L
Lauranimal
Guest
Something has been niggling at the back of my mind.
I tried to do a search on the QFG sights, but the search function seems to be dis-abled, and the the search function on SOTT does not seem to encompass the index of QFG articles. Hmmmm...
Well ... I recall reading at some point in either the Wave series, Adventure's with C's or articles on psychopathy. (I think it was Adventures, and I tried culling through the material, but still couldn't find it.)
All this adu about what? Laura made an obscure and passing reference to having corresponded for a short time with a sci-Fi / Fantasy author, never having given his name. Is it now possible to reveal that information?
I ask out of a deep curiosity because I have been reading (since 1990) a series called the 'Wheel of Time' by, Robert Jordan who died in September of 2007 having completed his notes for the final book in a series of, up untill now, 11 books. (FYI; The author who has taken up the reigns in writing the final book has actually found it necessary to divide it into 3 more books in order to do the story and their original author, 'justice'.)
From: Abbyland (I find this to be a pale review that does not seem to cover the depth and richness of the series, but it gives a general starting point) _http://www.abbygoldsmith.com/wot/
What the series is REALLY about is the struggle between STO & STS !
Some of what I find interesting is that as I have read through these books, I would come across words that somehow seemed familiar. Seemingly, they were words that he had created for his story, but many years ago, I started looking them up. As it turns out, the man is a historian and he wasn't just borrowing words from history, but using them by their original symbolic meanings and weaving their threads into the fabric of the story with perfect integrity.
He was a graduate of the Citadel (Military College of South Carolina), fought in Vietnam, and so had a strong grasp of strategy and understanding for politics,war and the causes and consequences of them. He also possessed a degree in physics and one of his hobbies was chess.
Those things being said, all of this background is clearly reflected in the depth of his writing. And it occurred to me that since he was deeply grounded in history, physics and the idea of an alternate dimention and 'unknown' qualities of THIS one, that he could very well be the Author that Laura had fleetingly referred to.
Any comments?
~Lar
I tried to do a search on the QFG sights, but the search function seems to be dis-abled, and the the search function on SOTT does not seem to encompass the index of QFG articles. Hmmmm...
Well ... I recall reading at some point in either the Wave series, Adventure's with C's or articles on psychopathy. (I think it was Adventures, and I tried culling through the material, but still couldn't find it.)
All this adu about what? Laura made an obscure and passing reference to having corresponded for a short time with a sci-Fi / Fantasy author, never having given his name. Is it now possible to reveal that information?
I ask out of a deep curiosity because I have been reading (since 1990) a series called the 'Wheel of Time' by, Robert Jordan who died in September of 2007 having completed his notes for the final book in a series of, up untill now, 11 books. (FYI; The author who has taken up the reigns in writing the final book has actually found it necessary to divide it into 3 more books in order to do the story and their original author, 'justice'.)
From: Abbyland (I find this to be a pale review that does not seem to cover the depth and richness of the series, but it gives a general starting point) _http://www.abbygoldsmith.com/wot/
So what's the PLOT SYNOPSIS?
The Wheel of Time takes place in an Age of Exploration type of world; [as if] "the late 17th century [...but clearly not ours...] without gunpowder," according to Robert Jordan in his interview with Locus Magazine. Magical ability called the One Power is practiced by a small percentage of humans with the lucky genes (or unlucky genes, depending on the culture). Due to a mistake made by well-meaning scholars in the distant past, only women can wield the One Power without going insane. Men who are born with this ability get exiled, tortured, or executed. The saga centers around one young man, a sheepherder's son from an isolated region, who can wield the One Power. His fate is to defend the world from evil forces (most of them human, and each nearly as powerful as he is) while battling his own growing insanity and the thousands of people who fear him, want to use him, or seek to destroy him.
It's really a story about struggle, when all is said and done. He hears voices in his head. He has memories of a childhood experienced by someone who lived and died three millennia ago. He's afraid to hurt anyone whom he considers a friend, and he's developing a stress complex over it. What could make a better hero than that?
What the series is REALLY about is the struggle between STO & STS !
Some of what I find interesting is that as I have read through these books, I would come across words that somehow seemed familiar. Seemingly, they were words that he had created for his story, but many years ago, I started looking them up. As it turns out, the man is a historian and he wasn't just borrowing words from history, but using them by their original symbolic meanings and weaving their threads into the fabric of the story with perfect integrity.
He was a graduate of the Citadel (Military College of South Carolina), fought in Vietnam, and so had a strong grasp of strategy and understanding for politics,war and the causes and consequences of them. He also possessed a degree in physics and one of his hobbies was chess.
Those things being said, all of this background is clearly reflected in the depth of his writing. And it occurred to me that since he was deeply grounded in history, physics and the idea of an alternate dimention and 'unknown' qualities of THIS one, that he could very well be the Author that Laura had fleetingly referred to.
Any comments?
~Lar
Ok. You're welcome?
Heck of a thing to start from the beginning!
Everyone I know who is in to it, has done the same. I thought I would too, but I am much to0 focused on the work. I will probably do a quick skim through the last book, and dig in to the new material. Quite engaging! Last time I read through the series, my dishes and laundry didn't get done for a while.