birthSqueeze, on 09 September 2013 - 06:26 AM, said:
I admit it's difficult to refute why people like these books, considering that I agree and it does have many strengths. It also has a lot of weaknesses as well. First of all I have to admit that I actually liked Prince of Thorns up until the very end. The ending was way too abrupt for my tastes. I was like WHAT! THAT'S IT. It ends right in the middle of the climax and then doesn't explain in very much detail how Jorg became king. As a reader I felt very disappointed and cheated and this may have been what led to my complete disconnect from Jorg in Kings of Thorns; after that point I wasn't feeling the emotion at all unfortunately. I perceive weak endings like that as laziness on part of the author. For me endings can make or break a book. It's why I enjoy Malazan so much; the epic climaxes are what I look forward to.
If you dont know how Jorg became King I dont think you finished the book. Were there loose threads sure but it was by no means too far a leap to imagine that after taking over the central castle of a kingdom he might go on to rule it. There were abrupt moves throughout the book though I wont disagree, and especially in the later books as well. I was too hooked to care. Why did I enjoy the books? They kept me entertained enough to buy the next one. What more do I need?
For me the most abrupt point in the book was when Jorg is stabbed by his father. We never really get a satisfying explanation for it. Was it Sageous? A lot of the books hint that it was not and yet why kill an heir who is as deadly as Jorg? Did the father fear him?
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I agree that Jorg has a great narrative voice and I do give credit to Mark Lawrence for handling the antihero so well, especially in first person. First person narratives are hard enough to nail on the head but to do it telling the story through a psychopathic killer is beyond risky. That sums up pretty well what I liked about the series. Then again.... I also didn't like how the story revolved around Jorg so much. I'm not a big fan of first person narratives except in rare cases so this definitely plays a big part in my biases. I also didn't think Lawrence's world building was that great and for the most part I thought he handled the fantasy element very sloppily. It was obvious to me that he doesn't care much for the fantasy genre. I don't want to spoil anything for those who haven't read it..... but I will say that one particular random deus ex machina plot point at the end of King of Thorns really showed a lack of plotting skills and very poor use of magic. Yes, I understand that some of these random plot points are very significant such as something really disgusting that Jorg did during Prince but that's not justification for the utter ridiculousness of it all.
I love first person narrative, its why I love Dresden so much. Its a great tool to et you into the head of a character. Criticizing the book for being about Jorg however is not a true criticism at all. Its a choice the author made and that you don't like it is an opinion. We can speculate pointlessly about how the book might have benefited from more characters having screen time but its just conjecture. It might have been worse.
I have mentioned myself though that I thought magic was handled somehwat unevenly throughout the novels. On that I do agree. I also must agree about calling the end of King of throns a Dues Ex Machina. However it is one I did not mind since I don't think it affected the story. Jorg had already won, he had killed the prince of arrow (a nice switch here) and the story was essentially concluded. The author could have chosen a myriad of ways to end the book without resorting to the Machina but it certainly fit just as well as any other option.
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I didn't like the premise much by the way. What? Jorg is trying to become king. What do you know, he succeeds. What? Is he gonna become emperor? The content might be very adult but if you strip the series down to it's barest bones, it's obviously quite juvenile. I'm guessing you're all going to throw the under the surface and philosophical references as evidence for it's greatness. I don't even remember that part very well but still.... there isn't enough concrete evidence to make the claim that Broken Empires is great. The weaknesses are just too glaringly obvious in my estimation. It might sound like I'm bitching but that's because I wanted to like this series and as I've already said, I noticed all of these technical flaws in the plot which nobody seems to be talking about.
Juvenille? Who cares. Sometimes the goal of a novel is simply there to provide a stream for the narrative to take. I wanted to read about Jorg as a character and I enjoyed the plot as well. His goal of becoming King and then emperor in my opinion is only a small part of the book however. Discovering the nature of the world, his interactions with new characters, his growth and backsliding as a human being. All entertaining. Is game of thrones juvenile for having sixty characters who want to become king? Do we even read that series to see who will win. No we read it because the characters make one damn fine read. I could boil down any book into one sentance but that wont mean I have captured its heart.
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I also don't mean any offence to you Mark Lawrence. I've looked at a number of interviews and you seem like a great guy; not at all like a sick minded person as the text might imply. The idea of an author spying on a thread about their series that's on a forum about a series that has nothing to do with their's is pretty creepy though. lol
I both agree and disagree. I think its great when an author pops by and says hello. I imagine its how regular people feel when Angelina Jolie gives them their autograph. If the author pops round to stifle criticism of their work that is a problem and something which I have seen no sign of in this case. I do remember attacking another author's work on this forum and he defended himself and I thought his presence in the thread responding to any criticism of his work made the thread quite awkward. I cant remember his name (Big in Sci-Fi as I recall) or the book, something about having a male gay protagonist.
I do believe that a more quite presence that takes in the praise and criticism of his fans could be a very useful method for an author to improve the work. Though of course an author should not feel the pressure to change hos works to please his audience.
The book is by no means flawless. Is anything? Still I found i thouroughly entertaining and a good read. I thought the narrative become clunky at times, the memory box for instance but for all that I read the three books in four days.