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Author Topic: what makes a good story impossible to enjoy?
arriki
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I have this book, LADY OF MAZES by Karl Schroeder.

Fabulous ideas! Characters seem okay. But in several months of hauling it around to waiting rooms even, I have not been able to force my way through the book.

I finally gave it to my husband and asked him to read it. He didn't make it as far as I have (page 133 almost halfway) and he's Mr. Average SF reader. A mathematician, prime sf fan, but this book stopped him.

He says that the characters seem like they should interest him but that they don't. Pretty much what I felt.

So, it's not just me. What's wrong with this book?

[This message has been edited by arriki (edited June 10, 2007).]


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Corky
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I'm guessing it may be the writing.

I just finished reading FORENSIC DETECTIVE by Robert Mann and Miryam Ehrlich Williamson, and I did not get nearly as much out of it as other books of its type that I've read (DEATH'S ACRE by Bill Bass and Jon Jefferson, TEASING SECRETS FROM THE DEAD by Emily Craig, DEAD MEN DO TALE TELLS by William R Maples and Michael C Browning, THE WISDOM OF THE BONES by Alan Walker and Pat Shipman, and CORPSE by Jessica Snyder Sachs).

All of these are books about people who work with skeletons/dead bodies and what they can learn from them, but while FORENSIC DETECTIVE was about that, it didn't really tell how the scientist learned what he learned from the bones. I think it was poor writing as much as anything, and I wouldn't recommend it to anyone who has read and appreciated the other books I listed above.

(I realize that you are talking about fiction, arriki, and I'm talking about nonfiction, but I think the same principles can apply when it comes to making a story enjoyable.)


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Antinomy
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The worst book I ever read was “Regina’s Song,” by established authors David and Leigh Eddings.

What could have been a good plot was ruined by merciless clichés, as well as frequently revisited scenes and often repeated descriptions. I forced myself to finish the book by skipping through the obvious and predictable dialogue.

Thereafter, I made a note to myself to avoid these authors in the future, and to limit every book to a 100 page value test.


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Robert Nowall
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I can't say it's something that stops me from finishing a good book, but when I run across something in a book I know to be wrong, it stops things dead for me for a moment. I've just been reading Vincent Bugliosi's brand-new heavy-doorstop-of-a-book on the JFK assassination. A couple of times along the way, he mentions Ronald Reagan's would-be assassin, William Hinckley. It's John W. Hinckley, Jr. (My memory fails me on what the W. stands for, but I don't think it's William. Might be Warnock, but I'm not sure here.)

This applies to non-fiction more than fiction, but it sometimes happens with novels, too---with fiction, you've got some licence to make things up, but there are limits.


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HuntGod
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Hmm, I've never been able to get past pg 68 of the Thomas Covenant books.

I know these were big sellers at one point, but the main character was so loathsome and weak that I had no interest in reading any further.

I can read about loathsome and weak characters if they are interesting but Donaldson failed for me on every level with his worthless protagonist. Page 68 is where he rapes the girl that helped him btw.

Blech!


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Robert Nowall
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Yeah, I read the first three "Thomas Covenant" books---and the only parts I remember anything about, close to thirty years later, are the "present day" scenes of him wandering around as a leper. Nothing from the fantastic end of it stuck in my mind.
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EP Kaplan
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I had to slog through Wizard's First Rule, which everyone I know insisted was great. I could get over the length, even Goodkind using the phrase "first ultimate use", but the idea that Hitler's son (Darken Rahl) could march into Stalingrad (Midlands) and be received as a hero, no matter how much of a putz Kruschev might have been, struck me as utterly unbelievable nonsense. Even if the Wizard's First Rule is "People are stupid", I refuse to believe in a world populated by such twits.
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InarticulateBabbler
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Eh? I think you are reading a bit more than the author intended into that.

I liked Wizard's First Rule, it's the subsequent books that I started having a problem with.

And, as for the actual Wizard's First Rule, If you have EVER dealt with any kind of "customer service" (on either side of the counter) you know that this is a general truth. Not everybody is stupid, but we all are sometimes; ergo : People are stupid. It made me laugh my @$$ off, when I first read it. And the characterization between Zed and the One-legged chick is priceless.

BTW - Wizard's second rule (and this also widely applies) is: People want to be tricked.


