Some fantasy I've been reading recently:
The Way of Kings (volume 1 of The Stormlight Archive), by Brandon Sanderson: didn't dislike it, I think I'll keep reading the series, but I was extremely underwhelmed compared to all the praise it had gotten before I got to it. It's supposed to be this groundbreaking, revolutionary fantasy, brilliant on many respects, and to me that was just... more of the same things I was reading in the 90s or 2000s. Oh sure, it deals with themes that weren't touched upon two or three decades ago (like a lot of focus on mental health and systems of discrimination), it's not behind the times, but passed these actualized themes it really felt like just more epic fantasy. The prose was also nothing remarkable, like, just well crafted enough to make itself forget, which to me is a huge drawback as prose is how I get into a story. I wanted to like this a lot more and I'm really disappointed that I don't, because this book means a lot to a lot of people, including people I would want to be able to connect with on an emotional level.
Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind (manga series originally published from 1982 to 1994, of which the 1984 movie is a compressed and simplified adaptation), by Hayao Miyazaki: I had started reading this years ago but somehow failed to ever finish it. I finally got back to it, rereading from the start then continuing to the end, and I am so glad I did. Miyazaki has said he had two main inspirations when writing this series: The Lord of the Rings, and Dune, and it shows, as this is by far the most epic, the most complex, the most deeply layered, and the darkest of all of his creations. It's incredibly modern, dealing with themes such as the impact of war on civilians, trauma, discrimination. There are multiple central and fully realised female characters. There is a scene where Nausicaä is taking a bath, her nudity not hidden, and yet Miyazaki, who was 50 year old man at time, managed to draw this scene with the uttermost respect, with not a hint of leecherous or voyeuristic intent. I honnestly think this is Miyazaki's hidden masterpiece, and I need to reread it again, but as it goes it's on par to become by favorite fantasy story ever, on all media. If you have only seen the animated movie, I urge you to seek this — the movie is but a pale shadow of this series.
The Poppy War, by R.F. Kuang: this another highly praised book, but this one I wasn't just underwhelmed — I actively hated it. It actually shared many themes and elements with Nausicaä above, but basically, everything Nausicaä did right, I thought this did wrong. The pacing was all over the placed, with rushed timelines and underdevelopped scenes. The writing style in general was very mediocre, with lot of telling, clumsy similes and whatnot. The tone was not consistent at all, with 2/3rd of the story feeling like Naruto (that is, a fun martial art adventure with some edgy humor and some dark moments) and then the last third suddenly switching to over the top super serious grimdark with genocide, gruesome torture, sexual violence… The worldbuilding felt lazy and inconsistent, with elements from real Chinese history transposed 1:1 with just a name change, without any concern of whether they fit together in this universe, no attempt to establish a consistent technology level, character names that seem picked randomly from various East Asian ethnicities with no concern for how these characters are supposed to be related to one another or their actual geographic origin within that world. And if you add to that the uneasy feeling that this felt a lot like an anti-japanese revenge fic made under the cover of fantastical allegory… So yeah, this series, I won't give a second chance.
The Quest for The Time Bird (graphic novel; just first four books that deal with the main story; there's more stuff after that but it's a prequel story), by Serge Letendre and Regis Loisel: so this I had actually read years ago, but for some reason I only owned the first book in the series and so hadn't been able to reread for quite a while. It's start with a fairly basic fantasy premise — an evil God trapped years ago in a magical prison, a sorcerer-princess has figured a way to renew the spell but needs the help of an aging knight who is sent on one last quest in order to save the world — except that all of this unfolds in a dark, diseased and twisted world, progressively unfolding a very cruel and cynical story, to the point that as the end of the quest draws near, the reader wonders if this world is even worth saving. So this series has problems — redundant and not very good narration, and more problematic, it indulges in a number of sexist tropes that were unfortunately pretty common in French fantasy from the late 80s, even if to their credits, the authors do try to be clever and play with the tropes a bit and subvert some expectations; but still, it's there and can't be ignored. Despite this, I really like this series for what it does, for the kind of decaying and corrupted world it constructs, and for its dark storyline.