I am with you on the Harry Potter issue. He certainly did seem to be in over
his head and always came out on top by pure luck, or by someone else bigger
and stronger stepping in, not my idea of a hero. And the wand trick did not
do much for me either. Power should always come from within and if you are
going to use a wand, then it should be merely an extension of your own
power. I think JK came up with a really cool concept, but her writing made
it a bit bland for me.

 

But on your description of Magician and Silverthorn I am not there with you.
I loved both of them, and I thought they were excellent books with enough in
them to keep me going and going. Magician was an awesome introduction to
Midkemia. And Silverthorn, I just loved the hopelessness felt by the
characters. That for me was what made it the best. The characters felt
overwhelmed, over matched and hopeless, and yet they continued to strive and
win through. But Darkness was definitely the ultimate end to that adventure.
I know I will be really sad when Pugs story comes to an end. Just to make it
last a bit longer I have went back and am rereading Magician. Am about half
way through. But I wanted to read them all again so that everything was
fresh when I finally picked up crown imperiled.

 

Graham Watson

 

 

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of jshkay
Sent: Wednesday, December 21, 2011 2:38 PM
To: feistfans-l
Subject: Re: Possible answer

 

I liked your magician books.  I think that overall, they were quite well
done.  That being said, I did feel they lacked the starting flourish of a
series like the Harry Potter books.  The magician books were more down to
earth on the whole, and though they had their fair share of mystery they
also didn't really compare to something like the mistborn trilogy in their
ability to intrique.  Also, a solid chunk of the magician books were
relatively slow.  That is not necessarily a bad thing, but would inhibit
readers from picking it up.  

 

To be completely honest, out of that series my favorite book was A Darkness
at Sethanon and my least favorite was Silverthorn.  I really felt like the
characters were a bit lost in Silverthorn and I also didn't like the feel of
helplessness that went with them being assaulted by powerful magic with
little ability to defend themselves.  Jimmy was definitely the strength of
this book, but on the whole it just felt bland.  I also did not find the
journey to be that enjoyable, nor did I like that magic from Pantathian
priests could so overwhelm a monastary that had been steeped in magical
power for centuries. I kind of felt the power of the Pantathian priests not
very believable. 

 

On the other hand, Darkness had a much more interesting journey.  I
absolutely loved Armengar from start to finish.  The whole series of events
in Armengar gave the book an epic feel.  I also very much enjoyed the
culmination of the book with the invasion of Sethanon.  I felt like every
character in this book was deep and had a reason, and story, behind their
actions.  It was a much more intense book than the previous three and you
really did a great job w/ it.  

I think JK Rowling got a bit lucky, to be honest.  I found her books to be
good, but nothing extraordinary. I've read quite a few fantasy novels I much
prefer over hers, and the last book was extremely disappointing.  The whole
mechanic with the wand felt cheap and cheesy to me.  Lose your wand and you
have zip for magical power.  To be honest, the wand mechanic was one of the
things I disliked most about her books.  Instead of getting your magical
power from within, you get it from a wand that can be broken like a twig
(always drove me crazy every time someone got owned cause they dropped their
wand).  That being said, she had some great characters.  Professor Snape was
easily my favorite, but I also thought Hermione was quite good (though I
felt Hermione should have been more relavant in a lot of the fights w/ the
dark forces).  The last thing I'd say is it always felt to me like Harry
Potter was tagging along.  Dumbledore would tell him what to do, give him
hints, and then he would do it.  Harry Potter would get in a fight and be
saved by one of the powerful wizards at the academy.  In general, he seemed
hopelessly outmarched by every situation he was in.  Throughout the books, I
felt like he was in for the ride and not actually a main character.  He just
felt shallow to me.

 

 

On Wed, Dec 21, 2011 at 1:45 PM, Raymond E. Feist <[email protected]>
wrote:


On Dec 20, 2011, at 2:04 PM, Scott Norris wrote:

> You're saying you need to work on your charm but you date women half your
age...
>
>
> now I'm really confused.
>
>
>
> ;-D
>
>
> Scott45
>



Everywhere you go, smart alecs.

Look, I think there was a lot of charm in Magician,because of the two main
characters, and in Silverthorn and Darkness because of who Jimmy was.  I
intentionally didn't make the twins or Erik and Roo "charming" and it's been
pretty dark since then.

Rowlings had a lot of the same issues;  Goblet of fire was the last
"charming book" where they were still kids, but Order of the Phoenix turned
very dark and from there . . .

Still, she had this charming foundation that echoed in the narrative of the
later books.

My situation in real life has nothing to do with the work.

And it's 1/3rd my age if you must know.


Best, R.E.F.
----
www.crydee.com <http://www.crydee.com/> 

Never attribute to malice what can satisfactorily be explained away by
stupidity.








 

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