spartan231490 said:
To clarify, I think that this story could have been told just as well with 10-12 POV characters and a few small sections from the POV of just random characters. I know that the plot and type of story is completely different, but I'm going to use Wheel of Time as an example. the world is huge and the story is really complex as it follows the 5-10 "main" characters around the world and through their story. And Jordan manages that story without changing POV every single chapter, and without making every single important character have a massive amount of POV. Faile, Lan, Moraine, Alanna, and probably a dozen other important characters only have a handful of POV section.
There be spoilers ahead
Please, you're comparing TWOT to ASOI&F? They are both written in completely different ways, with completely different focuses and ideas. I love both series' equally, but in different ways.
Jordan set out to create a massive, beautiful world, with strong definitions of good (The Dragon, Aes Sedai etc.) and evil (Shai'tan, the Forsaken). The story is Rand, Mat, Perrin, Nynaeve, Elayne and Egwene's story. In epic fantasy numbers, that is
tiny! Jordan created the archetypal struggle for good and evil, because he
wanted to have a clear protagonist, antagonist, and pave the way for epic battles (see Dumai's Wells). TWOT is all about balance. Aes Sedai/Asha'man, Saidin/Saidar, the Dragon/Dark One, men/women, lords/peasants, greed/honesty, even man/beast! These are clearly defined, and make it easy for the reader to root for Mat, because he's a good guy with a smile, or Elayne, because she's so compassionate, and to hate Lanfear, who's jealous, corrupt and serves the Dark One.
On the other hand, GRRM
wants ambiguity, and political power plays, and he
wants to differ from the stereotypical happy ending, protagonist wins, "Sam goes home to Hobbiton with his wife and kids" ending. He felt the need to have many characters to tell this story. He is going for small
geographical scale, but large
character scale.
Neither writer is bad. They may have some weaknesses, for example I truly believe GRRM is a sex-depraved sadist, but his writing is so gripping I don't care. And Jordan loves his characters too much (see books 7-10) to wrap them up and get to the important parts of the story (i.e. the pace slows to that of a dead snail), but that has made books 11-13 all the sweeter.
Have you noticed how Jordan makes a point of giving each city it's own personality? The Domani girls are sluts, the Tairens proud, the Saldean people quick to anger. This makes up for his lack of delving into many many main characters. GRRM does NOT do any of this. King's Landing is a blank slate, just as the Dreadfort, the Twins, Riverrun, Sunspear, Highgarden and the Arbor are all boring places without the excellent characters GRRM has given them (Winterfell, Pyke and Casterly Rock are exceptions).
I simply think that each author wanted to do his own thing. This means GRRM's style is
different, not
bad.
Also;
7 Faces of God
Sept/Septon/Septa
Seven Kingdoms
7 Ajahs
7 spokes on the Wheel of Time
What is with the number 7?
Edit: Thanks for the comment Dejanus!