Grief, on 04 March 2014 - 07:13 PM, said:
Abyss, on 04 March 2014 - 04:08 PM, said:
Graablick, on 04 March 2014 - 03:54 PM, said:
Hm.. the last days I have read all the Iron Druids book and are currently doing a reread of the Blinding Knife. Just for the record, Butchers owns the modern world fantasy thing.
Heh.. s'funny... i liked (but far from loved) Hearn's IRON DRUID... i consume a fair chunk of urban fantasy lit from a variety of authors, some of them pretty awesome... but no matter how great they are, i have to agree with you... no one's on par with Butcher. Some come close, but no one else nails that brilliant combo of great characters, pacing and sense of wonder the way Butcher does it, book after book.
I think Carey does it better. His world has more of an edge to it and his pacing and narrative arc blows Butcher out of the water. Butcher kind of starts feeling like a TV show that keeps getting renewed. All the books are fun to read, but there's not that same sense of deliberate build up, just a vague sort of idea it's going somewhere.
If you're talking about Carey's Felix Castor, Butcher's is much "bigger" in terms of scope of mythology, action scenes and topics tackled.
However, Carey is no slouch himself, having written Lucifer (one of my favorite series of all time) and the Castor series does well to build a multi-layered cast of characters surrounding the central character and his failings. The problems are a bit bigger in Carey's work with Carey's central relationship between Castor, Rafi and Basement Druid Lady never actually being presented nicely or in a way beyond "It just is that way and that's how we're going to think about it".
He invests far more time in Juliet and Castor than he ever does for Rafi and BDL. Butcher figured out how to make "before the books are being told" characters and plot points more vivid and able to be spun off into different plot points. This open-endedness built into Butcher's writing style is stronger and more developed than it is in Carey's work.
Early on, Carey is indeed meaner. However, he mostly stays on that level, while Butcher has made Harry & Co. gradually get into more and more grisly stuff without losing the epic underpinnings.
So basically, I'd give Dresden 10 Billy Goat Gruffs out of 10 and Carey gets 7.5 deadbeat, yet fatally fascinating clients out of 10.
This post has been edited by amphibian: 04 March 2014 - 07:32 PM
I survived the Permian and all I got was this t-shirt.