Morgoth, on 24 January 2012 - 07:56 PM, said:
Imperial Historian, on 24 January 2012 - 04:16 PM, said:
I had a pretty similar problem with tBotNS, and another book by Gene Wolfe the Wizard Knight to the point where I gave up on both books, Wolfe's style just doesn't seem to work for me. I get the whole the surface isn't what it appears to be, and that the narrator is unreliable, and there were lots of hints of stuff going on beneath the surface which kept me reading but I just couldn't get over the fact that it was incredibly painful to read. The fact that this is an artistic choice by Wolfe doesn't make the writing any more fun to read, it's still a typical example of bad writing, ableit with a cleverer writer trying to hide stuff among this. I can see why some people like it, and I may give him another chance at some point, but it got to the point where it was a chore to read more at which point I had to give up.
Bad writing? Wolfe is by far one of, if not the greatest living master of prose within the fantasy sci fi genre. You might not like his writing, I've for instance never been able to enjoy Dostoyevsky's prose, but to claim it is bad is rather absurd.
Pretty much exactly what I was about to say. Every other point you make is, to my mind, valid and understandable as he can be difficult, but I would argue vehemently than it is never, ever bad writing. Quite, the opposite, in fact. I believe that most people, lay and professional, lovers of the genre and critics alike, would agree that he is a superbly talented writer. For me, he truly pushes the boundaries of what is possible, exploring styles that others wouldn't dare, and his skill is such that he succeeds far more than he fails. None of his writing is, however, 'bad'.
Anyway, on topic, reading Orb, Sceptre, Throne and it is starting to pick up after a shaky start.