I was starting to think I was never going to finish either of the two books I seem to have been reading for an absolute age! However, I have just completed Winter's heart, by Robert Jordan - the 9th book in the Wheel of Time epic. As with previous books in the series, the action moves from place to place with alarming speed, and whilst focusing on the main characters - Rand al'Thor, Egwene, Matt Cauthon, Elayne and Nynaeve - there is a vast, and I really do mean VAST, set of minor characters that are packed in. Having not read one of these for about a year, I found it really difficult to get my head around all these extra characters ... had I met them before, or were they new on the scene? Are they worth paying attention to or are they going to disappear as quickly as they appeared? I find myself torn by this book. I really do want to find out what happens to these people that I have been reading about over the last few years, but it's a massive investment of time and can be frustrating. I feel that Mr Jordan should have had a good editor to help him keep on track with the story and to rein in the continual expansion of characters and places. We keep hearing about the breaking of the world, and the last battle - with Rand being the key to it all. But it seems to take forever and a day to be getting there. This book has some good touches and there is progression at last - but there is too much navel gazing and internalising for my liking. We kind of know what the characters are about by the 9th book in the series ... do we really need to hear yet again that Rand feels ill every time he fills with "saidin" to perform his magic? No we don't ... just get on with it man. I wouldn't recommend this book if you hadn't already been reading the Wheel of Time series. The first few books were great, but the last couple that I've read have felt a bit like padding, with nowhere near enough stuff going on. I don't think I've helped myself by leaving big gaps between the books - so I think I'll crack on with the next one sooner rather than later.
My STAR rating: THREE
Length: 704 print pages.
Price I paid: £1.95 (in a second hand book shop)
Formats available: print; unabridged audio download; ebook.
It's year SIXTEEN of my reading challenge blog, and this year I'm continuing to focus on reading those books that people have gifted to me that have been saved "for a rainy day" ... well, the rainy days are here! No longer will they languish in the gathering dust, but instead, they'll be given the priority they deserve! Oh, and I'm really, REALLY going to try and read more in general after a few years of struggling to muster up more than 5-10 minutes at the end of a day. Wish me luck!
Monday, 27 August 2012
Sunday, 12 August 2012
In the doldrums
I seem to be doing everything in slow motion at the moment. Maybe it's because the Olympic Games have been on and I've been totally hooked on them,t o the exclusion of almost everything else ... or maybe it's because I've been having dental problems (finally resulting in a tooth extraction last Thursday ... still sore!). I am reading, but only a few pages at a time. I am in the middle of the ninth Robert Jordan Wheel of Time book - where your head just spins with the vast array of characters and plot lines. It's ages since I read book number eight and it's taking me a good while to get back into the rhythm of this epic tale of magic and good and evil. I've also been reading, on audio, Sea of Poppies by Amitav Ghosh. Whilst I'm enjoying this too, it also requires a fair amount of concentration to read as it is highly spiced with Indian dialects. Plus I have been so busy over the last few weeks that my opportunities for reading audio have been few and far between. But today is the last day of the Olympics, and my mouth is getting better (oh to be able to eat something that you can crunch into!) so I should be able to steam ahead once more.
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