Abyss, on 02 January 2017 - 04:21 AM, said:
Briar King, on 02 January 2017 - 04:04 AM, said:
I seem to be blasting Safehold quite a bit considering how much I love it but Weber is grating on my last nerve with endless dialogue repeats. Ex: at the end of countless chapters someone will say a random line.."Neither am I." a sentence will pass then again they repeat themselves "Neither am I." I seriously can't count how many times a ch has ended this way but it gets fucking annoying! Not enjoying 6 very much at 125 pgs in. To many info dumps and to many back to back pgs dealing with tech issues in factories. Seriously I don't care about Fire oil seed trees and fire vines or how to make this and that. Just get on with it! 6 has been worse then bk 4 so far.
New to Weber, are we?
Andorion, on 02 January 2017 - 06:46 AM, said:
Briar King, on 02 January 2017 - 04:43 AM, said:
Yes it's my 1st time with him. He does that repeat shit in others? I can see why giving the story of Safehold he's including this tech stuff but he can certainly go on and on and on with boring info dumps.
He's on my radar to read others by him but after I finish Safehold it's going to be awhile before I start another series by him
When the story is actually moving is fun as fuck.
I did warn you about the infodumps BK.
He loves to do long internal monologue infodumps, huge tech developments and religion and society issues. And he likes to centre these around a military narrative.
Yep.
I have read a LOT of Weber, from back when Baen Books gave away its massive back catalog for free and like half the books were Weber and half the remainder were his cowriter protégés like Ringo, White, etc.
He is a genius at setting the stage for conflict, at taking very basic world building concepts and making them fun/interesting, and at writing action.
His characters, dialogue, interpersonal conflict, plot advancement, are basically the same in each book, give or take an overly ambitious junior officer and a moustache twirling villain here or there.
I maxed out eventually, but they were fun reads - the BAHZELL books are stupidly enjoyable fantasy, and STARS AT WAR is a study in how to up the conflict levels in each successive book in a series when the first book has massive space armadas blasting the living fuckstars out of each other. Just have to temper your expectations and know when to take a break.