Finished the second
Iron Druid Chronicles book, Hexed, earlier this week. Still a hoaky kind of book series but I think it improved between book one and two. Or maybe I just got used to the formula. Still find it bizarre that this random druid just randomly hangs out with gods, though there is something charming about this more personal form of deities. I like the idea of modern gods being versions of modern belief systems. So there are many different forms of the gods, several kinds of Jesus and Virgin Mary, etc.
One aspect that does bother me and I imagine is just going to be a running joke/trope, is the druid, Atticus, giving the police the run around. Just like the Dresden Files, it feels like a lot of death, carnage and mistrust could be saved by just having a meeting with the police chief and certain detectives. Demonstrate that the super natural exists and they need to learn when to get out of the way. If they freak out just have vampire lawyer mind fuck them back into ignorance.
In connection with that I find it funny but also jarring how uncaring Atticus can be about people dying around him. He has that immortal "mortals dying is just a part of life" thing but he's also written to be "the good guy" and as though he cares about the baddies doing bad things. As such you'd think he'd be more shaken up about a fallen angel eating school children or a bunch of dryads murdering scores of night club goers.
I'd appreciate a bit more depth to his character. Dresden would had been fucking murderous with rage if somebody pulled off this stuff in Chicago.
Began reading the first
Dragon Lance Chronicles book, Dragons of Autumn Twillight, this weekend. It's actually surprisingly good. I was expecting some antiquated writing and ancient tropes that only serve as a thin excuse for a Dungeons and Dragons-like board gameplay but it sucked me right in.
I'm reading a Danish translation that is super weird. I generally don't like reading Danish translations of English books, since something is often lost in the telling of the tale, but this book is weirder than that. For some reason the publisher decided to keep the names for places and people in English. Perhaps because of Dragonlance marketing reasons??? but what ever, it means you'll be reading a Danish sentence and suddenly "The Seekers" appear or the name of Flint Fireforge or Sturn Brightblade which just looks insane in an otherwise ordinary danish sentence. It's like reading video game fanfiction.
That aside I an impressed with the way the book opens. Like so many older fantasy tales inspired by Tolkien, the book starts with a bunch of travellers assembling and quest begins, but it's written in a clever way, where connections and shared history between the characters are mentioned in passing or hinted at, which suggests an older story and a wider world that immediately draws my attention. When it within the first 20 pages numerous times referred to older events and a previous meeting between the adventures five years past, I was convinced there was some older books I had forgotten about. This is a clever set-up. I am already hungry for lore and bread crumbs about the characters' pasts.
It doesn't hurt either that within the first 5 pages of the people meeting, they nonchalantly pick a fight with some stereotypically evil goblins, whom they dispatch with ease. This is writing for my inner teenager.
This post has been edited by Alternative Goose: 09 April 2018 - 02:10 AM