Abyss, on 14 November 2018 - 05:18 PM, said:
TheRetiredBridgeburner, on 14 November 2018 - 04:57 PM, said:
I have occasionally wondered if I'd missed a trick through impatience.... seems likely that wasn't the case.
...
Not much gets 'subverted' til the second and third books, and even then, i'd go with 'darker than typical' more than 'subversive'.
Arguably, the character of Glokta is both original and somewhat subversive right out of the gate, but even that isn't as crystallized til late in the book.
So i suppose one might say you missed the subversive parts, but hey, life's too short to tough it out through a book you aren't enjoying just because
You might try JA's SHATTERED SEA trilo if you haven't already. Better writing than TFL.
I on the other hand quite enjoyed the First Law. I read it as it was published though, and so wasn't saddled with the expectation that it was meant to subvert all the things. Rather, I enjoyed the story, I enjoyed the characters of Glotka and Logan and Bayaz, and I liked the prose well enough. A little clunky but charming I thought. What really sold me though, I think more than anything, was Logan's arc. The way you see him as he sees himself early on, then get glimpses of how other people see him and how that doesn't really mesh is intriguing. And when they return to the north and he returns to the patterns of behavior he had been trying to flee from, that I liked. When he's standing on the crumbling wall in the high places and screams that he'll be coming for the generals children, his spittle flying, that's when we see Logan as he really is, not what he wants to be.
So yeah, I liked the First Law. I thought it was a fresher take on the genre than a lot of you guys do. Which is fine. You're wrong about most things anyway.
Later on, as I grew older and read more books in a wider selection of genres, I discovered the abundance of unreliable narrators in fiction and how much I enjoy the use when done well. But at the time, I hadn't seen much of that. I don't think I had read The New Sun at the time for instance, or anything by Nabokov.
This post has been edited by Morgoth: 15 November 2018 - 08:24 AM