psocoptera: ink drawing of celtic knot (ha!)
[personal profile] psocoptera
So apparently Gaiman is writing a new Sandman story. Is this actually good news? I feel like creators going back to their most well-known early universes rarely produces anything up to the quality of their early works - in fact, I can't offhand think of an exception to this. Anyone?

Here are some of the cases I've already thought about:
Orson Scott Card's "Shadow" books revisiting the Ender universe
Asimov's later Foundation books vs the original trilogy
Vinge's recent Tines book
David Brin's later Uplift trilogy vs Startide Rising and Uplift War
George Lucas's Star Wars prequels
Indiana Jones and the Crystal Skull

The only counterexample I've come up with so far, after more thinking, is Jo's Boys, which was published fifteen years after Little Men. And I guess one could count the Lord of the Rings vs the Hobbit, although honestly, though it borders on blasphemy, I think a certain amount of Tolkien's later History of Middle-Earth work fits the pattern of "bloated and unnecessary".

Date: 2013-08-17 01:29 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] psocoptera.livejournal.com
I haven't read enough of the more recent Hainish stuff to have an opinion. I did briefly think about LeGuin's original Earthsea trilogy vs the later three, but - I don't know. I feel like LeGuin is doing something very different there, in that she's not just, like, elaborating her universe, she's actually *criticizing* it, she's interrogating it from new perspectives and actually rebuilding parts of it in more complicated and nuanced ways. Uh, which is not to say I love all those changes, the later three are very *hard*, in a lot of ways, compared with the trilogy - but I feel like it's a different caliber of thing than Card saying "no really this other guy was the really bestest, please buy six more books", or Asimov saying "the robots were in the Foundation, all along I've been writing one giant series and here's how it all links up!".

Date: 2013-08-17 02:32 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] q10.livejournal.com
i was avoiding the later Earthsea material because it's complicated in roughly the ways you say.

the thing is, in some ways, the Ender's Shadow was a criticism of Ender's Game, and George Lucas's second-most-hated act in revisiting Star Wars (Gredo shooting first) was likewise a criticism of what had come before. i think mainly it's that, as an artist and as a thinker generally, Le Guin has aged way the fuck more gracefully than Card and Lucas have.

Date: 2013-08-17 02:39 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] q10.livejournal.com
as for late Ekumen stuff, i thought the short stories The Matter of Segri and Solitude (collected in The Birthday of the World), were both pretty interesting, and some of the other Ekumen stories in the same volume were okay.

i thought that The Telling (the last Ekumen novel, published in 2000), was too preachy and not really competitive with the earlier stuff, although it had its moments.

Profile

psocoptera: ink drawing of celtic knot (Default)
psocoptera

January 2026

S M T W T F S
     123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 2nd, 2026 07:06 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios