Fantasy Book Club discussion
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That rarity - series that deepen, but don't sprawl.
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Years ago, I loved C.S. Friedman's Coldfire Trilogy. Like the Mistborn trilogy, it had a definite ending and characters I could keep track of. Friedman is a wonderfully complex writer who actually knows how to write a story with a beginning, a middle and an ending. Now, if she would only write faster.

Agreed. I'm trying to patiently await the 3rd in her Magister trilogy. Its a painful wait. She is one of my favorite authors.

I'd ask Random whether the Magister trilogy is very dark - it looked to be from the description. What's your take?
Jim - I'd read a few Modesitt titles - Magic of Recluse stuck with me as a decent read. I should probably dig into that author's work again. Thanks.



I will get back to you all about Warbreaker, which is next on my to-read list. I hope that his writing style endures in this stand alone novel.

Doh! I seem to have missed this. :)
Yes, it is a bit dark, but I wouldn't say any more than her Coldfire Trilogy or Brandon Sanderson's Mistborn.
I just finished the last book in Mistborn (Hero of Ages) yesterday and absolutely adored its conclusion. Very well done IMO.


Doh! I seem to have missed this. :)
Yes, it is a bit dark, but ..."
The Coldfire trilogy was dark in its premise, but the ending was not cynical or ugly. This put a balance to it that some dark books don't have. What gave that book its specialty was the exceptional characters, how the humans co-existing with something truly alien evolved to a new point of reference. The 'dark' was not gratuitous or there for the shock value - I felt the ugly bits were most subtly handled. Still, it took me three tries to get past that brutal opener.
I didn't consider Mistborn in the same catagory, or league - they are very different stories with different goals and thrust.


I wasn't really comparing them in catagory or league, just stating that they had a similar level of bleakness in environment. :)

I will have to leave readers to advise how successful the aspiration is. So far just books 1 and 2 ( Cloak of Magic and Staff of Power) are available (and unfortunately as they are self-published in the UK, both are quite expensive in the US. pdf copies are available from http://www.shehaios.co.uk and I am hoping to get them out on Kindle before too long.)
I am currently writing the third in the trilogy, and my aim is to bring all the strands running through the first two books together so that the three together tell a coherent story.

Authors have no business being humble. Trumpet it from the rooftops.
I do find myself wondering about the concept of depth, though. Are we talking about depth of history, or depth of character? My own books concentrate on a depth of character.

Authors have no business being humble. Trumpet it from the rooftops.
I do find m..."
Some people get offended by authors trumpeting. So I just give a little tootle now and again!!
Interesting point about depth of history/depth of character. I'd say I'm trying to do both: if my characters did not behave like "real people", with credible motivation and all the fragility of human nature, their influence on the "historical" events they are involved with would have no meaning: and for me, therefore, the story would have no point.
This is why I started writing stories in the first place - to explore what happens when certain characters are put into certain situations. Fantasy simply allows free rein to the imagination to create the situations, and the characters. What difference does it make for a creature to have a different physical make-up and a different evolutionary history to a human being? What difference does it make to an ordinary human to have extraordinary powers or knowledge? etc.

Authors have no business being humble. Trumpet it from the rooftops.
..."
Go ahead and tootle a bit. Having read both of the first two books, I would really like to read the third.

Thank you Tracy. I would really like to finish the third! I keep getting side-tracked, but I hope to have it out next year.


Each book completes a story while building to an amazing crescendo. At the end there are books for god and satan as well. The series is very well done and was my first exposure to the ideas of Milton and Dante.

and I like surprises too, the feeling that you dont know how it might end or if it ends, the element of unpredictability... the deepening element of some characters or areas is often present


Books mentioned in this topic
On a Pale Horse (other topics)Cloak of Magic (other topics)
Staff of Power (other topics)
The Name of the Wind (other topics)
Warbreaker (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Sherwood Smith (other topics)Piers Anthony (other topics)
Various (other topics)
L.E. Modesitt Jr. (other topics)
Joe Abercrombie (other topics)
More...
If you list a series, help us readers out (who are searching) and say why you entered the title.
Here's my short list:
Fortress in the Eye of Time - this book kicks off with a character new-made by a sorcerer, who is utterly innocent, and becomes the wildcard thrown into a sticky political/religious powerplay of intrigue. Carolyn Cherryh has now written multiple books in this series, and all of them have opened and peeled many veils connecting to the world's history, and its current struggle. But the central issues have stayed the prominent focus - and the character's evolution and prominence have held the center, still engaging my interest.
The Isavolta series, by Sarah Zettel. These books each take place in a different kingdom - or focus around a different generation, with loose links between. Although they can be read out of order there are ties to the other stories. Each one either develops another aspect of the world and it's cultural differences and linkages, or presents another aspect of a conflict that overwrites a past impression and lends increased depth an insight. We are not shown new, so much as revising our opinions of what we presumed, based on the limited character insights of previous volumes.
In a lighter, quicker vein, but delightfully tight with the plotting, and with the same overarching sense of revising the presumed opinions of the prior volume, Micheal Sullivan's two books, of a new series, rework the angles in the first volume in a deft handling that promises more of the same, as the series develops.
I would place Carol Berg in this list, as well, both for her first trilogy and her later duology.
Although cynical books are not my personal cuppa, in fairness, Joe Abercrombie's trilogy fits the criteria, too.
I'll surely think of more to add soon.
And yes, I have a motive! I am always looking for more series like these, that display intricate forethought, deeper meaning, and counter the (sometimes) current trend of some series to fan out and attenuate, until we can't see there's an overaching purpose to them. I am looking for more such reads, you betcha!
Suggestions please?