The "do you like it" IS the most important criterion. Others are important as well. A 'likable' author can be good or bad, but an 'unlikable' one can never be good. The problem is that 'likable' is subjective and so easily ignored by those who want to quantify everything.
The problem with most modern art in my opinion is that the critics are too obsessed with prose and metaphors and the use of artistic devices, etc. all of which are important but ignores the big picture and things that aren't so easily quantifiable. It is as people were judged as being athletic based only on the size of their muscles and track speed. If we did that every athlete would look like a body builder but wouldn't be able to dribble a ball. That is how I feel about modern art and about criticism in general.
The problem with most modern art in my opinion is that the critics are too obsessed with prose and metaphors and the use of artistic devices, etc. all of which are important but ignores the big picture and things that aren't so easily quantifiable. It is as people were judged as being athletic based only on the size of their muscles and track speed. If we did that every athlete would look like a body builder but wouldn't be able to dribble a ball. That is how I feel about modern art and about criticism in general.
The thing for me is that only a fraction of literature falls under Art, accidental or intentional. It can be accidental in the sense that the writer is so special and great that whatever his or her ambitions or intents, the books can be considered Art. Tom summed up well what a book needs to be considered a work of art: a significant aesthetic value, an exceptional mastery or a very unique and personal use of language, a depth of thoughts and ideas. Another criteria would be some personal contribution to the form, the "Art of Writing".
Personally, I just refuse to agree that for a writer to be considered "good" his work needs to have artistic significance, that the writer absolutely needs to be an author. Not every writer is an artist. Storytelling is also a craft, and there are many very good craftsmen who rather than push the boundaries will work within them. I don't agree these works should be judged with the same criterias used for Art. I find it completely absurd to measure Jordan's skills with those of artists like Nabokov, Borges, Flaubert, Proust etc. All they have in common with Jordan is the use of writing as a medium. Unlike him, these authors all considered themselves artists, and beside or beyond providing entertainment or pleasure of reading, they had artistic ambitions. Jordan would have been the first one to state right off the bat he saw himself as a crafstman of writing and aimed to entertain, give his readers a good time with a storym and had no artistic ambitions. He chose a level of language he was comfortable with andthought well-suited to his storytelling needs (and it was old fashioned and conventional) etc. We'll never know if he could write an artistic novel, he never tried to write one. We'll never know if he could write deeply psychological characters, he said himself he didn't want to have those in WOT!
It's the same with movies. I always laugh when critics approach an American blockbuster the same way they approach an auteur movie, when they judge movie stars' performances the same way they do actors'. It's the same confusion between craftsmen and artists. Auteur cinema is by definition Art, from good to atrocious. But cinema is also entertainment and a craft, and in Hollywood it is most often just that, and intentionally. There are excellent craftsmen among American directors, and only a handful who are true artists, even less who are significant ones. Of course, moviemaking like writing is an artistic craft and involve artistic disciplines, but most of it isn't Art, nor should be judged as such. You judge a blockbuster primarly by how pleasing and entertaining it is, how well the director master this aspect of the craft. The living pinacle of this type of directors who excel at their craft but aren't artists (or more properly, who did only a very few movies with artistic ambitions) is probably Steven Spielberg. Lucas began his career as an artistic director (the guy who directed THX-113
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In general it's why I usually stay away from debates about Jordan's value as a writer. In my eyes, he's a craftsman and a fairly succesful one - a storyteller with a great imagination who managed quite well to keep me entertained for many hours over the years. He's not the only one. In the same "genre", Tolkien, Erickson, Martin and a few others have entertained and stirred me in a very similar way (and I don't worship Tolkien the way some do. His English was certainly more elegant and pleasing, in an archaic and heavygoing kind of way, but in my view Tolkien was at best average as a novelist and that's charitable. His themes are overall naive and occasionally simplistic. His genius was elsewhere, in the depth of his imagination, in the depth of his understanding of archaic literature and mythology, in his knowledge of Language and the imaginative way he managed to incorporate language in his worldbuilding and his "magic". There was certainly a great depth of thought there.)
