Homeland, Exile, and Sojourn (the prequels to Icewind dale) were fantastic. It took fantasy storytelling into a non traditional setting. The post Icewind books, Legacy forward, were where the story started losing its tighter focus and feel. I have read up through the orc trilogy a few years back and none of the arcs have been as great as the first two trilogies. I can't hate on Legacy too much, that is the only one I have that I got autographed by Salvatore.UnderGlass said:"I'm surprised that anyone reads my books. I've been surprised by that since the first one came out."
Funny, I was kind of thinking the same thing. The Icewind Dale books were decent escapism and when the characters were fresh the clichés didn't matter but now the formula is creaking at the seams with the glut of low-quality writing.
Honestly, since The Halfling's Gem I haven't read a single R A Salvatore book that hasn't evoked an apathetic "meh" for it's samey-ness. Although - I've yet to try the Drizzt origin stories; if anyone would recommend them please let me know.
It's no surprise to me that his attachment to the Kingdoms of Amalur project has resulted in a cripplingly generic fantasy stew with little character to speak of. Hopefully this doesn't damage the game too much, I would really like to see that company succeed.
I know for a fact that he has tried to end the books but was told, by WotC at the time, if he did then they would give it over to another writer. Salvatore does not own Drizzt, Hasbro owns Drizzt. (As stated in the article.) So ripping on the guy for trying to hang on to his character is rather unfair.Zom-B said:The fact that he's written 20 books on Drizzt is a testament to his shameless milking of the character.
Okay, perhaps my judgement is a bit harsh, but as long as Hasbro owns the character he's not going to have any say in it's future. So Salvatore had a choice: he could have written a handful of strong novels and left a legacy behind and then distanced himself from whatever Hasbro did to the character afterwards, or he could continue to "protect" the character, write as many novels as Hasbro requires and keep cashing cheques. Clearly he chose the latter path.Roganzar said:I know for a fact that he has tried to end the books but was told, by WotC at the time, if he did then they would give it over to another writer. Salvatore does not own Drizzt, Hasbro owns Drizzt. (As stated in the article.) So ripping on the guy for trying to hang on to his character is rather unfair.Zom-B said:The fact that he's written 20 books on Drizzt is a testament to his shameless milking of the character.
Besides, he has stated how Drizzt dies (in response to being told keep writing or it goes to someone else); Drizzt trips on his boot laces, falls down a ravine, breaks his legs, and dies of exposure.
Apparently you didn't notice that his sister and father had at various points actually questioned the logic behind their lifestyles...viranimus said:Drizzt is an abomination who should be smeared out of existence. He is a traitor, and spits in the face of the worthy people from whom he was spawned. He represents everything that can go wrong with Drow. It causes nothing but shame to have any sort of connection to the dark elves, when mention of Drizzt comes up.