MALAZAN GARDENS OF THE MOON REVIEW

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  • čas přidán 4. 07. 2024
  • Here is my spoiler free review for Gardens of the Moon, the first book in the Malazan Book of the Fallen series by Steven Erikson.
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Komentáře • 300

  • @whiskeySe7en
    @whiskeySe7en Před 4 lety +47

    Some of you may guess where I got this name.
    First in, last out

    • @kwazhims3lf
      @kwazhims3lf Před 4 lety +3

      FFS let mallet fix your leg already "when theres time"
      no f u, theres always time!

    • @cayhle
      @cayhle Před 4 lety +2

      Always an even exchange.

    • @ramana4330
      @ramana4330 Před 3 lety +1

      omg y'ghatan

  • @robpaul7544
    @robpaul7544 Před 4 lety +75

    Messenger bird!!?? 🤣🤣😂 Crone would love to have a talk with you about her perspective
    Well, the review was a lot more positive than I feared! And much like the book itself I need to revisit it to catch all of your points, you went to town on this one.
    Minor thing about the one guy who made a derisive comment about a girl with a sword..
    He was explicitly called a dumb abrasive brute, and definitively proven wrong - if I'm thinking about the right guy.

    • @ebnovels
      @ebnovels  Před 4 lety +13

      If I’m not mistaken, is that the same character that’s listed in the character index as being “an unfortunate bully” or something like that? 😆 Haha, I actually felt kinda bad calling Crone that, cuz I really liked her, but then I remembered she’s fictional and didn’t feel as guilty 🤣

    • @robpaul7544
      @robpaul7544 Před 4 lety +5

      @@ebnovels
      Lol, she is being used as a messenger bird, so it's fair. I think the assessment might ruffle some feathers, and make her master chuckle a bit 😁
      And yeah, that's the guy 🤣 clearest example how sexism is dealt with in this world

    • @grier2593
      @grier2593 Před 4 lety

      It was the talking bird that caused me to put the book down and never pick it up again. That and the introduction from the author, that basically says you will either love this book or you are too stupid to understand it.

    • @silverblade41
      @silverblade41 Před 4 lety +6

      @@grier2593 its so hard to talk about these books with out spoiling anything but Crone isint simply a talking bird. the most common phrase on the sub
      reddit for this series when people ask questions is read on

  • @LanaFeyah
    @LanaFeyah Před 4 lety +11

    I think this is the most complete and accurate review of Gardens of the Moon that I have yet to come across, and I'm so grateful to you for making it! It would have been SO useful to me two years ago, when I was presenting the Malazan Book of the Fallen to my fellow coursemates at uni, haha!

    • @ebnovels
      @ebnovels  Před 4 lety +1

      Wow, thank you very much! I’m definitely intrigued and have already started the next one 😊

  • @theriddler2277
    @theriddler2277 Před 4 lety +67

    the set gender role is very deliberate from steven and Ian when they made the world - the base idea is that magic not muscle is the ultimate power and in a world where everyone has access to magic the gender roles would evolve in a very different way than in our world. (they've both written and talked about it a lot) ... props for spotting it so early, most of us miss it for a long time as it's never rally talked about in the series.
    hint about the magic(clues in the transfer hairlock to a puppet scene) there are more than 1 system of magic in the world.
    you'll learn a lot more from kulp and the wican warlocks in deadhouse gates.
    looking forward to hearing about the arguments you'll have with your BF over felisins story in the next book. And do enjoy the chain of dogs - one of the most stunning story arcs ever written and where the series overall themes starts to come into play.

    • @ebnovels
      @ebnovels  Před 4 lety +9

      We’re excited about book two! I already started it actually :D I’m kinda upset with myself for not doing predictions, because I definitely called Paran’s sisters showing up 😆

    • @noneofyourbusiness3288
      @noneofyourbusiness3288 Před 4 lety +8

      The chain of dogs is awesome and deserves an entire season of a possible tv-adaptation of Malazan (oh boy who ever could pull that off has earned my respect)

    • @EricEsenwine
      @EricEsenwine Před 4 lety +5

      @@noneofyourbusiness3288 Yeah the Chain of Dogs and the defense of Capustan are my two favorite arcs in the Malazan story... both so tragic and epic and amazing.

    • @GeekCultureReport
      @GeekCultureReport Před 4 lety +5

      @@EricEsenwine Itkovian's Gift alone was a seminal moment and a tearjerker. Chain of Dogs and Capustan siege were so emotional and hard hitting. Erikson definitely knows how to bring about an emotional crescendo in his readers.

  • @danbuter
    @danbuter Před 4 lety +85

    Once you finish the series, this book makes a lot more sense. Many "minor" characters in this book end up being very important later. Also, the next book is a huge jump up in writing quality.
    Heck, wait until you meet Iskaral Pust, Coltaine, Krupp, and Bugg.

    • @kappaayer
      @kappaayer Před 4 lety +2

      That is definitely true. This ended up being one of my favorite series but it took me two or three tries to get into the story.

    • @Gennys
      @Gennys Před 4 lety +4

      Coltaine, please never bring him up again. You just HAD to do it didn't you?

    • @kwazhims3lf
      @kwazhims3lf Před 4 lety +3

      TEHOL, KARSA, KALAM, QUIK, FIDDLER, RAKE, UBLALA, Torvald, Harrlos story arc... i can understand mention of Iskaral... f***** hilarious.. but you missed the best ones!
      krupp is annoying, and coltaine is stoic as all hell which can be cool but just makes him bland.. his uncle however hehe makes me laugh

    • @kwazhims3lf
      @kwazhims3lf Před 4 lety +3

      @Eric Jansson
      to some degree i think kelenveds and dancers relationship to be a "sort of" 'kind of' bromance
      stormy and geslers ultimate story arc ending was bromance ish.... so many good arcs!

