I do think that it's poor form as a creative artist for an author to start a magnum opus and then neglect it as he drifts into his sixties and seventies, because it leads to works being left unfinished by the author's unexpected medical decline and death...
The artist is within their rights not to care about that, but it's bad form.
Eh, the 1632 series is legitimately bad as alternate history, though it gets at least incrementally less bad over time (though retaining as canon the events that made it bad in the first place). By the time you get to the books that happen recently, the majority of relevant good decisions are being made by 'downtimer' natives of the 1630s, and the 'uptimer' protagonists are starting to fade into the background somewhat although there are still moments of grating.Thanas wrote:I did that with Flint's other work. It lead to me developing a drinking problem.
I can't see why people would read that dreck.
The Belisarius series is both... better and worse, I'd say. I essentially treat it as a series of fantasy novels that just happen to be set in a world that looks a lot like our Earth circa 530 AD, not as a serious attempt to depict realistic events if a magical jewel from outer space fell into the hands of Belisarius and told him he had to invent gunpowder weapons to resist the onslaught of a magical cyborg from outer space that was busy building Mordor an empire in northern India.
Thanas is criticizing Flint, not Drake.Eleventh Century Remnant wrote:Off the top of my head- hell, looking around my shelves- I can name at least half a dozen writers (well, somewhere between several and many anyway) who do a clumsier and less elegant job of adapting historical events to science- fiction plot than Drake. I suspect your disapproval is ideological rather than artistic.
He is almost certainly a good editor. I like him as a writer but my taste is... poor.Flint, on the other hand, his bibliography does contain quite a few things I wouldn't touch with a bargepole, and considering how much of that work is collaboration, with a fairly widely divergent spectrum of people, and how many other things are 'edited by', he may be a better editor than he is a writer.
I even find John Ringo marginally readable as long as he isn't co-authoring with anyone to the right of his own already right-wing views. Indeed, John Ringo is the exact outer limit of my standard of readability, because making him incrementally worse makes him intolerable to me, while making him incrementally less bad makes him tolerable.