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[personal profile] reenka
Having finally cracked under all the widespread raves about George RR Martin's Song of Ice and Fire series, I'm almost done reading the first book, and... I hate to say this, but it is well and truly just as good as everyone says it is. Like-- best fantasy series of the decade? Oh, easily. Some sort of 'masterpice' and seminal work and blahblahblah-- yeah. Which... just kind of makes me feel weird.

Generally, uber-bestselling books that are widely recommended fall into two categories, it appears: complete disappointments (maybe not so bad, really, but not worth all the hype by a long shot) and (rarely!) there comes the author who truly is that good. Good enough to appeal to a huge, wide-ranging audience without being... well... dumb. I mean, in my experience, the books that get famous & are well-beloved by masses of people tend to... uh... not be the most complex & difficult reading, so basically if a fantasy book is a famous bestseller, I'd avoid reading it like the plague (not that I like to struggle with a book, but I like some shred of complexity). In this case, it took 'A Game of Thrones' being $3.99 new for me to buy it on a whim while browsing at my Barnes & Noble; I really should've -known- because I'd loved the novella that preceded this all the way back when it was published, but like a fool I thought, 'I liked the girl in that story, but I don't wanna read about 10,000 court intrigues for 1,000 pages'.
    Basically, I think it takes something more than your usual run-of-the-mill talent to write something both easily read and deeply complex. In a way, that is the truest mark of genius, at least in writing: making it look easy without it actually being easy.

The thing that strikes me the most about 'A Game of Thrones' is really just how smooth such a complex and wide-ranging tale could be. There's not the slightest jolt between all the povs, not the slightest feeling of unnecessary exposition or plotting delay, not the least bit wasted in an 807-page work. As a reader, personally, it's working uphill all the way for me to follow more than 3 people, and nearly every other book I recall had at least one character I'd rather not have spent time on, but Martin makes every character vital and gripping and flows from one to the other like they were just links in a single chain, integral parts of a single story.
    Seriously, I remember being so impressed & intimidated by Flewelling's ensemble cast & world-building, but this knocks all that down flat, because it just seems so natural; there's never a moment for me to step back and watch it from the outside as 'the reader'. I'm constantly drawn into the story, constantly engaged. It's as if the writer is paying attention to me in a sort of... conversation, almost, and not letting my mind wander much. But it's not a cheap thriller at all; it's like... there's too much living going on. There's all this excitement and danger and intrigue, but the bottom line is always the individual characters & their lives. Always.

There's never any feeling of detail overload, even with tons of detail. Never the pointless reiteration of the character taking yet another bath (or thinking & looking forward to a bath, or casually referring to a bath, or lamenting the lack of a bath...), never a meal-taking that doesn't have some meaning, never a moment without some emotional weight and some irony attached. And then there's the humor, dark and fierce and amazingly effective, used as a characterization tool, same as the poetic bits and everything else. It's all part of making the characters seem human; rather than telling the reader 'this character told a joke and people laughed' (as many, many a drama writer thinks they can get away with), George RR Martin's characters actually... tell the jokes.

The thing that really struck me and made me wanna write a post is the idea of 'universality'; wondering if that's what I'm seeing: the mythic 'universal' storyteller at work. Wondering if that's how a truly brilliant and intelligent piece of work becomes a bestseller. But what does 'universality' even mean? Especially considering the idea that every work has the 'ideal' audience, the 'intended' audience, all that-- what is it that allows a work to be widely understood and appreciated on several different levels at once? It can't -just- be intelligence/talent, because many, many truly wonderful works are underappreciated and unpopular with the masses.

I keep asking myself, what is it? What part of this is the X Factor? The element that transcends boundaries and intelligence levels and readers' interests? Why would I, a reader who always looks for romance, magic, tight personal stories and style above content have such esteem for a story that so far has -no- real romance, -no- magic to speak of, and enough characters that I keep forgetting a quarter of their names.
    It does have poetry, though, and truth, and emotional power; it has a way of seeing right through people and being honest about that. The book's greatest strength is really in the depth of its humanistic imagination. Thinking back, that's what the Old Dead White Male writers always had, right? An insight into humanity itself; and with that, I suppose the idea of 'universal' becomes self-evident.