    • @omnitheus5442
      @omnitheus5442 Před 4 lety +2

      Karsa, Mappo, Icarium etc etc etc etc. Heck I even missed the big deal of the Hammer Brood is kicking around with till I looked up the wiki. You have to be 100 percent attentive or you'll miss stuff.

  • @haroldniver813
    @haroldniver813 Před 4 lety +27

    You will feel a much greater connection to the characters when/if you read Deadhouse Gates. I won’t say which ones, though. Your sympathies will probably sway, and sometimes you’ll feel torn, but your emotions will definitely come into play.

    • @davidemmitt9439
      @davidemmitt9439 Před 4 lety +1

      It's hard for people to understand malazan when they read the first book which is what 5% of the whole story. It's like a snowball rolling downhill as the series continues it gets better.

    • @ebnovels
      @ebnovels  Před 4 lety +1

      I’m excited for that :D

  • @MarvinMcDougle3
    @MarvinMcDougle3 Před 4 lety +20

    I would love to see a re-review after you've finished the series if you can spare the time for a re-read. For so many of us this series improves on the second reading.

  • @Mark-iv6yg
    @Mark-iv6yg Před 4 lety +44

    A thorough review 😊
    Your criticisms are accurate, fair and not at all wrong. That said, great writing doesn’t always make for a great story, just more linear reading, and authors don’t owe us readers a damn thing
    These books are tough, and get much tougher, Toll The Hounds wounded me deeply, I couldn’t pick up a book for months afterwards, and none of them are perfect, but the price is worth paying, it’s always an even trade with Mr. Erikson
    After each book, after finishing the series, after a re read, after each heart wrenching chapter of each book the one review that always stands out to me is ‘I stand slack jawed in awe of The Malazan Book Of The Fallen...’
    You will not be disappointed when you finally put down The Crippled God, I swear it.

    • @jaxi122
      @jaxi122 Před 4 lety +3

      This needs to be at the top.

    • @GeekCultureReport
      @GeekCultureReport Před 4 lety +1

      I completely agree with what you say. Gardens of the Moon was such a difficult read, but the writing takes a huge from the second book onwards.
      Just finished Memories of Ice last night, and am already reeling from the events of the final moments, and you are saying that it is just going to get lot tougher to come to terms with the world. Chain of Dogs and Capustan were already an emotional block to get over, I am feeling more anxious that most of my favourite characters aren't going to survive the series end.

    • @DarkCreed
      @DarkCreed Před 4 lety +1

      I agree, but you are wrong with saying 'the author doesn't owe us a thing'. This may be true if the work is free and ready for all to read. End of the day, we have to pay for these books.

    • @omysadat
      @omysadat Před 4 lety +1

      Completely agree. Always an even trade, more, after i finished my first read I felt guilty for thinking the story was chaotic. It all fits perfectly, at least imo.

    • @Mark-iv6yg
      @Mark-iv6yg Před 4 lety +2

      TheDarkCreed86 literature is an art, open to interpretation, it can’t just be about a simple dollar value
      Artists of any kind, written word, paint, music, whatever, are going to good, bad and ugly in degrees from person to person, that’s what can make certain works special for people, we each our own 😊

  • @austinthompson8302
    @austinthompson8302 Před 3 lety +1

    This is such a thoughtful review - I love it

  • @jameskanney3406
    @jameskanney3406 Před 4 lety +28

    GotM is generally considered to be the weakest book of the series. Erikson also wrote it years before he started book 2, Deadhouse Gates. Glad to see the series getting some recognition.

    • @kwazhims3lf
      @kwazhims3lf Před 4 lety

      what? have you read dust of dreams? dogshit compared to the rest... i thought the crippled god was also not very good. xcept for the last two pages.. and the finality of Crokus Arc....
      or how about night of knives? i know erikson didnt write it but ... god dam.. really bad

    • @StephSinalco
      @StephSinalco Před 4 lety

      And yet, I kinda liked it. I'm really struggling on Deadhouse Gates and won't probably finish it :( Definitely lacks clear descriptions of people and places to get a clearer picture of the action.

    • @nenadmilovanovic5271
      @nenadmilovanovic5271 Před 4 lety +2

      @@StephSinalco I was just about to drop DG. I was on prologue and it was just not interesting to me. But then shit hit the fan and now I can't stop reading. I think you just have to be in the mood for it.

  • @IronArkadius
    @IronArkadius Před 4 lety +8

    Great review Elliot! I’m glad you noticed the subtle worldbuilding through character’s eyes. That’s actually what sucked me in to the books, I really liked it. It somehow let me picture the scenes and settings quicker and more completely than paragraph after paragraph describing the carpets and desks, etc.
    I think all of your criticisms are very valid. I can’t really deny any of them despite loving the book lol!
    Hope you’ll enjoy Deadhouse Gates more, it’s very slow in the beginning but much better written. There was a 10 year gap between Erikson writing Gardens and Deadhouse. He grew a lot as a writer. Can’t say it doesn’t get any less chaotic though lol

    • @ebnovels
      @ebnovels  Před 4 lety +2

      I already started Deadhouse Gates! Im so mad I didn’t do a predictions part in this video, cuz I KNEW Paran’s sisters would show up 😆

    • @IronArkadius
      @IronArkadius Před 4 lety

      Elliot Brooks haha, well guessed then. Sounds like a good idea! would be very interesting to hear yours and Sean’s predictions

  • @itisAnnababe
    @itisAnnababe Před 4 lety

    This is a great review! After seeing you and Daniel Greene talk about Malazan I definitely want to have a go at it (and here's another huge series added to my tbr). Your analysis was really thorough and I really liked when you talked about the changes of pov/in the third person, I reckon it'll be useful to know when I'll be reading the book!

  • @DrakkanWoW
    @DrakkanWoW Před 3 lety

    So happy you talked about the difficulty of the audio books for this one!

  • @DMPhil
    @DMPhil Před 4 lety

    Great literary analysis!!! You really opened my eyes on a few perspectives on this book. As you noted, Erikson's story is so complex that I think a single read can't capture the nuance, subtlety, and "Easter egg" hunting enjoyment that some reader's crave. For those readers that want to delve deeper into the story the "SciFi & Fantasy Read Along" group breaks the story down chapter by chapter and explores those deeper nuances.

