The Sword and Laser discussion

This topic is about
Elantris
2011 Reads
>
Elantris: Anyone else give up on Elantris the first time around?
message 1:
by
Benjamin
(new)
-
rated it 2 stars
Nov 24, 2011 03:54AM

reply
|
flag


I'm liking it very much (30% into the book). Maybe it's different when you have read other Sanderson books? I don't know if his style has changed or anything and expectations are different. But for me, this is a pretty quick and easy read.

I agree Anne. I'm a Sanderson newbie as well. If I can get my family to stop making me play scrabble (a Holiday tradition) then maybe I'll get some time to read and finish this selection.

It felt like Cinderella with some role reversals.
I kept expecting some singing dwarves to come marching around the corner. It wasn't a bad book. Just that there are too many good ones still on my shelf to spend time ploughing through this sort.

I've read his two Wheel of Time books but this is my first attempt at one of his original stories and I'm frankly bored by it. Don't care about the characters, don't care about the world, want to read something else.



One of my gripes is that it doesn't actually change much. It didn't progress. Having read other stuff by Sanderson, I was excited to read this. I even kind of enjoyed it early on. But as the book progressed, I was less and less excited. I felt like I had to drag myself to it and force myself to finish the book.
I read it originally after reading his mistborn trilogy, which I enjoyed. It felt completely different and a bit clunky and rushed. Short enough to read in a day, and still pretty enjoyable for what it was.
But yeah, it is his weakest work and obviously his rookie entry.
But yeah, it is his weakest work and obviously his rookie entry.

But honestly this was the last Sanderson book next to Alloy of Law that I read/listened to. I made it through though I've never put a book down after four chapters so that doesn't say much.
I think I said in my review but I feel it would have been more solid if the princess was removed as a viewpoint and perhaps made the Yern (Rathen?) the female viewpoint instead.




(No disputing taste)
Seems like people either love it or hate it.
Which is better then a bland golf clap.




Democratic Process!
*cues the "Don't blame me, I voted for ..." crowd*
Wasn't my choice but I read it anyway. I do think Sanderson's Mistborn books are better, as is the work he's done on the Wheel of Time series. Elantris was his first book...and I think it shows.

How did this get picked? Welp. This is a pretty big club, so tastes are going to vary at times. Not everyone is going to enjoy every book.
Chalk it up as a miss and hope for a hit next time.
Chalk it up as a miss and hope for a hit next time.

I realize tastes differ, I just hope that the next time an older book is chosen there's a little more acclaim behind it (i.e. Shadow and Claw)
Heh, I disliked Shadow & Claw. Go figure :P

I'm with you there. I wanted to like it but couldn't even finish the thing.
As far as Elantris goes, it was actually my first introduction to Sanderson and found myself enjoying it right away.

I recently went to a book signing for Alloy of Law (Brandon is the nicest guy, by the way. He was so generous with his time, made me like him all the more!) and he talked about how he started writing.
He wrote 13 books before he got published; Elantris was number 6, and the other 12 he scrapped!!! So I'm willing to cut him some slack because it isn't up to the Way of Kings standards! :)



The characters are not super strong, tend to be a little one-note, and don't really grow or change all that much in the course of the novel. However, that didn't prevent me from enjoying this a lot when I read it, and I blew through it really quickly, actually. It was good enough to get me into Sanderson's work, which I think says enough. Definitely not the greatest novel I've ever read, but worth the time in my mind.

It turned out to be a decent book but you have to give it time and then you should be pleased. I know I was!

You know, even though I read the book only a short while ago, putting it in this context explains it all. Raoden (spelling...) is OBVIOUSLY Link from Legend of Zelda. He also gets followed around by balls of light...




Sam, once you get to Way of Kings, your mind is going to be blown!

Compared to the later Sanderson works it is lacking some character development and certainly doesn't feel connected to his broader Cosmere storyline but it's still fun.
For those who found 2/3rds of the POVs boring, I'm curious which ones you don't like. I had the same problem my first time through and so did some friends, but I wonder if everyone is bored by the same characters.

It's an enjoyable enough book, but yeah. I think it may have been fanwanked to the over four rating it has.

Applying him to the WoT series has made his books some of my favorites in the series. It's one of the reasons that I picked this book up. I seem to remember finding this as the first adult entry in amazon when I looked him up after it was announced he would finish the WoT books.


I think you're right. I probably would have liked Elantris more the first time if I didn't have expectations from the Mistborn books. On re-read I do enjoy it more than the first time.

Now I wonder if reading this thread might place impossibly high expectations on his other series.
I intend to read Way of Kings and find out.

So I was a little surprised when Elantris started out with a very clumsy and clunky feel, until I realized from the podcast that this was his first novel. It feels like a first novel--the storytelling is good, but the writing seemed forced and stilted at the beginning until Sanderson seemed to find his voice. Then the writing gradually caught up to the storytelling and I found myself enjoying it much more.



