Serenity, on 15 January 2014 - 08:53 AM, said:
Abyss, on 14 January 2014 - 03:18 PM, said:
Serenity, on 14 January 2014 - 02:55 PM, said:
...Dawnthief by James Barclay - thought this was very poor, especially in terms of characterisation. Doubt very much that I'll read any further in this series
Sadly, all i can tell you is that the books slowly get better and the second trilo is actually quite good, but yeah, the first one is a slog at times.
Thanks for letting me know. I thought I was going to enjoy it at first, but I'd nearly lost the will to live by the last third of it. The characters were so ... characterless, and the dialogue was dreadful. Fortunately - or unfortunately, depending how you look at it - this was another Kindle deal at Christmas - all seven of the Raven books for £18. I don't think I'll be reading the others, but at least they're not taking up my limited shelf space!
If i follow, you actually bought all seven, so... i can't pretend 1 is anything but disappointing. It has a certain classic fantasy appeal for the right reader at the right time, but yeah, it's meh at best.
here's what i posted elsethread about the first trilo...
Quote
The first book suffers from its fairly standard fantasy tropes - civilized medieval society invaded by the unsuphisticated yet savage yet speaking in perfect diction hordes from the other side of the mountain range at the direction of their evil witch lords. But the way the whole 'get the heroes to where they can activate the widget and stop the badguys' thing plays out quite well. I like the way the Raven are completely out of their depth and know it, but maintain an attitude of 'it's just another job, only harder'.
The second has dragons. Massive intelligent dragons at war with other dragons, and a magic spell thingy that will destroy the world if it does its thing. The magic in the this book suffers a bit - sometimes Barclay isn't as clear as he is clever, but again it works, mostly because the characters are great fun to read. And the dragon-to-dragon combat is awesome... i really have to give
Barclay credit on this - he writes massive frikkin' dragons beating the hell out of each other in the sky really well.
Third one has some excellent action scenes, - there's a rescue at sea in a storm sequence that is just brilliant to read - more character building, and if it suffers from anything its that it feels like the author wrote a solid ending but then editted the fnck out of the epilogue stuff to leave those elements for the next trilogy. Still, a hell of a finale with a couple of neat twists.
I liked.
Anyrate, i've read the three, i'm satisfied with them and will check out the next three at some point. I don't mean to damn with faint praise. It's not SE, it's not even close, but its fun satisfying fantasy from a decent writer that i'll check out again. I get that this isn't everyone's cup of kaelyk, but if you're a fantasy fan and haven't seen these yet and were put off by the various negative comments, i can at least say i think it's worth a look. Not tall dollars hardcover, but mmpb/library/2nd hand.
and re bk 6...
Quote
Y'know, it's beyond a damn shame that the admittedly mediocre DAWNTHIEF turns so many people off the RAVEN series, becauseholymotherofalldragonfucknuts that finale was just INSANE. Seriously. I don't put Barclay in SE's league by a long shot, but that finale was right up there with some of the high points of the MBF. Look... i'm not going to tell anyone to fight their way through six books just to read one awesome scene... or even the first trilogy, which i fully acknowledge is so-so, although i think that the second is flat out great from the start... ffs, Elf ninjas... but as a fantasy lit fan i thought that last bit was pure fantasy fan crackcocaine in action text form and a great great read.
and then there was bk 7
Quote
This is how you write end of the world epic fantasy. THIS.
All i can say is that if there was anything you enjoyed even a little in the first book, perhaps give the second a try and see whether that plus armies of dragons in air-to-air combat is enough to hold your interest.
Or don't... i just think a lot of people who might enjoy the series never make it past DAWNTHIEF.
Quote
Abyss, on 14 January 2014 - 03:18 PM, said:
Quote
Dead Beat by Jim Butcher - fecking loved it, probably my favourite Dresden so far. Polka will never die!
It remains my fave for all the obvious reasons, Polka included. Great great book.
I thought the last third of it was just brilliant. So exciting. Looking forward to reading the next one.
THE DREZDENCRACK.... IT GROWZEZ!!!!!
The Incredible Kitsu, on 16 January 2014 - 07:51 AM, said:
Maybe Apt, on 15 January 2014 - 02:55 PM, said:
Just finished Gun Machine. Great read. It's funny, the book read exactly the way I imagined a Warren Ellis book would. Funny, clever and weirdly detailed in odd places. I have to admit though that I was expecting a more weird explanation for what the hell was going on but the ending worked for me.
Guess I better add Crooked Little Vein to my "to read pile".
Good choice. I liked Gun Machine, but I LOVED Crooked Little Vein. It's also a quick read. Besides, I feel I should shave the phrase that Abyss used to make me drop my other reading plans and read it immediately: "plot-related Godzilla bukakke".
So glad you liked it Apt. I thought Ellis nailed that book.
VEIN is a very different experience. Kitsu correctly refs the intrinsic value of Godzilla Bukkake to not only the plot, but society as a whole.
As for my reading, am about 30pgs into Clines' EX-PURGATORY... very different from the prior three books but he's selling it so well... it's like one of those comic stories where the superheroes are depowered and mindwiped ... only with zombies.