Having now read the last bit of the thread: got to agree with Morghy and Amph that Sanderson is projecting his own lifestyle and expectations onto his characters with regard to their relationships and moral codes, and that he is fairly... reticent about posting about the physical part of love and lust.
I most definately did not find it an issue in the two works of his works which I rate highest (Mistborn 1 and Warbreaker), but during WoK I was at times thinking I was returning to, say, Elisabeth Moon's
Paksenarion (which has more off-screen sex than WoK in a tome of the same size) or perhaps Tolkien.
Where normally I have massive respect for his world-building and mechanics, to me, WoK felt like the first entree-level epic series of the 21st century - like Tolkien (when fantasy became its own seperate niche), Brooks, Jordan, before him. A bit more serious than Eddings, perhaps. (although at the least in the Sparhawk novels, there is just a tiny bit more of an adult edge).
Nothing wrong with that ambition: it seems about the only way to reach a large audience and it is different from the incredibly gritty fantasy Martin, Erikson, Bakker, Morgan, Abercrombie and others who we place on pedestals bring. But to me, when it comes to Sanderson, to write such a series seems like a step back in his development as an author.
I must say, I liked whatshisface with his wind spirit as a character and didn't get the farmboy-turns-hero feeling with him for the full 100%, also because that stage is in his past. Instead, he sounded like the veteran of a prison camp movie, but where he'd end up eventually was utterly predictable. I hadn't expected it this book already, instead thinking he'd stick to his miserable situation for a while longer, or maybe escape and become a hunted rebel.
Now, not every book has to have Richard Morgan-like every-orifice-explored graphic sex, Abercrombie's hilariously and intentionally clumsy scenes or Martin's rape and incest galores, but 'beautiful yet chaste', 'high morality', 'bigger objectives than satisfaction', 'too much respect', 'driven by a thirst for justice/righteousness/vengeance', 'glib and goodlooking but not profiting too much from it' are all traits that are applicable to most of Sanderson's characters, certainly the protagonists.
I could deal with it with Kelsier and Vin (great character), and the Gods in Warbreaker are awesome enough as a concept to not mind. But he would have made a real difference had he introduced one of his protagonists as a complete and utter hedonist/sensualist but of otherwise good nature - a bit like Banks describes the various individuals in his Culture books, which are filled with deviates yet it all happens off-screen but at the least is implied.
To dig a tiny bit deeper into the issue and to show it can be done as well, take Lynches' Locke Lamora, who is an interesting comparison. He hasn't had sex for ages, he too is loyal to the memory of a single woman, and he too sees that as a virtue. But at the least he jokes about it, deals with it, and there is plenty of interaction with those surrounding him who think he's a nutjob on that particular front. There isn't any of that with Sanderson's characters,
which there ought to be if they are a minority. When are whores hailing soldiers, where are the brothels, the groping in taverns, the men looking for a fun time, even as a side-description or a one-off?
Back to Lamora. Locke Lamora has had about as many pages as crazy-chap from WoK, but who is the more interesting, fleshed out, human character? Definately Locke. And no, I don't rate the Locke Lamora novels as anything more ambitious than well-written and decidedly fun-to-read novels: Lynch wouldn't really make my top 10 of authors.
I also think that QT's approach to judging in a vacuum is in an attempt to judge objectively without comparison, which is admirable. It is also slightly naïve (especially in a reviewer, imho - sorry about that judgment) and it is most certainly 100% fallible.
Everyone is subjective, and everyone relates to other stuff they have read or heard or whatever. The most common recommendation is after all, also on these boards: "if you like or hate this author/artist, (don't) read that writer/book/listen to that cd/ watch that movie."
This post has been edited by Tapper: 07 January 2012 - 06:59 PM
Everyone is entitled to his own wrong opinion. - Lizrad