Saturday, March 19, 2011

The Great Hunt


The Great Hunt is the second book in the Wheel of Time series; here we find Rand & company attempting to recapture the Horn of Valere, and in the process traveling from the Borderlands to Toman Head.

 The Seanchan are introduced, a seafaring empire that uses the One Power in battle.  They have occupied Toman Head and stand as adversaries against the peoples of the mainland.

 Egwene and her female twins are featured heavily, although their story here is solid, not drivel as in some of the later books.

 Overall it is about on par with the first one for quality, but has less variety, as it is very focused on the hunt for the horn.



 8.7/9

Saturday, March 12, 2011

The Eye of the World


 Robert Jordan's near endless series "The Wheel of Time" starts here.  Though it is now common knowledge that the later books suffer from an obvious quality drop, the early works were, if nothing else, rather entertaining.

 Yeah the book has a pretty obvious pathing that resembles the Lord of the Rings, the female characters are largely identical to one another while simultaneousness serving as some of the most annoying individuals in fantasy-- but this flaw only becomes a major issue in later books when the females are given more focus.

 I originally read this series in the 90's, but sometime around the 8th or 9th book I quit.  Since then Brandon Sanderson has taken over, following the death of Jordan, and apparently done a rather good job of it.  So I'm slowly rereading the series, since I'd like to see Sanderson's works.  There is a 2-3 book gap between Jordan and Sanderson that I'm not sure entirely sure how I'm going to surmount.

 Anyway, don't read this expecting anything else other than entertainment.

9/10

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Gardens of the Moon


   This is the first novel in Erikson's Malazon series.  Some people really like these books-- but I'm not one of them.  This first book was so poorly written and unfocused that I gave up on the series.

 There are lots of characters in this book.  Erikson never describes much of anything about them.  They just appear, and start doing stuff.  Then they disappear for 100 pages, then they reappear, then they suddenly die.  That's pretty much how this book goes.

 Additionally the prose can be painful, this is not lyrical, and repeated words and phrases within just a few lines are common--this drove me crazy! A good editor should have caught and fixed shit like this.

 Some people say the later books are better, and that Erikson's writing improves.  I haven't bothered to test these claims yet, and I'm not sure if I ever will..

 Anyway, this book is not worth reading, perhaps the sequels are, but this one is absolutely not.  It reads like a D&D campaign, and as such has about as much depth.


7/10

The Book Of The New Sun

 "The Greatest SF Novel of the last century." - Neal Gaiman
















  The Book of the New Sun is Gene Wolfe's masterpiece series, and taken as a whole it is easily the greatest novel I've ever read.

 This is the story of Severian, member of the guild of torturers who wanders the lands of Urth.
Yes a torturer.  When in need of money he can use his well honed skills for such as acts as public beheading, and dismemberment.  To clarify, it is never so gruesome that anyone would be put off, and their is no SM or anything like that.

 The language and prose of this novel are of the absolute highest quality, containing a lyrical beauty rarely found in even the most famous of works.

   Now, Wolfe assumes the reader is highly intelligent and knowledgeable.  He assumes your vocabulary is quite large, and even if it is, you will almost certainly have to look up some words(or just infer from the context).

   The novel is told in first person, with Severian claiming he has a perfect memory, but a careful study will show that he does at times contradict himself demonstrating that he is an unreliable narrator.  The observant reader will find many clues are embedded in the text that tell far more of Severian and his world than just his words.


 Now this IS a SF novel, not a fantasy piece.  Severian may see magic, but the reader should know better.  Severian lives in a dying world, an Earth so long gone that technology is magic and the sun is begins to burn the world.

 It was originally released as four novels, "The Shadow of the Torturer", "The Claw of the Conciliator", "The Sword of the Lictor", and "The Citidel of the Autarch".  In recent times the series has been republished in a far more respectable looking edition, comprised of the two novels shown above(each contains two of the original novels).

 This is a definitive work of the 20th century, however unknown it may be to the mainstream, and should not be missed.

10/10

Friday, March 4, 2011

The Wise Man's Fear


 "The Wise Man's Fear" is the second in what is supposed to be a trilogy(though I'm starting to have doubts as to how he can possibly conclude it with only one book).

 This one is much like his first, "The Name of the Wind".  Except it is really damn long.  1126 pages long.

  First, I did enjoy the book.  Rothfuss is a very solid writer, this ant no hack.  He is great a stringing together a sentence, but I'm starting to wonder if he can actually string a full story together.

 Why?

  Well for one, the first 400 pages are a retreat of the first novel.  More Kvothe at University, nothing really new going on here.

 Finally Kvothe leaves the University, he travels 1000 miles(somehow in only 16 days with a shipwreck, eh?) to a distant city where he enters the service of some high and mighty dude.  Denna shows up yet again.  Kvothe pines after her.  Hey this sounding familiar?

 Finally about half way through the book, Kvothe yells at Denna, and is promptly sent out on a mission to eliminate some bandits.


 I should add, that each time Kvothe travels to a new location, the story becomes interesting.. for a time.  But each time Rothfuss overstays, and the reader becomes deadly bored with the location, hoping each time a new chapter arrives that Kvothe will move on.  Kvothe always manages to stay longer than I care for, making me wish they had cut quite a few chapters.

 There is one horrible part where Kvothe enters the fae realm, I kept assuming it would end.. but chapter after chapter Kvothe somehow remained in this most intolerably dull location.

 It does pick up some at the end, Kvothe learns to fight, saves some girls, stuff actually happens, etc.  Why couldn't more of the book been like that?


8.8/10

A Civil Campaign

 Miles is back on Barrayar, and most of the book deals with Miles courtship, or campaign to marry Ekaterin.  New territory for the series-- obviously.. but it works fairly well.


 8.4/10

Komarr

 The third good Miles book in a row.  Miles is now an auditor, and he is helping to investigate a shuttle crash.

This one introduces Ekaterin, as Miles stays at her and her husbands house during his investigation.


8.6/10