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EP Kaplan
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I'm not saying the story *is* a metaphor. I sincerely doubt Goodkind really had Hitler in mind, at least no more than anyone in the latter half of the 20th century, but maybe he should have, and considered whether or not the premise is plausible. It's not. It's the idiot plot dressed up in the emporor's robe.

If anything people would be more likely to be bigoted against Rahl. Why was Achilles Jr. hidden away?

[This message has been edited by EP Kaplan (edited July 04, 2007).]


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arriki
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I bought a new sf novel this week. I'm not sure why. Oh, yeah. I was waiting for Sears to put a new tire on my left front wheel. That gave me a couple of hours on my hands so I meandered into the mall Borders store for a look see. I picked up THE HIDDEN WORLDS by Kristin Landon.

I'm thirty pages into the story and bored out of my mind.

It's not that there isn't a question raised on the first page. They were looking for something. Then they found it. A boot with a foot still inside. That told them that the missing ship, the village's only ship. their only source of much needed food, had sunk in the storm.

So, then comes a lot of internalizations and reviews of the situation as the pov tells her sister with two kids and another on the way that most of the men in the village are dead including her husband. Then they all have to pack up and move to the big city and subsist on charity and eventually on begging.

POV discovers a way to go offworld as some sort of indentured servant. That means the sister's family will have some monetary help.

That's as far as I've got and I'm too tired of the story to care to read on.

Why? Why did this come across as boring?
Is it a matter of the writing itself being kind of bland?
The events chronicled so far are dreary and depressing and bland?
The characters have no quirks or anything that appeals to me?

It isn't like the books I do read and enjoy don't have descriptions of events equally as dreary. They still manage to be interesting.

I just can't pinpoint what is different here.

[This message has been edited by arriki (edited July 13, 2007).]


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arriki
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I’ve reached almost the halfway point in the novel.
It’s romance, a thinly disguised romance set in a science fiction setting. The back cover blurb seems to focus on the big adventure plot of the alien Cold Minds who have destroyed Earth and are now coming to destroy the hidden colonies that are all that is left of humanity.

But...by halfway through the novel there have been only two or three mentions of that plotline. Instead there are pages and pages focused on the romance plotline. Not even a romance story with some new insight. A little bit of -- is she going to be raped..now? A lot of the female pov internalized reviewing everything around her and analyzing her situation ad nauseum. And more of the same from the male pov. We haven’t gotten to any of the bits where she thinks he couldn’t really love HER! Could he? And vice versa. I’m sure it’s somewhere ahead.

When I buy SF I’m looking for an adventure storyline predominant, not a romance. I feel cheated by the way the blurb was worded to emphasize the adventure and omit all mention of the romance.

Well, it’s just my opinion.

Yes, and it's a big reason why I'm hesitant to buy sf novels written by women. Not that I won't. There are a number of female authors I recognize and whose books I will purchase, but new writers with feminine names -- I'm real leery of those.

And then there are so FEW new sf novels published.


[This message has been edited by arriki (edited July 14, 2007).]

[This message has been edited by arriki (edited July 14, 2007).]

[This message has been edited by arriki (edited July 14, 2007).]


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Rick Norwood
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Because sf has a larger audience today, it has to be watered down, which frustrates those of us who grew up on sf of ENGINEERS! But I still find more real sf than I have time to read -- Vinge, Varley, Stephenson, Gaiman, Card, Wolfe, Bujold, Spider Robinson.

The hard sf is still out there, probably more of it than in the Golden Age, but now burried in a mass of fluf.

If I get tired of the modern stuff, I go back and reread Heinlein, Asimov, Clarke, Leiber, Sturgeon, and Van Vogt.


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J
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Whoever mentioned Wizards First Rule and that whole series--I agree completely. Those books almost define the category of "a good story that is impossible to enjoy." While some of the plot ideas are very clever, the writing is and most of the protagonists are pretentious, the "message" of the book is heavy-handed and clumsy, the dialog consists of poorly disguised lectures from the author, and the book is packed full of fights and romantic interludes that have no plot or thematic relevance, and are there just to titillate the reader.

I always felt like the people who truly enjoyed that series must be the core of the group that insists that the Wheel of Time is better in every way than the Lord of the Rings. I also suspect that these people love McDonald's hamburgers, but would turn up their nose at a medium-rare porterhouse steak.


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ValleyPastor
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Then there are those rare instances where the stories were so good (or just plain fun) that even third-rate writing couldn't drown them out, and they keep on getting re-published and read. George MacDonald's Lilith and Phantastes are like that to me, as is David Lindsay's Voyage to Arcturus. And (on a different level) every generation seems to rediscover Burrough's "Barsoom" stuff.

