Timewaster's Guide Archive
Local Authors => Brandon Sanderson => Topic started by: EUOL on May 09, 2005, 06:27:09 PM
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Ooo! Ooo! Go check bn.com. I'm the #184 best-selling book on their website.
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Kick A
(http://www.people.virginia.edu/%7Epjc7f/mdst110/lab2/cartman_dawg.gif)
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B&N.com has Elantris on it's main SF&F page right under the EP3 Novelization.
This month's Explorations offers a slew of astonishing debuts, including Brandon Sanderson's dazzling tour de force about a fallen city of the gods. Read our Spotlight Review, then browse for more great sci-fi and fantasy titles.
Another quote from a different page (I know these last two have been linked in the reviews thread).
An Instant Fantasy Classic
Destined to become a fantasy classic, Brandon Sanderson's distinguished debut novel, Elantris, is the compelling saga of a fallen city of the gods and its inexplicable rise from the ruins. Don't miss this thoroughly original storytelling tour de force!
Here's a quote of the review.
In a genre where mainstream success regularly leads to mind-numbing repetition (unnecessarily prolonged series that recycle predictable plotlines) and shameless mass imitation, true creative genius is often hard to find. Fantasy fans need not look any further for such genius -- Brandon Sanderson is his name, and Elantris is his calling card. Paul Goat Allen
you can read the whole thing here (http://www.barnesandnoble.com/newsletters/newsletters_cds2.asp?PID=795&userid=B23aXnLBBn&endeca=1&cds2Pid=160&linkid=459619).
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its sales rank would put it somewhere around #15 on the current bn.com bestselling science fiction list, but it hasn't been updated.
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it's now #40 on the bn.com science fiction bestseller list, which is NOT divided by children and adult, so things like Harry Potter are way up there...plus a zillion Douglas Adams books, which do deserve it...
(Not that the Rowling books don't deserve a high place on the appropriate chart. I just don't think it's very useful to see how Elantris's sales compare to Harry Potter's.)
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Harry Potter is the sole reason there is a separate NY Times children's bestseller list, because people got tired of it being consistently at 1, 2, and 3.
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Back when I actually bothered to read computer games magazines people were discussing something along those lines because of the Sims. Ended up with 2 years worth of game charts all having 3 - 7 versions of the Sims in it.