Knife of Dreams
Halfway into it. Verdict so far:
OK, I lied. No spoilers.
Better than Crossroads of Twilight. So is scurvy.
I'll post full opinion once I finish it.
EDIT: Done with the book.
OK, the book really *is* better than CoT. But it does not, IMHO, reach "really good" other than in a nod-and-wink sorta way.
The good:
- Resolution of Faile/Perrin. I just wish it had been Jim Hill's version.
- Mat & DotNM. Best part of the book, hands down. I actually enjoyed these scenes, a lot. Viewing Mat through an pair of eyes that does not really know what to make of him *works*.
- Thom & the Letter of Dooooooooom. Enjoyable section. Jordan finally grabs a thread that has been dangling for what, 6 books? Doesn't actually *resolve* it, though. Bastard.
- Perrin & the Seanchen. Intriguing alliance, made possible through Perrin's focus. There has always been something solid about Perrin, and frankly, a respect borne out from that feels a lot more believable than Faile. I still wish we had seen Jim Hill's version of the Faile/Perrin reunion, dammit.
- Less braid pulling, less sniffing, more crying. Good by a 2 to 1 ratio.
- Egwene. Interesting conceit, to play at Mata Hari when the enemy *knows* who you are. Yet it worked on some level.
- Seanchen. They finally get fleshed out from the "furriners with funny accents, numerous as grains of sand, implacable Return" cliche. They are a bit better now.
- Mat & DotNM. I know, I listed them already. Seriously. Best. Part. Of. Book.
The bad:
- Lord these people love to natter on. Shut up already.
- "It's a trap!" "Knowing that, we can safely spring it." *SNAP* "Oh, shit, there was a second layer." TWICE
- Pregnancy causes mood swings. We get it already.
- Not enough/well done enough large scale battles. Jordan always seems to write large battles well enough to be gripping. Here, not so much. Kind of a letdown.
- Red Ajah binding Asha'man and *only* Asha'man? And this was brought up as the freaking conclusion of the book? WTF?
- Not *nearly* enough face time for the Forsaken, what with the Last Battle Right Around The Corner, We Really Mean It This Time, Honest.
- Saidin is free of the taint! Whee! Absolutely nothing has changed due to this earth-shattering fact. WTF?
- Shaido run back to the Waste to lick their wounds, vow never to leave again. Um, thread resolved by autorial fiat, I guess.
Conclusion: Book 6-7ish in quality. Definitely a step up from the last several, but not a patch on the earlier works. I don't regret buying it, and at least Shit Happened, so KoD > CoT, but I was hoping for more.
There were enough threads resolved to see the end of the series looming. Thank God.
OK, I lied. No spoilers.
Better than Crossroads of Twilight. So is scurvy.
I'll post full opinion once I finish it.
EDIT: Done with the book.
OK, the book really *is* better than CoT. But it does not, IMHO, reach "really good" other than in a nod-and-wink sorta way.
The good:
- Resolution of Faile/Perrin. I just wish it had been Jim Hill's version.
- Mat & DotNM. Best part of the book, hands down. I actually enjoyed these scenes, a lot. Viewing Mat through an pair of eyes that does not really know what to make of him *works*.
- Thom & the Letter of Dooooooooom. Enjoyable section. Jordan finally grabs a thread that has been dangling for what, 6 books? Doesn't actually *resolve* it, though. Bastard.
- Perrin & the Seanchen. Intriguing alliance, made possible through Perrin's focus. There has always been something solid about Perrin, and frankly, a respect borne out from that feels a lot more believable than Faile. I still wish we had seen Jim Hill's version of the Faile/Perrin reunion, dammit.
- Less braid pulling, less sniffing, more crying. Good by a 2 to 1 ratio.
- Egwene. Interesting conceit, to play at Mata Hari when the enemy *knows* who you are. Yet it worked on some level.
- Seanchen. They finally get fleshed out from the "furriners with funny accents, numerous as grains of sand, implacable Return" cliche. They are a bit better now.
- Mat & DotNM. I know, I listed them already. Seriously. Best. Part. Of. Book.
The bad:
- Lord these people love to natter on. Shut up already.
- "It's a trap!" "Knowing that, we can safely spring it." *SNAP* "Oh, shit, there was a second layer." TWICE
- Pregnancy causes mood swings. We get it already.
- Not enough/well done enough large scale battles. Jordan always seems to write large battles well enough to be gripping. Here, not so much. Kind of a letdown.
- Red Ajah binding Asha'man and *only* Asha'man? And this was brought up as the freaking conclusion of the book? WTF?
- Not *nearly* enough face time for the Forsaken, what with the Last Battle Right Around The Corner, We Really Mean It This Time, Honest.
- Saidin is free of the taint! Whee! Absolutely nothing has changed due to this earth-shattering fact. WTF?
- Shaido run back to the Waste to lick their wounds, vow never to leave again. Um, thread resolved by autorial fiat, I guess.
Conclusion: Book 6-7ish in quality. Definitely a step up from the last several, but not a patch on the earlier works. I don't regret buying it, and at least Shit Happened, so KoD > CoT, but I was hoping for more.
There were enough threads resolved to see the end of the series looming. Thank God.
no subject
no subject
no subject
So far, does Knife Of Dreams suck?
no subject
I'll post more later.
no subject