I never checked into it for myself so I can't say anything definitive, but I've heard that it was around the time of writing "The Shadow Rising" that Jordan started having the martial problems that eventually led to either a divorce or at least some estrangement from his wife (which lasted until he was diagnosed with his terminal illness) and that the books from then until "Winter's Heart" had a lot of him forcing himself to write because he didn't want to stall the series for his personal issues. Not to say that that excuses the change in the series, but that's the explanation that I've heard.
I won't argue that Egwene and Perrin do a whole lot of nothing for the middle third of the series. They get some redemption with their parts in "A Memory of Light" (particularly Perrin), but I did rather hate most of their parts for a long time. At least Rand had his satisfying character development going on, Elyane and Nynaeve were doing some things, and Mat was always great post-tainting.
Also, I found the copious descriptions of the One Ring in LotR to be far more detrimental to the flow of things that the clothing descriptions in Wheel of Time, but that's going to a subjective thing either way. Not saying that they were enjoyable, but they didn't stick out like a Tom Bombadil cameo.
Awkward word choice on my part . I'd meant that their individual endings were ambiguous in terms of how good/bad they were, not anything to do with their relationship. I try to avoid reading too much into subtext because it's almost impossible to tell what, if anything, the author was trying to imply (like in my 10th or 11th grade English class, my teacher had disagreed with my interpretation of LotR having a theme of seemingly insignificant characters [from the point of view of a person in that world] being the driving force behind most of the major events, but the letter from Tolkien in the forward of my copy of Silmarillion says that that was exactly what he was trying to do).
I understand what you mean. I enjoyed the Dune books, too, but I felt like the later ones (starting with "God Emperor of Dune") went way off the deep end with the sexual issues, and the series would've done well to just end after "Children of Dune".
The male/female split of magic does become more meaningful later on (around "Winter's Heart", if I'm not mistaken), although it never really stops feeling like it could've been substituted by just saying that different channelers have different talents. Incidentally, there is at least one canonically homosexual character in Wheel of Time, and from what I recall, it was handled gracefully (just kind of an "Oh, really? Okay." moment). There is also at least one trans channeler, but I'd rather not say more about that for spoiler reasons.
It really comes to a point where it is sometimes unbearable. There are chapters where nothing happens, except Egwene taking a bath or some such. And Jordan fills page after page with descriptions of absolutely irrelevant things. The reader struggles through heaps of Aes Sedai, all introduced with names and origins and depictions of their garments down to the tiniest embroidery.
Also, I found the copious descriptions of the One Ring in LotR to be far more detrimental to the flow of things that the clothing descriptions in Wheel of Time, but that's going to a subjective thing either way. Not saying that they were enjoyable, but they didn't stick out like a Tom Bombadil cameo.
Awkward word choice on my part . I'd meant that their individual endings were ambiguous in terms of how good/bad they were, not anything to do with their relationship. I try to avoid reading too much into subtext because it's almost impossible to tell what, if anything, the author was trying to imply (like in my 10th or 11th grade English class, my teacher had disagreed with my interpretation of LotR having a theme of seemingly insignificant characters [from the point of view of a person in that world] being the driving force behind most of the major events, but the letter from Tolkien in the forward of my copy of Silmarillion says that that was exactly what he was trying to do).
Yeah... without opening an enormous can of worms (and I really hope this doesn't), a lot of 1980s-and-earlier fantasy seems to rely on very strict separation/misunderstanding between the genders (Dune also comes to mind). Especially Wheel of Time though. With the unassailable division between male/female sides of magic, a gay or especially a trans character would kind of break the whole system. Just a comment! Again, seen from outside the times in which it was written.
The male/female split of magic does become more meaningful later on (around "Winter's Heart", if I'm not mistaken), although it never really stops feeling like it could've been substituted by just saying that different channelers have different talents. Incidentally, there is at least one canonically homosexual character in Wheel of Time, and from what I recall, it was handled gracefully (just kind of an "Oh, really? Okay." moment). There is also at least one trans channeler, but I'd rather not say more about that for spoiler reasons.
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