To add to the list of **** Rothfuss is doing instead of writing, they announced the Kickstarter for Tak on his blog today.
quote:
It has been over five years since Rothfuss released book 2 and we don't even have a release date for book 3. With the TV series eating up time, I'm guessing it'll be another 2-3 years before he gets book 3 out the door.
quote:quote:
It has been over five years since Rothfuss released book 2 and we don't even have a release date for book 3. With the TV series eating up time, I'm guessing it'll be another 2-3 years before he gets book 3 out the door.
I've said it before, but I think Rothfuss found himself in a position of not knowing how to finish the book and being afraid his 15 minutes of fame was/is winding down.
I think we all agree book 1 was better than book 2. If book 3 is a dud, how many people are going to continue to give him a chance or view him as highly as before?
I think he's realized and would rather milk the fame his got then to actually commit to writing something he thinks is going to ruin him.
quote:
Finished bands of mourning and I think that is the best of the series so far in the new mistborn era.
Working on calamity from the reckoners series.
quote:I'm nearing the end of Recokoners on audiobook and it is pretty gripping. Very enjoyable series.quote:
Finished bands of mourning and I think that is the best of the series so far in the new mistborn era.
Working on calamity from the reckoners series.
Brandon Sanderson wraps up a series better than anybody out there in my opinion. I finally finished the Mistborn trilogy and thought it was one of the best endings in fantasy fiction. I was very happy with the outcome of The Reckoners as well.
Also on the topic of Sanderson, Wayne is one of my favorite characters ever. He cracks me up
quote:
I've said it before, but I think Rothfuss found himself in a position of not knowing how to finish the book and being afraid his 15 minutes of fame was/is winding down.
I think we all agree book 1 was better than book 2. If book 3 is a dud, how many people are going to continue to give him a chance or view him as highly as before?
I think he's realized and would rather milk the fame his got then to actually commit to writing something he thinks is going to ruin him.
quote:As someone who's finished the series and rates it at the top, and honestly it's not even close, it's all about how immersed you let yourself get into the world he's built. Races, locations, fighting styles, politics, cultures, blah blah blah the guy thought of everything. He's also as consistent and as much of a workhorse as Sanderson. I'd constantly find myself online, sometimes in the middle of chapters, refreshing my history lessons on the Malazan world to prevent getting lost. He not only doesn't hold your hand he throws you off the high dive into the deep end and I think a lot of people strangely appreciated that.
Yeah, that was me several times. Malazan and I have a complicated relationship. I'm on book 5 and still haven't figured out why people absolutely love it....but at the same time I keep picking up the next one. I'll go for a month+ not wanting to touch it, to pounding out a couple hundred pages without putting it down.
quote:quote:quote:
It has been over five years since Rothfuss released book 2 and we don't even have a release date for book 3. With the TV series eating up time, I'm guessing it'll be another 2-3 years before he gets book 3 out the door.
I've said it before, but I think Rothfuss found himself in a position of not knowing how to finish the book and being afraid his 15 minutes of fame was/is winding down.
I think we all agree book 1 was better than book 2. If book 3 is a dud, how many people are going to continue to give him a chance or view him as highly as before?
I think he's realized and would rather milk the fame his got then to actually commit to writing something he thinks is going to ruin him.
I would tend to agree. Or he does not understand, as Sanderson obviously does, that he is effectively a vendor and his clients have expectations and that mutual satisfaction is important to continued success. Waiting this length of time for sequels is borderline ridiculous, they aren't that good. Is writing his profession or not?
quote:quote:As someone who's finished the series and rates it at the top, and honestly it's not even close, it's all about how immersed you let yourself get into the world he's built. Races, locations, fighting styles, politics, cultures, blah blah blah the guy thought of everything. He's also as consistent and as much of a workhorse as Sanderson. I'd constantly find myself online, sometimes in the middle of chapters, refreshing my history lessons on the Malazan world to prevent getting lost. He not only doesn't hold your hand he throws you off the high dive into the deep end and I think a lot of people strangely appreciated that.
Yeah, that was me several times. Malazan and I have a complicated relationship. I'm on book 5 and still haven't figured out why people absolutely love it....but at the same time I keep picking up the next one. I'll go for a month+ not wanting to touch it, to pounding out a couple hundred pages without putting it down.
Just a few other series to throw out there while people wait on GRRM, Rothfuss, Lynch etc. prob in order of most liked:
Prince of Thorns (The Broken Empire)
Promise of Blood (Powder Mage)
Red Knight (Traitor Son)
Theft of Swords (Riyria)
Warded Man (Demon Cycle)
quote:I think most of the issues around GRRM and Rothfuss are them making promises they couldn't keep. A Feast for Crows last page, on the original publication, talked about how soon DwD would be out and that it was almost complete and really AFFC was just chapters from that book that needed to be pulled out due to publication size restrictions. Rothfuss pretty much sold Kingkiller Chronicle as an already completed trilogy. When you say things like that then waste literally years at conventions, editing side projects, selling water damaged calanders then people start to get a little pissed.
I actually have no problem with the way Rotfhfuss comports himself as regards his writing timeline. He doesn't owe us a book; and I've seen a bunch of fans start hurling demands at Martin, Rothfuss, and even Butcher who is a writing machine, needing to know when their next book will be out. I think Rothfuss is dealing with a major case of writer's block; I think he tried to force the last book about Auri out; and we saw what came of it.
quote:
I just assume I will never get to read A Dream of Spring. I'm hoping the tv series ends well
quote:
I'm nearing the end of the Mistborn trilogy myself. Glad to hear I'm in for an solid finish.