T O P I C R E V I E W |
The Sage |
Posted - 03 Aug 2010 : 05:28:42 Well met
This is a Book Club thread for Elminster Must Die (part of "The Sage of Shadowdale" saga), by Ed Greenwood. Please discuss chapters 26 - 31 herein. |
5 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
Blueblade |
Posted - 08 Aug 2012 : 21:36:33 My reread continues. There's a point in many of Ed's Realms novels where the pace really starts to pick up, and for EL MUST DIE it's in this stretch of chapters. The obvious noble villain, Stormserpent, is no longer in control (if he ever was) and no longer center stage, and we start hurtling towards the conclusion. Still a great read... BB |
Dennis |
Posted - 29 Nov 2010 : 12:51:37 I appreciate Ed's 'fixing' of things that used to elicit heated comments from many fans...But these chapters still haven't saved me from boredom. |
George Krashos |
Posted - 13 Aug 2010 : 00:53:04 Ed uses his novel opportunities to constantly "fix up" areas of realmslore that occasionally provide or reactions in fans.
A small example of this is from the "Swords of Eveningstar" trilogy where he notes that the nature of portal/gate magic is somewhat unstable in that non-organic things disappear randomly, never to be seen again. I know that this bit is in response to fans who have queried why magic and portals don't dominate trade activities - in other words, why anyone bothers shipping stuff by trade caravan.
Another one was the revelation that the Chosen/Harpers were monitoring and manipulating the Thayan enclaves for intelligence on the activities of Thay rather than actively seeking to shut them down. This was in response to the opinion of some fans that the Thayan enclave system wouldn't/couldn't be allowed to exist by the forces of good in the Realms.
I pick up more and more of these minor tweakings when I read Ed's novels these days as he reacts to published realmslore that he had no hand in crafting. He works tirelessly to file off the rough edges, make that material a part of the cohesive whole and explain away the inconsistencies that crop up from time to time.
As for a "deeper/hidden" message, I haven't managed to find one save for what shines through in every piece of Ed's writing: love is the most powerful force in the Realms. Given I love the guy for all that he has given me over many years, I can identify with that.
-- George Krashos
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Baleful Avatar |
Posted - 12 Aug 2010 : 23:29:45 I've read some comments here and there from people who've read Ed's latest that it seemed to them that Ed was sneaking some hidden messages into the text. Some think it's a treasure hunt, some a comment on/information about future Realms events or releases, and one guy even thinks it's some sort of revelation about real-world politics (!). Does this seem credible to anyone? Anyone? Several times while I was reading, I got the feeling I was "missing something" that was "behind" what Ed was saying in the forefront of his prose, but I just thought it was "deep" Realmslore references I was missing. Anyone else have the same feeling? |
Longtime Lurker |
Posted - 12 Aug 2010 : 03:34:39 It was in these chapters that the book stops unfolding merrily and starts to speed up (though Chapter 33 is when it really becomes noticeable). I suspect this is when Ed tossed aside his outline and rode the starting-to-take-on-a-life-of-its-own tale to the end of his wordcount. It feels that way, anyway. Susan Morris, if you read these threads, care to comment at all? Ed has praised you highly as an editor, both here and among staffers from the big New York houses who were touting their great and veteran editors; I'd love to hear your take on editing an Ed Greenwood novel. Does he still put in scenes just for the amusement of his editors, that he knows you're going to (have to) edit out? |