#and i still stand by my choices but time away from dragon age has mellowed me out lol
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glamfellens · 1 year ago
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also it still baffles me how people look at anora being an option for ferelden's monarch and then still run on the assumption that its a hereditary monarchy. eamon's insisting that she "has not a drop of royal blood" and "alistair is maric's son" arent rules, otherwise anora would not have been an option in the first place. eamon is just using those as reasons to put alistair forward as a viable candidate. which is funny because if this was based in actual history then alistair would not be a viable candidate because maric never acknowledged him as his son or as a theirin and before people are like "but moira was queen in exile, maric was king, and then cailan after him!" look at the kennedys or william pitt the elder & younger
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redscullyrevival · 8 years ago
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Fool’s Fate: The Tawny Man Rundown
@sonnetscrewdriver I’ve moved on to Dragon Keeper!
Plot/Setting/Narrative
Jesus
Okay
Holy shit???
I need a moment
Alright, so lets start easy
Being the Age of Sail nerdo I am this book’s voage bits were amusing and then a bit dissapointing; an apprecaition of sailing and living the sailor LifeStyle isn’t really a Six Duchies thing it seems, huh?
I was SO excited with getting a glimpse of my precious Bingtown babies in the last book that I was stoked for a high sea adventure in this book but wah waah mostly it was sea sickness and brooding 
Honestly I let myself down because this is a Fitz story and, well, how else would the sea be depicted?! LOL 
Poor Thick
Poor everyone for the most part, yikes
Farseer had a lot of mystery to it, a lot of slow burn world building/concept reveal with answers eventually given; Liveship Traders showed it’s cards on the table for the most part but thrived of the suspense of all the threads coming together or possibly unraveling; Tawny Man is the first series where I understood events before the characters did, the results of which made the series much more subdude than the last two. 
Not in a bad way, just, ya know, different. 
“Life Is Change” is very obviously the big overarching connecting theme between the Realm of the Elderling series and I only have praise for the fact each series has it’s own distinct tone and approach to the same (and shared) characters - it’d be a hallow utterance if the book narratives themselves did not change and grow series to series. 
The change in Tawny Man is big; it’s big for the narrative space and it’s big for Fitz and it’s big for the reader.
And you can accept the change or reject it, that’s a option we as the reader has.
I choose to embrace it.
But oh man, oh my god, I will miss The Fool. I’ll miss “Fitz and The Fool” as a unit. I know there is a new series and I’ll get to it eventually but I’ve got four Rain Wild books (YAY!) before I come back to Fitz and his part of the map so this is a solid goodbye for a while and it feels odd to part with them in the place we do.
Odd, but new. 
I’m talkin’ out my butt - I’m a little sad okay?! But I’m happy too. 
And I think that’s what this book was going for; a kind of reaffirmation that life and change is hurt and happiness and a lot of effort went into guiding readers through feeling that message as well as understanding it on an informative level.  
Ultimately I enjoyed Tawny Man more than Farseer, it’s just much more my-type-of-story. 
I never really agreed with/bought into Fitz’s choices within much of the Farseer Trilogy. I understood Fitz’s logic of course, so his choosing to let expel his pain and hide away (and all the other choices along the way) were not make or break issues for me; there is much to enjoy simply being along for the ride.
But with Tawny Man it was very satisfying for me to see Fitz come back again and again to his past decisions and not cast them off as impervious to change or impossible to face. 
That’s a beautiful message.  
I embrace that message very much in my mind and I will try to embrace it within my own life as well. 
And this isn’t relevant to anything but a little thing I’d like to preserve for my own amusement: This was the first book I’ve ever read on a Kindle! Lee got me one for my birthday for my “Year of Book” project. It took a little time get use to but once I adjusted I really enjoyed it - particularly the fact that if you are reading a borrowed book from an online library it shows you what others have highlighted as they read! I found that very interesting and I enjoyed highlighting my own favorite bits (which, not shockingly, coincided with many other people’s favorite bits).
For Rain Wild Chronicles I may start a new section for these write ups where I relay some of my highlighted sections, ‘cause why not? These are already long and useless, might as well really own them. 
Fitz
I know there is a lot we could talk about when it comes to Fitz in this book 
But I kinda already covered him in the setting/plot/narrative section above
And I really just want to let anyone bothering to read this know that I’ve never liked Fitz more then when he cleaned up and donned fancy Jamaillian digs and walked into Molly’s family chaos to tell a grieving family he is FitzChivalry Farseer and he’s gonna look after them.
I was shocked and horrified and thrilled and laughing
Fitz truly changed! It wasn’t just description of his inner change (although that was lovely, good for The Fool, thank you Fool) but the end of the book drags a bit as it does so as to allow Fitz to act on this inner change - which is something I’ll never hold against Hobb. 
