WanderingThrough2 said:
You may well be right; I really don't have any huge vested interest in defending Kay, and I read Tigana when I was pretty young, so perhaps it really isn't appropriate for readers older than 16. My recollection is that the characters were actually complex and fairly interesting, that the moral crux of the story was a good one, and that the prose was very strong (if somewhat purple). There were a few (melodramatic) moments that really moved me (the duke's amputation of his fingers, the finale with Brandin and Rhun, the ring dive). But I'm frankly unwilling to pick the book up again to test whether it holds up, because it probably doesn't.
I could probably comment on some of those if I'd managed to finish
Tigana, but I didn't. Funny, I finished Ed Greenwood/Salvatore novels, but not
Tigana. Not because Greenwood or Salvatore is better, but probably because they're so bad I couldn't help but continue. Trainwreck syndrome and all that.
I do think that you're falling into the trap, though, of equating sentimenality with melodrama. Maybe you're just using the terms interchangeably. As much as I hate recourse to the dictionary, to simplify things let's just use a fixed definition of melodrama: "a dramatic form that does not observe the laws of cause and effect and that exaggerates emotion and emphasizes plot or action at the expense of characterization."
That's the thing. I don't think GRRM
exaggerates emotion. Given what his characters go through, it's not strange that their reactions would be extreme or violent or any of the things they are, but the difference is that in general their emotions aren't shoved down your throat. Perhaps I'm biased and rage and bitterness are less sick-making than love, but then I never found--for example--Jaime's uncertain love for Cersei nauseating. For that matter, I don't find any of the characters' more honorable/loving actions painful to read about, so it's not a matter of "zomg i's edgy, i like teh GRITTY stuff." You're probably right that I'm interchanging sentimentality with melodrama, though.
My last efforts to get back into fantasy (after years of Serious Literature self-improvement) were total failures.
...I hope I never get like that. I shouldn't; three years of English lit undergrad course didn't destroy my ability to read anything but SERIOUS BUSINESS LITERAWRY things.
(I confess, too, that I'm a total sentimentalist, so if one doesn't like sentimental stories, there's a fair chance that he won't like any of the books on the list I gave other than, I suppose, Wolfe.)
Haha, I guess it's good I didn't bring up my opinions about Hobb too. I was going to, but then I didn't want to come across as being contrary for the sake of it.
Edit:
Erebus said:
And "The Lies of Locke Lamora", which I've read recently, was also good.
Ah, that was another one I was going to recommend, but it falls more in the "entertaining, but not much else" category. Someone on Amazon said it's Salvatore but more grown-up, and that's somewhat right. I enjoyed
Lies and the sequel very much for all the funny dialogue, but start thinking and the enjoyment begins to fade: the plot's pretty predictable, the characters can be pretty thin, and it's a little bizarre how
every single person ever is capable of spouting clever even through bruised and bleeding lips.
Edit: GO BOOKFAGS GO.