I mentioned in the other thread I was gonna talk about Burroughs; I dislike him. The first John Carter story was pretty good. Maybe the first two. But they get VERY samey and progressively more out there and ridiculous and contrived as they go on. Also, there's some serious white saviour/the superiority of the American MAN, stuff going on that I got more and more put off by as I read more stories. It's a lot like realizing Lovecraft is a raging racist. Once you see it, you can't UNSEE it. At least Lovecraft's stories were almost universally really good. Burroughs' aren't.
I was one of those who read Lord of the Rings annually for years, but I think I've read them once since the movies came out. Now I watch the extended trilogy semi-annually, and appreciate how they condensed so much and still remember the books with a ton of fondness. I just never went any deeper with that genre.
Yeah, I've probably only re-read LotR twice since 2003. To be fair, though, I think that also has a lot more to do with how much time I have available. I love comfort reading my favorites, but I also hate myself for doing it nowadays because I'm so time-constrained and I have so many NEW things I want to read. It's faster/easier to throw in a movie I've watched and let it play while I kind of do other things or when I otherwise wouldn't be able to read for whatever reason anyway.
And honestly, I usually don't make it through my movie re-watches either. I bought the blu-ray set like a year ago. My son and I made it through the first half of Fellowship and haven't gone back since.
And then I picked up Shadow of the Gods by John Gwynne, loved it, immediately picked up book 2 and 3. It's kind of self-indulgent Viking-themed fiction and I honestly had the thought: are fantasy stories using Viking themes just Romantasy for dudes? And I think they are, but I'm also perfectly okay with that and will read more of it. Like if there is a word from Viking culture that could be stuffed into this fantasy novel it has been stuffed into it, but it's just fun and dark so I'm into it.
Dude... when I started reading your post, before I got to this paragraph, I was immediately like 'I gotta fucking tell him about Shadow of the Gods!' I absolutely LOVE that series. It's so goddamn good. I read them as they came out, and it was actually painful for me to wait for the next book each time.
I think I've said this before, but I also cannot recommend Rage of Dragons strongly enough. It's the first book by Evan Winter. Fires of Vengeance is the second one. The final book isn't out yet. It's African-themed fantasy. It's REALLY good. I've been stamping my feet waiting for book 3. I will literally put down whatever I'm reading the day that book comes out. Unless it's the new Gael Song book, because that series is also incredible.
I was just talking about the TV series and how hated it was by his fans and I, someone who ENJOYED the first half-dozen books, think the show was doomed to fail because it was too rangy and winding to translate to screen anyway,
WOT is quite literally the only time in my life I ever thought 'I hope they don't adapt this faithfully, because it will suck.' They should have gotten a talented writer that loves fantasy to come in and basically re-draft the entire WOT story into something that would actually work for an adaptation. Like Dragonball Z Kai: Remove all the shitty filter and get to the fucking point. THEN, it actually probably good be a good, fun story.
I think I've been looking for fantasy that doesn't play by the old rules, though.
Read Rage of Dragons by Evan Winter.
I've been in a slump, as well. I find it hard to concentrate on reading when *gestures broadly*. What I have been reading hasn't done much for me.
I get it. I've found Shauna Lawless' Gael Song series is what helped me, more recently, kind of get out of my funk. That and, believe it or not, Warhammer 40k books. It's so wildly and hilariously grimdark that it really plays into the 'so dark it's a parody of being dark while still being dark' thing that it helps me forget how shitty the real world is because it almost makes a parody of how bad things can get, if that makes sense.
It's repetitive, overly long,
To me, this sums up Sanderson generally. Good for him, don't get me wrong, he found a niche that people like and will keep giving him money to produce. So he does. He just keeps making the same stuff. I fully get that people like it. But I hate it. I've read 3 different books from different series, because he comes so highly recommended, and I hated them all. Way of Kings was definitely the worst. I had to buy it on Kindle to give it a second try because I LITERALLY threw the physical book in the garbage when I got most of the way through that 'laying bridges across cliffs' or whatever bullshit that lasted WAAAAAY too fucking long, made no goddamn sense, and was possibly the stupidest fucking thing I've ever read in any book, ever. Came back to it about a year later on Kindle, skipped that entire part, and still ended up thinking the book sucked balls.
Sanderson, to my mind (and JUST my opinion) is the worst popular writer in modern history.
I compare them because I find they're tonally similar. LOTR was like PG+. It's hard to think of many fantasy series that don't dip into grimdark, politics, or sexual fantasy. (Or all three, if you're lucky.)
Totally get that. I tend to think that a lot of pre-teen fantasy feels more LotR like in certain, very specific respects. Stuff like Dragonlance, and even some Pathfinder and Forgotten Realms books. But, of course, they DON'T feel LotR like because the prose is dumbed down in that very modern way we do when we write for young people. Something Tolkien definitely did not do.
I'm way more sci-fi oriented than fantasy oriented
I don't read a ton of sci-fi these days, but I enjoyed the hell out of Children of Time and really need to get through some other stuff so I can get to the other two books. And I definitely want to read some of the other stuff from the same author. Of course, I read a lot of Warhammer 40k as pallet cleansers, but I'd almost call that more fantasy than sci-fi despite all the spaceships and laser guns.