rocklobster (post: 1373265) wrote:I like it too. YOu know, I really hate how people think Christopher Paolini is ripping off people. Don't they realize nothing's original anymore? Heck, even Star Wars borrowed from other sources.
rocklobster (post: 1373265) wrote:I like it too. You know, I really hate how people think Christopher Paolini is ripping off people. Don't they realize nothing's original anymore? Heck, even Star Wars borrowed from other sources.
SeraphicCharm (post: 1373200) wrote:Yes, yes yes!!!!! Great books! I actually haven't finished Brisingr yet (even though I started it over a year ago), but it has excellent quality! And I've heard rumors that the fourth book cover is going to be green...
Lynna (post: 1373339) wrote:The mark of a good writer is not to create something that nobodys ever heard of before but to take something people have already written and make it your own
goldenspines...I would have to disagree whith you...
Then it may be good to not make statements like that when you don't know where Paolini got all his ideas when you do not. Simply saying you like the series would have sufficed without dragging in this issue.rocklobster wrote: To be honest, I haven't even read Anne McCaffrey's stuff.
Lynna wrote:The mark of a good writer is not to create something that nobodys ever heard of before but to take something people have already written and make it your own
goldenspines...I would have to disagree whith you...
Nate (post: 1373418) wrote:I disagree with you, in turn. I agree, the mark of a good writer IS to take something people have already written and make it their own. George Lucas did this with Star Wars, which he has stated is inspired by the Akira Kurosawa film The Hidden Fortress.
I have seen The Hidden Fortress. I can see the inspiration George Lucas took from the movie. However, Star Wars does not feel like "The Hidden Fortress, but in space!" This is in direct, absolute contrast to Eragon which is "Star Wars, but with Dragons!"
This is why Paolini is not a good writer.
Lynna (post: 1373549) wrote: And I agree with rocklobster. The movie was really flimsy and even more like star wars than the book---the only thing that made it worth watching was Brom. His acting was amazing and he was really funny
I should probably say something like I have never read any of Christopher Paolini's books and don't really care to]He removed both his boots, then stood and dropped his trousers, so that his only garb was his shirt and woolen underpants. “Top that if you can,â€Lynna (post: 1374080) wrote:I personally think that Christopher Paolini is a very good writer and that the books are very good litriture...that's just my opinion though
Imagine how more rich her character would be if she were angry with Eragon and wanted him dead for cursing her? (think, finally a character who didn't kiss the dirt at Eragon's feet). She could become the main antagonist or something.
I found Eragon to be the most annoying protagonist I've encountered in fiction
I should probably say something like I have never read any of Christopher Paolini's books and don't really care to; HOWEVER, I have been informed that one of his books actually contains the following excerpt.Originally posted by Christopher Paolini is such a great author you guys:
He removed both his boots, then stood and dropped his trousers, so that his only garb was his shirt and woolen underpants. “Top that if you can,” he said, and pointed to the inside of his thighs. A riotous combination of colors mottled his skin, as if Eragon were an exotic fruit that was ripening in uneven patches from crab apple green to putrefied purple.
Whether Christopher Paolini is good, and possibly even more controversially whether he is actually a writer, is something I'll pass on for the good of this thread and my own health. That said, filing anything in a book containing the previous quote as standard form under "Good literature" offends me and the occasional actually literary quality authors I sometimes read.
LadyRushia (post: 1374158) wrote:
Another thing that bothered me about the third book was Saphira's chapters. The idea behind them is fine, and I'm all for practicing with different voices when speaking through different characters, but it was still inconsistent. All those hyphenated words certainly sounded more animal-like, but for all of the other chapters she refers to a human as a human instead of a "Two-legs-something-or-other." This is one of the reasons why I wish these books were drafts instead of final copies.
I think that what Paolini was trying to do with that was to convey that there are certain human things and concepts that don't translate well into the dragon mindset, and was trying to show certain things from how they understand it/what they call it. It wasn't unique to Saphira; in Glaedr's monologue later, some words appear the same way, so it's more of a dragon thing. It's trying to show an alien thought pattern and a language barrier: certain idioms and expressions in one language have no direct parallel in another. In my view, it's one of the books' better points, showing that the dragons aren't just humans with wings; they see the world in extensively dfferent ways.
Anyway, if I were to write the last book, the elves would have been using Eragon as a tool from the start, to get Galbatorix out of the way so that they could rule the world instead, possessing absolute dominion over the humans. This would be presented as a good thing. It'd be the only logical conclusion, seeing how much Paolini talks about how awesome the vegan, atheist/agnostic, nature-loving, free love-practicing elves are.
Strafe (post: 1374178) wrote:Galbatorix is probably evil through and through.
LadyRushia (post: 1373559) wrote:I think Paolini needs to take a few writing classes and use a thesaurus less.
Lynna wrote:I personally think that Christopher Paolini is a very good writer and that the books are very good litriture...that's just my opinion though
Davidizer13 (post: 1374168) wrote:Another (better) example of this separation is the Orz in the game Star Control 2 (*cough*freeware*cough*), who, unlike the rest of the species you meet, are so alien that not everything from their language carries over. Like the dragons in the Inheritance Cycle, you can kind of understand what gets lost. (Maybe.) It adds to their aura of "we're not from around here." (The great voice acting helped, too.)
CrimsonRyu17 (post: 1374193) wrote:Not to mention he relates dragons to cats. e.e
the_wolfs_howl (post: 1374481) wrote:And what's wrong with that, may I ask? When writing about my dragons, I draw parallels to cats, dogs, and birds (even a little bit of snakes), mainly because humans are much more used to those animals, so when you go about describing a kind of animal that doesn't exist in our world, you have to make comparisons. So my dragons purr, stretch like cats and dogs, prance around like puppies, fly like falcons, etc.
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