AsMoral Wrote:I personally find Excelsior’s post ridiculous. Fine that they choose to give up on RJ but to use such a lame excuse as "I don't like supernatural and the otherness" when The Tomb was both mystical and supernatural. How can the book that got you reading the character be filled with all this mysticism and supernatural aspects and only down the line do you not like the direction the books have taken?
Jack was delivered to us amid ancient Bengali demons, a necklace that prevents its wearer from harm/aging and a curse that spanned many generations.
If you don't like the Supernatural then why did you finish The Tomb and pick up other books featuring Jack.
I am glad you're an FPW fan; I just think you're muckraking at this point and the basis of your decision is weak. But as others said, there are many non-otherness books out there by Paul that you may enjoy.
Whoa... whoa... whoa...
Let me address this in points.
1) No, I haven't read any of the Adversary cycle. I picked up "The Tomb", read the jacket and thought it'd be an interesting read. I came into it cold, with no knowledge whatsoever of the part it played in FPW's grand scheme. For that matter, I didn't know there
was a grand scheme.
2) Yes, in the very first novel the supernatural was prevalent. But, as was stated before, in the very
second novel, nada. I hoped that the first had been an element that was to be abandoned for the rest of the series.
3) I never said that I don't like supernatural stories. Quite the opposite, I think.
4) I kept going back to the RJ series because A) I like the writing, and B) I kept hoping that the supernatural elements would play second fiddle to the natural. Each time I went back hoping that this book would be different - either the way the elements blended, or that my opinion of them would change. Well, after strike 4, I was out.
I never intended this thread to cause any kind of a stir. I just wanted to let my thought out, and frankly I'm tired of explaining myself. Thanks to everyone who added a kind thought. Ciao.