reviews and such
Sep. 16th, 2006 10:47 amGabe Chouinard has posted a thought-provoking treatise on The Crooked Letter and reviews in general here, in which I am exhorted to become "more purple, so to speak". It's a fair call. :-) Check it out. He has lots of interesting things to say.
(Late addition: the comments to this post include an explanation of the title of the The Crooked Letter. Anyone not wanting to wait until the last book of the series can get the answer now--not that it in any way constitutes a spoiler.)
Also The Library Journal has reviewed The Blood Debt:
'The second instalment in the author's "Books of the Cataclysm" series (after The Crooked Letter) follows the adventures of three companions who battle the unknown to save their families. Set partly in the modern world and partly in a fantasy environment drawn from archetypal myths and legends, this epic belongs in most fantasy collections.'
Nice.
Thanks, lastly, to everyone who came to my signing at Borders last night. It was great to see so many familiar and friendly faces. I'm heartened by the feedback. The Devoured Earth really feels like it's out, now. :-)
(Late addition: the comments to this post include an explanation of the title of the The Crooked Letter. Anyone not wanting to wait until the last book of the series can get the answer now--not that it in any way constitutes a spoiler.)
Also The Library Journal has reviewed The Blood Debt:
'The second instalment in the author's "Books of the Cataclysm" series (after The Crooked Letter) follows the adventures of three companions who battle the unknown to save their families. Set partly in the modern world and partly in a fantasy environment drawn from archetypal myths and legends, this epic belongs in most fantasy collections.'
Nice.
Thanks, lastly, to everyone who came to my signing at Borders last night. It was great to see so many familiar and friendly faces. I'm heartened by the feedback. The Devoured Earth really feels like it's out, now. :-)
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Date: 2006-09-16 11:01 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-17 11:26 pm (UTC)http://pyrsf.blogspot.com/2006/09/crooked-state-of-genre-reviews.html
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Date: 2006-09-18 01:30 am (UTC)Oh, and it also continues here (me) (http://deadcities-icon.livejournal.com/98115.html) and here (not me) (http://sartorias.livejournal.com/174363.html). And elsewhere, I'm guessing.
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Date: 2006-09-18 02:01 am (UTC)In your recent post, you say:
I believe Sean Williams played it safe, not trusting the reader to accept more ornate writing.
The truth is simply that this is the way I write. I was aware while writing TCL that other writers would have written it very differently, and I thought about giving it a go. I decided not to for several reasons, not least among them because I think I'd enjoy it less. It's not really about the readers at all, not until it's being edited, anyway, when issues of how best to communicate regularly arise. In some ways, I think I made the right decision, as a more convoluted style would only (arguably) obfuscate what was already a complex cosmology, and being regarded as New Weird (or whatever) was and still is a secondary consideration for me.
I certainly don't think that ornate writing is harder to read and therefore limits sales, and decisions relating to my style are certainly not contingent on commercial factors. I like to think my style sits somewhere between purely commercial and thoroughly ornate, but obviously that's something for readers to decide for themselves. I'm blind to it, most of the time...
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Date: 2006-09-18 02:56 am (UTC)What I was aiming for (and probably failed miserably at) was to suggest that the book's subject matter may have been improved by the use of another writing style. Hubris, no? :) I've been accused of that before. But the more pointed part of that was my suggestion that fantastic fiction IS dominated by that clear, styleless style, which actually annoys me quite a lot. (Again, personal failing.)
And, just to make sure my ass is *totally* covered, I haven't read more than a handful of your short stories. Hopefully that can be remedied soon!
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Date: 2006-09-18 03:06 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-18 03:08 am (UTC)Wanna know something ironic?
I just now read your profile page, and see that you're a sometime DJ.
I hope you dug my references to djing!
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Date: 2006-09-18 03:18 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-18 03:19 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-19 12:31 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-18 03:54 pm (UTC)http://pauljessup.kapo.ws
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Date: 2006-09-18 11:11 pm (UTC)