This was the book that got me into the series in the first place. Up to that point, the longest series I had read in the fantasy genre was "Dragonlance". I do find myself agreeing with his critiques, even while I acknowledge that I was so young at that time that nostalgia still makes me give a nod of satisfaction to this book compared to the prior 3.
That being said, I did always gets a "theme park/amusement ride" feel from "The Wheel of Time" - I actually thought it was set in a Western, frontier American setting for the longest time due to this book's cover, and I was initially interested because it wasn't the same old quasi-medieval fantasy that other books were.
But most of us readers already know two main things about Robert Jordan's writing style, so I think long-time readers are willing to forgive weaknesses in these areas. Those two things are 1) He doesn't know how to write or convey a good villain without making them seem like super-villains from a comic book or "James Bond" movie complete with individualized quirks and gimmicks and 2) He doesn't know how or want to write sex scenes or romance scenes favoring a very conservative approach (ie: loads of scenes of women bathing, scenes of women getting naked and intimations that a male has an erection). But do we really want the romance scenes to resemble a Harlequin romance? Personally, I would have preferred him to concentrate on strengthening his battle scenes especially with the Power.
That being said, I did always gets a "theme park/amusement ride" feel from "The Wheel of Time" - I actually thought it was set in a Western, frontier American setting for the longest time due to this book's cover, and I was initially interested because it wasn't the same old quasi-medieval fantasy that other books were.
But most of us readers already know two main things about Robert Jordan's writing style, so I think long-time readers are willing to forgive weaknesses in these areas. Those two things are 1) He doesn't know how to write or convey a good villain without making them seem like super-villains from a comic book or "James Bond" movie complete with individualized quirks and gimmicks and 2) He doesn't know how or want to write sex scenes or romance scenes favoring a very conservative approach (ie: loads of scenes of women bathing, scenes of women getting naked and intimations that a male has an erection). But do we really want the romance scenes to resemble a Harlequin romance? Personally, I would have preferred him to concentrate on strengthening his battle scenes especially with the Power.
I think your last point is a key one here in considering what he's saying. He's speaking as someone who is new to the series and it is rare to see someone (even rarer, him being an author as well) review each of those books shortly after reading them for the first time. I wonder how many perspectives have been shaped in forums like this to the point where such a "new" viewpoint (new in the sense of the reviewer not being exposed to various takes over a long period of time) feels so wrong-headed because it has been something that's been argued over for a period of years (decades?)
Considering how things are progressing there, didn't want you to get your head ripped off unknowingly by others
Illusions fall like the husk of a fruit, one after another, and the fruit is experience. - Narrator, Sylvie
Je suis méchant.
Je suis méchant.
Professor Roberts reads "The Shadow Rising"
02/04/2010 02:38:57 PM
- 1412 Views
Well, I was keeping his reviews in one thread way down below...
02/04/2010 09:44:42 PM
- 614 Views
Sorry - I thought you stopped at the 1st review!
02/04/2010 09:49:25 PM
- 645 Views
No problem
02/04/2010 09:53:37 PM
- 731 Views
More garbage.
02/04/2010 11:59:13 PM
- 737 Views