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He is a "worldbuilder" first, author second. The landscape was initially supposed to be used for more stories, but he's gotta get over that hump if he wants to succeed at that inital thought.I've heard quite a few theorize this, which may be part of the delay, he just doesnt know what to do and feels stuck to the trilogy. I've also heard that this trilogy could be an intro to an even bigger series
Robin Hobb is my utmost favorite. Her Realm of the Elderlings is my all time favorite series. No series has come close to making me feel for these characters like this. Untold amount of tears have been shed
The last few hundred pages for me were very slow because I had to take breaks, the tears kept coming. They have come a lot over the whole series, but that last push was rough.Gawd Iām usually a reasonably stoic reader but the last two Hobb books each turned the taps on, for opposite reasons. I would love to see her return to this world.![]()
Agreed, 1984 was a good, thought-provoking read, and Fahrenheit 451 was so dull.Never cared much for 1984's oft-mentioned counterparts: Brave New World, the Chrysalids, or Fahrenheit 451.
I am so excited for you. Wish I could wipe my memory and start fresh.I finished WoT fairly recently and I've started Malazan Book of the Fallen, just had book 2 arrive in the mail today. Excited to rip through it, heard there are some fantastic battle scenes in it.
I'd heard it was a very difficult read but I'm not having a problem with it (yet!).I am so excited for you. Wish I could wipe my memory and start fresh.
I haven't. A friend has sent me the first two and I've read Tress of the Emerald Sea, which for all the obvious Wizard of Oz parallels I thought was right up there with the best that he's written from a prose perspective. It actually felt like I was reading something written by Neil Gaiman rather than Brandon Sanderson, which is absolutely a compliment.Buuuuuump.
Has anyone else read Brandon Sanderson's secret project 3? Yumi and the Nightmare Painter?
I just finished it and it might be his best stand alone book. The tone, the world building, the whole package was incredible and though I do not have many physical books anymore, I'm strongly considering the hard cover for this. The artwork through out is so beautiful.
I have read some classic sci fi recently. As part of that I read 1984 for the first time and really thought it was excellent. It's almost a shame that it's repeatedly referenced by the "1984 has basically come true" people online, because not only is that not really accurate, but the book deserves much more considered discussion than that.Agreed, 1984 was a good, thought-provoking read, and Fahrenheit 451 was so dull.
Agreed! It's not just about surveillance, which is what most people seem to mean when they say that. I doubt most people who refer to it have even read it, though.It's almost a shame that it's repeatedly referenced by the "1984 has basically come true" people online, because not only is that not really accurate, but the book deserves much more considered discussion than that.
It's absolutely inevitably the case that most people who reference it haven't read it.Agreed! It's not just about surveillance, which is what most people seem to mean when they say that. I doubt most people who refer to it have even read it, though.