https://time.com/archive/6675462/books-the-american-tolkien/
A common discussion in Fantasy online circles seems to be "who's the new Tolkien?", this article by Time magazine dates from 2005 and is responsible for popularizing the idea that George RR Martin is the "American Tolkien".
What really distinguishes Martin, and what marks him as a major force for evolution in fantasy, is his refusal to embrace a vision of the world as a Manichaean struggle between Good and Evil. Tolkien's work has enormous imaginative force, but you have to go elsewhere for moral complexity. Martin's wars are multifaceted and ambiguous, as are the men and women who wage them and the gods who watch them and chortle, and somehow that makes them mean more. A Feast for Crows isn't pretty elves against gnarly orcs. It's men and women slugging it out in the muck, for money and power and lust and love.
Now I have to say a like ASOIAF a lot, but I never understood why those two authors get compared to each other. They both write Fantasy and love (loved in Tolkien's case) world-building and lore but that's it, their writing styles are different, their stories are different, their themes are different. Is it just because has a "double R" on his name (the second R which he added by the way). Is it because the "what's Aragorn's tax policy" quote?
The article talks about Robert Jordan too @kaamrev and what's funny is that it comes as a review for "A Feast for Crows" which is… well, ranked low among ASOIAFcels, most fans feel the series peaked in "A Storm of Swords" and AFFC can be a slog for many.
I think it can be argued GRRM is currently the best Fantasy author alive (I guess this speaks more of the current state of fantasy but many would claim it is ), there's a lot of his writing which is good but also what is bad tends to be very bad
Like this:
Sunset found her squatting in the grass, groaning. Every stool was looser than the one before, and smelled fouler. By the time the moon came up, she was pooping brown water. The more she drank the more she shat, but the more she shat, the thirstier she grew.
Daenerys last chapter on ADWD lmao
Or this from AFFC which I don't know if it is good, bad, funny or what
Ten thousand of your children perished in my palm, Your Grace, she thought, slipping a third finger into Myr. Whilst you snored, I would lick your sons of my face and fingers one by one, al those pale sticky princes. You claimed your rights, my lord, but in the darkness I would eat your heirs.
Cersei describing licking Robert's c*m instead of finishing inside her, she says that while anally fingering a woman. Maybe we can qualify it as a realistic
Then there are the thematic differences, Tolkien's Legendarium is mythology, which was Tolkien's life passion, he gets criticized for making "black and white" characters instead of "morally grey" ones but the thing is his main themes are "Good vs Evil" on a cosmic battle, envy (Morgoth) and the will to dominate (Sauron) are the ultimate evil, he's not aiming at historical accuracy as mythology is always anachronistic. ASOIAF is an attempt at European Medieval History but "what if dragons and evil ice elves existed?" Is not good representation of Medieval Western Europe either as medieval peasants were just passive NPCs which lords like the Boltons could skin alive without repercussions, the evil characters of ASOIAF like the Boltons, the Mountain or Tywin get away with too much shit. The high lords of Westeros are also weirdly and modernly atheistic or irreligious, so for all of GRRM's talk about his saga being "historically well grounded" it doesn't seem better than any other fantasy novel, not that it is a problem as it doesn't affect writing quality and storylines just something to point out.
A good way to conclude is that GRRM is not the American Tolkien, in fact no one is and that's ok. An author should be it's own thing, they shouldn't live under the shadow of another author to be compared and I feel like every time the media or fans say stuff like "X IS THE AMERICAN Y" or "A IS THE NEW B" they're doing X and A a disservice.
Here are some reddit threads on it
https://old.reddit.com/r/Fantasy/comments/hw0ls4/the_american_tolkien_isnt_george_r_r_martin_its/
Here this redditor argues the American Tolkien is not GRRM but Stephen King
And here's Robert Jordan's thread
https://old.reddit.com/r/books/comments/61k1v0/robert_jordan_the_american_tolkien/
I never read Jordan so maybe their fans can tell us if that's an apt comparison but I'm certain having Jordan just be Jordan is much better
The Game of Thrones sub (normiest ASOIAF sub ever).
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but he doesn't write childrens books how can he be the americna tolkien
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The Hobbit alone has more literary merit than GRRM's entire corpus
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maybe, but everything tolkien wrote was for children.
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Depends
The Hobbit, yes
LOTR, kind of, even back in the 50s it attracted audiences of all ages but teenagers and young adults were the ones to love it the most.
The Silmarillion, no. Is not that is not "suitable" for kids or anything, but the prose is much harder unlike the Hobbit which is quite simple, same with the plots, many LOTR fans were disappointed with The Silmarillion because is a dry mythology Bible-like compendium instead of an adventure/fantasy novel.
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I mean, the Tale of the Children of Hurin isn't a fun cheery happy kids' story. It too has incest in it, but whereas Martin would probably describe every moment of the THEY'RE SIBLINGS HAVING S*X THIS IS INCEST DO YOU GET IT? in gloating detail, Tolkien just tells us "yep, they met again. they didn't recognise each other. they got married. she got pregnant. then they found out. and she killed herself, and he went even madder than he already was and killed himself. then their parents found out about it all later."
It's a very dark story, and the restraint makes it even more emotionally affecting. The entire saga is one long tangled mess of good people making bad decisions and how that makes everything go to heck, with innocent bystanders (and not-so-innocent ones) getting caught in the crossfire and ending up dead and worse.
You don't actually need to write every single little detail of the s*x and gore and so forth to get a reaction out of the reader, if your story is strong enough and your writing is good enough.
Like, Hurin is this epic hero. He stands up to and defies Morgoth for decades of physical and psychological torture. Then he's let go, but that's just Morgoth being a cat playing with a mouse. And the heroic warrior who could tirelessly kills scores of enemies in battle is, in the end, a weak old man who hasn't even the strength to lift the dead body of his wife up so he can bury her properly:
If Martin has written anything this pitiful and sad and emotionally affecting, I'd be glad to hear it. Not some stupid vain b-word licking c*m off her fingers.
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1 of the 50 books he wrote was for children
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what he only wrote 4 books and they are all lord of the rings which are childrens books
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Modern readers are as sophisticated as children from the 50s
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Hwonyestwy that's fair. The Hwobbit is unyiquewy fun in a gay way.
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He writes shit exclusively for adult children. That counts right?
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