Hard to put it in the grand scheme of things, I'd have to do a full series reread before I could 'rank' it or anything, but I thought it was good. Maybe it was because I knew what to expect from the different writing style, but there weren't sections (like in TGS) where I had to cringe and skip over them (like rand standing and waving his fist saying 'damn you dark one!' or Cadsuane 'breaking' Semirhage). Mostly flowed pretty well.
I actually quite liked that we jumped around in time alot; I felt that, given the choice between putting all of Perrin and Mat at the start to catch up with Rand & Egwene, or putting all stories together even though one is ahead by a few weeks, I would choose the latter. Narrative flow wasn't sacrificed, and Sanderson obviously didn't think their fans were idiots and could tell the difference between 2 storylines given enough cues (ie. Tam was with 2 groups of people at once in the book, but it was clear enough what was happening when).
There were a few annoying inconsistencies, the most glaring of which was Grady telling Perrin that the taint was clean, which he did a few books ago as well.
I liked the fact that they avoided doing a Rand PoV (save the dream one in the epilogue), as it built up the mystique of the new 'balanced' Rand a bit more. I appreciated the scene where he wept in public to his father; that was really the confirming moment that he'd changed. I also appreciated that they kept the Lan sections short, as that was the most poorly written character (compared with how he'd been built up for books), and probably the hardest to write well.
I also thought the Tower of Ghenji chapters were well written, the best that Sanderson has done with Mat's character. The Aviendha memory sequences were quite compelling, and well placed in the book. The epilogue was really great, and served as a great reminder that no matter how much you get your act together as the forces of good, there's always gonna be some chaos thrown in the mix.
As far as plot developments, of course it was exciting to have some things feel like they were wrapping up (and other things opening huge question marks), but it seems like the book could have had 100 more pages and set up better thematically for a 'final' book, if they had included: a) a resolution, or at least fighting climax, of the Black Tower storyline, b) the same with the Seanchan, and c) ended with Rand meeting with the rulers of the world saying 'let's get ready to rumble' sort of thing. I'm just unsure that all of those things can be treated properly in the final book.
Anyway, pretty good, no major disappointments, just happy to see that things are finally wrapping up.
I actually quite liked that we jumped around in time alot; I felt that, given the choice between putting all of Perrin and Mat at the start to catch up with Rand & Egwene, or putting all stories together even though one is ahead by a few weeks, I would choose the latter. Narrative flow wasn't sacrificed, and Sanderson obviously didn't think their fans were idiots and could tell the difference between 2 storylines given enough cues (ie. Tam was with 2 groups of people at once in the book, but it was clear enough what was happening when).
There were a few annoying inconsistencies, the most glaring of which was Grady telling Perrin that the taint was clean, which he did a few books ago as well.
I liked the fact that they avoided doing a Rand PoV (save the dream one in the epilogue), as it built up the mystique of the new 'balanced' Rand a bit more. I appreciated the scene where he wept in public to his father; that was really the confirming moment that he'd changed. I also appreciated that they kept the Lan sections short, as that was the most poorly written character (compared with how he'd been built up for books), and probably the hardest to write well.
I also thought the Tower of Ghenji chapters were well written, the best that Sanderson has done with Mat's character. The Aviendha memory sequences were quite compelling, and well placed in the book. The epilogue was really great, and served as a great reminder that no matter how much you get your act together as the forces of good, there's always gonna be some chaos thrown in the mix.
As far as plot developments, of course it was exciting to have some things feel like they were wrapping up (and other things opening huge question marks), but it seems like the book could have had 100 more pages and set up better thematically for a 'final' book, if they had included: a) a resolution, or at least fighting climax, of the Black Tower storyline, b) the same with the Seanchan, and c) ended with Rand meeting with the rulers of the world saying 'let's get ready to rumble' sort of thing. I'm just unsure that all of those things can be treated properly in the final book.
Anyway, pretty good, no major disappointments, just happy to see that things are finally wrapping up.
Post your review of Towers of Midnight
07/11/2010 04:20:11 PM
- 10794 Views
Liked it pretty good
07/11/2010 10:34:23 PM
- 1427 Views
No Spoilers, just a review (Accidentally posted in a thread, supposed to be stand-alone review)
13/11/2010 08:41:58 AM
- 1179 Views
5/10 *spoliers*
08/11/2010 07:54:10 PM
- 1424 Views
About not sensing gholam. Nobody sensed him. It's the ability of the thing, I think *NM*
08/11/2010 08:03:45 PM
- 578 Views
You wanted MORE of Elayne's political maneuvering ?
08/11/2010 11:18:42 PM
- 1254 Views
Yes. I personally would've liked all that to be more detailed.
09/11/2010 06:11:44 PM
- 1096 Views
8/10. Fairly solid plotwise with some great moments but structurally flawed. *NM*
10/11/2010 02:46:09 PM
- 621 Views
this book made me sad, and not because it's the penultimate chapter
30/11/2010 03:27:35 AM
- 1175 Views
I'll buy that (mostly ). Got a good beat and I can dance to it; I give it a 7.
01/12/2010 02:32:59 PM
- 1319 Views
After a very long break from WoT... I'm back into it and loving it!
05/12/2010 03:08:57 AM
- 1181 Views
It was ok. Not brilliant but certainly better than a lot of the middle ones.
19/12/2010 11:28:32 AM
- 1398 Views
Solid but not great continuation of the series, both exciting and flawed
05/04/2011 08:34:48 AM
- 1166 Views