Fantasy Book Club discussion
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Have We Reached A Saturation Point?
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hmm, IIRC, Orcs are not "natural" creatures. They are birthed via evil and torturous means. The making of Orcs require the rape, torture and death of Elves. In addition, any Orc found outside of their caves have been "raised" to destroy and have either taught or inherent evil actions. AFAIK Orcs cannot reproduce themselves - thus they are not a "race" and (for me, at least) removes the entire idea of racism.

If there's a message in Tolkien, it's that all power corrupts. [Or, I suppose, that any desire, no matter how good in itself, will turn the user to evil if they have enough power, unless they completely free themselves of pride]
I think you see Tolkien as 'optimistic', except in the most remote and theological way, you haven't read the Silmarillion recently...

I agree with this. Plus The Children of Húrin. Oh, gosh. I own a copy but I can't bring myself to read it. I know it's heart-rending.


After reading book one of peridido street nation, I'd say I was blown away by mievile's imagination but the book fell short in so many other areas for me.

I stopped reading after the third book, too. I thought I was the only one! If you don't give me someone to connect with (or you kill them all off), there are just too many books out there with living, breathing, complex and inspiring characters that I can go and read.
This is the same reason why I couldn't even finish Perdido Street Station by Mieville. And we have other Mieville's sitting on the shelf, but I keep telling myself, if they are all gritty, all death, all dark and I don't care about anyone in the story (not to mention the bizarre insect sex), why would I spend my time reading it?
I think dark and gritty are buzzwords for the time, but as Shari Kay said, it remains to be seen if they will dominate the genre for years to come.




Quite often - in my experience - a lot of the current "gritty" books aren't actually labeled as such. I bought the Night Angel Trilogy because all my friends claimed it was "great!" and I like assassin characters. But when I got ready to read it, I discovered that it's considered grimdark, too. So it sits unread.
I also bought The Blade Itself prior to discovering GR (if it was even around then). No clue - even from the reviews I could locate - that this book and series would be depressingly grimdark with a little torture porn thrown in.
It's not quite as easy as "Just don't read them if you don't like them." There's the element of discovery and spending hard earned money as well.
One great way to make it easier would be warning labels but I know a lot of authors are offended by warning label requests.

Although I would think that, as a general rule, books about people who murder people for money are quite likely to be at least a little bit dark...

Although I would think that, as a general rule, books about people who murder people for..."
Ah, but there's dark but hopeful vs dark and depressing. :) A fine line, I know, but one that I tread regularly. My first assassin was Shadowspawn and I adored him. Shadowspawn is an assassin but he has a moral code.
I don't need rainbows, unicorns and butterflies but I need hope and no torture porn.


:-D Loved the Thieves' World series. I read the majority of them including spin offs.
You know...I have a love-hate relationship with Lythande. I loved the gender bending - it was so different from the majority of the things that I had access to at the time. I felt that the "book" was less a book and more a set of short stories cobbled together for a bit of a money grab. IDK, some of the stories were cute but very few of them memorable or worth a re-read.

Books mentioned in this topic
Shadowspawn (other topics)The Blade Itself (other topics)
The Children of Húrin (other topics)
Riddle-Master (other topics)
The Goddess's Choice (other topics)
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Writing in shades of gray (like Paul just alluded to) doesn't necessarily mean there's no evil, I'd argue that it means one has acknowledged that evil has become more pervasive and more insidiously integrated into life.