Started reading The Name of the Wind. The main character behaves a lot like HPMoR!Harry in many ways (although maybe the causation is in the other direction), I like the magic system, and there’s a decent amount of lampshade-hanging. And the dialogue is surprisingly funny. Generally recommend.
I concur with the recommendation, though it does tax my suspension of disbelief quite a bit on occasion, more so in the second book, as far as the characters’ decision making is concerned.
My pet theory is that something like at least 30 percent of these books, which are written as the main character dictating his life to someone, are lies and exaggerations.
Certainly all of the references to things not happening the way they would in stories, in addition to all of the exaggerated stories other characters tell about Kvothe, would lend support to this interpretation.
although maybe the causation is in the other direction
You mean the causation is from wish-fulfillment → thoughts and plans and nigh-magical abilities, making it a mite Mary-Sue-ish? :P Though, to be fair, tempered with “but it was all for nothing, because everyone I loved died” at regular intervals..
Started reading The Name of the Wind. The main character behaves a lot like HPMoR!Harry in many ways (although maybe the causation is in the other direction), I like the magic system, and there’s a decent amount of lampshade-hanging. And the dialogue is surprisingly funny. Generally recommend.
I concur with the recommendation, though it does tax my suspension of disbelief quite a bit on occasion, more so in the second book, as far as the characters’ decision making is concerned.
My pet theory is that something like at least 30 percent of these books, which are written as the main character dictating his life to someone, are lies and exaggerations.
I’m hoping so. If it’s meant to be played straight, the main character is the biggest Mary Sue I’ve come across in published fiction.
Certainly all of the references to things not happening the way they would in stories, in addition to all of the exaggerated stories other characters tell about Kvothe, would lend support to this interpretation.
Nope. Couldn’t seem to get into that one myself.
You mean the causation is from wish-fulfillment → thoughts and plans and nigh-magical abilities, making it a mite Mary-Sue-ish? :P Though, to be fair, tempered with “but it was all for nothing, because everyone I loved died” at regular intervals..
I mean the causation might have been from Kvothe to Harry, although Eliezer said in another comment that this isn’t the case.