this post was submitted on 31 Oct 2023
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Chronicles Of Thomas Covenant by Stephen R Donaldson.
This was a well written fantasy series that I would love to see made into a series or multiple movies.
Chronicles Of Thomas Covenant:
Lord Foul's Bane (1977)
The Illearth War (1977)
The Power That Preserves (1977)
The Second Chronicles:
The Wounded Land (1980)
The One Tree (1982)
White Gold Wielder (1983)
I absolutely hated the Thomas Covenant novels. I hated the character, and I hated the plot devices. But I read them at a point in my life before I learned that you could put down books you didn't like; that you didn't have to finish something you started.
However: I do think they'd make a great miniseries. His internal, eternally whining self-pity would be minimized, making the character less loathsome. I mean, we're supposed to hate the character, but Donaldson sandblasted that soup cracker, leaving a hollow characature it was impossible to sympathize with on any level. In the media format translation process of distilling to imagery, Covenant might, like the anti-heros on The Boys, become less repellant. And the premise is interesting. It's become a trite trope, but it was more novel when it was introduced, and I think it'd fit the TV format well. I'd watch it.
Me too - I was so glad when I finished the first book, knowing I would never have to read another line of his whining, snivelling, excuse for a protagonist ever again.
I absolutely hated the Thomas Covenant novels. I hated the character, and I hated the plot devices. But I read them at a point in my life before I learned that you could put down books you didn't like; that you didn't have to finish something you started.
However: I do think they'd make a great miniseries. His internal, eternally whining self-pity would be minimized, making the character less loathsome. I mean, we're supposed to hate the character, but Donaldson sandblasted that soup cracker, leaving a hollow characature it was impossible to sympathize with on any level. In the media format translation process of distilling to imagery, Covenant might, like the anti-heros on The Boys, become less repellant. And the premise is interesting. It's become a trite trope, but it was more novel when it was introduced, and I think it'd fit the TV format well. I'd watch it.