Dead Machine wrote:
Brahm_K wrote:
The Stand: Fine. It is good, excepting the Hand of God part. I did think the epilogue to The Stand was quite excellent.
The epilogue isn't the ending.
Generally, the epilogue constitutes a good part of the ending, and in this case, as it resolves the fate of one of the main characters (ie: the villain) it is indeed part of the ending. Thus that part of the ending was very enjoyable, while the others were at least enjoyable, barring one stupid Hand of God. Hence, what I would call a good ending.
Brahm_K wrote:
It: Man, that was some good dribble and hooha.
Quote:
Sure, if you like turtles and nonsense. And not GOOD nonsense like WSB, BAD nonsense like Saturday Night Live.
Well, who doesn't like turtles? I did enjoy the parts concerning the deadlights quite a lot, and the character death was done quite well; put it down to personal taste.
Brahm_K wrote:
Insomnia: And we all agree that The Dark Tower is good!
Quote:
When I read a novel I don't want to paddle through 1000+ pages to get to an advertisement for another novel, thanks.
But really, besides the villain orchestrating everything being the main villain of the Dark Tower series and his four page appearance, thats about the main crux of the advertisement. The main plot points of the book are resolved; really, besides those four or five pages, the ending is completely unrelated to the Dark Tower. I don't understand how those four or five pages can ruin an ending so completely.
Eyesore: You like David Eddings and you complain of King's writing? I mean, King isn't that good, but eww... The Malloreon was some of worst fantasy I have ever read. Poorly written, and right up there with Terry Brooks and Terry Goodkind for most overrated fantasy authors. Ehh.. No accounting for taste I guess.
Radagast: Martin is as realistic and gritty as you would like. No elves, dancing is usually followed by decapitation, the only "dwarf" is an actual slightly deformed midget (and the best character I've ever read in fiction to boot) and magic level is kept low. I really cannot stress enough how much I recommend this series to anyone with the slightest interest in fantasy, or even medieval historical fiction.