WizarDru
Adventurer
That sums up a lot of the problems I had with MS&T...most of the series was irrelevant. Most of the major subplots ultimately were unimportant, other than to show that the heroes were a disorganized, desperate rabble. Williams could have told his tale in far fewer words. His writing is good, or I wouldn't have finished the series, but he needed to be edited down considerably. 'To Green Angel Tower' could have been ONE book.SableWyvern said:Everything the central characters did throughout the entire novel is rendered irrelevant to the story's conclusion, as Pug and Co. suddenly appear and save the world without breaking a sweat.
As for not being 'Tolkein-esque'...I got many impressions from MS&T, but that wasn't one of them. Are the Sithi anything but Tolkien's elves with the serial numbers rubbed off? That's how I read them. The Storm King felts very much like a slightly more vocal Sauron, to me. There were other parallels, of course, but that neither hurt nor helped my enjoyment of the series.
I realize that Williams may have been trying to convey a certain message with the ending...I just didn't appreciate the execution.
This reviewer on sffworld sums up my feelings pretty well:
Ben@sffworld said:However, after the first book, this trend not only continues, but it intensifies. A great deal of trouble and intense effort is put forth by a variety of characters and subplots that are doomed to simply end in the death of the primary characters. Subplots leading to a smidgin of hope end up in ashes. Major subplots which seem to be absolutely critical to the resolution of the story are thrown away or made worthless, and there is a great deal of unrequited suffering and pointless hope.
The worst comes at the end of the book, where the final resolution is perfectly in keeping with the above flaws. Without spoiling all three books, which despite their flaws are monumentally well written and fun to read, I can say that the final climax in the third book was certainly unexpected and for me unsatisfying. Given where all of the other subplots in the other books eventually lead to though, it should have been obvious what was going to happen.
In short, extraordinarily well written, with fantastic characters and a dark story where madness and death are frequent visitors. Ultimately a few too many deaths, a few too many pointless subplots where primary characters are simply snuffed, and a very disappointing (for me) climax in keeping with the disappointing subplots.
Oh, and minor pet peeve: the phrase is "Eat your cake and have it, too", not the other way around. The point being that you want to eat your cake and enjoy it, and still have it after you've eaten it, without actually sacrificing the cake.