Anonymous wrote:Sanderson responded on Reddit and took the high road:
'But he also feels sincere in his attempt to try to understand. While he legitimately seems to dislike me and my writing, I don't think that's why he came to see me. He wasn't looking for a hit piece--he was looking to explore the world through his writing. In that, he and I are the same, and I respect him for it, even if much of his tone seems quite dismissive of many people and ideas I care deeply about.
The strangest part for me is how Jason says he had trouble finding the real me. He says he wants something true or genuine. But he had the genuine me all that time. He really did. What I said, apparently, wasn't anything he found useful for writing an article. That doesn't make it not genuine or true.
I am not offended that the true me bores him. Honestly, I'm a guy who enjoys his job, loves his family, and is a little obsessive about his stories. There's no hidden trauma. No skeletons in my closet. Just a guy trying to understand the world through story. That IS kind of boring, from an outsider's perspective. I can see how it is difficult to write an article about me for that reason.
I do want to make it clear, again that I bear Jason no ill will. I like him. Please leave him alone. He seems to be a sincere man who tried very hard to find a story, discovered that there wasn't one that interested him, then floundered in trying to figure out what he could say to make deadline. I respect him for trying his best to write what he obviously found a difficult article.
He’s a person, remember, just like each of us."
https://www.reddit.com/r/brandonsanderson/comments/1200dzk/on_the_wired_article/
Meanwhile the author is getting flamed on Twitter
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son liked a series of his books when he was 12-14 yrs old. I think that's his target audience, YA.
But a friend of mine who is also a successful YA writer pointed out that a lot of Brandon Sanderson's stuff is heavily influenced by Christianity.
Is this something you've noticed?
I don't think he's overly LDS in his writing. There are some themes, but he has multiple fully fleshed out belief systems operating at the same time in a lot of his books and he never seems to imply one is right or better. Where is does come through is that even his adult books don't have graphic sex scenes or language that you would be uncomfortable with a kid reading.
Anonymous wrote:My son liked a series of his books when he was 12-14 yrs old. I think that's his target audience, YA.
But a friend of mine who is also a successful YA writer pointed out that a lot of Brandon Sanderson's stuff is heavily influenced by Christianity.
Is this something you've noticed?
Anonymous wrote:My son liked a series of his books when he was 12-14 yrs old. I think that's his target audience, YA.
But a friend of mine who is also a successful YA writer pointed out that a lot of Brandon Sanderson's stuff is heavily influenced by Christianity.
Is this something you've noticed?
Since his debut, Elantris, in 2005, Sanderson has published 30-plus books, the biggest ones in excess of 400,000 words; there are far more if you count the novellas and graphic novels and stuff for kids. I’ve read 17 of the actual books. Or maybe it’s 20. Exactitude is pointless here. As the major books are all set in the same universe, which Sanderson calls the Cosmere, they’re all but meant to blur together.
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At that rate, none of the words could possibly be any good. They’d be right, in a way, and that’s what Sanderson agrees with. At the sentence level, he is no great gift to English prose.
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Of his own work, Sanderson has said: “I detest rewriting,” “I write for endings,” and “I write to relax.” It shows. He writes, by one metric, at a sixth-grade reading level.
Sanderson is a bad writer; I’ve already said it. Here at the convention, most of the panelists aren’t even writers. People don’t care about sentences. They care about Sanderson.
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This is the Year of Sanderson, the panelists keep saying. Four new books, with special swag for backers! New toys and sparkly bookmarks! Now they’re talking about warehouse expansion efforts. Now they’re talking about a possible future bookstore, housed in a castle or something. “When will the Dragonsteel amusement park be built?” someone asks. The audience hoots.