Robert Jordan's son has nothing to do with the last three books lol. It's Brandon Sanderson, an author that Jordan's wife (and, interestingly enough, editor) picked as the writer most capable finishing the series. I find that Sanderson's prose is so much tighter than Jordan's was in the final books before his death. I'm enjoying the slightly different style he brings to the series.Mugen said:hmmm Dune could be interesting....i played the game what feels like a BAZILLION years ago now.
God damnit, i love the Wheel Of Time. i think when Robert Jordan died, so did a little part of me. I think his son is doing a better job than i expected of wrapping things up, too. one more book to go...and in 2012 i hear.
i think of myself as a ''purist'' only because i find that Fantasy is the only genre that i truly lose myself in. sure, i liked the Motley Crue biography (''i thought i was a real drug addict. i popped pills in the morning, smoked weed all day, and shot cocaine into my arms till late at night. Then, then i met Ozzy Osbourne....) and i enjoy crime/noir novels too, but they don't even come close to something like the WoT.
Also, i study creative writing, and my only ambition in life is to write a high fantasy epic, with a scope of such magnitude that it will dethrone even the almighty Tolkien, and to a lesser extent, George RR Martin (the Tolkien of the modern age, in my opinion.
im only in my first year, but we all start somewhere, right?
EDIT - Logalog, and the shrews, my favs in Redwall![]()
If you want to be a writer (even if you're specialising in a specific genre), I'd highly recommend branching out further. By reading a range of genres, you may find yourself developing ideas from those into a fantasy setting. If you limit your influences to fantasy, you run the risk of unconsciously copying ideas or - god forbid - not evolving the genre. If your aim is to surpass Tolkien, then you'd have to some up with something truly unique... In my opinion, only by reading a wide range of genres can you really hope to do that. But that's just me lol.
If you're willing to try other things, I'd recommend absurdist/surrealist fictions as a foundation for complex ideas. My favourite novel of all time is Catch-22 by Joseph Heller. It's an anti-war novel, if you didn't already know and is unbelievably good. It's a difficult first read but does some mind-boggling things with narrative structure... not to mention your bloody emotions. The way I describe it is: "tragically hilarious, hilariously tragic." Google it, I guarantee you'll be intrigued.
Another absurdist author (with obvious Sci-fi elements) I'd highly recommend is Kurt Vonnegut. Slaughterhouse 5 is fucking incredible. It's about 'Jimmy Pilgrim', a man who has become "unstuck in time", causing him to inexplicably jump to various moments in his life throughout the novel. It's also an anti-war novel focusing on the Dresden fire-bombings during the WWII. Because of it's sci-fi nature, it may appeal to you more, so I'd urge you to at leats check it out if you don't fancy Catch-22.