The Eye of the World
discussion
are series getting to long
date
newest »

message 1:
by
Brent
(new)
-
rated it 3 stars
Sep 29, 2015 02:12PM

reply
|
flag

One of the major problems is that I don't remember the first book well when I am reading the last book. With Martins new book coming out this year I re-read the first five books. Well surprise it is not coming out until next year. That was five other books I could have read.

I started reading the WOT series by Robert Jordan almost 20 years ago and had to reread some of the earlier ones just to pick up some threads in the plot. No surprise then that in the end there were many errors/inconsistencies in the books (See also the famous WOTFAQ).
Terry Goodkind I stopped reading as it felt as a rehash of other authors.
In general I feel that fantasy series can be longer than mere trilogies, because world building is an important factor, and this might warrant more explanations, but as Brent says, if it's a matter of churning out the same dribble again and again, it's just isn't worth it to stay with the series.

One long series that wasn't mention above is Steven Erikson's MTotF. This is not the perfect long series, but unlike WoT or SoT it doesn't stagnate. There is a core cast of characters that are present throughout, but they are just a couple of people in a vast cast and seem to be mostly present to give the reader a sense of consistency. The story itself evolves, the reader is confronted with multiple different environments, multiple different races, and multiple different stories that are all connected in some way or form to the overarching plot. On the other hand, MTotF's greatest flaw is that its too large, there is too much going on for the reader to truly grasp it all without multiple rereads.
Anyway, that's my two cents: long series are about exploring change and the passage of time.


Maybe some series are drawn out and overlong. I haven't read Goodkind, but I've been told that later books in The Sword of Truth are just additional adventures for his characters and don't add anything to the story. If authors don't have anything new to say and just want to send their popular characters on new quests because people buy the books, then I'm sure that could be too much.
It seems like you're getting confused in that OP, though. What do you mean about Sanderson having 5 books? He has two stand-alone fantasy novels and a number of stand-alone novellas. He has one self-contained trilogy. He has another series of four books (still in progress) in the same world as his trilogy but 300 years later, so it's its own thing. Then there's The Stormlight Archive, which will be ten books long, when it's completed. And almost all of his books take place within the same universe.
So there's a little something for everyone, there. If you want a one-off adventure, you can read one of the novellas or Elantris or Warbreaker. If you like shorter series, read either Mistborn series (or both). If you want a long fantasy epic, get into The Stormlight Archive. And if you're really crazy about immersive fantasy epics, you can look for the connections between all the books that make it a mega-series.
Is it the same thing over and over again? No. And, also, different series do different things. Some authors write works derivative of each other, but there's still a lot of variety. Long series don't necessarily provide the same kinds of things. The entire 14 books of The Wheel of Time only cover about 3 years. When the Stormlight Archive is through, it will probably cover 20 or 30 years in depth. Other series span centuries (L.E. Modesitt's Recluce books come to mind).







Take Brandon Sanderson, for example. He was employed to finish The Wheel of Time, but that's not his own personal work. Rather, his magnum opus is the Cosmere series, a loosely connected web of books that will eventually span at least 30 novels. Now, these are generally fast-paced adventure fantasy books. They aren't pretentious pseudo-intellectualism. But they're all part of the same story, and, yes, it really is that complex. He's not milking a cash cow. He's telling a massive story.
If that's not your thing, fine. But please realize that it is a possibility. There CAN be a story that warrants 10+ volumes. Its audience isn't just a bunch of idiots sucking up drivel from a douchebag who's milking his cash cow of a series.
all discussions on this book
|
post a new topic