I haven’t read past the first book; but in the first book, the bad guys are really obscenely bad. Calling God a bad guy doesn’t make it morally ambiguous, if God is really bad in the story.
I strongly recommend His Dark Materials for relaxation reading. Book 1 was meh, but book 2 is good and book 3 is beautiful. It’s lightly peppered with good rationality. Will in particular thinks pretty clearly.
Yes, they’re bad, but they have justifications for why they’re doing everything. (They’re horribly mistaken about the consequences of what they’re trying to do, but most of them honestly believe in their cause.) And you get to hear their explanations first, before Lord Asriel gets to speak—and when Lyra finally meets up with him at the end of the first book, the first thing he does is pretty horrible.
His Dark Materials is a possible counterexample.
I haven’t read past the first book; but in the first book, the bad guys are really obscenely bad. Calling God a bad guy doesn’t make it morally ambiguous, if God is really bad in the story.
Well, there’s a reason I named the trilogy rather than the first book.
Perhaps I’ll read the next book, then!
I strongly recommend His Dark Materials for relaxation reading. Book 1 was meh, but book 2 is good and book 3 is beautiful. It’s lightly peppered with good rationality. Will in particular thinks pretty clearly.
Yes, they’re bad, but they have justifications for why they’re doing everything. (They’re horribly mistaken about the consequences of what they’re trying to do, but most of them honestly believe in their cause.) And you get to hear their explanations first, before Lord Asriel gets to speak—and when Lyra finally meets up with him at the end of the first book, the first thing he does is pretty horrible.