So many books end quickly after their narrative climax but Hobb likes a good post cuddle and god bless her for it. 
Cutting a story off after the final movements have played is dramatic and can help events stand out as an experience in an audiences mind; but there is unique pleasure in seeing the individuals of an orchestra pack up their belongings and shuffle out isn’t there? There is a true affection for humanity’s relentless plodding along in those final chapters. Fine by me. 
The Fool
): 
So I freaked out towards the end there, ya know? 
And much like with when it happened to Fitz, a part of me thought it a cruel thing to do, to bring someone that far gone and that brutalized back.
I understood the thematic ouroboros of The Fool’s return and as a fan it was a relief of sorts but there is still that small part of me that found it cruel all the same.
I’m floored with how moved I was by the aftermath of the Fool’s death. Fitz’s quest to find the body and then to restore dignity to his friend - that was some rough stuff. 
It wasn’t “true grief” like with Nighteyes (for me anyways) but rather a form of anticipatory mourning, but in reverse? Hard to explain.
The point is yes, I cried.  
Oh oh oh how I hope The Fool can learn to manage in a world they can’t see into or shape. I hope to see the Fool again after visiting the Rain Wilds. 
Hap
lol
fuckin’ Hap
I love this idiot 
I love how all around Hap epic and fantastical things happen and his story is just him coming of age and figuring his shit out
Good for him
Does he know who Fitz really is though?! This was never addressed?! 
Prince Dutiful
Dutiful cracks me up
I love how he’ll go into PRINCE MODE and be near perfect Sacrifice and royal and awe inspiring 
then he laughs at boogers
Dutiful is hilarious to me, how I see him switch back and forth between mature young prince to out-of-his-depth-survivor brought me much joy
I love his friendship with Thick; I love how he falls for Elliania’s transparent baiting; I love how he’d be cool outwardly but skill “WTF is happening?!?”
What a joy! 
Chad
In the last book Chad really slipped through my fingers but now we’re back to our normal rocky relationship.
I like Chad
but then I don’t
And I think, finally, I’m okay with that duality 
Thick
My sweet little man
Everything about Thick is my favorite thing
I especially love how he is often described as being bored
Discussing intrigue and espionage and dragons? BORED 
Hahaha!
No wonder he and Nettle get along so well
I especially loved how he decided, for himself, to stay with Fitz on  Aslevjal
I’m excited to come back and hear more, learn more, about Thick
Nettle
I wouldn’t wanna be on Nettle’s shit list, would you?
What a storm of a person!
Nettle isn’t very defined still, she is a bit reactionary and never quite gets totally fleshed out by the end of the book. 
Which is a bit of a shame.
But! Nettle of the Dream World is a different story. 
She feels much more defined there and I dunno, maybe that’s intentional?
I like her but I’d have to spend a lot more time with her in the solid narrative space rather than the abstract dream/skill narrative space to really have opinions or emotions over her as her own character rather than her as a character and how she relates/involves/moves Fitz, Burrich, Molly, or Thick.  
Elliania
Elliania has a similar disadvantage as Nettle does but at the same time she still has more definition (to me) then Nettle; her motivation and actions are followable and her personality is filled in with Outisland society.
And she ain’t afraid to smack a bitch up with her titties out.
So she gets some mad bonus points right there.
I really felt for Elliania’s struggle and she totally won me over in the scene where she comes up from inside the Pale Woman’s domain dragging her forged sister and mother with her.
One of those scenes where the grandure, emotion, and awe of it all was very powerful
loved it, love her
Web
YEAH
Don’t need permission to do what’s right - fuck yeah
Web’s the friggin’ best guys
I want a spin-off of him teaching Old Blood children and Fitz
Swift
This little shit
I love him, I love all of Molly and Burrich’s wild children, but Swift gave me anxiety lol
I’m actually really intrigued by Swift but he’s too brief and wild at the moment, I hope he mellows out a bit but still keeps that confrontational fire and uses it for good
Burrich
NO. 
God
Damn
It
When my man showed up on Aslevjal I was shocked
I was so mad 
I was also very happy of course but ughgughgu
I WAS CONFLICTED and had good right to be
Oh this man, I really adore Burrich even though he is a flawed person - that’s what is so compelling about him though.
We kept learning things about and from Burrich up until the very end. 
I’ll miss you, Heart of the Pack.
Molly
I’m devastated for Molly
I’m Happy for Molly 
I’m very pro-Molly in general even though she is a bit vague
Like, she is more than just a plot device but not by a whole lot, ya know? 
What I wanna do though is sit her down and have a real heart to heart; ask her if she really thinks Fitz will ever be truly free himself of his duty, from his duty to the Farseers or from his own idea of honor.
That man is going to leave off on some quest or some shit you know it, I know it, she must know it! 
Be safe Molly, but happy, but alert
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