I really want to write, but my mind wonāt let me
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@morai-thoughts
I really want to write, but my mind wonāt let me
Harwin Strong:
#Harwin Strong can carry me like a sack of potatoes any day
Harwin crumbs
daemon asking rhaenyra if this is what she wants parallel to rhaenyra asking daemon what does he want in the previous ep. all right in front of viserysā salad?!?!?!?!? INSANITY
Viserys lmao
Hob could have simply written the new address here but no, he decided to spray paint an arrow all the way from the old tavern to the New Inn just in case because itās been 700 years, he knows how dense Morpheus is.
And he literally named the new place The New Inn to be extra sure
I love them
Elend Venture
This is how I feel describing most of my personal favorite characters.
Kaladin: *is reported dead*
Bridge Four: LOL. Better not be late for dinner, bitch.
Iāve started rereading The Way of Kings and am noticing a few things.
First, the risk that Sanderson took starting it the way he did. Three different time periods and viewpoint characters before the fourth chapter finally gives us a current-time, main character viewpoint. If I was Sandersonās editor when he was pitching this, Iād be finding the Cenn viewpoint the hardest sell.
The Kelek one is short, hints at vastly powerful forces, ends with the creation of a great mythic lie, and the ā4,500 years laterā gives things a properly epic feel.
The Szeth one is fantastic - it starts with an iconic line, has an engaging magic battle scene, and sets up a central mystery: why did the Parshendi betray the alliance and have Gavilar assassinated. It explains enough but not too much of the context (mechanics of Szethās āmagicā powers: yes; details of the concept of Truthless and reasons behind Shin veneration of stone: no).
But the Cenn one has the combined challenges that this isnāt a main character, dies (though we donāt yet know it) at the end of the scene, and isnāt an interesting person in and of himself. If I was the editor, Iād be asking āWhy canāt we have the Kaladin POV here?ā But the more we see of Kaladin, the clearer it becomes why his introduction had to be done this way. The contrast between Kaladin in the Cenn-POV chapter and the despairing Kaladin in the slave wagon in the next chapter gains its power and drama from two things: the contrast between who Kaladin was then and now, and the contrast between how others see Kaladin and how he sees himself. Kaladin in that battle wouldnāt have seen himself as the heroic, nearly-miraculous figure his soldiers see him as: rescuing Cenn by fighting six-on-one and killing all his enemies in a matter of seconds, then turning into a healer and bandaging his wounds; training his men to operate as a unit unlike anyone else on the battlefield; spending most of his pay on bribing the support staff to evacuate his wounded; bribing other commanders to give him recruits who seemed militarily useless. Heād have taken that for granted. Kaladin (later) reacts to being pretty much miraculously resurrected by despairing and thinking heās a failure. The switch of perspective at the start is necessary for us to realize early on that the way Kaladin percieves himself does not line up with objective reality or with other peopleās perceptions, and necessary for us to realize how impressive he was, and how others reacted to him, before his enslavement. Itās the essential backdrop for all the horrible early chapters in the slave wagons and Bridge 4. But the necessity of that only becomes apparent once the reader has spent a while with Kaladin.
The second thing Iām noticing is that, while on my first read-through I was overwhelmed and not picking up on this, Sanderson does leave us a trail of breadcrumbs to follow. In the first chapter, four people are named: Kalak, Jezrien, Talenel, and Ishar. Then, only a few pages later, Szeth passes the states ādepicting the Ten Heralds from ancient Vorin theologyā, naming four: āJezerezah, Ishi, Kelek, Talenelat.ā The names are similar enough that itās possible to put the pieces together. Even in Kaladinās first chaptet, the mention of windspren stucking things to other things can recall Szethās Full Lashings.
Another thing that jumped out at me: in the first chapter, Kelek mentions āred, orange, and violetā blood on the battlefield. Parshendi blood is orange, but who on Roshar has violet blood?
I wish them the world
no one:
obi wan on a mission that he didn't want to go on in the first place to rescue the child of two people notorious for being sassy and not following his advice while being hunted by 80% of the population of any planet he's on:
Leia: getting her mind force scanned by an inquisitor
Leia: is this a staring contest?
Absolutely sobbing at Leia hiding under Obi-Wan's military coat in the middle of a base wide manhunt it is the most obvious thing in the world and yet it worked literally until Reva rolled up I am losing it
āthe jediās weakness is their compassionā cool, and yours is fortresses under water. This is the second time it happened
Obi and Leia + these little moments
+ this big one
I love them
#this could fix all my problems#im sure of it
By @galwednesday
Kaladin be like
When the Worst Love Triangle Of Westeros(tm) was unfolding⦠did Edmure notice or was he too busy being a dumb teenaged boy. Cause I figure thatād be kinda funny