JamesL
Speculative Horizons
- Joined
- Nov 10, 2004
- Messages
- 959
I was going to post this in the Tolkien sub-forum, but then decided that as it is relevant to fantasy as a whole that it should instead be posted here.
Having looked at the nominations so far for SFX magazine's poll to find the best genre authors of all time, I was interested to see that Tolkien's showing wasn't as strong as I had expected. Few readers have nominated him as their number one choice, and many don't even include him at all in their top five.
This of course got me thinking as to why this might be. I wrote a short article about this over at Speculative Horizons, but here's a brief summary of the reasons I came up with:
- The proliferation of outstanding modern works. A Song of Ice and Fire, Malazan Book of the Fallen and The Wheel of Time have shown that if you want exciting, diverse epic fantasy you don't need to resort to reading Lord of the Rings.
- The fact that Tolkien's world-building and vision was not matched by his writing skills. His pacing often leaves a lot to be desired and his characterisation is questionable; we tend to see the characters as small figures against an epic backdrop, rather than up close and in more detail. I would go as far to say that Martin, Erikson, Abercrombie and Lynch to name but a few are superior writers.
- That Tolkien's influence is not as strong as it was. Younger readers coming into the genre are more likely to be directly influenced by Martin and Jordan than Tolkien. These authors are more accessible, there is more of a buzz surrounding them. Sure, this means that indirectly Tolkien will be influencing them, as many modern works are influenced by him, but I think the overall impact on younger readers is less than it was in times past.
Anyway, those are just my thoughts. I'm interested to hear what everyone else has to say!
Perhaps I should add that I think George R. R. Martin surpasses Tolkien in terms of storytelling and writing. Let's face it, as wonderful as Tolkien's world-building was, he never constructed a plot as enthralling as A Storm of Swords, or wrote with as much verve as Martin does. On top of that, Martin has proven his ability in a number of genres and formats.
Having looked at the nominations so far for SFX magazine's poll to find the best genre authors of all time, I was interested to see that Tolkien's showing wasn't as strong as I had expected. Few readers have nominated him as their number one choice, and many don't even include him at all in their top five.
This of course got me thinking as to why this might be. I wrote a short article about this over at Speculative Horizons, but here's a brief summary of the reasons I came up with:
- The proliferation of outstanding modern works. A Song of Ice and Fire, Malazan Book of the Fallen and The Wheel of Time have shown that if you want exciting, diverse epic fantasy you don't need to resort to reading Lord of the Rings.
- The fact that Tolkien's world-building and vision was not matched by his writing skills. His pacing often leaves a lot to be desired and his characterisation is questionable; we tend to see the characters as small figures against an epic backdrop, rather than up close and in more detail. I would go as far to say that Martin, Erikson, Abercrombie and Lynch to name but a few are superior writers.
- That Tolkien's influence is not as strong as it was. Younger readers coming into the genre are more likely to be directly influenced by Martin and Jordan than Tolkien. These authors are more accessible, there is more of a buzz surrounding them. Sure, this means that indirectly Tolkien will be influencing them, as many modern works are influenced by him, but I think the overall impact on younger readers is less than it was in times past.
Anyway, those are just my thoughts. I'm interested to hear what everyone else has to say!
Perhaps I should add that I think George R. R. Martin surpasses Tolkien in terms of storytelling and writing. Let's face it, as wonderful as Tolkien's world-building was, he never constructed a plot as enthralling as A Storm of Swords, or wrote with as much verve as Martin does. On top of that, Martin has proven his ability in a number of genres and formats.
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