[This message has been edited by ValleyPastor (edited August 02, 2007).]


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EP Kaplan
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Oh. The Harrad Experiment, which was supposed to be some brilliant free love manifesto was one of the worst pieces of nonsense I've ever read. I should have known that a book whose cover features a scantily clad pair of college students was a bad idea, but I listened to popular opinion (note to self, not every widely recommended author is Rowling or Card) and trudged ahead. I noticed many things.

1- Stranger in a Strange Land was more plausible. Harrad is a "literary" version of Heinlein's masterpiece, only in order to get characters to behave in "new and different" (though not necessarily "better") ways, Rimmer chose not to impose "new and different" circumstances, but to fulfill what was ten a juvenile wish and then let the major character's be as absolutely unrealistic as possible. All for, what- a degree as a glorified sex ed major? These kids don't seem to be learning much else.

2- The "diary entry" format is horrible. Every character sounds exactly the same, and they don't develop The POV bounces around as the author sees fit, almost comically. The lack of intimacy with the diary itself ruins the characterization.


3- There's plenty of casual sexuality, but no true emotional closeness. The difficulty of polyamorous relationships, the butting of three or more heads in relationships, be they sexual or not, is glossed over. Lazy. (See the preface of Speaker for the Dead)

4- Rather than instituted a new morality, the book frequently dismisses the topic when inconvenient. Religion is, by and large, insulted throughout the book without ever being given a fighting chance. Characters are either indoctrinated or are labeled as boring, lacking in unity (despite the lack of evidence of such a thing at Harrad), and anyone who disagrees with the Tenhausens's view of the world is a slave to the dogmatic mores of an illogical and insane society.

Evidence of such a thing. Clunker of a noun. Just think, the Germans have a word for it. But I digress.

5- No, Rob, I'm not going to read the books you "casually" mention.

[This message has been edited by EP Kaplan (edited August 03, 2007).]


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Kakichi
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when I read the title of this thread, the first book I thought of was Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time series.

Despite being hugely popular and not half bad fantasy, I for one found it incredibly hard to slug through even the first three books of the series. I found the characters to be annoying and god-like (meaning they got out of every situation and I felt like they were never really in danger of dying or being hurt other than psychologically) which really took the fun out of it for me. It took me years just to get through each book and ended it on the third, calling it quits for the whole thing.

It also didnt help that even my friends that loved the series and have read all, what...11 books and counting now?... The thing that bothered me most was that they liked most of the books but one thing stuck out...they started mentioning that like from the 6th book on they were really slow and not so good, and I've heard that it's pretty much been like that since the newest book has come out.

So maybe someone here can explain to me the reason why these books are so popular? It seems like if you're gonna get into a massive epic like this you would wanna be engaged through the entire thing.


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annepin
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The sign of a good story made impossible to enjoy is when I want to read the cliff notes to find out what happens, but I don't care to read it. A good story is one where I might know the whole plot, but man, I still want to read it because it's so well written.

Okay, I'm probably going to get burned for saying this, but I actually had a hard time enjoying Martin's Fire and Ice series. While I wouldn't say it was impossible, I had a hard time getting through it. Why? Martin tried to tell everyone's story, and as a result, I lost track of the larger story. I love the characters, i love the setting, but I couldn't keep track of everyone, and just when I was forming a comfortable rapport with, say, Tyrion, we move on to another character and I felt I had to start all over again. I found myself skipping ahead to read just the Tyrion parts. It's frustrating, too, when some of the chapters focus on characters I really could care less about.

Another book with the flaw over-complication is Jaqueline Carey's Kushiel series. Besides being a bit over-written and self-admiring, it just had too many characters to keep straight.

I also think of Battlestar Galactica--sorry, it's a T.V. show, I know, but I think it's relevant to writing. Because I love the premise, I love the story, but I just can't get into watching each show--there are too many side plots and details the characters get into that don't have a bearing on the larger story, they're just cheap ways to create suspense that doesn't work.

So, what spoils good stories for me is lack of a tight narrative structure, gimmicky or manipulative writing, and flat characters. No matter how good the story, if the characters don't work, it's difficult to read.


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Matt Lust
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No actually you'd be surprised that among writers we all generally understand the reasons why people don't like certain books (well not really as discussions of LOTR and HP can attest).

