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| Registered User Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 31
| Janny Wurts advice Hi Janny Wurts fans! I'd like to start reading something of Janny's since I've read some really good reviews on her work. on occasions I even spotted her name mentioned alongside George Martin, Steven Erikson and such, which was quite surprising since I've never heard of Janny Wurts before. Anyway, where do I start? What is considered the best of her work? and does she really reach the standards of Martin the likes of him? I didn't know where would be the best place to ask this, and then I decided that here, among her fans, would be the best way to get to know Wurts's work, and maybe even become a fan myself. Hope you could help me... |
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| Direwolf of the chrons Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: Back in a time when Pluto was a planet and brontosauruses walked the streets
Posts: 2,007
Blog Entries: 1 | Re: Janny Wurts advice A good easy start is "To Ride Through Hells Chasm" Its a good start as its a single volume only rather than part of a longer series - so its one complete story. That is where I started and I think its a good place to begin. Otherwise you could try "Curse of the Mistwraith" which is the first book of her series "Wars of light and shadow" but that is really heading into a longer story arch |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| Moderator Join Date: Mar 2005 Location: Australia
Posts: 7,980
| Re: Janny Wurts advice Yes I wouldn't suggest gonig straight to the Wars of Light and Shadow. Can I suiggest as Overread points out the stand-alone nvoels To Ride Hell's Chasm or Master Of Whitestorm You could also try her earlier stuff: The Cycle of Fire Book 1 Stormwarden Book 2 Keeper of the Keys Book 3 Shadowfane In collaboration with Raymond E Feist. Book 1 Daughter of the Empire Book 2 Servant of the Empire Book 3 Mistress of the Empire Cheers.... |
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| Why is my nose hot? | Re: Janny Wurts advice Yep, either To Ride Hell's Chasm or Master of Whitestorm would be my recommendations to start with, too. TRHC is a good example of where her writing is now; MoW is an older story but a well-told classic fantasy, a cut above the mob. |
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| Lochaber Axeman Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: Canada
Posts: 1,287
| Re: Janny Wurts advice I'll throw in my two pennies... To Ride Hell's Chasm is great, because it gives you a really good idea of her style NOW, as opposed to 20-25 years ago. It is a great book that starts as an intriguing mystery and then breaks out into incredibly fast-paced action about half-way through. The story's timeline takes place in a week, and so it is very fast-paced (no long journeys, etc.). Master of Whitestorm and Sorcerer's Legacy were among her first novels, and she has evolved quite a bit since they were written. The latter is her first novel, very much a court intrigue story, whereas the former is like a series of short stories (each chapter is a separate adventure) about the same character, something of a tortured soul, proto-Arithon (see below) type. Alas, these two books are out of print, as is the Cycle of Fire series cited by Gollum above. The Empire books with Raymond Feist I found to be the best stuff in the Riftwar universe. The characters were so much more refined, and the plotting was carried out with much more finesse than what Feist usually does. If you like the Feist books, the Empire series is another great introduction to Janny Wurts (it was mine). Janny's big epic, The Wars of Light and Shadow, stands at 8 big, fat novels, with the ninth coming out likely next fall (she is almost done the manuscript). Like the others, I suggest you try this AFTER you have read TRHC. If you like TRHC, then by all means, pick up The Curse of the Mistwraith, the first book of that series. Be aware that it is setting the foundation for an epic of 11 books, but it is by no means an infodump. You are being introduced to a big world, with vivid characters that you don't always like, and that do things that you don't necessarily want them to do, but that are very, very real. Enjoy. I always envy you first timers. Nothing like reading a great book for the first time. |
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| Moderator Join Date: Mar 2005 Location: Australia
Posts: 7,980
| Re: Janny Wurts advice Quote:
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| Where matter vanishes... Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 1,834
| Re: Janny Wurts advice I will echo the previous posts, LaMattie, and add that she also has a several short stories and a lot of additional information on her works, which can be found here. I too hope you enjoy her stuff, and envy you your find! Grim |
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| | #9 (permalink) |
| Lochaber Axeman Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: Canada
Posts: 1,287
| Re: Janny Wurts advice LaMattie, check out this link, which is a story on Janny Wurts just posted at FantasyLiterature.com: Janny Wurts’ works return to American bookshelves | Fantasy Literature, Frankly |
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| | #10 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 1,694
