Luv2B_Sassy, on 10 May 2018 - 08:11 PM, said:
I think some of you guys are way overreacting. Maark is saying that these books don't dig in as much as he'd like, and are worse for it. I don't think he's arguing for some arbitrary minimum page count so much as space for the story and characters to breathe a bit more. Add a little pathos, a little more emotional heft. Seems like a pretty fair complaint, given that this series is the one telling of this era in Malazan history we are going to get.
While I agree that this
may be the intention, and while I would wholeheartedly agree with that, the way Maark said it is understandably rubbing people the wrong way. Some stories and styles simply do not need a thousand pages to be told or to tell a story, and emotional impact is not necessarily achieved by overindulgence in details. Personally, I would rather say that it depends a lot on the writing style and wether there is enough story to be told. I am madly in love with both SE's style (very indulgent at times) AND Glen Cook's (brevity is wit at its finest). I'd also say there's a big difference between details which work to further the reader's immersion and those which work to pad the text with unnecessary detail, and the line between them is very delicate and lies elsewhere for any given reader. Thus making blanket statements like 'readers want this' or 'readers don't want that' is pointless, everyone is going to enjoy something else, and sometimes the same thing will seem amazing or trite depending on the context of the story and the skill of the author.
Another thing is that it takes a special kind of author who writes only what he wants to read. You may be lucky to happen to write something that people
want to read, but you cannot
make readers like it, and doing exclusively your thing has its pitfalls. For example, I adore what Bakker is doing, and I fervently wish for him to keep doing that, but there's a reason why his books aren't selling all that well and why there's a huuuge question mark on wether his third trilogy/series/whatever will ever see the light of day. Even SE has lost his "piss on compromise" stance once he saw that Kharkanas wasn't selling well. Do I like that? Hell, no way, I want MORE Kharkanas and I'm not reading ICE anymore because what he writes is not my thing, but that in no way means that everyone who does is in the wrong. People like what they like.
I'll be honest: as a reader, theses kinds of blanket statements make me hesitant to read Maark's book, even though I bought it.
This post has been edited by Puck: 10 May 2018 - 09:49 PM