In the case of GRRM I have to convince myself that this series is really just historical fiction.

If you try to read it like "fantasy" you're apt to be in a for a shock especially about halfway through book 3. In fact I still can't to this day, finish book three after the close of one particular POV chapter.

I simply stopped reading and waited for book 4.


As to your reading style, you're not alone OSC reads one character all the way through before reading others.

[This message has been edited by Matt Lust (edited August 04, 2007).]


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HuntGod
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Matt,

Just curious but which POV chapter turned you off the GRRM books?

As to the WOT books by Jordan...I look at them as a bad marriage.

You read the first book and it's pretty good.
Books 2 and 3 are in line and still enjoyable.
Book 4 is the wakeup call that the honeymoon is over.
Book 5 & 6 is when you realize marriage takes work and you've invested enough time into the relationship to warrant a little work.
After book 7 and 8 you start looking outside the marriage, a little Tolkein, maybe some Martin and you hope Jordan doesn't find out.
Books 9 and 10 are him getting back at you for cheating, but you put up with it because you've become dependent.
Oddly enough book 11 he patched things up and you realized why you got into this relationship to begin with.


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Matt Lust
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I'm not "done" with GRRM I've read (and reread) book four and am anxiously awaiting book five.


To reveal why I can't finish book three and by extension re-read the first two books would be to spoil the story for those who ahve not read but it should be suffice that it was in Rob's POV and what GRRM does that causes me to have a problem with the story.

My brother for the first time this summer read the first three books of Fire and Ice (though he really felt overwhelmed by POV storylines that he didn't enjoy such as Arraya and Sansa) and without my saying anthing to him like me, he quit reading book 3 after the same POV chapter ended and said "I'm done, I was only reading to see the storyline develop and then the only character I sort of kinda actually like......."


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Robert Nowall
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I'm inclined to forego further reading in a series if (1) later volumes seem too dependent on events in earlier volumes, or (2) accidentally pick up a later volume of a series and find I can't follow what's going on unless I pick up earlier volumes.

I'm a guy that likes everything I read to stand or fall, or at least be understandable, on what's in front of me at the moment. I refrained from buying the rest of Harry Potter until after Book Seven was out---I got earlier volumes as a gift, and I have yet to read past Book One. I also picked up and read the Alvin Maker series---which, enjoyable though they were, I felt cheated because there seems to be more beyond that Book Seven, that I can't read yet.

I've somehow hoped that, in my projected career as a successful writer (yeah, right, he added sarcastically), I'll avoid writing multivolume series involving the same characters, or, if somehow trapped into it, will be able to make each book stand on its own.


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Matt Lust
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Then write to a forumula.

This is not necessarily a bad thing but the only way a recurring character is enjoyable is if either a)the character has an arc or b) the character does basically the same thing every book .

Since every book you want to write has to stand on its own then you must leave the arcs small.

While A/B are not mutually exclusive, they are rarely ever mutually inclusive. Bova's grand tour series (a different book about something going on at every planet) is a great example of this. Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter Saturn and Titan are all examples of books that completely stand on their own but are all also tied into his larger universe.


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Robert Nowall
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Well, I think multi-book story arcs are unfair to the reader. They're right up there with serialization.

Say the typical reader picks up Volume One of this new series. He likes it...but some things aren't resolved, and are put off till Volume Two, and Volume Two won't be out for another year at least. He waits, picks up Volume Two when it comes out...learning that, though some things are worked through, other things still wait on Volume Three.

Say he makes it all the way to Volume Seven. (Might as well keep the Harry Potter similarities.) But suppose he doesn't? Suppose he becomes dissatisfied somewhere in the middle, and stops buying? Suppose that outside events, say, his sudden death, drive him away from the book series altogether?

Suppose something happens to you, the writer, like sudden death? Could you go to your grave happy, knowing you left so much hanging in your series and the loyal readers might never know what would have happened next?

Is it fair to let an enthusiastic fan never learn what'll happen? Are you writing a book, or marketing a sucker deal with the reader getting stuck?


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annepin
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a well thought out, well arced series is a joy to read, but it can't last for ever. Personally, I think three is a good number. Seven is pushing it. But i like revisiting worlds and characters.

Matt: re GRRM- I'm still mystified. in book three (storm of swords, right?) we aren't in Rob's pov... I'm assuming you mean Caetlyn, the next closest.


