I've got to admit, I'm getting sick of hearing people say, "Oh, Revelstone! Oh, you poor rock!" People are dying, and you've got some mourning a gate. Come on. Hey, forget the fact that if the gate is breached, everyone will die. No, we're supposed to feel sympathy for the fact that the rock itself will be broken (and conveniently forget that much of this rock had to be carved away and destroyed in order to make Revelstone in the first place). Yeah, I know, it's symbolic; the earth = life, yadda yadda. It was charming and otherworldly when Trell "healed" the broken stoneware in LFB. But then, no one's life was at stake.
However, that's a minor gripe. The entire scope of the 3rd book just doesn't seem as epic as the first two. There are no Quests, there is no great war, no seeking lost, mysterious Power. There's just Covenant running around in the snow and Mhoram grimly staring at green lights in the ground. (Yeah, I know I'm simplifying it.)
I guess the reason this bugs me so much is because people have complained that Runes is not as good as the "originals." In my opinion, Runes was infinitely more entertaining than PTP. And the writing is orders of magnitude better.
Has anyone else noticed how often SDR, in his early years, makes use of "as if . . .", "like a . . . ", and "seemed . . ."?? Why must every sentence be a simile? Can't he show the depth and power of what's happening without comparing it to something else? If the events/actions aren't potent enough speak for themselves, no amount of comparing them to unrelated, often confusing images are going to make them more powerful. In his more recent writing (Gap, Runes), he relies upon this overused technique much less.
(p.243) "[Mhoram] raised his staff AS IF to ward off a nightmare." Why can't he be raising his staff to to ward off the very real threat of the green moon that has been poisoned by LF as a signal for Satansfist to begin his next attack? Why compare this literal, significant threat to an insignificant, unreal nightmare? How does that make it more powerful?
(p.243) "LIKE a tsunami of malignant scorn, [the green moonlight] rolled upward and broke across the Keep." I have a hard time picturing a tsunami composed of malignant scorn. What's that look like?
(p.243) "Its green, radiant swath swept LIKE a blaze of wrong over the ground . . . " Yeah, a blaze of wrong. I know exactly what that's like.

(p.243) "Slowly, Mhoram realized he was grimacing LIKE a cornered madman . . . the contortion clung to his face LIKE the grin of a skull." So he's like a cornered, dead madman?
And there are many more on that one page I picked at random. There is literally NO paragraph on that page (and most other pages) that is free of this impossible-to-imagine, often conflicting imagery. How about "reanimated lust"? Any clue what that looks like?
Don't get me wrong, I love SRD's writing. I devour his books like a cornered tsunami of blazing, reanimated lust of a madman.

Just my opinion. What do you all think?