Date: 2006-04-05 05:32 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] notrafficlights.livejournal.com
What part of this is the X Factor?

Layla Miller! *rimshot*

Have you read Temeraire yet?

Date: 2006-04-05 08:52 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] yourpoison.livejournal.com
Well, but it has dragons and no dragon/boy smex :(
(I had the whole plot told to me, pretty much, though, ahahahah)

Date: 2006-04-05 09:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] notrafficlights.livejournal.com
and no dragon/boy smex

Actually it does. Kinda. Almost. I swear! No really. There's... stroking involved, and happy-dragon noises, and embarrassing realisations, and blushing afterwards. And, well, fuck, there may as well be dragon/boy sex, cos really, dude, just, *happy sigh*. They are so in love, it's more canon than Wincest.

OH GOD HURRY UP AND READ IT I WILL SEND YOU A COPY IF YOU WANT! *flails* I want to talk about it with you. I'll cry if you don't!

Date: 2006-04-05 09:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] yourpoison.livejournal.com
HEE! *strokes chin*
Well, I'd love to talk about the Song of Ice & Fire series, so I can send you the first book in return-- heck, it's only $3.99 :D :D :D And I do like packages... :>

Date: 2006-04-05 09:51 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] notrafficlights.livejournal.com
As long as you promise not to spill water over it like the last person I lent it to did (though, in her defence, she bought me a new copy)I can mail it to you tomorrow if you like. I just need your mailing address, obviously. :D

Date: 2006-04-05 06:04 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] loftily.livejournal.com
God I love GRRM. ♥.

Date: 2006-04-05 08:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] yourpoison.livejournal.com
Hee! Omg I've been reading nonstop. It really is... so many pages....this is why I avoid epic fantasy... *facepalm*

Date: 2006-04-05 10:48 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/_inbetween_/
Those are exactly my feelings! And this might be the only post that really had me hovering over the amazon-link right away - but when adora_spintrae asked about Temeraire, I remembered the universal raving about that, and how I don't want to read it that book at all, so I guess Game of Thrones, alas, won't get any of my measly savings either :S

Date: 2006-04-05 11:08 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] yourpoison.livejournal.com
Hahahah thwarted by unintended association, y'mean?? :> But Temeraire isn't even connected to Game of Thrones-- I mean, one is popular on lj 'cause a well-known fanfic author had written it, and the other is truly a huge bestseller by a seasoned author who is really just. That. Good. I wasn't trying to convert anyone, but-- if you could find someone to lend you a copy or a library-loan or something, you (probably) won't regret it if you like the genre at all.

Date: 2006-04-05 11:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/_inbetween_/
*big crooked grin* yes, definitely thwarted by that. I wonder when it will ever stop, but I guess people being slow readers, and the paperback coming out later, the constant reminders on my flist will keep me sporking my eyes out.

I did check it after all, since you so persuasively listed what it does NOT contain (ps: Wraeththu and Wicked annoyed me with sudden 3-7 year jumps at crucial points, how does GOT do in that respect?) and had another negative association - a former friend of mine might have loved that series, and she's into proper manly men and proper feminine women and so on ... oh, and she won't lend me the book either. Argh.

Date: 2006-04-05 11:28 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] yourpoison.livejournal.com
Haha, if this was really a rec (I'd like to think) I'd talk more about what the book -does- contain rather than the opposite, but... yeah, it has no odd time-jumps (WHICH I HATE AND FLEWELLING DID WITH ALEC&SEREGIL TO MY WOE). I've just gotten to the beginning of book 2 & it picks up where it left off, pretty much, because it's a continuous story. GRRM takes no shortcuts. He's just really hardcore in every way, for serious.

...my biggest complaint-- my -only- complaint, really-- is that he insists on describing everyone's clothes and naming things (castle-environment things) that I can't picture very well so they just confuse me, but. This isn't a serious flaw, as you can see :>

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