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Corky
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quote:
My brother for the first time this summer read the first three books of Fire and Ice (though he really felt overwhelmed by POV storylines that he didn't enjoy such as Arraya and Sansa) and without my saying anthing to him like me, he quit reading book 3 after the same POV chapter ended and said "I'm done, I was only reading to see the storyline develop and then the only character I sort of kinda actually like......."

So GRR Martin is repeating himself? He did this in book one of the series, and while I did keep reading that book, I couldn't bring myself to pick up book two.


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Matt Lust
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Okay maybe it wasn't Rob's POV (it been almost 4 years since I read Storm of swords) but it was what happened to Rob that did it too me.

Like I said, I have to read the series like Historical fiction because I know GRRM is not going to let this story get away with any of the standard plot cliches of fantasy writing.


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Matt Lust
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Corky,

I don't feel he's repeating himself in anything after book 1 and especially not in Book 3/4 as the POV characters are now so geographically scattered as to keep GRRM from repeating himself.

Arraya and Sansa were always rather bad POV's in the first book for this reason in my opinion though I think he did a wonderful job building them into separate characters in the following books.


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annepin
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(last question about GRRM, I promise!! and this is more on topic)

Matt, does the fact that it reads more like historical fiction vs. fantasy make it more enjoyable to you, less, or just different?

The reason I'm asking is that some people seek out the fantasy cliches you said he avoids, so I'm curious what your take is on this.

[This message has been edited by annepin (edited August 10, 2007).]


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Matt Lust
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Hmmm.......

that's a really good question.


I don't mind a good light fantasy read but that being said, I am trying to get through Acacia (via audiobook) a new fantasy novel by David Anthony Durham. Quite frankly I should really like this book because its actually well written in terms of style and tone but the story's structure and plotting is like a patchwork quilt and not like ones my mother does more like the ones I tried to make when I was a 8 year old.

Its got at least 7 if not eight POV characters that he does a decent enough job weaving but the universal/world spanning empire that has a dirty dark secret and a helpless but well meaning king who can't do anything about the deep dark secret and also a long long ago enemy who is making plans of their own.

Top this off with the fact that this world spanning DOES NOT have any significant military force of their own and is is in fact beholden to a "league" of merchants that controls all the trade in the "known" world.

Top this off with an impending invasion by a long forgotten people group who they bought off with the big dark secret.

I could go own but really thats as far as I've gotten in the book.

GRRM on the other hand while he writes alot of characters, the story structure is much more stark and as well as very deep yet concise characterization (He may have too many characters but thats a different issue) with what strikes me as a well plotted character and event arc that I personally cannot wait to see how it ends.

It was however that one particular scene when I decided that too enjoy Fire and Ice, I had to throw out my understanding of what kind of fantasy I thought Fire and Ice in order to still enjoy all the other characters as well as discover what GRRM has planned for westeros.


Acacia appears similar to song of ice and fire but to me what makes the latter a classic work of fantastic fiction and the former a hack job, is the voice of the author in the work.

To me it feels that GRRM is telling a recounting historical events while Durham is attempting to tell us an honest to goodness original work that too me smacks of cliche and at times outright borrowing (though not plagarism) from other writers.


Cliches (or universal themes to be more polite) are fine but it is the voice of the author that makes them special or makes them as pleasant as curdled milk.


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HuntGod
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I realized GRRM was writing as different kind of Fantasy after what happened to Eddard Stark in book one.

I also think that his books benefit from discussion, he drops very subtle hints regarding underlying plot threads that are very easy to miss if you are used to authors being very straight forward. Many authors, myself included, fall victim to explaining things to show how clever they are. GRRM doesn't seem to care if you missed his clues, he is fine if you don't realize how clever he is :-)

Jon Snow's parentage is presented very forthrightly but there are several inconsistencies and his parentage has significatn bearing later in the book, though it's never shoved in your face.

Sorry don't want to turn this into a GRRM thread...but I wish Jordan wrote with a fraction of GRRM's depth.


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Matt Lust
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Personally I think Jon Snow was not Eddard Stark's bastard.

It's crazy but I think he is a targaryen (sp) via Eddard Stark's sister Lyanna and Rheagar.

but that's off topic.


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Robert Nowall
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I heard somewhere that George Railroad Martin planned out his series with a specific number of books right from the beginning. (It's, again, another one I haven't picked up, though I might when it's complete---I really liked a lot of his other stuff.)

