AsMoral Wrote:Paul himself has acknowledged in the past that he refuses to write the character forever, hence the deadline (Nightworld) but he has a few more stories to tell before then.
I would not say it seemed as if he "mailed it in" with regards to BTS. It was great to see jack intricately tied to Black Wind which is my favorite novel of all time, by any author.
The novel was layered and complex and more than enough violence to hold my attention.
The slow build to the catastrophic events in NightWorld is like inching ever so slowly to the crest of a steep hill on a great rollercoaster. He is setting the events for the endgame when the reader will be taken down the steepest stomach dropping hill.
The style makes sense to me and makes me appricate night World all the more.
I agree Tony, the story was layered, complex, and did serve to pique my curiosity in some areas. I was intrigued by [spoiler]Glaeken's involvement, Gia's growing sensitivity to the Otherness, P. Frank Winslow, the sword staying with Jack despite the Lady's advice[/spoiler], and some others.
However, I found the main storyline (the convergence of all actors) to be far more predicatable (and a bit repetitous) and therefore less engaging, by comparison to past novels.
BTS was still better than most non-FPW novels I've read. And, unlike others, I do not compare it poorly to Black Wind; BW is not one of my top 10 FPW books either.
I have stated elsewhere on this board that one element I was particularly dissapointed in was the mellowing-down of the shoten to be anyone...not children only. This not only diminishes Black Wind by suggesting that the cult's failure to develop the Black Wind soon enough to win the war was due to incompetence (not experimenting enough with the elixir to discover that Children were not necessary), but also drastically reduces the horror of BTS's finale (for me) because Jack would have been forced to kill a child (or somehow render them unconcious)...only months after his unborn child was taken from him by the Ally. Naka Slater's grandchild as the shoten would have been an insteresting twist.
Now THAT would have made for some gut-wrenching character developemnt AND been horrific to read (as well as write, I am sure). As a father of a young child, I would have had nightmares about that one for weeks. As it stands, I easily dismissed the loss of a single adult whom I did not identify with to begin with.
Great literature, and particularly great horror literature, discusses what is hard to face; it doesn't take the easy way out.
As I said in that other thread, I may change my mind when I re-read it...I'm finishing Reborn now, so it will be a while...but until then, it remains one of my least favourite FPW books.
Just wanted to show that I did not make my comments lightly.
And thanks to Jim for offering a different option..."mailing it in" is more akin to what Stephen King does lately, with his novels..."phoned-in" or perhaps "emailed-in" is closer to how I felt about BTS.
-Wapitikev