  • @AttitudeAdjusterAA
    @AttitudeAdjusterAA Před 4 lety

    wow, great review. Been a long time since i read the book so kinda of a refresher, but having finished the series this is a nice to see someones new perspective of the world.

  • @honorspren
    @honorspren Před rokem

    Man I have been watching your reviews a lot, but this one is just something next level stuff. The level of depth analysis that you did and the clarity with which you expressed your views was just phenomenal. Will definitely give this one a read. Although it is overwhelming, but your review made me feel like I can give it a try!!
    Thank you!!

  • @dylearium
    @dylearium Před 4 lety +6

    The audiobook performances are phenomenal. Ralph Lister & then Michael Page both made huge fans out of me (minor tragedy that Lister doesn't read the entire series).
    But you pointed out the biggest drawback to the audiobook experience. The desperate need for better indicated scene shifts.
    Really thoughtful review!

    • @kwazhims3lf
      @kwazhims3lf Před 4 lety

      man, i never thought of audio book version until reading your comment
      my immeadiate thought was 'no way'
      the characters represented in my imagination, they way they sound would just all be kiboshed by audiobook narration.

  • @grafffuller3265
    @grafffuller3265 Před 4 lety +2

    Thank you. I have been interested in this series for years, but because of the negativity attached to "getting into" the series...I have held off. Because of this review...I think it will be something that I do sooner, than later. Thank you. I really enjoyed the depth of this review, without spoilers. Great insights and thoughts. I will check out your groups.

    • @TheMartinTD
      @TheMartinTD Před 3 lety

      Just make your own mind up, listening to others and making your decision based off theirs will have you missing out on a lot of great things.

  • @sirbooksage
    @sirbooksage Před 4 lety +1

    Just finished Gardens of the Moon this weekend and I'm very early on in Deadhouse Gates. I'm really enjoying it so far. You touched on a lot of great points. For me, however, even with those things, it really clicked for me. I thoroughly enjoyed it. It was a rollicking, rambling, epic fantasy fun. Kruppe was my personal favorite character. I got the impression this first book was all about laying the seeds for future major events. I'm looking forward to your future thoughts as you continue through the series.

  • @rkess5871
    @rkess5871 Před 4 lety

    Great review, I completely agree with pretty much everything you said. His vocabulary is such a huge selling point for me, first series I've read in a long time that I actually learned some new words from. He gets fixated on some words to a fault though. Look out for "detritus" in the coming books, and a good amount of "flotsam" and "ochre" too.

  • @Law-of-EnTropy
    @Law-of-EnTropy Před 4 lety +2

    Just starting out the video and I can already see the length you'd be covering in reviewing such a dense book.

  • @AndrewHaddow
    @AndrewHaddow Před 4 lety

    I was thinking about doing a re-read of Malazan and stumbled across the channel. Nice overview! I definitely enjoyed books 2-4 a lot more and I hope you have a chance to read them. I fell off the series around book 5 or 6 and really want to make it to the end.

  • @kingersoll10
    @kingersoll10 Před 4 lety +1

    I think your review is very spot on with a lot of the issues that first time readers experienced with MBotF. When I first read the series it was a bit overwhelming with all the characters, lack of information on the magic system, and sparse background on the main conflict of the series. Once you get further into the series and history/characters are flushed out a little bit more I think that you may feel a little different about Gardens of the Moon. It would be a great video idea to re-review GotM after you finish the series and see if you agree with how Erikson wrote this novel as the set up piece for everything to come later.

  • @zoelove3430
    @zoelove3430 Před 3 lety

    Very insightful review! Thanks! :-)

  • @siddiqali1679
    @siddiqali1679 Před 4 lety +2

    MBotF is personally my favorite series of all time! Fair criticism and great review!

  • @beatrice5043
    @beatrice5043 Před 4 lety +1

    Great review and very valid criticisms! As you said, GotM is just the beginning and this also means it's not possible to judge the series only based in that first installment.
    It's always a bit of a relief to hear even native-speakers comment on the vocabulary (makes me feel less bad about my reading comprehension as a non native speaker 😅). Also, the prose is definitely an aspect that improves a lot imo. You'll probably already notice it in Deadhouse Gates but especially the later books have amazing prose. Sometimes he also deviates from this typical dry writing style. So he actually can write very beautifully, he just doesn't do it all the time (which fits the series better, anyway, if you ask me).
    A lot of the concepts and aspects of the world will become clearer. One example is Dragnipur. In GotM it's a freaky, powerful sword but once you realize what it actually is and what its role in the world is...wow, definitely one of the coolest fantasy artefacts ever!
    I had to laugh at that 'even the messenger birds have povs' part though. Maybe because I love Crone a lot. I don't think she would mind being called a messenger bird though ;)

  • @mrsjonesshoneycomb1806

    I’m on my third reading of the series. It gets better on each reading. I hope you stick with it as the pay off is well worth it. Great review though, knowledgeable and technical. Definitely will be subscribing. Well done

  • @deadlyk12538
    @deadlyk12538 Před 4 lety +3

    I'm definitely going to be falling behind this month! I read The Final Empire and Gardens of the Moon last month and couldn't decide which to carry on with first, but Mistborn won me over!

    • @ebnovels
      @ebnovels  Před 4 lety +1

      Ohh, Well of Ascension is so good! It’s very political, which I loved :D Hope you enjoy it!

