As a note that is more to the topic, I actually found the whole ending, the burials, grief and farewells appropriately sad.
Tempest, on 20 October 2011 - 07:37 PM, said:
Deren, on 16 October 2011 - 07:42 PM, said:
Certainly not Whiskeyjack's death. Sorry, that's just too stupid. And Kallor. What a joke. It's like the characters in this world are all mentally not older than twelve. A disaster like this is kind of foreshadowed, but the way it happens is just "oh, really? Aha..." Frustrating, but too stupid to be affecting. Even if the stupidity is kind of the point... no, it's just stupid. Argh, this series is too silly for me, I'm dropping out after this book.
Do you read a lot of fantasy?
A large proportion of what I read is fantasy, but not exclusively and now very selectively. And it's true that comparing it with other standards influences my critical reaction, but I think it's also fair (at least in certain aspects) as a criticism of Steven Erikson's success of his own intentions.
Tempest, on 20 October 2011 - 07:37 PM, said:
Because if you do, and you like other texts, I'd like to know why you believe the mentality of these characters to be so childish (or, at the very least, one dimensional -- although granted, yes, a couple of them are the latter).
If you do not, I suppose such a sentiment is understandable.
It's probably mentioned or suggested at some points in the series that the gods appear like spoiled children. The same is true of many of the greedy, competitive, conspiring and selfish councilors, priests, nobles, politicians and merchants in this series. Steven Erikson portrays them in the simplest way possible and deliberately denies them access to higher brain-functions, so to speak. You'll never see them do anything that isn't directly or indirectly harmful for the commonality and in the longer run for themselves. Just because they're wired that way. Whether you agree with the general idea of this worldview or not, they should be something more than mere puppets of vice.
But this applies not only to the negative. You can't count how many times characters "snap" and "sneer" or otherwise show their immediate affects, whether it's a high-ranking officer in front of his troops, an immortal being or whatever. Also in their inner lives they are constantly whipped about by the slightest incentives. In a negotiation and conference they get easily distracted by their feelings and smaller interests thus all the while risking the fate of the world and the course of history to some chance mood. And everyone happily joins in as if this wasn't subjective but the most objective thing to do. But of course everything turns out the way it should so that it feels like the author is the ultimate conspiring god, in all good but mostly in bad.
Kallor is an especially hard case. Shortly before his betrayal he makes his most snappy and sneery action for the least reasons since quite a while. Even if I believe him to be so hateful and hardbeant on his obsessions, the way it's written is nothing short of ridiculous and inauthentic, let alone having the others bear with it. And then he becomes the instrument of the most random, inopportune "tragic-relief" scene in the midst of battle preparations. Being ridiculous devalues the big impact he makes and the way it happens is similar to all the other little snaps.
Then there are also all the comic relief scenes, of course, which sometimes take up more pages than relevant events and tend to go all along the same lines, and characters often appearing like cartoons or Anime characters.
I'm sure this is largely a conscious style of characterisation. It comes with the bag of all the high fantasy, RPG-like stuff. I even chose this series in the expectation of all the high fantasy, RPG-like stuff. But I think Steven Erikson shouldn't have so fully, uncritically embraced this kind of characterisation, even if he thinks it's the most enjoyable style of writing or just fast and relatively easy. It's too shallow for some of the more serious elements.
Minhasing Bheget, on 20 October 2011 - 11:43 PM, said:
Deren, on 16 October 2011 - 07:42 PM, said:
Certainly not Whiskeyjack's death. Sorry, that's just too stupid. And Kallor. What a joke. It's like the characters in this world are all mentally not older than twelve. A disaster like this is kind of foreshadowed, but the way it happens is just "oh, really? Aha..." Frustrating, but too stupid to be affecting. Even if the stupidity is kind of the point... no, it's just stupid. Argh, this series is too silly for me, I'm dropping out after this book.
i have to say, this is the first time i've ever seen tMBotF criticized for being 'too silly'
I don't think it's such an unusual criticism of the series in general although it might not be often with this exact word. Other words where this is often implied are strange, confusing, incomprehensible, over-the-top, nerd-fantasy...
This post has been edited by Deren: 22 October 2011 - 12:09 PM