Smokestone
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Posts posted by Smokestone
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A lass who wove light as a trickWent splash and was soaked to the quickThough dying from coldShe was repeatedly toldThat a stick is a stick is a stick!
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There once was a half-skaa named Vin
Who discovered that she could burn tin
When Luthadel burned
She further discerned
That her actual foe was Ru-in.
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That said, people have brought this up in the discussion before me, but I'd like to hear: what are the specific ways you think Robert Jordan pioneered the future of epic fantasy? Here are a few, in my opinion:
-Mixing laws of modern physics with laws of magic
-Types of magic with "hard" rule sets: the reader knows exactly what tools a magic-wielding character can or can't access (rather than the Gandalf-type magic, where we really have no idea what he is and isn't capable of, it's all shrouded in mystery)
-"Strong female leads" (I put this in quotes because I don't really like the way Jordan executed this concept, but it was clearly his intent) as well as exploration of gender roles and politics
-the role of fate and prophecy: while the future initially appears to be set in stone, it may be affected by human choice
Any others that stick out to you?
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Bahaha, my favorite moment of the whole series was when Perrin totally owns Egwene in Tel-aran-riod or however it's spelled. Wipe that smug condescension off her face.
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Playing the nice guy is fine as an opener, but at some point you have to take the risk and ask her out. It hurts to get shut down, but there are a number of clear advantages to having the conversation in the open. Like, if she can tell you've been meaning to ask her out for a long time (if you've spent a lot of time around her, she probably suspects already) she probably will appreciate you saying so. Either 1) she wants to go out with you or 2) she doesn't, but either way it clears the air. If you never ask, you'll never know.
Have you read The Name of the Wind (there are a bunch of Patrick Rothfuss fans here, I know, so I'm guessing you might have)? Kvothe is super awesome in so many ways, but he totally has the Nice Guy problem with Denna - he's just afraid to commit. All his friends can see how obvious it is that he's infatuated with her and that she digs him too, but he has difficulty confronting reality and just going for it, and his life would change enormously if he did.
So yeah. Bravery, I say! Ask her on a date.
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I'm in as Dui, a JoSeun immigrant who likes to eat chalk. Or at least he thinks he does. He might also be anemic and have a touch of pica.
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SLC, by the U of U mostly
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I would like to join the squee thread. Recently received in the mail the following UT licence plate:
STORMIT
In the immortal words of Rebecca Black, "we so excited."
(be sure and say hi or something if you spot us on the road!)
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Hey, also a newbie to the forums here, though a longtime Sanderson fan...the original Mistborn trilogy remains my favorite of his works so far (the ending of The Hero of Ages brought me close to tears...that doesn't happen to me much in fantasy novels), but I've certainly had fun with the rest of the canon. And of course, Kaladin is a stud.
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White Sand Volume 1 Reactions
in White Sand
Posted
This ^^.
I enjoy both comics and graphic novels, they can be really powerful ways to tell interesting stories. (My favorite is easily lackadaisy.foxprints.com, I highly recommend it!) This one was intriguing, but felt like a rocky start, because there's just too many words, too many plotlines, too abrupt of transitions, not enough reason to care, for me at least. I haven't read the prose version and I don't plan on it...and to me, this work really doesn't hold up by itself. I'll certainly read the next two volumes when they come out, but I won't be so quick to buy them.