    • @Al-nj8ow
      @Al-nj8ow Před 4 lety

      started with mistborn too, it‘s really good and interesting things happen

  • @danielsmithiv1279
    @danielsmithiv1279 Před 4 lety +32

    People are so sleep on this series, it's ridiculous.
    Example, for you Game of Thrones fans, imagine Daenyrs could not only command dragons but can transform into a dragon herself and was also a great swordswoman who had the power to wield magic??
    And then imagine that this almighty Daenrys fought against Jon Snow whose Targaryen blood allowed him to be superhuman strong, agile, and deadly enough to combat Daenrys with his supreme swordsmanship -- even though he himself couldn't transform into a dragon?
    And imagine that Jaime Lannister was such a crazy swordman that he could've killed two of Daenyrs dragons in a sword fight all by himself with his own strength and superior skills?
    Ladies and gents, what I just described to you is a small TASTE of Malazan Book of the Fallen.
    If people love action, Lord of the Rings, Game of Thrones, or any other fantasy in general, people have to experience this story.
    But, heads up, this story is not only complex, but incredibly, emotionally intense, brutal, and sad.
    There's Metal Gear Solid. There's Soul Reaver. And then you have something special like Malazan Book of the Fallen.
    Check it out now.

    • @paulramberg9081
      @paulramberg9081 Před 4 lety +14

      this is the quote i always copy paste when wanting to describe malazan :
      “Imagine a massive-scale battle-royale over decades (and aeons) between the Romans, the Turks, the Mongols, emogoth dark elves that are not to be fucked with, a bunch of extremely pissed-off Inuit, Conan’s roided-up big brother, undead neanderthal warriors, uber-samurai, gods, elder gods, demigods, usurper gods, alien gods, insane priests, sorcerers, warlocks, shamans, witches, nearly-immortal orcs with the driest imaginable sense of humour, demons, sea monsters, assassins, shapeshifters, a giant-beetle airforce and T-rexes with swords for arms, all competing to see who can fuck each other over the hardest.”

    • @momonvhe2345
      @momonvhe2345 Před 4 lety +1

      @@paulramberg9081 that's sum it up right! lmao

    • @danielsmithiv1279
      @danielsmithiv1279 Před 4 lety

      @@paulramberg9081 LOL hell yea!

    • @danielsmithiv1279
      @danielsmithiv1279 Před 4 lety

      @@momonvhe2345 "That sums it up right!" Yeap! lol

    • @jakebishop7822
      @jakebishop7822 Před 4 lety

      Its on my Tbr, but right now i'm going through WoT, and I fell like 2 massive in scale 3 million + word epic fantasies back to back is overkill, so i'm gonna put a couple smaller series in between them

  • @adrian00v
    @adrian00v Před rokem

    Great review, wholeheartedly agree with everything you said.

  • @jacekciesiokiewicz7582

    Thanks for the video 🙂

  • @execbb9939
    @execbb9939 Před rokem

    Recently finished the book and this is a really great review

  • @AlanDantes76
    @AlanDantes76 Před 4 lety

    Great analysis. This series is kicking my ass. I may have to put it off for a few years lol.

  • @Suport7000
    @Suport7000 Před 4 lety +11

    I agree with your review. Nice review by the way! I gave up after book 3 because I got lost with all the characters. But I would like to know how the series ended. The series is massive. I wish Erikson would have gone ASOIAF to George. R. R. Martin way with one chapter focusing on one character instead of head-hopping. Didn't work for me. But that just me.

    • @ebnovels
      @ebnovels  Před 4 lety +2

      Ah, sorry it was a miss for you! I’ve heard some people say they stopped and then tried again and liked it a lot more, so if you ever do that, hopefully the second try is better. And if you never do that, then enjoy the other things you pick up 😄

  • @bobbylavoie3223
    @bobbylavoie3223 Před 3 lety

    Wow. You are brilliant. Great memory for details.

  • @valerio1292
    @valerio1292 Před 4 lety

    thank you for this review. i was thinking about getting into this series, but you described literally everything i don't like about a fantasy ahahah

  • @Atlasss97
    @Atlasss97 Před 4 lety +5

    the "bro I'm with you on that" at 9:50 got me to subscribe 😂

  • @nyxian_grid
    @nyxian_grid Před 4 lety +1

    I started this book this week and am now only 7% in, but I'm really enjoying it so far! I also joined the facebook group, though I'm mostly trying to catch up now. I'm just curious to get to those parts that leave everyone confused :P

    • @ebnovels
      @ebnovels  Před 4 lety

      Yay! I’m glad you’re liking it! You’ll have to keep me updated :D

  • @MrCesare1987
    @MrCesare1987 Před 4 lety

    great review!! bye bye from Italy!!!

  • @chuchulain5827
    @chuchulain5827 Před 4 lety +1

    Best is to enjoy the stories and take each book at face value and not over analyze. I would say hands down some of the best characters ever written and will stay with you for ever. Is full of plot twists - many of which may go no where - but that's just like life! Since he is an archaeologist and anthropologist there are many interesting nuances that resonate with our own pre-history. Also some interesting resonance with current world socio-political circumstances especially in later books if you read between the lines...

  • @oscarlavergne6919
    @oscarlavergne6919 Před 4 lety

    Awesome review!

  • @HarbingerOfMorningWood
    @HarbingerOfMorningWood Před 4 lety +4

    “Even messenger birds have perspectives”
    Yeah... I love Crone though. Probably my favorite character besides Rake in GoTM

  • @carole5648
    @carole5648 Před 4 lety +3

    ok i read this with you on the buddy read, and i have no idea what scene your 'potential spoiler' was for, so i don't think it's a spoiler haha. i have a few ideas what it might be, but nothing obvious. But all your other criticisms, yeah totally. I think you did an amazing job actually of getting into critiques without spoilers, which i think would be really hard for this book.

    • @ebnovels
      @ebnovels  Před 4 lety +2

      Haha, ok, I’m glad it wasn’t super obvious 😆 If you care to know SPOILERS
      the scene I was referring to was with (sorry, I don’t remember the spelling) Lady Symtal being distracted during her party.

