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Je ne connaissais pas du tout Sanderson avant de savoir que c'était lui qui reprenait le dernier livre de Robert Jordan, donc pour le moment, je n'ai pas vraiment d'avis quant à la reprise de ses propres ouvrages... Mais j'aime beaucoup le fait qu'il privilégie son travail sur la Roue du Temps! ;)Quand à celui-ci je préfère attendre mais j'ai comme un pincement au cœur car ce ne sera jamais du Jordan comme on l'a toujours connu! Enfin, wait and see!

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Je suis en train de faire connaissance avec son ecriture avec mistborn et je doit dire que je ne suis pas déçu pour un poil! Son ecriture est fluide et prenante et on a du mal à se détacher ("quoi je suis déjà arrivé? faudrais que j'me trouve un boulot plus loin de chez moi!" :D )En tout cas ça promet pour WoT! Vivement!

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Depuis que j'ai fait sa découverte (en partie du fait qu'il reprend la WoT) je suis tombé sous le "charme" de cet écrivain. D'une il a une vrai relation avec ses lecteurs. Il communique avec eux, échange des point de vue, bref une vrai "interaction" qui personnellement me plaise beaucoup (si vous lui envoyez un mail, il y a de bonne chance qu'il vous réponde par exemple). Ensuite il se prend pas la tête, il sait parfaitement reconnaître ses point faible, les erreurs de ses livres, etc... Il a un style d'écriture très fluide, très simple a lire (a la difference d'un Erikson par exemple, ou d'un Bakker qui sont plus "lourd" - avec tout le respect que je doit à ces auteurs que j'adore tout autant-). Bref des auteurs "nouvelle" génération Sanderson est l'un de mes préféré pour sa fraîcheur et son rapport au lecteur/célébrité.J'ai hate de mettre les mains sur "The Ways of kings" :lol: (et sur la trilogie de fin de WoT cela vas sans dire)

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King Kong a écrit :Du neuf !:arrow: http://www.elbakin.net/fantasy/news/997 ... t-le-point
Pour rebondir sur cette news et la parution de The Way of Kings, j'ai vu une info un peu surnaturelle sur le blog de Hugin & Mugin qui reprend l'info du blog de Sanderson. Une fausse page Amazon a été créée pour le livre, avec une fausse couverture très classe, un blurb de Goodkind himself et des commentaires de haute volée. C'est totalement décalé, et donc hilarant.

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En effet très bon!! J'ai beaucoup aimé
Elvis is only in the book for about 1/3 of the narrative, and then leaves the rest of the heroes in order to fight a light-saber-wielding zombie Mussolini on another planet
;-)Dites donc Gillo ce serais pas toi qui a écrit l'avis intitulé I Yeard It Through The Grape Vine de Foreverlad par hasard? :mrgreen:

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Non, ce n'est pas moi, merci. :mrgreen:J'avais failli justement parler du billet de Sanderson hier, et puis je me suis dit qu'il faudrait presque déjà ouvrir un sujet à part pour sa nouvelle saga. En même temps, il mène tellement de projets de front... ;)

