I hope all the people reading Shannara in prep for the TV show know to skip book 1, which they've already read anyway if they're familiar with LotR, and start with Elfstones. Or at least are aware that's what the show is doing.
amphibian, on 15 September 2015 - 05:00 PM, said:
Kai Ashante Wilson's The Sorcerer of the Wildeeps is incredible.
Flat out fuckin' amazing.
But it's short at 224 pages. I honestly think this book would be one of the all time best novel debuts if it were 400 some pages because 224 feels like the first half of clear, impactful greatness. As it is, it's pretty great and the characters and action are so vivid. It's a very well written "caravan guard has immense depths to him that few others know and has to get everyone safely to the next destination" story.
I first heard about it from Saladin Ahmed and I was a little hesitant because Ahmed doesn't have the same tastes I do (our Venn diagrams in reading/media consumption do not overlap much), but I took a chance. It paid off gloriously.
Those looking for exquisitely written, non-white, non-cookie cutter characters will get them here.
I read this on your rec. I wouldn't put it on as high a level as you evidently did, but it's certainly a book worth reading. My main problem with it, apart from the aforementioned shortness-that-leads-to-slightness, is that
Character and writing wise it's excellent, though, and the world is very interesting.
Since you liked this, have you read anything by Martha Wells? It reminded me of what I've read of hers a
lot. To the point where if I hadn't already known who it's by, the only thing that would have definitively given away that it isn't her is the vernacular of the brothers, which I'm pretty sure isn't her style (that talk took a while to get used to in this setting, gotta say. Worked fine in the end, though), and the sarcastic footnotes.
I read the first chapter of Twelve Kings of Sharakai and wasn't enthused. Given that I didn't much enjoy, despite greatly liking the premise, the first book of Beaulieau's previous series, The Winds of Khalakovo, I don't think I'll be carrying on any time soon.
This post has been edited by polishgenius: 24 September 2015 - 08:40 PM
I can't carry it for you, but I can carry you.