  • @kdnelson1888
    @kdnelson1888 Před 4 lety

    As a huge fan of this series i was really worried this would be a totally negative review from you but this was just a really great/fair review all around. It did show how people can have different tastes in how scenes are approached as some of my absolute favorite scenes are when you get a sudden POV of the person that the main character is about to interact with/fight. I actually think this series is what cemented my like of that type of scene as its done quite often but i can understand that some people would find it frustrating

  • @dalefassoth3291
    @dalefassoth3291 Před 3 lety

    That audio book tidbit hit so close to home. It was probably one of the main things that got me lost while listening with all the changes in perspective without any warning.

  • @alexisdumas84
    @alexisdumas84 Před 4 lety +1

    Messenger bird PoVs: wow.
    Also, the Dune books (especially later ones) do a lot of head-hopping; particularly in Heretics where you'll be following one character's train of thought and then abruptly switch to another character, if the other character is having a related thought. It is really jarring, but I also find it to be a very interesting and cool narrative tool: it allows the writer to give multiple angles on each situation, and show what each person is doing at cross-purposes with each other. So, I'm not sure if its as bad of a writing thing as its made out to be?

  • @ArkonRiser
    @ArkonRiser Před 4 lety

    Yah I kinda felt the same about the first book. But the second and third book dwarfs the first. It’s goes deeper in the magic system, fleshes out the characters as you read on. I promise you though you will not regret it if you continue on. Malazan is astonishing, epic and truly unforgettable.

  • @Wankeroo
    @Wankeroo Před 4 lety +11

    "Thrown into a world" is basically a perfect description for this book. The book is not a book that can be properly reviewed on its own imho. On its own this book is not great. It's basically just setting the scene with a lot of "intro" and not much depth beyond 2 characters. Re-reading this book after reading the entire series is entirely different from the first read. The arc of this series is fantastic and nothing compares to it. It's so ridiculous that you don't even get a proper sense of the main arc until book 5 which is a masterpiece. Re-reading these books is a must - especially the epilogues and prologues.

    • @Mark-iv6yg
      @Mark-iv6yg Před 4 lety

      Wankeroo midnight tides is still my favourite of the series, Shakespearean Tragedy....

    • @rileykuhl8011
      @rileykuhl8011 Před 4 lety

      Wankeroo Completely agree!!! Everything comes together beautifully, and you don’t know till you get there. It’s built in fantastic fashion!

    • @kwazhims3lf
      @kwazhims3lf Před 4 lety

      @@Mark-iv6yg ... yea.... poor Brys... Trull ... Rhulad..... you're right it was a great read.... my fav arc in all malazan book of fallen is Tehols... and Rhulads is good too.
      but could i argue for 'House of Chains' case being #1? when erikson admitted to Karsa being inspired by Conan it all came together in my head. everyone loves a power fantasy

    • @kaneabd1217
      @kaneabd1217 Před 3 lety +1

      @@kwazhims3lf but many people say memories of ice and bonehunters as no.1 book but nevertheless house chains is a superb book as far as I have read reviews about it

  • @mickrichy4455
    @mickrichy4455 Před 3 lety

    Just starting it now , I'm going to start bing reading the series

  • @summerb5153
    @summerb5153 Před 4 lety +1

    Although I'm new to Fantasy I want to read Malazan books so bad, well Malazan and Wheel of time but I'm so scared.
    I enjoy this Malazan vibe in your channel, you go girl 😍

    • @adsm6464
      @adsm6464 Před 4 lety +2

      Definitely read WoT first, it has a similar scale as Malazan, but is much easier to follow. Both are epic and amongst the best of their genre though. Have fun.

    • @summerb5153
      @summerb5153 Před 4 lety

      @@adsm6464 thank you! I try Wheel of time first.

    • @summerb5153
      @summerb5153 Před 4 lety

      @John i just purchased the first book in Wheel of time so wish me luck!

  • @joeeykful
    @joeeykful Před 4 lety

    Reading this now, it's confusing at first coz it doesn't bother to properly set the scene, it's however helpful to have some fan art to help build the scene and characters. Thanks for the review.

  • @insilencea4599
    @insilencea4599 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks for putting so many of my feelings about this book into sensible words. 😂👍

    • @ebnovels
      @ebnovels  Před 4 lety +1

      Haha, you’re welcome!

  • @thefantasyreview8709
    @thefantasyreview8709 Před 2 lety

    I read it a while ago, and also did a review. I had been looking at some other reviews, most of which were pretty positive. I think your review really brings up the best points...and doesn't gloss over it's flaws. It is a bit of a flawed work, which has some great attributes. Completely agree, rather than a complete novel in itself, its like a blueprint, or a foundational work. There are way too many characters, and they aren't fleshed out. He does a good job of making the short characters stand out, but really, I think if you are a character person who likes character driven works, you are going to be hoping the second book gives you more depth with the characters.
    People have criticised it for its magic system, but I was the same, it didn't bug me it wasn't fleshed out.

  • @josi4749
    @josi4749 Před 4 lety

    Completely agree. Great review! I purchased the book based on all the hyped reviews. I love complex books (BotNS and Dune are favourites), but this book had zero character development and utterly ridiculous names with zero reference. I might give the series a go another time, but even after two reads of Gardens of the Moon, I still didn't care for it.

  • @omnitheus5442
    @omnitheus5442 Před 4 lety

    I would never review this series in depth till I've read it twice plus the other books. The further along you get the more the world opens up but Erikson does give hints plenty every chapter.

  • @JoeBob79569
    @JoeBob79569 Před 3 lety

    I've made 2 attempts to read this series over the last year or two.
    On the first attempt the amount of characters just made the story too vague, like nothing was going anywhere.
    The second time when I got further into this book, I started enjoying it a bit more and everything started coming together, and the characters were more familiar to me. But, I think I had another book that I was really excited to read so I had to put it down again, and haven't got back to it yet.
    I think it might have been the Wheel Of Time that I had to read, since the series had just been announced, and I felt that I had to get it read before the series started, and to avoid spoilers, and to join in on the WOT hype.
    Still, I'm looking forward to getting back to the Malazan again soon.

