Andorion, on 08 November 2014 - 01:27 PM, said:
So theres no clear ending in sight for the books and some people hate them. Why does this remind of Jordan again?
Well, people tend to hate them for different reasons from why they hate Jordan. There's actually a lot of similarity to the hate that Toll the Hounds gets to the hate Bakker gets, namely for its being heavily introspective and utilised by the author as a means to discussing philsophy as opposed to pursuing fantasy. There's a link in that Erikson supposedly was convinced by reading Bakker that he could go more introspective without producing problems of narrative flow.
As for the lack of an apparent clear ending, well, the first trilogy is fairly self-contained in that a lot of major arcs are begun and resolved within it. It also has quite a different flavour compared to the second trilogy and the two are separated in in-world time by about 20 years. Of course, the Big Arcs (the Consult, the Second Apocalypse) aren't resolved in the first trilogy, in fact are in many ways only foreshadowed or dipped into, but you can easily read the first trilogy and be fairly satisfied at the pulling together of most of the threads without feeling you have to necessarily read the second trilogy immediately after.
The second trilogy isn't complete but Bakker has submitted a draft of Book Three to his publishers. The issue is primarily whether it is going to be released as one or two volumes. There are some other mitigating circumsatnces, such as apparent conflicts between author and publishers over content and the fact that Bakker for the past three years or so has at times had to work part-time on the draft because he's not making enough money from writing and has had to do some teaching to support himself. Bakker has himself stated that Book three is going to resolve a lot of threads but also that it will open up a whole new Pandora's box of issues which will be dealt with in the third trilogy. There is next to no info on what the third trilogy is about save that the title will be a spoiiler for events at the end of Aspect Emperor Book Three, so it is currently parading under the cover of 'The Series That Shall Not Be Named'.
So in general, I would definitely recommend trying Bakker. As stated elsewhere, I am partisan. But given that each trilogy is fairly self-contained and that book three of trilogy two should be out within at max a year and a half, I see no harm even if you are annoyed by having to wait for new books to come out of at least reading the first trilogy now-ish. Plus, to contrast with Jordan, Bakker has, I think, better prose, and whilst he writes reasonably long books he rarely ventures into bloat - I would find it difficult thinking of a particular description or passage that struck me as particularly unnecessary.