Lady Eruwaedhiel wrote:
I just got the fourth book and am about halfway through it. Mind telling us why you didn't like them, Laura?
I find Overstreet's style to be ... interesting to say the least. He has some brilliant settings, creatures and characters, but his plots are extremely hard to follow. He's very subtle in his clues as to what's going on. I find it hard to keep track of all the characters he has, not to mention their motivations. I'll have to read them again to see if I can figure out better what goes on.
His ideas are among some of the most original I've seen in a modern fantasy, though.
Well, it's sort of hard to explain why exactly I didn't like them, especially the fourth book. I suppose it's partly because Overstreet doesn't seem to have the most Biblical worldview; or, if he does, it sure doesn't come out so much in his writings. I thought that it kind of sounded like reincarnation when people came back to life, because, even though they were the same, they weren't, or something. And there was so much violence, and gory descriptions (admittedly, not as bad as they could have been, but still too descriptive), as well as some things that were too suggestive, if you know what I mean, as well as outright sensual. For instance, there is a couple (not going to tell you who, since you probably aren't there yet) that have apparently committed fornication. This is moved over very quickly without even a hint that what they did was wrong, or that they really regret it.
Another thing is that the ending just wasn't satisfying, for a number of reasons. I won't go into detail, because, again, you haven't finished the book. But, suffice it to say that too many things are overturned and mixed up. Who are the good guys? Is everybody good underneath? What was the point? Here are some spoilers that you don't have to read:
Although it's a small thing, the Ale Boy's real name is never revealed; nor are Auralia's origins, which is a much bigger thing, ever revealed.Another thing that threw me off were the vawns. They seemed out of place, and I didn't like them 

 I also didn't like a lot of the names he made up for things. I get that he was trying to describe what the animal/tree/bug was like with it's name, but it's very distracting from the story to see 'cloudgrasper tree', 'oceandragon', etc.
I think he may have taken his originality a bit far, and just made it too outlandish. I did write a very favorable review on Amazon for book 1, but I may have to change it. I'm trying to remember what else I didn't like about it.
I did like the story of Jordam the beastman. It was very good. But there were way too many questions that the book seems to ask with the intention of answering (such as, what are the colors from?), and then, it seems to just forget about them.