  • @EricMcLuen
    @EricMcLuen Před 3 lety

    Thank you for not mentioning WoT at any point in the review. I also find it humorous people want more detail in an 800 page book. However Erickson doesn't spend much time on world building because it is already built and fleshed out. It was their gaming world after all and probably spent years on it.

  • @riakm921
    @riakm921 Před 4 lety +8

    Lots of fair criticisms and I think you did a good job of highlighting many of the pros. On perspective, Erikson has gone on record as saying he is a fan of "third person limited omniscience". Hopefully the cons didn't outweigh the pros for you, because I think the series only gets better from here!

    • @ebnovels
      @ebnovels  Před 4 lety +1

      I’ve already continued with the next one :D Haha, and I didn’t know that with perspective-thanks for informing me 😄

  • @blaziec8209
    @blaziec8209 Před 4 lety

    So Glad I found this channel, sup from South Africa...its legit lonely here for fantasy/sci-fi book nerds. Also I'm currently reading Midnight Tides (book 5 i think) it gets easier Im not as lost anymore. I remember reading gardens of the moon and seeing a dramatis personae page and thought "pfft I'll never use this bulcrap"..now I'm like who the hell is this again let me check the
    dramatis personae.

  • @Hadrian1616
    @Hadrian1616 Před 4 lety

    Started way of kings re-read. 😄 I still need to sign up for that over on caravan.
    Elle, are you going to collect the new mistborn covers?

  • @NofirstnameNolastname
    @NofirstnameNolastname Před 4 lety +3

    If you read more of the books then trust me you will cry as you start caring about characters.
    I personally read the main series once and then another time with all of the sides stories which is like 26 books total. I just can't get enough of Erikson. This man is just impossible with his imagination.
    *edit*
    Ian c. Esslemont has also been getting better and better fyi. Orb Sceptre Throne and Blood and Bone are fucking epic

  • @Shyllard
    @Shyllard Před 4 lety

    This is my favourite high-fantasy series, but I see the validity of many points you make. I would add, that the culture later on becomes really fleshed out, and quite uniqely, due to Erikson's anthropological and archeological background. However, the first 1-3 books are certainly not the best of the series, so it is definitely hard to get into, but once you do, it istruly something else. I just realized that I want to reread the whole series, now, that the core story is complete.

  • @willprotector
    @willprotector Před 4 lety +6

    Thanks for the fair and honest review. The first book is not the best beginning for fantasy series and I understand completely those who DNF because Erikson is still developing as a writer as he fleshes out the first book. I would also say that the story is about the world, not the characters. Characters do develop as the story goes on but they are never really the point at least not individually. Erikson sees the people of his world as one large character exhibiting both good and bad tendencies. Compassion is a theme throughout and I think that is what keeps it away from the nihilism of grim dark. I look forward to you guys reading more of series.

  • @jesse3715
    @jesse3715 Před 4 lety +1

    This is a great review, Elliot. Kudos.
    I don't really agree on your perspective about the worldbuilding, particularly the magic, needing to have been more fleshed out more in GOTM, however. Maybe it's just because when I was reading it I always just accepted that this was, like you say, the first part, the beginning, of a much larger story and that the knowing would come later on. Or maybe it's just as I've gotten further along, and the magic has become a more intrinsic part of the worldbuilding (err and i mean that in a very literal sense) that I forgot that it was so opaque in the GOTM.
    Completely agree with your take on the gender roles attitude as well. I didn't actually pick up on this until about Memories of Ice, but it's something that I also appreciate and helps to further delineate that world from ours (you know, if the floating mountain city wasn't enough).
    I also strongly agree with you on the occasions that he can be so subtle sometimes and then wack you over the face with information the other time. I find it incredibly jarring when that happens, and it's my personal single biggest criticism of the series so far.
    I think I remember hearing you say in another video that you're going to give at least the first few books in the series a try, so I'm looking forward to hearing your opinion on Deadhouse Gates, which is far better written book in terms of the things you criticised from GOTM.

  • @LandofFrost
    @LandofFrost Před 4 lety +12

    Great Review. This is the book I tried to read three times and failed, I finally bought the audio book and it made much more sense. This book had a number of ideas, such as Anomander Rakes' sword, that I still find incredible.

    • @ebnovels
      @ebnovels  Před 4 lety +4

      His sword is so bizarre 😆 But definitely unique, I must say!

    • @colin9501
      @colin9501 Před 4 lety +2

      @Elliot Brooks and you've only scratched the surface, it becomes way more bizarre in the third book you'll see... But it is definitely an incredible idea

    • @rileykuhl8011
      @rileykuhl8011 Před 4 lety

      Dragnipur (I believe that how it’s spelt) is a character in its own right with how much attention it commands! You will not be disappointed, I guarantee it!!!

  • @garyodom6574
    @garyodom6574 Před 4 lety

    I view reading Eriksons Malzan books like putting together a jigsaw puzzle. At first you dont even know what you are looking at (though somehow it is compelling) until more pieces are placed. As the pieces fall into place the story clarifies. So if you are lost at the beginning you are just like everyone else.

  • @JohanHerrenberg
    @JohanHerrenberg Před 4 lety

    My first-ever reading of GotM isn't as problematic as I thought it would be. Yes, you're thrown into an utterly strange reality, and you have to be very alert. There are dialogues that at first make no sense, people violently reacting to some piece of news which doesn't mean a thing to you. But - as you read on, the interconnectedness becomes stronger and stronger. I just finished Book One, and I think Erikson has done a very good job already. If you read carefully and connect the dots, the ever-expanding world becomes clearer and clearer. I certainly intend to read all ten books. Fascinating stuff!

  • @abbaty
    @abbaty Před 4 lety +6

    I would always recommend that you read the introductions and forward to the books. He established and answers most the points you've raised in this book.
    Erikson is also notorious for dropping you into the middle of the story, you get the sense that so much has happened before you get to this point. He mentions it in the preface as well. A lot of the things you're feeling is because you get dropped in the middle of the world without any soft landing. But it gets better, trust me.

