What are you reading Wednesday
Jan. 9th, 2013 04:40 pmWhat are you reading?
Godslayer by Jacqueline Carey, because it was a gift from semilocal J--. Second in a duology. I've also (still) got a bookmark in N.K. Jemisin's The Shadowed Sun where I stalled out.
What did you recently finish reading?
Banewreaker by Jacqueline Carey, first in the duology. I am not a huge fan of these books; they read like the author wanted to rewrite Lord of the Rings with the mythic gravitas of the Silmarillion, only from Sauron/Morgoth's point of view. Which is an interesting enough idea if the author can pull it off, but without decades of worldbuilding and a grounding in the epics that epic fantasy comes from, I don't think it's doable. Carey is no Tolkien, nor even Guy "ghostwrote the Silmarillion" Kay. On the other hand I am genuinely curious how far she'll carry the genre-twisting "bad guy's perspective" thing, and the characters are decent.
What do you think you’ll read next?
Good question. Probably not Tolkien. Likely either Princes of the Air by JMF, or something off the To Be Read shelf. Perhaps the Jemisin.
Godslayer by Jacqueline Carey, because it was a gift from semilocal J--. Second in a duology. I've also (still) got a bookmark in N.K. Jemisin's The Shadowed Sun where I stalled out.
What did you recently finish reading?
Banewreaker by Jacqueline Carey, first in the duology. I am not a huge fan of these books; they read like the author wanted to rewrite Lord of the Rings with the mythic gravitas of the Silmarillion, only from Sauron/Morgoth's point of view. Which is an interesting enough idea if the author can pull it off, but without decades of worldbuilding and a grounding in the epics that epic fantasy comes from, I don't think it's doable. Carey is no Tolkien, nor even Guy "ghostwrote the Silmarillion" Kay. On the other hand I am genuinely curious how far she'll carry the genre-twisting "bad guy's perspective" thing, and the characters are decent.
What do you think you’ll read next?
Good question. Probably not Tolkien. Likely either Princes of the Air by JMF, or something off the To Be Read shelf. Perhaps the Jemisin.
no subject
Date: 2013-01-14 12:17 am (UTC)The Abercrombie, argh. I read them on the advice of a friend and I can see where she liked them: the narrative voices are excellent and his twist on the save-the-world trope is well done. But the viciousness and pettiness and general Crapsack World ground me down, and for several personal reasons I have no use whatsoever for Glotka's arc.
I have not read Guy Kay (well, except for the Silmarillion). E rather enjoyed his latest, Under Heaven. She was unimpressed by the Fionavar books: it sounds like they're early work, and not of the "I really respect his early work" kind either.
(miss you.)