| Re: Janny Wurts advice Thanks everyone for your contributions to this thread. I am also looking for a place to start and sample some Janny Wurts. It looks like she's going to win the vote for the author to read for Feburary (in the SFF Chronicles Goodreads bookgroup). I definitely prefer the idea of starting with a stand alone novel as I tend to avoid series these days anyway so "To Ride a Hell's Chasm" sounds like the one. I didn't know which of the three stand alone novels to try but, as Clansman said, this will show me where she's at now rather than twenty years ago and since one of my over reading aspirations is to aquaint myself with more contemporary SF and fantasy, I might as well go with the recent one. |
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| | #11 (permalink) |
| Lochaber Axeman Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: Canada
Posts: 1,287
| Re: Janny Wurts advice Yes, TRHC is an excellent place to start. That's my standard recommendation for a new Wurts reader. In fact, for any author who you haven't tried, a stand-alone is a nice way to decide if you like them or not. That way, you don't have the unanswered questions the first book of a series poses. I started series by Sara Douglass and David Coe that I didn't like, but to this day, a little part of me wants to finish them to find out what happened. A very little part, one that gets no attention from me, because I don't have time to read sub-standard stuff. |
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| | #12 (permalink) |
| Lochaber Axeman Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: Canada
Posts: 1,287
| Re: Janny Wurts advice I have actually thought about this a bit, and I have come to the realization that I should temper my view slightly. Where to start with Wurts depends on the reader, and where the reader is at. TRHC is a fantastic book (one of my faves), but it might prove daunting to some (it is big, and very robust in the language department). Therefore, I would describe her books, so that you can choose what best suits you right now: Sorcerer's Legacy - fast read, one track plot, lightly romantic, female heroine. Janny Wurts advises that this quick court intrigue is what caused Ray Feist to ask her to collaborate with him on the Empire series. Cycle of Fire trilogy (Stormwarden, Keeper of the Keys, Shadowfane) - a coming of age fantasy about three children with flaws, with a cross-genre surprise in the hidden depths (big surprise). Master of Whitestorm - straight up adventure, about a mercenary who deals with insoluble problems. Fast-paced, written in episodes in easy bites for a commuter. If you like odd magic systems, wonders and astonishments, centerpieced by a Lethal Weapon style hero that unwinds to reveal his psychological depths - this book's for you. Recommended to people who like Sanderson, and swashbuckling. Free first chapter available as a text excerpt at Excerpts: The Master of Whitestorm That Way Lies Camelot - short fiction collection, a grab bag of both space opera, SF and Fantasy. Nominated for a British Fantasy Award for Best Collection. To Ride Hell's Chasm - mystery to intrigue to action adventure, with a gifted heroic lead forced to face then overcome the core circumstance that brought about his past failure. Free first chapter teaser excerpt at Excerpts: To Ride Hell's Chasm, and you can hear the first 3 chapters available as an Mp3 download of audio readings by Wurts herself at Podcasts: Readings by Janny Wurts Then, there is the massive and wonderful The Wars of Light and Shadow which is my favourite epic series. It stands as tall in quality a A Song of Ice and Fire or Erikson's Malazan Book of the Fallen, and I like it better than both of those, because the story is more balanced, the characterization is tighter, and there aren't so many bloody POVs. It is much better than Jordan's Wheel of Time, and The Sword of Truth is not fit to be mentioned in the same post, even though I have done so. If you really, really love big epic fantasy, then by all means, start here. There are excerpts of chapters, in text (and audio for Stormed Fortress), from each of the books in the series at The Janny Wurts Official Webpage, just click "Excerpts" at the top of the page. There is an interview at Keeping the Door (Master of Light and Shadow: Janny Wurts interview) which explains the motivation and makeup of the series. There are also three short stories from the series that have appeared in different anthologies. The Empire Series, written in collaboration with RE Feist. A court intrigue, where a woman must wrestle an entrenched cultural bias to save her family. Sort of Woman of Substance meets Shogun. Easy to read story, and you can find the books anywhere. Tight plotting and the best characterization you will find in any Feist novel. I understand that this is considered subversive women's literature in Japan. Very readable, and in my opinion, it is the best stuff with Raymond Feist's name on it. There, that should give any Wurts newbies a decent take on each of her major works. |
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| Easily amused Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 721
| Re: Janny Wurts advice Thanks for the rundown, Clansman. Wurts first came to my attention when I was reading the Riftwar books. I thought the Empire books were the best of the lot. Then I found To Ride Hell's Chasm (loved it), and that prompted me to get the Cycle of Fire trilogy, which I didn't like as much. I have all the Wars of Light and Shadow books, and I'm looking forward to reading them this year. I'm going to look into Sorcerer's Legacy and Master of Whitestorm. Your comments piqued my interst. |
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