amphibian, on 02 October 2014 - 05:33 PM, said:
No, you're supposed to feel like "this band of adventurers has been done so many times before" for a brief moment - and then the real story starts kicking in. It's decidedly meaner and more interesting than let's say... Tolkien's LotR adventurers.
Glokta in particular is one of the best characters to appear in fantasy in recent years. Jezal and Logen have their martial abilities subverted as well.
What "band of adventurers" ? There's no swordsman+archer+dwarf+wizard+gnome group going on here. The closest thing to a "band of adventurers" is one guy who walked around in the woods for a while on his own, then walked some more with a sick guy who he barely talked to, then he met up with another guy and stood in a room doing nothing, now he's walking through the woods with the sick guy and the other guy and they're still barely talking. He actually straight up says "Don't tell me where we are going or why you [this is a person he's never met or heard of before] summoned me, I don't want to know." !!!
Say what you will about "bands of adventurers" but LotR's fellowship was a diverse group from different parts of the world who interacted, shared stories, got riled up, etc while they were journeying, and right from the get-go they knew where they were headed (Mordor) and why (destroy the ring).
In contrast, the most interesting storyline in this book is about 1 guy, then 3 guys, from the same place, who barely even speak to each other about anything of importance, with the only PoV character not knowing or caring where they are going or why.
It doesn't count as "suberting" tropes if you just replace them with bland nothingness.
QuickTidal, on 02 October 2014 - 05:41 PM, said:
Yeah, Amph's got the right of it. You're definitely supposed to be put off by the tropes at play, and that's when Abercrombie starts twisting and turning things.
300 pages so far and I don't see any twists. Logen is still obstinate and knows nothing, Glokta still hates stairs. Jezal's self-obsessiveness and angst has increased ten-fold. And still none of them have any motivations or any sort of long-term plans. Only reason I'm still reading at this point is because I'm compulsive enough to feel the need to finish the book (but not the series, thank god).