In the FWIW category
I recently picked up a series of books on how to write. I got them for the purpose of improving my own game writing, not because I had any delusions of becoming a full time writer. (Okay, I did, but that's neither here nor there.

) In these books, the authors all say that writing IS a contract between the author and the reader. That usually, very quickly on, the author tells the reader what they are writing about so the reader can decide if they want to read the book or not. In short stories, it should be done in the first paragraph. In novels, usually within the first chapter.
Now, many of the people who wrote the books do say that there are times when to break the contract or to set up something different, usually as long as there are story reasons for doing so. It can't be completely in the dark that something big changes. However, the suggestion for starting authors is not to attempt to do that until they get more experience and confidence.
Interesting about TC. I haven't read them, and my wife won't let me since she figured she wasted her time for both of us, but I found the discussion interesting.
Here are some of the people and books I didn't like because I felt they broke the contract:
Tolkien - I hope the flames will be kept to a minimum but I don't like Tolkien. I am basing this on the movies, which is not the books, but I have (unsuccessfully) tried to read the books for 15 years now. I never feel pulled into them. However, in the end, the promise given to me was that Frodo was the only one able to carry the burden of the ring and he couldn't do it in the end. In the end, imo, there is NO hero, at least with regard to the ring, because of how the ring is destroyed. There were other things in the movie that I didn't like, that are supposed to be directly from the books, but that ending really made me mad. Again, contract broken for me.
Jordan - Ugh. This is one of those situations where I am embarrassed that I liked him and defended him, even got some people to read him, and after book ten, I refuse to read him again. He was good up through book six of WoT but after that, he seemed to be milking the series rather than writing what he started to write. I mean, he went from 2-3 major things happening per book to sometimes nothing important happening! It was a book of plot that moved nothing else along! Ugh.
KJA - I hated his Star Wars books and was flabbergasted when he became the authority. I thought that it was obvious what Zahn had done in setting up Jade and Skywalker and when KJA didn't have them together, it didn't make sense. (I LOVE Zahn! Love his books!) I loved how Zahn made that more definitive, lest that happen again. However, in this case, the contract he broke felt more that he wasn't writing in the Star Wars universe. It wasn't even good in some books. He never seemed to get the characters down as well as others. (In contrast, Kathy Byers (Truce at Bakura) didn't have good science but the characters and plot were good.) KJA did the same thing with the X-Files books he wrote. I never felt he got the characters of Mulder and Scully down compared to some other authors. I also didn't think much of his ideas for the books themselves.
I agree with Weiss and Hickman assassment as well. I liked Chronicles and Legends but nothing else after. Death Gate was so anti-climactic that I was pissed they wrote what they had. I knew that they had written Summer Flame for the SAGA system and that's probably why the books starts as it does, to get the reader in the mindset that this isn't DND anymore. However, it was too big of a change and I think they should have done it another way. They wrote heroic books and it felt as if they were trying to be "more real" later on but it ended up feeling like they broke the contract compared to what they had done before.
Simon Hawke never got me with his Dark Sun books. In fact, even within fantasy, I had such a hard time buying the underlying premise of his Dark Sun books that I never finished them. I always felt he made it too easy for his main character and felt cheated that I didn't see the hero struggle more.
Clancy let me down in becoming more about the battles and the fighting rather than the characters and in what they were caught. I think it was the Bear and the Dragon that I didn't like and so stopped reading them. They aren't reading like my thriller/suspense novels that I liked but novels on tactics and battles with too much detail.
Grisham is still interesting to me, although I haven't read Painted House and maybe one other, but they are starting to be the same. However, the last book was done well and was different from his usual lawyer novels such that I will probably check out his next book.
Crichton probably let me down when he wrote a sequel to Jurassic Park, more than likely due to publisher influence. That just isn't how he writes. While I liked the book okay, I think he should have refused, as he did for number three. Otherwise, I think I get exactly what I expect from Crichton and I enjoy reading him. (Too bad the movie Timeline SUCKED! I really hate it when they change his movies (Timeline for Walker and Rising Sun for Snipes) for the stars they have.)
Of the writers I like whom I think follow through on the contract, it would be, in no particular order: Elaine Cunningham, R.A. Salvatore, Margerat McCollough, Lyndon Hardy, Thomas Reid, Lisa Smedman, Katherine Kurtz (adept series), Wurtz and Feist (Empire), Troy Denning, and a few others.
There are authors I don't like but I can't say if they break the contract or not.
Good discussion! Thanks!
Have a good one! Take care!
edg
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