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Indlæser... The Belgariadaf David Eddings
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Pre09: Maybe I'll try it again, but I just couldn't handle it the first time. Sooooo trite. So contrived. So predictable. The characters just weren't dynamic enough to be enjoyable. Characters: Cookie cutter except for Polgara. Plot: Boooring. Save the world crap. Style: Flat, no twists; all romanticist. I fell in love with this whole series one summer when I was about 16 I think. It was the first fantasy I ever read that really created an elaborate world with that went beyond unusual creatures with unusual powers, to different socialstructures, a mythology, social customs, and unusual species. I identified with the boldest female character Polgara who became a sort of role model for me I suppose. I tried reading David Eddings after this series but it seemed like his whole writing style change and was dumbed down. The sentence structure in this series is full, descriptive and I thought it was beautifully written prose. There is a love story embedded in this (several)and a sense of urgency tha will keep you turning the pages. Read it and escape somewhere else for awhile! ingen anmeldelser | tilføj en anmeldelse
IndeholderI spådommens spor af David Eddings (indirekte) Troldkvinden Polgara af David Eddings (indirekte) Troldmanden spiller ud af David Eddings (indirekte) Den gyldne prinsesse af David Eddings (indirekte) Enchanters' End Game af David Eddings (indirekte) Pawn of Prophecy, Part 1 af David Eddings (indirekte) HæderspriserDistinctionsNotable Lists
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Queen of Sorcery is less problematic on the whole, though there are still some tired sexist tropes. The adventure really gets going here, and we're taken on a trek through Arendia and Tolnedra and down to Nyissa to see the world and give Eddings a chance to show us what he's made. Garion remains a wet git, sorry, a naive narrator, which was definitely the best way to do it. Belgarath and Polgara are maybe just too powerful though, so we're starting to lose any sense of peril or risk. Nevertheless, it remains a charming and readable series!
Magician's Gambit is a great work, the whole Ulgo and Cthol Murgus bits are lovely and dramatic but I don't really understand Ctuchik's death, it seems like he would be smart enough to avoid that action, even if he was panicking. I would have had him distracted long enough for Belgarath to make his head explode or something, but I'm not a clever writer or owt, just a mad old git.
Castle of Wizardry is a bit of a weak point. Not a lot of overall plot action here, so what there is is stretched out. Its all essential, and couldn't really have gone into Gambit, but the lack of action leaves this book mostly people going places and saying stuff. Eddings' poor use of character language comes to the fore, with most of the characters sounding the same and using the same linguistic style despite being from different cultures, and it makes this probably the least pleasurable of the series.
Enchanters' End Game continues the problems from Castle, but adds lots of action to make up for it, and shifts the action regularly between multiple viewpoints. The actual battle with Torak is pretty crap, and I didn't understand why, if Polgara and some others were due to be in Cthol Mishrak for the big fight somehow, why didn't Garion and Belgarath just hang around with them and be taken there as well. Still I think that Eddings' way was better, as it got some good scenes with the Morindim and with Drosta lek Thun. All in all a decent finale. ( )