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Un long message très prometteur, que ce soit pour la Roue du Temps que pour sa nouvelle série ! :)
DONEPosted on 07.07.09Categories: The Way of KingsHousekeeping first. Remember that I'll be doing on-line appearances tomorrow, where I'll be answering questions. The one on Twitter will probably be way busy, so that should be interesting. I'm getting to the odd state in my career where there will probably be far more questions than I have time to answer, but I'll do my best. Also, have you not seen Howard and Tracy Hickman's Extreme DM book? If not, you're missing out. It's awesome. Some sample pages are here.Now, the big news. At about 6:00 am this morning, I finished THE WAY OF KINGS rewrite. It ended up at 380k words, which is almost double the length of Mistborn. (It's almost as long as THE SHADOW RISING, by Robert Jordan.) Now, before you get TOO excited about that size, know that I tend to write too much on a first draft intentionally, and now plan to trim it down by at least 10%. The final book should be between 300k and 350k. Either way, though, it's going to be a meaty book. (Not long for long's sake, mind you. That's just what it took to tell the story the right way.)How did it turn out? Well, to be honest, it's FANTASTIC. This is a monstrous, beastly, awesome epic of a book. And so I'm going to give Tor the official thumbs up so they can put it on the schedule for release next year. The series title, if you haven't heard, is going to be called THE STORMLIGHT ARCHIVE.The book does everything I wanted it to, and then some. It was a lot more work to revise it than I'd anticipated. I essentially ended up writing the thing all over again, not keeping any of what had been written before. But knowing the characters already helped a great deal. (And if you guys ever see my wife at a convention, make sure to give her a thanks and a hug for deal with a husband who has been essentially working two full time jobs for much of this year—one on KINGS, one on THE WHEEL OF TIME.)Like any time I finish a book, there's still that itching, authorial paranoia that nobody is going to like what I've done. I have chosen a career path where, instead of releasing all of my books in one series, I jump around. I've done this partially because I want the freedom to reinvent myself. Some of my favorite authors growing up seemed unable to give new life to a series when they started it, and ended up repeating the very same story and tone over and over. I wanted to train myself to be doing new things, and wanted the freedom to write different books in different ways.I know I'm not as wildly different in my variation as some other authors, but at the same time, there's a different feel to each book/series I've done. Hopefully, all will have great characters, a fun setting, and a compelling plot. But there will always be those who prefer Elantris's thoughtful contemplativeness to Mistborn's action or Warbreaker's reversals and humor. Each time I've released a new book, I've worried. Will my audience follow me in this (slightly) new direction? What will they think of what I've done?KINGS is no different. In fact, it's got me even more worried. My goal for this book was to give it SCOPE. The setting is the most distinctive I've written, with the largest world and the largest number of cultures and peoples. The book (though mostly linear) involves flashbacks to character pasts, and sometimes firsthand looks at the deep past of the world. At the same time, because of the enormity of what I'm trying, I found that the book couldn't telegraph as easily what it was about.What does this mean? Well, Mistborn and Elantris both did excellent jobs of telegraphing to the reader—right off—what the story was going to be about. After the first few chapters of Mistborn, you pretty much knew that it would be a book about Kelsier's attempt to overthrow the Lord Ruler, mixed with Vin's training as a Mistborn. Elantris was about Raoden trying to restore Elantris, Sarene investigating his disappearance, and Hrathen's attempts to convert the people. Because of the scope of these books, I was able to get across very easily what they would be about and what the central conflict would be.KINGS . . . well, I have trouble describing what the heck KINGS is about. While there are a number of plots bouncing around in those 380k words—and many of them do get resolved—the larger storylines are only just beginning. The book isn't about one or two things, like Mistborn was. It's about dozens. And yet, the main character's plotline is simple: survival. He's in a terrible, brutal situation, and he just wants to live.Anyway, the book needs a lot more revision, but it's in a state where I think we'll make it. So send a little good will my way as I dig into it over the next eight months. Maybe I'll be able to come up with a way to describe this beast.(Also, WoT readers, I haven't forgotten you and am not ignoring you. WoT13 is going very well, and I'm excited about the progress. We're on target for a November next year release, at the latest. I wish I could give you details about the books, but I'm under some pretty tight restrictions about what I can say. Once TGS is out in November, I think I'll be more free to talk about what's in the next book.)

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Yeah good news!!J'ai hate de voir ce que The Way of Kings donnera! Quand à La roue du temps heureusement qu'il y a le Re-read pour me faire patienter parceque la je ronge légèrement mon frein ;)

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La nouvelle série de B.Sanderson promet. Rien que l'article me met l'eau à la bouche :D j'ai vraiment hate de voir ce que ca donnera. Sinon moi qui ne connaissais l'édition Tor que de nom ca m'a vraiment :O quand j'ai vu qu'il publiait autant de livre en 1 mois que Brag en 1 an. Ils ont vraiment de la chance ces Anglophones :p

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Je suis content d'apprendre la sortie de cette nouvelle série de B. Sanderson. Après avoir lu et apprécié Mistborn et Elantris, j'ai hâte de lire d'autres œuvres écrites de sa main en espérant que le niveau d'écriture se maintienne ou encore s'envole! :)

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TOR fait un peu dans le grandiloquent quand même... Mais puisque c'est du Brandon Sanderson, je le lirais de toute façon :p (Après une pub pareille, j'aurais la pression le pauvre)