Started reading the first one—from the prologue alone, Kellhus seems absurdly strong/skilled/fast. He reads people’s minds by looking at the patterns of their facial muscles, catches arrows out of the air, kills large groups of enemies by himself in hand-to-hand combat, etc. I’m not sure what lessons could really be derived from this, since these actions are far beyond the realm of normal human ability. Does the series/book get any better, or am I missing something here?
I’ve heard this complaint from others, and it’s valid. Where the series really starts coming into its own, in my opinion, is around the end of the first book/ start of the second where Kellhus gets involved in politics and persuasion. This is the part that gives me a better understanding of “superintelligences” and what they might do.
Started reading the first one—from the prologue alone, Kellhus seems absurdly strong/skilled/fast. He reads people’s minds by looking at the patterns of their facial muscles, catches arrows out of the air, kills large groups of enemies by himself in hand-to-hand combat, etc. I’m not sure what lessons could really be derived from this, since these actions are far beyond the realm of normal human ability. Does the series/book get any better, or am I missing something here?
I’ve heard this complaint from others, and it’s valid. Where the series really starts coming into its own, in my opinion, is around the end of the first book/ start of the second where Kellhus gets involved in politics and persuasion. This is the part that gives me a better understanding of “superintelligences” and what they might do.