Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Elantris

After reading Warbreaker I was a little less excited about Elantris. I was afraid that I had already read Sanderson's best books in the Mistborn Trilogy. However as I started Elantris I was immediately drawn into the story and the Mystery surrounding the city of Elantris. I did not like this as much as Mistborn but it was much better than Warbreaker. This book still had many of the traits I had come to expect from Sanderson (plot twists, deep history, unique magic system, even a little mystery) yet I came to notice a little more about his writings. In all of Sanderson's book that I have read so far there is a heavy emphasis on Religion and religious history. Also in each of these books there are characters who achieve great powers and are considered Gods. These characters are ordinary people who usually through no particular effort of their own, become Gods. I find this theme in Sanderson's books to be very interesting especially considering his belief system (he is LDS).

The emphasis on religion is refreshing especially when we are constantly bombarded either anti religious or just plain irreligious attitudes in most pop media today. Some authors hint at it but no one I have read (beside regional or niche authors) has detailed religious beliefs as thoroughly as Sanderson. And as a person of strong religious beliefs I really do enjoy seeing characters who display such faith.

Monday, October 12, 2009

The Lost Symbol

For as much as I enjoy Dan Brown's books I also despise them. The Lost Symbol did not change my perception of Brown's writing abilities. The strength of Brown's books are his research and his ability to extrapolate from that information a world that is so close to being real that many people take his "fictions" as "facts." This is in the purest sense science fiction (which is probably why I still enjoy these books).

What I do not like about Brown's books are the way he cheats to create urgency. Brown writes his novels in the Third person all knowing point of view, however even though the narrator knows everything he does not reveal this very promptly. This is prevalent through out Brown's books and it continued to bother me in this one. Brown could still create this same sense of urgency by using a third person limited point of view (similar to Orson Scott Card, Brandon Sanderson, Shannon Hale, Stephanie Meyer, JK Rowling and many other). By using third person limited and shifting characters (as Card, Sanderson and Hale do) an author can create just as much urgency as Brown creates without making the reader feel as if he is being cheated information.

If I were to compare this to Brown's other books I would place it third behind Angels and Demons and The DaVinci Code but well above his other two (the one nobody has ever heard of).

Warbreaker

After reading the Mistborn trilogy I was excited to try another novel by Brandon Sanderson. The first one I was able to get was Warbreaker. I had not heard anything about this book before I just knew the author, but the way this book came about also interested me. Sanderson wrote this as an online book. He would write a chapter and then post it online with a new chapter coming out every week. This is reminiscent of many previous books that were originally published as serials in magazines or newspapers (i.e. Asimnov's Foundation, Dumas' The Count of Monte Cristo and many others).

I really did enjoys this book. Sanderson creates another unique world with a detailed magic system and a rich history that is hinted at throughout the book and revealed more in-depthly towards the end. Twists that should have been expected yet floor the reader are ever present and the conclusion is very fulfilling.

If there is a fault with this book it is in the lack of details that I was expecting. Motivations of some peripheral characters is not very clear and I was hoping for a more detailed explanation of the magic system that is in effect in this world. For whatever faults there are it was still a good book to read.