The Sword and Laser discussion
Scifi / Fantasy News
>
Name of Wind Optioned for TV
date
newest »


But I'm not so sure that Name of the Wind will translate that well to a 40 minute format with it's story within a story within a story concept.


I second that opinion. And at the risk of being heretical, Kvothe is just so damn annoying. They'd have to perform some serious personality surgery to make him more appealing. To me, anyway. Because, clearly, I am the target audience.





I'm not even going to get into Denna.
The best thing about that book was the world building. If there had been more time spent on that, rather than on Kvothe's quasi narcissism, it might have been a better read.

You say the first person narration had nothing to do with it, but then you talk about his narcissism, and of course they're connected. He's recounting the story of his life, and he was a world-shaker.

He's rather arrogant and that's why I don't care for him. At least in the actual first-person parts. The interludes when he's the innkeeper are much better. He's humble and you can tell he's been brought down a few pegs.

That was my point when I said it had nothing to do with it. I will amend it to say, the narrative choice had very little to do with my view of Kvothe.

You take a staple fantasy badass character like Conan, clearing a taproom because of a comment, then drinking it dry after. That scene gets told from the omniscient point of view, maybe we think Conan is a dillhole, or a badass, a mean drunk or a Mary Sue who can beat odds no human could. But you get the same scene from the first-person, and you see firsthand the reckless confidence of someone who would do something like that. The :
"Fuck it. I'm just going to beat the teeth out of every person in this room. No one talks to me like that."
Line of thought, that would have to be there, but is omitted in the omniscient retelling of the scene. Of course that colours the way we look at the character, because it forces us to confront that aspect.
I look at Kvothe's scenes at the University, and I hear his retelling as someone talking about what a know-it-all dumbass he used to be. Young Kvothe's arrogance is shown through the filter of Kote's regret.

You're definitely right in saying that a first person POV can heighten the reading experience. It can bring an emotional intensity and immediacy to a story in a way that a limited third, or omniscient can't. I just didn't find that it did that here.
Ultimately I think it comes down to the author's ability to render a sympathetic portrayal. If you want my main reason for not caring for the book, then there it is: I don't find it well-written. Kvothe is obviously thrilling to everyone around him, so as a reader I want to feel a little star-struck too. In this case all I felt was mild annoyance at Kvothe's probable Mary Sue-ness. Those traits would have been there regardless of how the story was told.
The first person narrative is limited by what the POV character knows, and it tends to easily slip into telling rather than showing. It's a great device to use, but something about the story has to demand it (like the paranoia of "A Tell-Tale Heart," for example), and it takes skill to do well. Kvothe is annoying because he's not skillfully written, not because he narrates his own story.
Since it's an opinion, I'm not looking for agreement. There are a lot of people in love with this book; I'm just not one of them.

I came here to post this, amazed that I would be the first....only to find that I didn't get notified about this....or about 30 other threads that got updated.
Anyway, as with all things when they get announced...I'm cautiously optimistic on it. It will be interesting to see how they weave in the "current day" stuff with the "actual story" stuff...because that current day stuff is pretty important (I think...I guess we'll see?). It will also be interesting to see how (if) they can really capture Kvothe's brilliance and stupidity...


Everytime I'm left scratching my head and wondering if I've read the same books as the people who claim that Kvothe is "perfect." Dude has some serious character flaws and a life filled with pain and problems, a lot of them caused by himself. Not exactly my definition of perfect but YMMV.
Anyway, I'm slightly optimistic, but only because I believe Rothfuss wouldn't have signed any deals if he didn't have full faith that it'd turn out alright.
It's fox though. So even if it's greenlit, they will cancel it.