  • @noneofyourbusiness3288
    @noneofyourbusiness3288 Před 4 lety +38

    Reading Malazan is like getting punched in the face. In a good way. I dont know. Its weird. It feels like playing a video game with a steep learning curve.

    • @MrJordwalk
      @MrJordwalk Před 4 lety +3

      DARK SOULS! Malazan and Dark Souls are tonally similar as well, as both are soaked in misery.

    • @jackdamm1792
      @jackdamm1792 Před 4 lety

      Cole Jordan just finished Gardens of the Moon, I was struck by how tonally similar it is to dark souls! This is the first time I’ve seen it mentioned anywhere, granted this is also the first review of the book I’ve looked at lol.

    • @MrJordwalk
      @MrJordwalk Před 4 lety

      FromSoft are also currently working on their largest game to date, Elden Ring. They got George RR Martin to handle the world-building (he wrote the lore). This is going to be an Open-World Soulsborne RPG!

    • @berserker8884
      @berserker8884 Před 4 lety

      @@MrJordwalk Dark Souls is my favorite game of all time! Gardens of the Moon gets a really bad rep, but I have to say that Im enjoying the living hell out of it atm and Im only 100 pages in. Its probably gonna get denser and more characters introduced, but Im ALL IN. Maybe Dark Souls has trained me to love the lore and extract the story from little beautiful and magical details.

    • @MrJordwalk
      @MrJordwalk Před 4 lety

      @@berserker8884
      Dark Souls is my Top 3. Have you seen that they Remastered/Remade Demon's Souls for PS5?

  • @Varlwyll
    @Varlwyll Před 4 lety

    Will there be a review that includes spoilers?

  • @mrsduncanthetall
    @mrsduncanthetall Před rokem

    Elliot!!! Im just catching this video from 2 yrs ago. Did you continued with Malazan?

  • @joel6376
    @joel6376 Před 4 lety

    It was originally meant as a d&d campaign.. also he apparently did not use an editor.

  • @djin81
    @djin81 Před 4 lety

    I was intrigued by you pointing out the overuse of names between Coll and Paran, so I went and found that passage. I think it's a deliberate choice by Erikson. We get Paran's point of view and he's doing the maths in his head of I need to infiltrate Darujhistan, helping Coll will delay my arrival BUT arriving with an injured local will make entry into the city much easier. Paran doesn't start using Coll's name until he commits to saving him. Likewise (although this is Parans POV) Coll doesn't start using Paran's name constantly until he's sure Paran is his best option for survival.
    The constant name using back and forth is after both characters have decided its in their best interests to become friends.

  • @mikesalviani6115
    @mikesalviani6115 Před 3 lety

    What is the music at the very end? Shazam doesn't pick it up.

  • @1siddynickhead
    @1siddynickhead Před 4 lety +2

    did you enjoy it though?

  • @jommywop
    @jommywop Před 4 lety +1

    Easily the best fantasy epic I've ever read. I've finished the 10 core books as well as all the side books by his writing partner Ian Esslemont. I've yet to be disappointed. Deadhouse Gates is up there with my favorite books of all time.

  • @duncan2by4
    @duncan2by4 Před rokem

    I don't think I'd have as big a problem as I do, if the Character POVs didn't switch between two or three characters in the same chapter. Especially in the first book. Give a character their own chapter to establish them, and start to switch between them later. After we're connected and understand who they are. I'm only on the first book and this is my biggest hurdle getting through it.

  • @amateurm3mer316
    @amateurm3mer316 Před 4 lety +7

    Great review! Although I have one counterargument to provide: most of your criticisms are almost sort of "intentional" flaws. Stuff like the Azath houses might seem like deus ex machina but if you read all of Malazan its comparable to being blind and trying to navigate a city and suddenly being able to see for the first time. So much stuff makes sense and I awe Erikson's forethought when constructing the world. It's like Hoid in the cosmere, only it's not one person but an entire world that is connected. IMO it's so interesting because it is an absolute reflection of reality. We don't know or understand everything and we never will. People will come and go, and they might never even cross our mind again while they go on to bring great change. I still think after 20 years of being a fantasy nerd that Malazan is the most rewarding series ever when it comes to rereading. It's like a beautiful painting, which everytime you look at it reveals another hitherto hidden detail. No other series made my head hurt so much and yet and I still feel blessed to have discovered it (looking at you WoT). Good luck with DG!

    • @ebnovels
      @ebnovels  Před 4 lety +4

      Yeah, I know a lot of people say something similar to what you expressed! I tried to make it clear that things feel random in this first book in particular, since it’s common for things to be explained later. I do think it maybe happened a few too many times in this first book, where it was almost unsatisfying, though I can definitely see how that would change in later books :)

    • @amateurm3mer316
      @amateurm3mer316 Před 4 lety +3

      @@ebnovels Yeah I totally agree and the whole "blueprint" review segment was actually scarily accurate. I myself remember being baffled by stuff like the Deck of Dragons or Warrens. It's just that you seemed pretty meh about it in your reading vlogs so I wanted to provide some encouragement :)

    • @Levels6789
      @Levels6789 Před 4 lety

      I feel so far that the interpersonal and organizational conflicts and subtexts are greater in WoT but the divinity and civilization conflicts are greater in Malazan. You care about the jaghut, the first empire, and sundering of the tisti races among many other stories in Malazan. In WoT the foraken, children of light, and black ajah provide conflict. One is a laser focus in time and concentration of power in the present day of the narrative while the other has inertia and weight of entire races and skips tens or hundreds of thousands of years. The tragedy of one is always immediate while the impact of the other almost forgotten but for a few.

    • @darkale658
      @darkale658 Před 3 lety

      Her points about the technical flaws of the first book are really good though. At some points I found it very hard to care because the stakes were not adequately described. I felt like I was more along for the ride than seriously invested. I slogged through some parts just because I know there will eventually be a setup and explanation to later books in the series. As a standalone book it is unfortunately not very strong IMO, although there are amazing, well-written scenes and the world building is pretty cool.

