Christopher Buza
asked
Christopher Paolini:
I'm really interested in reading Gene Wolfe's work. I've heard people call his prose beautiful, but I've also heard the words "archaic" and "sexist" thrown around. I read your review of "Shadow and Claw," which is where I aim to start, and I was wondering what your take on these critiques is. Nonsense? Unfortunate reality? (I'm a Lovecraft fan, so I'm experienced with having to look past problematic author traits.)
Christopher Paolini
‘Archaic' isn’t a problem for me when it comes to fantasy. The genre is inherently conservative, so a certain amount of archaism is to be expected. As for ‘sexist’ . . . I’d say Lovecraft is probably more obviously offensive in that regard (he’s many things as a writer, but subtle ain’t one of them). Wolfe is primarily concerned with the use of language and with unreliable narrators. As a result, he gives short shrift to all characters outside his narrator, including of course, the women. Honestly, I haven’t read enough of his work to be able to give you a definitive answer. In fact, I feel as if I don’t entirely understand "The Book of the New Sun." It’s a densely wrought, enormously complicated hall of mirrors, and I’m still trying to decide how much to trust the main character. So . . . yeah. If you like puzzles, go for it (the language is awesome). Just realize most of the female characters aren’t going to have a whole lot of agency. But then, few people do in Wolfe’s world. For comparison, I would highly recommend "The Worm Ouroboros," by Eddison.
More Answered Questions
Rowan Hart
asked
Christopher Paolini:
Not a question, I just wanted to say that you're absolutely amazing and I hope that you're enjoying whatever you're working on now and whatever you decide to work on in the future, whether you return to Inheritance or not. Keep being awesome! Also, since I apparently need a question mark, are there going to be dinosaur aliens in your Sci-Fi?
Rachel
asked
Christopher Paolini:
This question contains spoilers…
(view spoiler)[
You described the riders of the past would get kids to walk in a line along the egg, each touching it. How would this work? How would the riders know who the hatchling hatched for? What if they got the wrong person? How long did the egg take to hatch? It took Saphira a couple months to hatch, have any eggs taken just as long/ even longer? How soon could a dragon communicate? Were some dragons 'smarter' than others?
(hide spoiler)]
Danae - WordPeace
asked
Christopher Paolini:
Hi Christopher! Just wondering which Hogwarts house you'd be sorted into and why?
Christopher Paolini
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Apr 25, 2017 05:13AM · flag