels for more than that. The "disappointees" aren't disappointed because the novel is too literary and sophisticated. We actually like Donaldson for that, or we wouldn't be here in the first place. But before the issue of style, we first look for a good story. For many reasons, I feel AATE fails in this regard. I might feel differently on a reread ... but if I do, I'll be very disappointed in my reading comprehension and my own intuitive sense of storytelling. I have a pretty good idea about what I like--that's an area where I'm hardly ever wrong.TheFallen wrote:As I've said before, progress/change is not invariably positive - it's always possible for sharks to be jumped. On that basis, there's no absolute necessity for the passage of 20 years to mean that SRD has "surpassed himself and moved on to a more 'sophisticated and literary' style"... you're being very charitable there in trying to see the POV of the fervid Last Chrons supporterspeter wrote:I want us all to remember that it was these first six books that brought us together and that because (maybe) Donaldson has surpassed himself and moved on to a more 'sophisticated and literary' style, it does not mean that the first six books are lessened in value or that the people who prefered this type of work are in some way lacking. We just happen to like the old style better. No rights, no wrongs, just differences. Thats all it is.
Having said that, I think it's more that what interests SRD as an author has changed - single protagonist-focussed internalised drama, more than epic production stuff with a wider caringly depicted cast. This will either appeal or not - it's not "better" or "worse" by nature, but it is certainly as you rightly point out "different".
Well argued - you're drawing attention (I think) to the possibilities of "style over substance", or even "art for art's sake" - but actually I don't think that SRD falls into either of these creative traps within AATE or the Last Chrons as a whole... and I'm sure you're not saying that, either.Zarathustra wrote:I mostly agree with both of the "quotees" here, but I just wanted to grant, for the sake of argument, that it's possible SRD has "moved on to a more 'sophisticated and literary' style," and yet still manage to produce a book that is not as good. "Sophisticated and literary" is not the same as a good story, told well, with fascinating characters who are utilized to maximum effect for the overall story. To put it another way ... we could just go read poetry, if "literary and sophisticated" was all we were seeking. Obviously, we're reading fantasy novels for more than that. The "disappointees" aren't disappointed because the novel is too literary and sophisticated. We actually like Donaldson for that, or we wouldn't be here in the first place. But before the issue of style, we first look for a good story. For many reasons, I feel AATE fails in this regard.
No, forget your likings... I'm Spartacus!Zarathustra wrote:I might feel differently on a reread ... but if I do, I'll be very disappointed in my reading comprehension and my own intuitive sense of storytelling. I have a pretty good idea about what I like--that's an area where I'm hardly ever wrong.![]()
Yep and largely agree with your sentiments.peter wrote:I think you get the gist of what I was trying to convey.
Agreed again - it's a movement because it's different, but that doesn't mean it's an advancement.peter wrote:There just seems to be this attitude that the direction his writing has moved in, in the Last Chrons is in some way an advancement over the (would you call it narrative driven) storytelling of the first 6 books. This I don't get. For me it doesn't work, so either I'm deficient in my ability to read in some way (if it is an advancement) or it's not advancement - just a matter of taste.
That's Mr. drug-crazed knuckle-dragging no-hoppers to you pal.TheFallen wrote: What it *actually* means is that all those disagreeing with you are blatantly obviously a bunch of drug-crazed knuckle-dragging no-hopers
It's only bizarre if it goes on for weeks without mentioning Hitler or Nazis.peter wrote:How bizarre! The thread seems to have stopped in it's tracks after weeks of vituprative infighting in which no quater was asked or given
. Perhaps the effect of a little much needed humor into the proceedings. or perhaps (and more likely) an exhausted pause in an ongoing war of atrition!
Well, that's because folks who don't like AATE are CommunistsTheWormoftheWorld'sEnd wrote:It's only bizarre if it goes on for weeks without mentioning Hitler or Nazis.peter wrote:How bizarre! The thread seems to have stopped in it's tracks after weeks of vituprative infighting in which no quater was asked or given
. Perhaps the effect of a little much needed humor into the proceedings. or perhaps (and more likely) an exhausted pause in an ongoing war of atrition!