sholio: (Dresden bookverse)
Sholio ([personal profile] sholio) wrote2010-11-04 05:46 pm

*squails*

Um ... oops. What with NaNo and all, I really wasn't planning on falling headlong into a shiny new/old Dresden Files obsession. BUT HERE I AM. I guess re-reading all the books wasn't such a good idea. (Well, I'm not done yet, but there are only a few to go ...)

I just ... these books push my buttons so so hard. They have it all -- deep friendship bonds and found-family and long-lost-family and love and heroism and sacrifice and presumed-dead-but-not-really and starting a war for one human life because that's the only thing worth starting a war for ... and that's not even touching the humor and sparkle and shiny, splashy special effects. (I know the f/x are only in my head, but there's just so much mental eyecandy in these books, so much that I wish we'd seen in the TV series because the mental visuals are so awesome!)

I love how these books are, at heart, about sacrifice and love and being a good person against all odds -- even when life keeps kicking you down, even when you don't believe at heart that you are a good person. And I love the characters so much -- on the re-read I'm finding myself even falling for some of the ones that I never could get into the first time around, like Elaine. (Still can't get into Marcone, but I don't dislike him; I think that, like Ivan in the Vorkosigan books, I feel a little weird because so much of the fandom seems to love him and yet I can't really get into the character.)

I love how sympathetic/empathetic Butcher is towards his female characters -- he writes absolutely kickass women, and so many different kinds of women, from the literally kickass sort like Murphy and Elaine, to Charity protecting her children with a heart of steel and Susan growing from "the girlfriend" into a fully realized person with her own life and even gentle, damaged Justine. Most of the characters (not just the women) have an archetype or stereotype lurking under them somewhere, but they're given life on the page -- even if they start out in a role that could be flat and unmemorable, they tend to grow and develop; they have flaws and complexity and life.

And re-reading the books is making me notice how complex and well-done the plotting is -- the individual plots are pretty tight, but so are the long arcs, too. Now that I know where it's going, on the re-read I'm noticing how many times he plants seeds of plot turns that don't come to fruition until four or five books later. (And I'm also noticing dangling bits of plot, loose ends or unanswered questions that may well be setup for things that haven't happened yet!)

This is not to say the books don't have flaws, or things that frustrate me sometimes, but they just have so much heart, and, well, see above re: button-pushing. ♥ ♥ ♥ I'm just so gone for them right now -- all the way into that full-fledged, flailing, uncritical-squee place. OH EVERYONE. ♥
ext_1981: (Dresden bookverse)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2010-11-05 06:44 am (UTC)(link)
That link is AWESOME. :D And I am trying very, very hard not to think about how long it is 'til the next book.

But I gotta admit, it amuses me that you love Thomas, because he's such an obvious fangirl bait sort of char that I'd half expect you to be turned off him. ...actually I have yet to meet a single female fan who doesn't like Thomas; Jim Butcher wrote an incubus so good that even all of us in real life fall for him! XD

Hee! There is actually one person I know of on my flist who really doesn't like Thomas, so it's possible. :D But, yeah, given the EVER-INCREASING number of times that I have actually gone for the fangirl-bait character (Dean, Zuko ... Haplo ...), maybe I should stop claiming that I don't like that sort. XD

I actually didn't like Thomas at first ... for a book or two, anyway. Then the big reveal happened, and I found myself falling for him like the proverbial ton of bricks, and now I'm pretty sure that the Thomas scenes are my very favorites. Thomaaaaaas! :D He wasn't really in Turn Coat much because of the whole ... tortured-by-the-skinwalker thing, and then he and Harry were tragically on the outs, so going back to the earlier books, I'm falling in love all over again with his snark and his protective-big-brother thing, even when Little Brother had no idea what Thomas was up to. Oh, Thomas. I will never not love a character in full-on protective mode.

(The fact that I didn't like Thomas in the very beginning is making it very interesting, actually, going back and re-reading the first couple of books in which he appears, because I vaguely remember not liking him then, but I adore him NOW, so it's a weird sort of cognitive dissonance ... almost like reading those scenes for the first time ...)
ext_3572: (gintama to the rescue)

[identity profile] xparrot.livejournal.com 2010-11-05 10:09 am (UTC)(link)
*laughs* you're vulnerable only to particular types of fangirl bait, but hey, they wouldn't be bait if they weren't shiny and delicious!

going back to the earlier books, I'm falling in love all over again with his snark and his protective-big-brother thing, even when Little Brother had no idea what Thomas was up to. Oh, Thomas. I will never not love a character in full-on protective mode.

eeeee~ me neither - one of my biggest buttons ever, always <3333

I am totally biased about Thomas, I realized, because I love sibling relationships so very much - and because the Dresden books are 1st person, everything we see of Thomas is all about how he relates to Harry, or about how Harry relates to him. I don't know if I'd like Thomas quite so much if he were on his own...though he'd still be a big brother (I kind of love that he's the older one, because Harry needs as much protection as he can get!) and besides a good bit of snark will get me every time. (a major reason why I love everyone in Dresden-verse, really XD)
ext_1981: (Art-red blue leaves)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2010-11-07 07:27 am (UTC)(link)
(I kind of love that he's the older one, because Harry needs as much protection as he can get!)

ahaahaha, this is actually one of the things I love MOST about the Brothers Dresden/Raith, that Harry, who tends to spend most of his time in the role of protector/defender, is the little brother and therefore the one who needs to be protected ... and Thomas is super protective of his idiot little brother, who does indeed need a lot of protecting. :D

and besides a good bit of snark will get me every time. (a major reason why I love everyone in Dresden-verse, really XD)

I was actually thinking about putting up a quotes post, because these books are SO full of awesome snark, dialogue and quips. And, yeah, I was actually noticing on the re-read how much Thomas's voice sounds like Harry's; he's got the same tendency to mouth off, in a rather similar kind of way. (In fact, there's one point when Harry lampshades it, before the reveal on the brother thing, commenting that Thomas annoys everybody and he -- Harry -- can't help liking someone who's that much like himself. :D)

Mmmm, Dresden Files. :D