Andorion, on 16 September 2014 - 01:41 PM, said:
But what I do say is that its too easy to label Dresdenfiles as vanilla crowdpleasing thrills. I think Dresden's bluntness, his tendency to rush into things and smash stuff, is a deliberate device used by Butcher to set him off against antagonists who are invariably more cerebral.
You don't think that a blunt protagonist being set of against more cerebral antagonists is textbook vanilla crowdpleasing thrills? Deliberate or not (and I'm not sure it makes a difference)?
amphibian, on 16 September 2014 - 03:01 AM, said:
Plus, the hardboiled wizard detective thing comes with certain tropes attached to it - which Butcher knows and readily foils with the actions/thoughts of the other characters encountering Dresden.
Likewise, I feel like you're giving Butcher too much credit. Butcher's other characters rarely inform Dresden in a way that contradicts the tropes surrounding him, as opposed to emphasizing them ("Oh Harry, underneath your harsh exterior you really are a sensitive/good person" or "Hey Harry, you're not as badass/clever as you think you are" which is inevitably built up just to be shot down). Likewise, they very rarely influence his characterisation in a different direction in a manner that is more than fleeting. I think Harry's character development is rather poorly done really. It rarely changes at all, but rather hovers around a "base state", and then occasionally we'll get flashes of some supposedly important aspect of him which seem erratic to the degree that it's like Butcher has just remembered them, and then these are quickly forgotten about again. This also ties in to the sense of time around the books. There's what, a decade between Storm front and Small favour? You would think in that time, we'd see some development that didn't occur in the few weeks we collectively see him for over that time.
I've argued about it here before, and probably will again but really, Butcher must be one of the most over rated authors raved about on this forum ("one of" mostly because of Abercrombie's inexplicable popularity). He's fun, he's enjoyable, and he's solid, easily digestible entertainment to unwind with. I don't want to knock that in itself, but other people do it better - Pratchett comes to mind as similarly readable as well as more entertaining, varied, insightful. Some Iain Banks might be another. And as for Urban Fantasy, Carey is a far better storyteller. In part, this is subjective, but there are also non-subjective qualities involved (cohesive narrative arc and thematic content, character development that isn't in the form of a power up, a more internally consistent universe that it doesn't feel like he's constantly adding new rules to, to go along with a story that feels like he actually had an idea where it was going to begin with, and a secondary cast that isn't starved of development to the extent that the author then falls back upon cliches to fill in the gaps...etc etc).
I enjoy Butcher, I'm just not sure I get the hype.
Also you guys should read Carey if you haven't, if you didn't get that from the above.