1. Vancian magic, particularly of the D&D-Vancian variety, tends to assume that a spell is a *thing.* It is a *thing* that you have stuffed into your head. When you cast it, you are letting that *thing* out. Look at the spellthief to get an extreme example of the implications of this point of view- if a spell is a *thing* inside of your head, someone could possibly take that *thing* out of your head and run away with it. This point of view has been in the background of D&D magic for some time, but is sometimes stressed and sometimes ignored.
2. Not a fan of the Dying Earth books. Too much casual rape. I know, written in an earlier time, main character isn't a "hero" by any stretch of the imagination, prose is still excellent... but about the point where Cugel sells one woman off to be raped with only a twinge of guilt that he rapidly ignores, rapes another, and then shrugs and walks away when she's drowned as a result of his own actions, I quit reading. Technically neither woman was an absolute saint, and maybe I'm hypocritical for not putting the book down after all the casual murders Cugel commits, but I am what I am, I guess.
I'd rather read Matthew Hughes.
2. Not a fan of the Dying Earth books. Too much casual rape. I know, written in an earlier time, main character isn't a "hero" by any stretch of the imagination, prose is still excellent... but about the point where Cugel sells one woman off to be raped with only a twinge of guilt that he rapidly ignores, rapes another, and then shrugs and walks away when she's drowned as a result of his own actions, I quit reading. Technically neither woman was an absolute saint, and maybe I'm hypocritical for not putting the book down after all the casual murders Cugel commits, but I am what I am, I guess.
I'd rather read Matthew Hughes.