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Re: I suspect someone could later write an academic paper on the Mormon influences on his writing - Edit 1

Before modification by DomA at 07/04/2010 01:16:37 AM

I read somewhere that Sanderson has some kind of meta-theme. Like, every book he does (excluding WoT) has the same god, or same fundamental power source, or SOMETHING.

Is this ringing any bells? And where did you find this out?


Based on the bits and pieces I've read here and elsewhere, there do seem to be a few plausible parallels there in terms of a tripartite "realm" system, the nature of God, and so forth. But that could also be facile interpretations that could be shot down as well. But it certainly is interesting to a degree. Now if only the writer can develop his writing to the point of making these disparate elements seem even more intriguing than they already are, that's the trick.


He discussed some of that after a Q&A I attended, in the light of WOK (he did mention that more aspects of his system would surface in that series, and it'd be more present on the whole then it had been in Mistborn and Elantris, but IRRC not necessarily in book 1 that is more action oriented, while the next books would get more WOT/ASOIAF like). IRRC, he explained that his "cosmology" (which he didn't want to explain too much in detail beside reluctantly explaining a bit his three planes of existence for souls (IRRC), as his characters in all his books so far have a very limited understanding of this and he feels readers shouldn't know too much more than they do. It's been almost a year, but I think he explained the Kadra is an example of beings from the second "plane";) owes a great deal to his fascination with world religions and they are an aggregate of multiple influences he's gathered in his readings since he was a teen and to which he gave his own twists rather than echoing any specific faith. I recall he did mention that the greatest influence his personal faith had on his work was an enduring fascination for faith and religions in general, more than aspects of the Mormon faith he transformed, built on and translated into his fiction work. That aspect of Sazed as a scholar was very much Brandon, though his crisis of faith was something more remote to Sanderson's experience he took on as a kind of challenge: could he write convincingly someone who doesn't believe? (IRRC what he said about this)

What might be a bit "special" (it's probably not unique) about Sanderson as a Fantasy writer is that he seems more influenced and interested in the religious aspects and in anthropology than in the mythologies that come with religions. He knows his Odin and Zeus well enough, but it's when he talks of various beliefs and cosmologies etc. that he gets really passionate.

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