I also read somewhere that Lester Del Rey, he of Del Rey books fame, started writing a fantasy book series once he retired from the firm, but only finished one volume before his death. As far as I know, it was never published---and it's something I'd like to see, open-ended or not.


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HuntGod
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Yes Jon Snow is Lyanna Stark and Rhaeger Targaryen's child. But in the books he keeps that low key and you have to piece it together, most don't pick it up because it is subtle.

I beleive GRRM originally had it planned as 3 books, then realized it would take 5.


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Matt Lust
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Actually I think it was always meant to be 7(or was it 6). But with the splitting of book 4 into two books I think that the series is going to be one book longer than originally designed to be.
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Kakichi
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wow, it's interesting to see what everyone thought about Martin's series. I personally loved the series and have my favorite characters like everyone else does. He has introduced a lot of characters (especially in book four) that aren't so interesting but I'm willing to keep going to find out whats gonna happen in the end. Those first three books and their chapters read like cliffhangers throughout and kept me hooked. I really admire what he has accomplished in terms of being non-cliche and thats what I really like. I'm hoping to write my stories in a non-cliche fashion so they remain fresh and I hope to deal with some interesting issues in new ways. but then, that's what we're all out to do huh?
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Robert Nowall
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Looking over the thread...well, I want to reply to something Rick Norwood put up over a month ago, that's only partially Martin-related. (I was late noticing it.) Well, not so much a reply as a comparison of experience.

My first magazine exposure was to Analog, in the early seventies, just after Ben Bova took over from the late John W. Campbell. (It was probably more than a year before I realized there were other magazines.)

I liked some of the "hard stuff," but I think of the regularly-appearing writers, the ones that appealed to me the most were George Railroad Martin and Spider Robinson. I wouldn't consider their stories the hardest of the hard SF by any means.

I saw an interview somewhere recently with Martin---I forget where. He talked of publishing in those days, and said he wasn't exactly a great fit with the "hard science" school of SF writing.

I've tried to keep that in mind. My writing isn't "hard" in that sense. I try to get the science right, but I don't calculate out orbits or figure the biochemistry of my aliens. I might be willing to do so if the idea appealed to me, but I generally avoid that sort of thing. I can't do what, say, Hal Clement could do with a dazzling scientific idea. I'm more likely to drop some piece of technology into the mix, an idea rather than a rigorously-worked-out speculation, that might "look" like something that comes out twenty years later.


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annepin
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Ah, David Anthony Durham. I read his historical fiction "Pride of Carthage", which I thought was imply abominable. Now there's a good story that's botched--how can you screw up a retelling of Hannibal? I think it's because his characterization was weak (well that and the IMO inexcusable historical inaccuracies). Hannibal and his brothers came off as heroic stereotypes--there was nothing in them that felt real, or different, so unlike Mary Renault's, or even Steven Pressfield's, Alexander.

So, let me add weak characterization, or perhaps ill thought out, unoriginal characterization, to the list of things that ruins a good story.

Oh, and I started a GRRM thread to continue the above conversation, as need be.

[This message has been edited by annepin (edited August 13, 2007).]


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debhoag
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IMPly abominable ? I think you may have coined a lovely new phrase there . . . now if only I can find somewhere to use it!
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NancyE
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I'm working on the Runelords books (David Farland) now, and nearly stopped with #1 because of poor style editing. Here are some of the things...
1) He has a tendency to get into the middle of long sentences and not be able to keep track of his pronouns. Irritates me when you have to pick apart a sentence to figure out who "he/she" actually refers to.
2) Misuse of words... "coiffed," for example, refers to HAIR, not to clothing. He has wardogs--mastiffs, which are the size of shetland PONIES, that "yap." Toy poodles, yorkies, lap dogs yap. Mastiffs shake the ground when they bark.
3) repeated noticable image--I swear he used the concept of pain "blossoming" 3 or 4 times in the book, and I've seen it used before, besides. I pick up on these as a hold-over from grading college papers--it's one way I would spot plagerized papers.

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Robert Nowall
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This is as good a place as any to mention a mixed metaphor I heard on Fox News yesterday. In a political commentary, the reporter (whose name I don't know 'cause I wasn't watching, only listening), said. more or less, "If Fred Thompson stumbles out of the gate, he'll really be behind the eight ball."

I thought, "Geez," and wondered why somebody would mix horse racing and pool. I guess some of these guys really do just talk to hear the sound of their own voices...


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