When I seek literature that will make me think, feed me intellectually or widen my horizons (which I do quite often, as it happens), I just very rarely pick something from the bookcase my Fantasy books are on. IMO Jordan has more depth than some think - and the layers beneath his story are of some interest for sure, IMO, but WOT is primarly meant to be entertainment, and IMO should be judged as such - by how well it succeeds at keeping the readers entertained. In this perspective, Jordan managed really well with me, in part out of his skills, in part because of special affinities and interests (I love extremely detailed stuff), so for me he's definitely a good writer. The next guy will be bored by WOT and think otherwise, and that's just fine. When it comes to entertainment, I don't think universal canons of what is to be judged good or bad truly apply. It's very much a question of personal tastes. Canons and standards apply much better to Art (to an extent, because the personal value of an artistic work is also very subjective and often has as much to do with the audience as with the artist.).
Can someone explain to me how Jordan is not a particularly good writer?
21/02/2011 05:41:31 PM
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I personally see it as more of RJ being a fantastic story teller, but not a well structured writer.
21/02/2011 06:44:21 PM
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Re: I personally see it as more of RJ being a fantastic story teller, but not a well structured
22/02/2011 10:59:25 PM
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What do you think about the Southern Gothic authors?
23/02/2011 08:08:26 AM
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Re: What do you think about the Southern Gothic authors?
23/02/2011 10:51:57 AM
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For the same reason that most people think they have above average intelligence.
21/02/2011 11:13:34 PM
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Re: For the same reason that most people think they have above average intelligence. *NM*
22/02/2011 02:39:20 PM
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Re: For the same reason that most people think they have above average intelligence.
22/02/2011 02:41:37 PM
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That's possibly the best explanation of literary criticism I've ever seen.
23/02/2011 02:47:12 AM
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I can take a shot at that, since nobody else seems willing to.
22/02/2011 07:29:20 AM
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Re: I can take a shot at that, since nobody else seems willing to.
22/02/2011 11:23:38 PM
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That has very little to do with anything unless you can provide a real-world analogy to a channeler.
22/02/2011 11:30:52 PM
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Re: That has very little to do with anything unless you can provide a real-world analogy to a
23/02/2011 12:02:24 AM
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As far as I'm concerned, the only way to gauge whether an author is good or not is ...
22/02/2011 03:58:17 PM
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Re: Can someone explain to me how Jordan is not a particularly good writer?
22/02/2011 06:27:11 PM
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I think it has more to do with limitations imposed by how the story was organized and edited.
22/02/2011 07:50:18 PM
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That's interesting, and I have a weird agree/disagree here; also, that Adam Roberts sucks
23/02/2011 02:15:12 AM
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Re: That's interesting, and I have a weird agree/disagree here; also, that Adam Roberts sucks
23/02/2011 11:02:14 AM
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adam roberts reviews
23/02/2011 03:53:49 AM
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And I suspect those who prefer the BS books are those who largely read WoT for the story. *NM*
23/02/2011 08:06:16 AM
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Oh GAWD!... not another pointer to Robert Adam's incoherant muckraking
24/02/2011 07:47:35 PM
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I think DomA answered the question best, but the "do you like it" argument is weak.
22/02/2011 10:32:51 PM
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Re: I think DomA answered the question best, but the "do you like it" argument is weak.
22/02/2011 11:16:24 PM
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The Necronomicon isn't actually a book, you know.
*NM*
22/02/2011 11:28:29 PM
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There are nine, actually...
23/02/2011 12:04:55 AM
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Lovecraft's Necronomicon was fictitious. If you want to count fanfiction, fine. *NM*
23/02/2011 12:38:07 AM
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Based on how poorly worded that response was, I'm not sure what to think of it. *NM*
23/02/2011 12:13:00 AM
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I hope I am misunderstanding you.
23/02/2011 10:57:47 PM
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Re: I hope I am misunderstanding you.
24/02/2011 10:41:09 AM
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If the core of the story is all that matters, why read a book
24/02/2011 10:32:01 PM
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Re: If the core of the story is all that matters, why read a book
24/02/2011 11:23:42 PM
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So wait, style is good?
