Posted 25 November 2005 - 02:15 PM
Agraba, your list perplexes me somewhat. I'd rank them like this (I'm sure we'd all have differences in ranking, but I just want to post mine for contrast):
1- Lord of Chaos. Yup; more on this below.
2- The Shadow Rising
3 - The Great Hunt
4 - The Fires of Heaven
5 - Dragon Reborn
6 - Crown of Swords
7 - Knife of Dreams
8 -Winter's Heart
9 -The Path of Daggers
10 -Eye of the World
11 - Crossroads of Twilight
Quite a few differences from your list. For the first 5 books, I never found much of a surprise in the endings. EOTW - Rand was always going to be the Dragon Reborn. Great Hunt - he'd battle with Baal'zamon, get the horn back, Egwene would be freed, etc. Dragon Reborn had the most obvious ending of all thus far, Shadow Rising - showdown with Asmo and capturing him (forshadowed by plenty of prophecy), Fires of Heaven - showdown with at least one of the Forsaken group trying to get him to attack Sammael was inevitable; it was never going to be Sammael (yes, the Lanfear thing WAS a surprise, although Moiraine's impending 'demise' was obvious) but Lord of Chaos....I thought it was heading towards Illian and Sammael...ho hum...and bam, Rand gets taken. I really hadn't been expecting that...and then Dumai's Wells was awesome. The Aes Sedai knelt. So cool.
But plenty of other things make LOC really good, IMO. Nynaeve heals gentling, which was a great scene. Forsaken resurrected, Shadar Haran makes his first appearance, Demandred, Sammael and Graendal get 'screen time' (I love seeing the Forsaken's planning and plotting, and LOC had quite a bit), the farm is established and Taim is put in charge of it and Rand generally isn't too idiotic, actually making plans and developing them. Sure, it's not 100% pure action - I often find the Salidar chapters pretty slow, and could do without the whole Egwene/Gawyn thing - but it was the highlight of the series for me, so far.
EOTW was very average. I had no interest in continuing after finishing it, and didn't read The Great Hunt until I came across it in the library when I was stuck for something to read, some 8 months after I'd read EOTW. This was vastly different to what I'd expected after EOTW, although by the 3/4 mark I thought I knew where it was likely to be heading, and wasn't too far wrong. Dragon Reborn I found rather tedious until the end. The end was great, the rest? blah. Yes, the Shadow Rising was just amazing, and a very, very close second, IMO. Unfortunately, Faile just gets to me so badly it interferes with much of my enjoyment of Perrin's chapters, so it's not first on my list. I like being surprised - so the crystal columns was fantastic, but the climax of the novel? ho hum. TFOH was good, but had too much travelling in menageries with Nynaeve and Elayne for my tastes. The docks was a nice surprise, insofar as Lanfear seemed to have been taken out, and I wasn't expecting Asmo to go so quickly either. It was after LOC, IMO, that the series began its decline.
It was the fact you ranked LOC as second-last that mostly inspired this post. For the life of me I can't understand that, so I'm just going to chalk it up to human diversity. I cannot comprehend how you enjoyed EOTW as much as to rank it so high.
The idea that Rand, as the most powerful ta'veren in 3000 years (at least) should do what anyone tells him is ridiculous, really. Even Moiraine knew he needed a large degree of freedom for things to turn out right. Cadsuane is so annoying it almost defies reason - I thought Faile was the most annoying character possible until Cadsuane happened along.
If you ever thought for a second that any of the three ta'veren would die before the end, then we must be reading different books. Sure, Rand will die at TG, but he'll be resurrected; but there have been numerous other hints that without both Mat and Perrin, Rand will lose at TG.
I enjoyed TWOT enormously until bk 6, and then felt it had a gradual decline from ACOS to TPOD, picked up a tiny bit in WH, and then sunk to depths I wouldn't have believed possible with COT. KOD was something of a return to form, but some things certainly seemed rushed, but not so badly as, for instance, the discovery of how to make cuen'dillar, which was just something that Egwene had suddenly worked out in whatever book it was.
RJ is writing a series, it seems to me, for as broad an audience as possible, so traumatic deaths of major characters which haven't been telegraphed since the first novel - and which aren't going to be resolved by resurrection - just aren't going to happen, IMO. It'd scare the kiddies.
'This is my timey-wimey detector. Goes 'ding' when there's stuff. Also, it can boil an egg at 30 paces - whether you want it to or not, actually, so I've had to keep away from chickens. It's not good when they blow.'