knivesout
I've always been rather fond of Aviendha too, especially when she stood up for Mat and made the other girls apologise to him! No prizes for guessing who my favourite male character in WoT is!
Well, I guess you've both answered my question. The characters do make sense to you, and it's probably more a guy thing that I get a bit put off?
i guess one has to sign away the first born kid to post on any internet site in these days of modern practicality. i remember when it wasn't so.
i joined this one because it looked to be a forum in which one could critique jordan negatively, even if not trashing him. all of the jordan brown-nosing sites react as if you were crucifying Jesus Christ again if you step outside of the twilight zone world of their fantasy and speak realistically. they feel affronted and ban you from their - i won't mention names - silly sites. i don't believe i will break any codes of conduct with this post by merely speaking my mind. hopefully, this is a more adult site and none will feel i am trying to pull their world out from under them.
though i do enjoy the story - damn, it has been a long 12 years - there are things i have to agree with all around.
first, mat and aviendha are my favorites. i would have liked to run into a woman matching her physical description when i was in the marrying age. i did have a fiery red headed girlfriend that would do the aiel proud but that one ran me off as if she carried spears.
mat is a typical guy's guy, a guy you want to hang out with just to BS with as long as he is in his element and away from nagging women.
which brings me around to the shocker that almost killed all of the EMO kids...i don't think a man is writing this story. the main pretense is supposed to be a huge war to settle the end of the world. 11 books of interpersonal relationships, most between women, was well written but the content wore thin. how many braids can be tugged and how many dresses need to be straightened? how many men can one belittle to put a point across? how many scenes of physical discipline(ala anne rice) are necessary to tell a story of armageddon?
the author did a commendable job of slowing down the pace at times to the point i thought i was eating with them or playing stones. i think i drank spiced wine along the way and rode a few horses. the author, whom i contend is a woman, did a marvelous job of what becomes playwriting, as it is directed at a theater stage at some points.
louisa may alcott would be proud of this extended version of "little women" though it may grow long in the tooth for her. i raise her name as i don't believe a man can fathom the intricacies that take place in a strictly female world. the "love scenes" are purely nora roberts and some not that forward as our young heroines are uptight, prim and proper victorian prudes for the most part. put them alone with the ruffians they pine over and what randy vixens they become.
in some fashions, this story has become a literary version of the screenplay for the 1997 film "titanic" - a love story that just happened to collide with a sinking ship. the WOT battle scenes are so few and far apart one forgets what the subject matter is as the buying of silk for dresses, how many to a bed, discussion/disgust of local fashions, mealtimes and snipping at each other is the substance of the story. i will point anyone to elizabeth moon's "the deed of paksenarion" for a book that can cover the full gamet. that is actually three novels pulled together as one just as "the lord of the rings" books have been. it reads easy in that manner.
it has been written that jordan's wife harriet is his editor. i see it the other way around and they make a good team though they milk it for all its worth. how long has "his" illness truly been a factor in the writing of these books? i don't mean any harm to mention that but it is reality. i hope jordan a speedy recovery as i know what it is to be ill.