murphy72, on Oct 21 2008, 11:38 PM, said:
...
Before Jordon, the only author to do a long series was David Wingrove and that was SF, not fantasy. ...
...ah yes, Wingrove's Chung Kuo... which might also be said to set the standard for author implosion given the drek that was the last two books of that otherwise exceptional series.
I'm dredging my thinkymeatz here, but Feist was already way into the Magician series (jncluding the Empire stuff with Wurts) by the time RJ got rolling with WoT. Ed Greenwood did some fairly extensive DnD based books by then, the Myth Inc books were well on their way, there was the Dungeon! series that ran like twenty books... point beaing RJ may have been the first major one, but not the first.
Terez, on Oct 22 2008, 12:38 AM, said:
....The later books also shed more light on how much was predetermined in the early books, but the action is slower, so that more details about the side plots, the world, and the characters can be given - which is why a good chunk of RJ's long term fan base is not disappointed. That's what we wanted,...
Yes, yes, more, MORE dress descriptions, MORE random Aes Sedai internal squabbling, ...more, MORE GIVE US MORE!!!!!
...and while you're at it, maybe have Matt spend a few more books stuck under a wall, cuz that rawked!
I'm being facetious, but i squarely fall within the crowd that really enjoyed WoT up until Lord of Chaos and was saddened when things imploded after that, then encouraged as of the finale of Winter's Heart.
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...and most of us are pretty confident that the action in the last book is going to be extremely fulfilling, cause we've been putting our heads together for years to try to figure out exactly what's going to happen at the end, and we've got a great deal of it figured out. ...
I know this goes without saying, but Sanderson could tie up every major plot line in the entire series and someone will still whine because he didn't explain why Aes Sedai X's allegiance to the Purple Ajah changed. That said, am also looking fwd to it.
Back on topic, it's difficult to put say, Path of Daggers, in the category of 'worse fantasy books ever' - it's hard to ignore the series' commercial success, tho' my eyes bleed just glancing at any bestseller list that includes a Goodkind novel, so that particular qualifier is mixed.
- Abyss, ...crosses his arms and huffs...