| Because I need to think about things that are differently stressful, sometimes... |
Because I need to think about things that are differently stressful, sometimes...
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May. 9th, 2009 @ 05:15 pm
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| From: | naraht |
| Date: |
May 9th, 2009 11:50 pm (UTC) |
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Guy Gavriel Kay is sounding more and more interesting. I've been meaning to read him anyway because of his books about Byzantium (my family and religious history).
I loved his Sarantine Mosaic although I've heard many complaints from people both in terms of gender, and in terms of 'he just stole everything from history books'.
I also have an utter and unholy love for his 'Lions of Al-Rassan', which again, has been criticised. I am too biased to care, but I acknowledge the opposing view points for the record. :)
in terms of 'he just stole everything from history books'.
I would be interested to hear what these people think of straight historical fiction, then -- the similarities/parallels to European and Middle eastern history were one of the things I really liked about the Sarantine Mosaic and Last Light of the Sun.
I love Kay like burning, and I think he handles female characters fine. And I love how he's taken history to make a fantasy world that seems utterly real and rich but which is recognizably not our own (it's hard than it looks).
On the other hand, I really didn't like his straight fantasy novels. But Saratine Mosaic (Byzantine) books are gorgeous, and so is Al-Rassan and The Last Light of the Sun. I still haven't read Tigana or A Song for Arbonne (I really should--I was saving them to spread out, but it's been a couple years).
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