Years of enjoyment. What else do you expect from fiction?
Marshall Send a noteboard - 08/10/2012 10:17:30 PM
Fiction can serve many purposes. The primary purpose, I'd say, is simply the enjoyment of immersing yourself in a made up story. It's a peek into a world vastly different from our own, one in which events take place that couldn't possibly take place here, and characters with extraordinary traits. The enjoyment of reading the series comes from reveling in their faults and virtues, the fantastic plot, and the imagination of the author.
Fiction can also be used to teach lessons, of course. WoT is full of lessons, some of which are subtle and others not so much. Tar Valon is a beautiful representation of an entity with immense power steeped far in tradition--and how its failure to change with the times brings it weakness.
Rand's lesson is one of love for humanity. It's hard to argue with this one; it's also arguably the most important lesson of the series.
Nynaeve's lesson has been one that mirrors the lesson of Sai'dar--learning not to fight directly that which is too powerful. Overcoming her block of anger was something that went hand-in-hand with her development as a person; learning to actually listen. Ironically, she's grown more as a Wisdom by becoming Aes Sedai.
Egwene and Perrin both follow similar lessons in leading.
The Seanchan gave us an amazing insight into the importance of completely disparate viewpoints. I felt this was the most GRRM-like writing he did, showing (what we considered) complete bad-guys, owning slaves, and we somewhat understood their point of view. Doesn't come close to the 180 that readers turn with the likes of Jaime Lannister, but it's the closest we get. GRRM has very few totally evil personalities, but they are in there.
Overall, I got great joy in reading the series and also following the theories online. I'll be sad when it's over for sure, but we've all grown quite a bit older as the series as progressed, and it can't go on forever.
Fiction can also be used to teach lessons, of course. WoT is full of lessons, some of which are subtle and others not so much. Tar Valon is a beautiful representation of an entity with immense power steeped far in tradition--and how its failure to change with the times brings it weakness.
Rand's lesson is one of love for humanity. It's hard to argue with this one; it's also arguably the most important lesson of the series.
Nynaeve's lesson has been one that mirrors the lesson of Sai'dar--learning not to fight directly that which is too powerful. Overcoming her block of anger was something that went hand-in-hand with her development as a person; learning to actually listen. Ironically, she's grown more as a Wisdom by becoming Aes Sedai.
Egwene and Perrin both follow similar lessons in leading.
The Seanchan gave us an amazing insight into the importance of completely disparate viewpoints. I felt this was the most GRRM-like writing he did, showing (what we considered) complete bad-guys, owning slaves, and we somewhat understood their point of view. Doesn't come close to the 180 that readers turn with the likes of Jaime Lannister, but it's the closest we get. GRRM has very few totally evil personalities, but they are in there.
Overall, I got great joy in reading the series and also following the theories online. I'll be sad when it's over for sure, but we've all grown quite a bit older as the series as progressed, and it can't go on forever.
So when the book/series ends, what will it have all meant?
08/10/2012 09:47:49 PM
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Years of enjoyment. What else do you expect from fiction?
08/10/2012 10:17:30 PM
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HAHAHA!
08/10/2012 10:17:58 PM
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Yeah, the use of my time does matter
09/10/2012 02:45:15 AM
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Not sure I'd call it mindless
09/10/2012 02:53:00 AM
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Well, it is a bit more complex than a D&D novel
09/10/2012 02:55:40 AM
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I'm not really a huge fiction reader to begin with
09/10/2012 11:25:34 PM
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I've noticed that quite a few here/wotmania have not been big fiction (fantasy) readers
11/10/2012 05:48:02 AM
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Re: I've noticed that quite a few here/wotmania have not been big fiction (fantasy) readers
12/10/2012 05:11:20 PM
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Well... it's a bit late in the game...
09/10/2012 02:04:16 AM
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True, but it's never too late to ask people such questions
09/10/2012 02:49:28 AM
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I'm not sure...
09/10/2012 06:03:08 AM
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Well, we may be in closer agreement then
09/10/2012 06:43:50 PM
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There's a reason for this...
09/10/2012 02:11:21 AM
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True
09/10/2012 02:54:12 AM
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Re: True
09/10/2012 06:19:42 AM
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I am now visualizing WoT as a telenovela adaptation
09/10/2012 06:59:11 PM
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everything about Lanfear screams TeleNovela!
11/10/2012 04:38:03 AM
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Por ella, soy Luisa Therin?
11/10/2012 05:44:32 AM
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It is a tale, told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.
09/10/2012 02:21:20 PM
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It also has Faulknerian allusions
09/10/2012 07:04:55 PM
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BTW, did you see the Folio Society's color-coded The Sound and the Fury?
10/10/2012 08:06:18 PM
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Re: BTW, did you see the Folio Society's color-coded The Sound and the Fury?
10/10/2012 09:39:56 PM
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No, but I'll keep it in mind for the future when I have more money to spare
11/10/2012 05:49:52 AM
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It sold out fast. They might reprint it, though.
11/10/2012 03:45:20 PM
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Hopefully, that or it won't be more than $200 when I do have the money to spare
11/10/2012 05:53:20 PM
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Re: So when the book/series ends, what will it have all meant?
11/10/2012 10:52:01 AM
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Ah, where would we be without such bright lights like you around?
11/10/2012 05:59:48 PM
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It will have meant.. .
11/10/2012 06:59:43 PM
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So...
11/10/2012 07:05:41 PM
- 800 Views
For me, yes.
11/10/2012 07:45:25 PM
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