• tetris11
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    4 hours ago

    I hope you’re joking.

    Martin knows how to write people. He can create the most vile, repulsive, irredeemable characters known to man and then teaches them mercy, honour, and sacrifice by forcing them into situations where they have to question who they are.

    He redeems the irredeemable, not only in the text, but also outside of it by merit of the sheer humanism he expresses in his works.

    I learned a lot about humanity, mercy, and forgiveness just by reading his books. No other author has come close to reaching me in such ways.

      • tetris11
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        4 hours ago

        “whilst I concur wholeheartedly with the detailed rebuttal you have given, I alas remain uncertain, caged by the incongruous gut feeling that compels me.”

        • caseyweederman@lemmy.ca
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          3 hours ago

          I read them all (so far anyway) and they’re decent enough.
          I don’t think he redeems anyone who is irredeemable or has any special insight into humanity. There are some awful people who are complicated and there are his favorites who get away with anything and come back from death multiple times. They all make good decisions and bad decisions and get good consequences and bad consequences and those don’t always line up.
          I don’t want to diminish your experience but I really don’t see it.