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I've got good news for you then: the fourth and fifth books are already out.
Yeah, the firth one came out super fast. I bought the 4th one last year, and haven't gotten to it, thinking he would take several years for the 5th, and to my surprise it released a few months ago. I believe he is focusing on finishing another series before he gets to the final 5 books of Stormlight though.
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can edgedancer be read as a standalone book? or is it the latest installment of a ongoing arc?
You can but you might not quite understand some things unless you read book 1 and 2 first. I'd pick this up but wait. Highly recommend the Emperor's Soul if you want a taste of Sanderson's style. Then, once you're hooked (because you will be) Google around for recommendations on where to start. Mine would be the first trilogy of Mistborn.
I'm a fan of Brandon Sanderson's work, and have read many of his series. That said, I'm going to wait before I get into this particular series. For one, it seems to be a a huge time investment. Even the 'novellas' in the series are novel sized by typical standards. And I imagine the series will take a decade or more to finish. I usually forget the plot points when I take a long break in a series. More than once I've reread initial books of a series, because I had forgotten so much with years of gap. And so now I prefer to read series that have finished.
But even if I keep all of those concerns aside, what holds me back the most is that reviews of the latest book have been quite bad. Of course, I haven't read the books so I don't have specifics, but from what I could glean, the general consensus seems to be that the latest book should have gone through extensive slimming. It's too long for its own good, with the plot not doing justice to its length. 'Sanderson needs to change his editor', seems to be a common theme among reviews.
Also, this might be contentious, but too many reviews mention that Sanderson is slipping into preachy territory — not that I mind left wing/ 'woke' politics, but ham-fisted attempts at pushing an ideology can degrade the quality of any work. I do not know whether this is true of the latest book. So I'm reserving judgment; just sharing a common complaint that I came across.
I do believe good authors can write bad books on occasion (I can go on and on about the astonishing quality gap between the best and worst books by John Grisham, for example). And so I'm probably going to sit on this series for another decade or whatever time it takes for it to finish. And I will try to gauge via spoiler-free reviews to see how well the series holds up as a whole.
I do not believe Sanderson will pull a vanishing act like GRRM or Patrick Rothfuss. If anyone can be relied upon to finish a series, it's Sanderson. And Sanderson usually finishes his series strong. So I'm holding out hope that it'll turn out to be worth the time in the end.
You can but you might not quite understand some things unless you read book 1 and 2 first. I'd pick this up but wait. Highly recommend the Emperor's Soul if you want a taste of Sanderson's style. Then, once you're hooked (because you will be) Google around for recommendations on where to start. Mine would be the first trilogy of Mistborn.
Agree. Sanderson's website is actually really helpful. He provides some commentary on his series and provides some recommended starting points. I've read 2 of the 3 and its fantastic. Highly recommend.
I'm a fan of Brandon Sanderson's work, and have read many of his series. That said, I'm going to wait before I get into this particular series. For one, it seems to be a a huge time investment. Even the 'novellas' in the series are novel sized by typical standards. And I imagine the series will take a decade or more to finish. I usually forget the plot points when I take a long break in a series. More than once I've reread initial books of a series, because I had forgotten so much with years of gap. And so now I prefer to read series that have finished. But even if I keep all of those concerns aside, what holds me back the most is that reviews of the latest book have been quite bad. Of course, I haven't read the books so I don't have specifics, but from what I could glean, the general consensus seems to be that the latest book should have gone through extensive slimming. It's too long for its own good, with the plot not doing justice to its length. 'Sanderson needs to change his editor', seems to be a common theme among reviews. Also, this might be contentious, but too many reviews mention that Sanderson is slipping into preachy territory — not that I mind left wing/ 'woke' politics, but ham-fisted attempts at pushing an ideology can degrade the quality of any work. I do not know whether this is true of the latest book. So I'm reserving judgment; just sharing a common complaint that I came across. I do believe good authors can write bad books on occasion (I can go on and on about the astonishing quality gap between the best and worst books by John Grisham, for example). And so I'm probably going to sit on this series for another decade or whatever time it takes for it to finish. And I will try to gauge via spoiler-free reviews to see how well the series holds up as a whole.I do not believe Sanderson will pull a vanishing act like GRRM or Patrick Rothfuss. If anyone can be relied upon to finish a series, it's Sanderson. And Sanderson usually finishes his series strong. So I'm holding out hope that it'll turn out to be worth the time in the end.
All 5 are out, there's nothing to wait for. The last 5 are going to be its own thing.
Yeah, the firth one came out super fast. I bought the 4th one last year, and haven't gotten to it, thinking he would take several years for the 5th, and to my surprise it released a few months ago. I believe he is focusing on finishing another series before he gets to the final 5 books of Stormlight though.
Yupp. Ghostbloods (Mistborn Era 3) is the next project he is focusing on. He plans to write out all 3 books for that, then release them. That said...he will start work on Stormlight Archive #6-10 in 10 years (yes, 10 years).
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But even if I keep all of those concerns aside, what holds me back the most is that reviews of the latest book have been quite bad. Of course, I haven't read the books so I don't have specifics, but from what I could glean, the general consensus seems to be that the latest book should have gone through extensive slimming. It's too long for its own good, with the plot not doing justice to its length. 'Sanderson needs to change his editor', seems to be a common theme among reviews.
Also, this might be contentious, but too many reviews mention that Sanderson is slipping into preachy territory — not that I mind left wing/ 'woke' politics, but ham-fisted attempts at pushing an ideology can degrade the quality of any work. I do not know whether this is true of the latest book. So I'm reserving judgment; just sharing a common complaint that I came across.
I do believe good authors can write bad books on occasion (I can go on and on about the astonishing quality gap between the best and worst books by John Grisham, for example). And so I'm probably going to sit on this series for another decade or whatever time it takes for it to finish. And I will try to gauge via spoiler-free reviews to see how well the series holds up as a whole.
I do not believe Sanderson will pull a vanishing act like GRRM or Patrick Rothfuss. If anyone can be relied upon to finish a series, it's Sanderson. And Sanderson usually finishes his series strong. So I'm holding out hope that it'll turn out to be worth the time in the end.
Join The Conversation
Share information with the community. Please follow our Community Guidelines and be kind!