25/02/2011 12:32:07 AM
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That depends...
23/02/2011 03:00:35 AM
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I didn't say aesthetics was the primary criterion. I named three criteria.
23/02/2011 05:39:03 AM
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the "do you like it" is the most important criterion
23/02/2011 10:45:17 PM
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Re: the "do you like it" is the most important criterion
24/02/2011 01:53:59 AM
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Thumbs up - IMHO, all discussion can end here
28/02/2011 05:45:34 PM
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If you don't mind me asking...
24/02/2011 01:05:12 AM
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I don't mind that you ask, but I'm not going to engage in a defense of literature.
24/02/2011 05:35:27 PM
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Re: I don't mind that you ask, but I'm not going to engage in a defense of literature.
24/02/2011 11:26:55 PM
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I'm sure you have a wonderful job awaiting in fast food service.
25/02/2011 01:57:15 AM
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Re: I'm sure you have a wonderful job awaiting in fast food service.
25/02/2011 08:56:06 AM
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...
25/02/2011 01:07:22 AM
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It is not a serious question.
25/02/2011 01:53:59 AM
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Is that so?
25/02/2011 05:58:31 AM
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I'm not fixated with Jordan.
25/02/2011 03:13:56 PM
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Then why do you keep trying to qualify the passage in relation to him?
25/02/2011 06:29:31 PM
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You're conflating two things.
25/02/2011 07:32:59 PM
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All right, now we're getting somewhere.
26/02/2011 12:40:57 AM
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Okay, here you go. I am giving you the benefit of the doubt as to your sincerity.
26/02/2011 03:20:44 PM
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Thank you, and I agree with all your explanations. *NM*
26/02/2011 07:28:09 PM
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No, it is a serious question, just one that can never be seriously answered.
25/02/2011 03:28:48 PM
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Your opinion isn't as valid as anyone else's if that's your opinion.
25/02/2011 04:44:57 PM
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Re: Your opinion isn't as valid as anyone else's if that's your opinion.
25/02/2011 06:05:18 PM
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I'm not wasting my time proving something to an internet moron and troll like you.
25/02/2011 07:36:19 PM
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Ah yes, the wonderful "dissmiss the person who disagrees with me by insulting him tactic"
28/02/2011 02:30:35 PM
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Re: Your opinion isn't as valid as anyone else's if that's your opinion.
26/02/2011 11:06:26 AM
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Re: I find this whole thing elitist and more than a bit silly
23/02/2011 06:45:05 AM
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Why do you think mind-expanding literature is restricted to the classics?
23/02/2011 08:03:59 AM
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Re: Why do you think mind-expanding literature is restricted to the classics?
23/02/2011 09:25:10 AM
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Of course people read for pleasure.
23/02/2011 09:04:24 PM
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Ok...
24/02/2011 08:59:27 AM
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"Yeah well, that's, like, just your opinion, man." Good argument.
24/02/2011 03:43:24 PM
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I'm curious to hear who Tom and DomA consider a "very good writer"?
24/02/2011 05:49:13 PM
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Among living writers?
24/02/2011 08:16:08 PM
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My list would be similar...
26/02/2011 07:24:11 AM
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That was a very good list.
26/02/2011 03:07:31 PM
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Re: That was a very good list.
27/02/2011 04:51:43 AM
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Oh, and another question
27/02/2011 05:28:47 PM
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Re: Oh, and another question
01/03/2011 03:42:02 AM
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I think the two of you have taken too narrow a meaning of 'great'
27/02/2011 11:14:30 AM
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Re: I think the two of you have taken too narrow a meaning of 'great'
28/02/2011 11:51:49 PM
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Re: I think the two of you have taken too narrow a meaning of 'great'
03/03/2011 12:01:30 AM
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Re: I think the two of you have taken too narrow a meaning of 'great'
03/03/2011 02:17:06 PM
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He's a great storyteller, but his prose is somewhat uninspiring. *NM*
27/02/2011 07:28:00 PM
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