ASOIAF has much more of a drama then a Fantasy book, which does throw a lot of readers for a loop.
Never heard of the other serie tho.
Never heard of the other serie tho.
It's tough to pick a favorite character... Fiddler maybe.Plasmadamage said:Also, for BotF readers, who is your favourite character, what warren would you choose and what's your favourite race?
I totally agree with you. I still remember during Feist earlier works, a Lord randomly gets taken out by an arrow while sitting on the castle walls and another's horse bucks (from a snake I think), and the guy break his neck. Pointless deaths happen far more than heroic onesBloatedGuppy said:Eeesh. Not a selling point. I've become a big fan of verisimilitude in fantasy fiction, or at least the illusion of it. Too many "heroic deaths" and it becomes achingly apparent I'm listening to the sound of the author masturbating.trunkage said:Eriksen usually gives main characters "Heroic" deaths, where many of GRRM seem to happen by circumstance - out of there control.
Joe Abercombie - The Blade itself is pretty good tooAbsimilliard said:Seeing as I've only read the Song of Ice and Fire books, I can't compare the two, but thanks a lot for making the thread; I've run out of fantasy to read, and was looking for something new. I might just give Malazan a try.
I don't know about the DnD thing since I've never played it, but it MBotF certainly isn't wacky. The whole world as created by Erikson and Esslemont is believable, at least in my experience.DANGER- MUST SILENCE said:I dunno, just from hearing people describe it, it sounds like someone decided to turn their wacky D&D campaign into a book series... and I don't need that. I've played D&D, I've had wacky campaigns of my own. I don't need to waste my money and time on someone else's fun.
I'm into Fantasy built from a love of a topic expressed through meticulous research. With Tolkien, it was linguistics. With GRRM, it's the history, culture, and politics of late medieval England. I like that kind of fantasy because I get something out of it. Even if the story is 100% fiction, I know more about the real world from having read it.
Also, I'm into Fantasy where magic is magic. These systems where people explain a theory of magic that drives how the cosmos works don't come across to me as epic. If your world can even have a "theory of magic", then that doesn't strike me as a well-developed world. It's simply an overly-expositioned world. It feels a bit like if some joyless bugger made me read a spreadsheet listing all the reasons Star Wars is fun instead of letting me just watch the damn movies. Magic is not a science. If you can make a system of rules it obeys that the reader can figure out, then it's not magic. It's super-powers with wands instead of tights.
I think they getting a "Compare to COD because COD is good" treatment here. I know it sounds silly me saying this but for some reason it isn't wacky. Or maybe no wackier than everyone else.DANGER- MUST SILENCE said:Allow me to requote the words that inspired my post:SpinnokDurav said:I don't know about the DnD thing since I've never played it, but it MBotF certainly isn't wacky. The whole world as created by Erikson and Esslemont is believable, at least in my experience.
"Hive. Minded. Velociraptors."Adaephon said:I mean, there's a race of hive minded velociraptors with swords for arms?
That's not believable. Sorry, but there's no way we're getting around that. I don't care how many degrees the writers have, when you've got dinosaurs with sword arms in the world, that's not believable. That's just "wacky".
I'm not going to say that the books are bad, because I've never read them. I'm just saying that after seeing those words, there is nothing anyone here can say that will get me to believe these books are worth my time. I gave my reasons why.
Maybe you guys all love the books. That's fine. Different strokes for different folks. I'm not going to say they're bad, or that you are bad for liking them. But the moment anyone tries to claim that Malazan is better than ASoIaF, they're going to have to deal with a hive-freaking-minded velociraptor.
I think I should probably step in here and say that when I said that I was being overly simplistic for comedic value. The hive minded velociraptors (most of whom are zombified too, not that that makes my case any better) make a lot more sense, and are a lot more menacing, in full context. The K'Chain Che'Malle (seriously, Erikson's biggest weakness is his naming) are essentially a reptillian version of the Gaim from Babylon 5; there are hyper-intelligent "matrons" who form large colonies based around advanced machinery, like flying cities, and birth various types of drones to help them around. There's semi-sentient advisors and agents, mindless drones and warriors, and other sorts of stuff. The warrior drones that are born are augmented by their machinery so they attach long blades onto their arms since, after all, they only live to fight. Plus there civilization died out thousands, possibly millions, of years before the start of the books so what little is known is very altered from the truth since it has not been really recorded or investigated. But my original point was that the best way I could praise the books would be to pull a random element form them and show how ridiculous it sounds and then say, but it seems perfectly reasonable when you actually read the book where they show up. My original idea was to go with the army of cannibal peasants whose women rape dieing male soldiers to get pregnant so that they can bolster their numbers, but the hive minded zombie dinosaurs with sword arms sounded funnier to me.DANGER- MUST SILENCE said:Allow me to requote the words that inspired my post:SpinnokDurav said:I don't know about the DnD thing since I've never played it, but it MBotF certainly isn't wacky. The whole world as created by Erikson and Esslemont is believable, at least in my experience.
"Hive. Minded. Velociraptors."Adaephon said:I mean, there's a race of hive minded velociraptors with swords for arms?
That's not believable. Sorry, but there's no way we're getting around that. I don't care how many degrees the writers have, when you've got dinosaurs with sword arms in the world, that's not believable. That's just "wacky".
I'm not going to say that the books are bad, because I've never read them. I'm just saying that after seeing those words, there is nothing anyone here can say that will get me to believe these books are worth my time. I gave my reasons why.
Maybe you guys all love the books. That's fine. Different strokes for different folks. I'm not going to say they're bad, or that you are bad for liking them. But the moment anyone tries to claim that Malazan is better than ASoIaF, they're going to have to deal with a hive-freaking-minded velociraptor.
The same thing could easily be said about almost any element in a sci-fi or fantasy setting, when poorly translated. For example, Jedi and Sith from Star Wars could be described as space knights with telekinetic abilities. And the Others/Wights from ASoIaF as could be very much mistaken as snow zombies. It's kind of silly to make presumptions about a series because of a somewhat off-the-cuff comment about a very minor background element in the setting.trunkage said:"Hive. Minded. Velociraptors."Adaephon said:I mean, there's a race of hive minded velociraptors with swords for arms?
That's not believable. Sorry, but there's no way we're getting around that. I don't care how many degrees the writers have, when you've got dinosaurs with sword arms in the world, that's not believable. That's just "wacky".
Joe Abercrombie tries waaaay to hard to be dark it goes into grimderp at times.trunkage said:Joe Abercombie - The Blade itself is pretty good too