I finished The Hallowed Hunt yesterday, the latest of Lois McMaster Bujold's new set of fantasy novels, which I have been enjoying quite a bit. (I say 'set' rather than 'series' because they have a common setting, but they're standalone books, not a trilogy or anything.)
Anyway, aside from her usual excellent pacing, plotting, and writing, I think what's really neat about the books is that she develops an interesting cosmology, with gods that exist and can meddle, and then works through a lot of the logical consequences. But it's still a low-magic setting, with room for religious disagreement, petty villainy, doubt, misunderstanding, and all the other normal drivers of drama. No need for Forces of Darkness, just fallible, imperfect humans.
Highly recommended.
Anyway, aside from her usual excellent pacing, plotting, and writing, I think what's really neat about the books is that she develops an interesting cosmology, with gods that exist and can meddle, and then works through a lot of the logical consequences. But it's still a low-magic setting, with room for religious disagreement, petty villainy, doubt, misunderstanding, and all the other normal drivers of drama. No need for Forces of Darkness, just fallible, imperfect humans.
Highly recommended.
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Date: 2006-08-01 02:06 pm (UTC)It's just so nice - and so dang unusual - to have somebody who writes SF and fantasy without an axe to clumsily grind (her points come across just fine), with fundamental skills of writing and plot and pacing and character development well-mastered, and without pretentiousness*. She's not The Perfect Author, but she's awfully close.
And yeah, that's an interesting point - that in Lois, like in the real world and unlike other fantasy, we frankly don't need a Dark Force that's worse than our own shortsighted clumsiness.
(* - Most fantasy authors make me want to say, "I've read J.R.R. Tolkein. I know J.R.R. Tolkein. And you're no J.R.R. Tolkein.")
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Date: 2006-08-01 04:57 pm (UTC)I'm pondering how well the cosmology would work for an RPG...
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Date: 2006-08-01 05:20 pm (UTC)The thing I found most interesting about Chalion is the demon possession aspect that rules their magic. I'm also a big fan of heresy. I think my mother would really enjoy these books, but I'm not sure how to address the demon possession issue with her.
Bujold has a book in a new series out this fall, The Sharing Knife.
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Date: 2006-08-02 04:36 am (UTC)Actually, the one that really got me was Dennis McKiernan. I read a few of his books, and they were pretty good— barring the occasional "character gives the author's lecture" that I was still too young to spot reliably— and I kept hearing about his award-winning Iron Tower trilogy. So I finally tracked those down.
And they were almost point-for-point LOTR. Right down to escaping into the abandoned dwarf mine with the kraken at the door.
What offended me was not so much that he'd written those books, nor that someone had published them. It was the "award-winning" that drove me nuts. Some fools had the audacity to give awards for a retread? Give me a break.
So yeah. I don't like Tolkienesque fantasy. Mainly because I've read so many good fantasy authors who developed their own worlds. Melanie Rawn. C.S. Friedman. K.J. Parker. Terry Pratchett. (And I'll even give a pass to Barbara Hambly, whose ideological axe seems to be the truly awful status of women in history through fantasy, because she writes very good stories around that.)
I also like Mark Anthony, but since I know the guy, I'm definitely biased. Very David Eddings-like in tone but not in plot.
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Date: 2006-08-01 04:17 pm (UTC)I know you know about Dave Duncan, since you introduced me to him, but here's a plug for his cosmology-structured magic systems. Have you read Martha Wells's Wheel of the Infinite?
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Date: 2006-08-01 04:56 pm (UTC)I haven't read Martha Wells. I will check it out, thanks!