Crossroads of Twilight (spoilers)

Includes Spoilers

While Elayne & Egwene had some good, and long, talking moments, with a book this size its not unreasonable to expect they follow up with some action- seeing the implementation of

Elayne's plan to scare the other nobles with a controlled incursion of the borderlander armies would have been nice. Or maybe interacting some with enemy nobles. Some actual, direct politicking would have been nice. All she did was hint at what she needed to do, and what she intended to do next.

In a last 20-page shocker, a main character did something. Egwene had an unspecified plan to do something involving the skill of making cuendlar (sp?). Of course, she took no one to watch her back... and her line of business she should have realized the foolishness of that. Earlier that day she was thinking about the dire necessity of having a hundred guards within 50 yards at all times...

Mat was being very much himself, aside from actually trying to get Tuon to speak his name. Based on the structure of his character, I was surprised at his near-complete focus on courting her. His character has always been about avoiding destiny, and sometimes succeeding. He should have run for the hills as soon as he realized her saying his name would lead to their prophecized joining. Also, his role in the novels is that of the Great General of the Dragon or something. Whatever else he does in this side-plot, his main purpose in the larger story is with the armies.

Rand's decision to make a truce with the Seanchan was surprising. In that he didn't realize its necessity earlier. His job is championing the side of life and light against the eternal evil Dark One. Anything the Seanchan might do is irrelevant if he fails that. Its sad, but he's long since been nutty and cold enough to realize he needs to give away at least half the continent, maybe so he can subtely work on gaining control over the Seanchan forces to add to his own.

*

I like the idea of Jordan doing some off-epic stories in this world. Not in the middle of the series mind you, but when else would this man do that? It really shows that he might not have sold out so much as lost his direction.

The first few books were great, and everything I read about Jordan's reactions to fans and their conspiracy theories pointed to him looking down at his thorough outline of the whole story and giving an evil little grin at all the wild pronouncements. He has misplaced that outline...

This book not only had a lot of padding, it feels like padding. So much stuff was detailed for no apparent, meaningful reason. I expect it was written to remind people of everyone and everything and make a little extra money while he tries to figure out where to go from here. He can't advance the plot until he decides what that should be.

Gawyn got a few nice pages reminding everyone that he was conflicted in his loyalties and in love with Egwene. A darkfriend (Mellar?) who had so few pages before that I could barely remember him was revisited, to remind us he was evil. He did have the most development of any character in the book though. He actually killled someone. That was the great action scene. Perrin's cold effort at torture was not an action scene, it was built to remind us he has hardened into someone able to command an army, and then to remind us that he hates killing.

The most aggravating thing about 'stuff which actually happened' in the book was Logain and Bashere spontaneously arriving together at Rand's secret hideaway. Apparently this pair of men, soldier's and Aes Sedai warders in tow, had made their way to Cairhein, turned that city on its head, and sniffed out where Rand was, then showed up. Until he was on Rand's doorstep, Bashere was with his army near Caemlyn. And Logain was about to set out for a Asha'man recruitment trip. So these key secondary characters did more adventuring than anyone else but it was not shown- it wasn't even hinted at that they were looking for Rand!

A few new characters were introduced in this book- the Great Captain of Arad Doman, an Imperial Deathwatch General, and maybe one or two others. Ituralde of Arad Doman is not important to anything as far as I can tell, just a competent man dealing with change who someone, probably Mat, will have to impress and dominate later. The General is actually a cool character who I wouldn't mind seeing more of- once the main characters have been seen to. The man seems to have a thing for Tuon, indicated only in his odd personal loyalty to her and his insistence on assignment protecting her.

So, to recap, the book was reminders, padding, and set up for the real book, which will arrive sometime in years to come.

This rant was much better than the one in the other thread... and I had thought I'd gotten it out of my system. :cool:
 

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Re: Includes Spoilers

Khorod said:

So, to recap, the book was reminders, padding, and set up for the real book, which will arrive sometime in years to come.

This rant was much better than the one in the other thread... and I had thought I'd gotten it out of my system. :cool:

I think the first reaction of most people when they first finish COT is to rant. I spent a couple of days looking around the net to see what other people thought of the book and I found that I actually wasn't as mad as many of the true diehard fans out there.

I never truly believed that he was just padding it out before but if you take the hardback version of The Fires of Heaven (683 Pages long) and the hardback version of Crossroads of Twilight (680 pages long) and you open them up and place them side to side it is just insane the difference in the the font size used. Fires had 56 chapters, Crossroads had 30 chapters. The font size was increased to pad the book out to make it look like he was still doing 600+ page books, (In Fires of Heaven chapter 31 starts on page 357). He isn't writing longer chapters, and there is no way you can say that he is putting more in his chapters as nothing really happens in them. A Crown of Swords has a larger typeset than the first six books and Path of Daggers, Winter's Heart and Crossroads of Twilight have huge typesets by comparison. I don't have the first two books here right now but not including the glossary; The Dragon Reborn (55 chapters, 578 pages), The Shadow Rising (58 chapters, 681 pages), The Fires of Heaven ( 56 chapters, 683 pages), Lord of Chaos (55 chapters, 699 pages), Crown of Swords ( 41 chapters, 663 pages), Path of Daggers (31 chapters, 591 pages), Winters Heart (35 chapters, 656 pages), Crossroads of Twilight (30 chapters, 680 pages). The typeset gets a little bit smaller from Dragon Reborn to Fires of Heaven, then gets larger by a little bit from Lord of Chaos to Crown of Swords and then gets huge from Crown of Swords to Path of Daggers (not so suprisingly this is where people started to really complain about nothing happening and the series getting drawn out). Yea I know it sounds like a conspiracy theory but there is a reason that people are saying that Crossroads of Twilight only seems like half a book, by comparison to his older books it is. There is a difference of 26 chapters between Fires of Heaven and Crossroads of Twilight yet the chapters don't seem to read like they are twice as long as they used to be. Winters Heart and Crossroads of Twilight combined would of made one very good book.
 

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