@ BreakLater:
When I talked about the "it sucked/it was boring" blueprint (or storyboard, as Roland called it) school of thought in fantasy, I wasn't talking about people here in this thread; I was defending my observation that lots of fantasy readers *do* read like that. And of course it's my own experience, I said that in my reply to Jon Strunk. But my experience is with over a hundred people of all sorts of backgrounds (meaning both education/reading experience and the kinds of places I have come across their opinions) and of all ages - at the very least. Their eyes mostly glaze over when we go beyond topics like: "I can't stand that retard Sansa!" or "Let me tell you my theory about whose son Jon is" or "Wow, that was an awesome plot-twist there; sure didn't that one coming! Cool!" (I'm giving examples of topics, not of the way people talk about them. Some of them can be very articulate, but their opinions generally amount to the above.)
@ KatG:
And in that relation, Kat - that's what I meant when I said fantasy readers tend to treat fantasy as escapism. I can't count the times I've had to deal with or read about "Who's gonna win in a single combat?"-type of questions. Also, treating characters as your best friends, or your annoying little brat-sister, or in any way like people you can meet on the street IS a form of escapism. To me. It's a much healthier form of escapism than running around with a cape and a magic stick, or spending eight hours a day writing fan-fiction with you as the protagonist and Cersei as your step-MILF (or Tyrion as your sly little love-gnome), but it's still a form of escapism. And yes, sure I've done it. Sure I still do. But I keep it to myself and don't let this into my aesthetic impression of a book.
(That last one is a sort of emotional/intellectual response (not necessarily coherent) that, in order to effect, you need to go beyond personal likes/dislikes for character, plot and setting.)
Reading the text as a blueprint can be liberating, but it curtails exactly the force of that aesthetic impression. "Who are you to point out the lack of homoerotic tension between Eddard and Jaime?! It's
there! Screw you! Who are you to talk about Brienne and the interesting deconstructionationism or whatever of female fighting characters ? She's an ugly boring b**ch!"
Valid opinions all. We all choose what to take in and what to ignore when we read. Most people read only for entertainment. I read Sanderson's books for entertainment. They are terrific entertainment. But the way he structures his narrative (all these pseudo-ScottCardian introspective analyses) and the way he sometimes writes a sentence could have made me put the books down if I hadn't chosen to just not pay attention to some of these.
Still, I just feel that this kind of snipping away of potential meaning impoverishes greatly both reading and discussions about stuff we read. Not to mention I'm strongly opposed to the inattentiveness to language that the blueprint approach engenders - not only to language in literature, but to language in general.
And in *that* respect, concerning your examples - I wouldn't call Salvatore's language bardic. I wouldn't deign to call him even a workhouse writer. In that example I gave earlier in the thread there is an obvious grammatical error in the first paragraph of his book. I mean, I wouldn't compromise so much as to turn a blind eye to that. (It's a regular feature of his books.) Some would. Some would just skip/skim the text, gleaning the main landmarks of the story along the way. God knows I did when I had to review a couple of his books. But then I *had* to review them.
Also, I would certainly *like it* (I don't *want* anything from you or anyone else, I like to think I'm not that presumptuous

) if instead of saying "Feist has tried some really interesting things" or "Salvatore can do comic and he can do dark", or "I think these and these books by Brooks are really well-written", you would give an example of the interesting things Feist has done, or Salvatore's skills with different tones (I remember some of his "comedy" - in one book Drizzt and the gang had a great laugh, cause Bruenor couldn't get his axe out of the mangled body of a goblin, as if it were a tree stump. Tasteful.), or some arguments why you think Brooks' prose is good in this or that particular instance.
I'm not saying you should write a 10-page essay on any of these subjects, I would just like it if you gave us a taste of your direct readerly impressions, unfiltered through generalizations such as "well-written" or "an interesting, fun character"; imagine being in a creative writing class and you're scribbling notes in the margins of a fellow-writer's text. If Sturgeon had been my writing buddy (hm, maybe I'm kind of presumptuous sometimes

) at the end of his first two paragraphs I would have written: (great colors, the bronze, the red-gold, the leather-color, the pears, the gold leaf; all fits; great contrast with the girl feeling she doesn't fit). Or something like that.
And, more generally speaking, I really don't think something like the above is more difficult to do than just talking about "cool/sucky characters" or "boring/interesting plots". If someting in particular has made a particular impression on you, it shouldn't be difficult to express it articulately and with excitement. I'm sure Roland could easily write an ode about one particular monologue in The Shadow of the Torturer, without being able to write anything as nearly engaging and perceptive about the whole Book of the New Sun as awhole (and neither could I).
What I'm trying to do, when I talk about something I've read, is not simply state how this or that struck me, but describe something of the process by which it struck me. For a review or an opinion on a message board, one obviously has to pick and choose which impressions to describe in more detail, but still, even a little goes a long way, with me at least.