  • @GEORGIOARCADE
    @GEORGIOARCADE Před 4 lety +1

    You get a 🎖 for covering this complex story lol. I probably won't be getting this at least not at the moment. It does seem like the author was experimenting with all these different perspectives & that sounds confusing lol 😄. I actually like 3rd person books but it has be well structured. When i go to barnes and noble this week, ill check out this book out & see what's going on. Also a review can be a bit spoilery as long as the ending isn't revealed cuz you gotta be able to tell us something. I look at like a verbal non visual movie trailer except for books. Anyways i just wanted to show you support here my friend. Have a bless happy reading day 🙌💫💜

    • @GEORGIOARCADE
      @GEORGIOARCADE Před 4 lety

      @@BooksRebound ok cool! I'll check that out. Thanks for the info 😁👍💫

    • @ebnovels
      @ebnovels  Před 4 lety +1

      Thanks Georgio! Hopefully this doesn’t sound like I’m assuming too much, but from what we’ve chatted about before with books, I’d say some of the other stories we’ve chatted about might be more up your alley. I think you know what I mean by that!

    • @GEORGIOARCADE
      @GEORGIOARCADE Před 4 lety

      @@ebnovels No problem! Elliot, i didn't want to sound negative lol 😄 I was just trying to understand the book. It doesn't sound like a bad book at all. I was just giving my impressions based on the info you gave me. No hard feelings 👍💗

  • @AngelofNever
    @AngelofNever Před 3 lety +1

    If I hadn't trusted that this series was a good one before I started reading this, I would have bounced hard off of Malazan after finishing this book. It suffers from the same problem as The Wire...stories that aspire to be epic and multifaceted seem to require so much build up and perspective jumping that for a long time you just don't know enough about any single character to give a damn about what's happening to them.
    I honestly wasn't hot on this series until maybe the back half of DeadHouse Gates. This is a good series but it takes a ton of patience...could you recommend a book to someone with the caveat that it's "just getting into stride" for like 800 pages?

  • @nuriablanco.bookreviews

    hahaha I also felt like I was a kid and I was reading an advanced book xD. I'm at book 6 now, and I'm still not sure if I understand the magic system...:P

  • @cappy2282
    @cappy2282 Před 4 lety

    Looove the Malazan books but I had to re-read all of them, use the Malazan wiki, take some notes....and hire a private tutor to baby me through them (I'm joking..but not really lol). I read each one twice back to back then moved onto the next book in series. Then I read them all the way through a yr later. P.s. Great vid. U really know your stuff

    • @lifesabeach2597
      @lifesabeach2597 Před 4 lety +1

      If you want a good Malazan Empire origins story, try Esslemonts Path to Ascendancy

    • @cappy2282
      @cappy2282 Před 4 lety

      @@lifesabeach2597 ya, dancers lament might be my favorite book in series. I haven't read 2-3 yet tho...I just found out a couple weeks ago the 3rd one is out lol

  • @Rendref
    @Rendref Před 3 lety

    Interesting, you seem pretty positive about the book in general here, but as I remember you DNF'd Deadhouse Gates, right?

  • @Lukazure
    @Lukazure Před 4 lety

    Regardless of your opinion of this book and its many sequels there can be no doubt that these two guys have created one of the most amazing fantasy world's ever. the depth and scope of history is off the scale. Sure Erikson has his faults (who doesn't) but as far as high fantasy goes this is the benchmark that all should be judged against.
    think i am on my 3rd reread of the entire series at the moment and it never gets old and every time i reread i discover bits i missed before and again im in awe of the scale and depth.

    • @Lukazure
      @Lukazure Před 4 lety

      the fact that Erikson doesn't spoon feed the reader with huge info dumps is part of the charm, keep with the books as the further you go along the more the pieces fall into place. If you cant read between the lines and need the author to hold your hand as he explains things this isnt the series for you. im not saying you need that by the way!

  • @NonstopRam
    @NonstopRam Před rokem

    Recently finished it.
    It was definitely tedious and awkward read at the beginning.
    Then I was finding the story interesting in Darujhistan.
    Then towards the end, it got awkward again.
    It is an interesting book, even when it has those weird moments.

  • @Furniture121
    @Furniture121 Před 3 lety

    Gardens of the Moon is a slog, but the next 9 books are awesome. When you add in the Ian Esselmont books, and the two prequel series, it's by far my favourite fictional world.

  • @catatony2468
    @catatony2468 Před 4 lety +2

    If you devote so much time to reading a series it becomes almost compulsory not to feel you have wasted your time and consequently u just like it :> cheers !

  • @omnitheus5442
    @omnitheus5442 Před 4 lety

    Keep reading the loyalty for One Arm and Whiskey Jack and later Ganoes will totally make sense...

  • @paulwalther5237
    @paulwalther5237 Před 2 lety

    I'm guessing you didn't name drop to avoid spoilers but I'd like to have the names anyway.

  • @eduardoo31
    @eduardoo31 Před 4 lety +3

    i think this is gonna be my next book, and i'm legit scared. i've flipped through the first few pages (figuratively since i read on my ipad) and there are like five maps and several pages filled with character names. Oof. i'm also not a native speaker, so if you had trouble with the vocabulary, i think i might actually struggle hahaha.

    • @eduardoo31
      @eduardoo31 Před 4 lety

      @@BooksRebound i'm definitely going to check out your vid. i was thinking before that it might be useful to watch a channel for malazan like i did for wheel of time (daniel greene). but unlike wot i don't plan on binging all 20 something books in a few months hahaha. i want to take it slow, at least in the beginning. i'm reading elantris right now, but i think i might pick up gardens of the moon by next week.

    • @ebnovels
      @ebnovels  Před 4 lety +1

      I think you’d be alright! There was the occasional words I didn’t know, but I by no means think the story is littered with advanced vocabulary :) Also, the writing style is quite direct otherwise, so even if you don’t know what something means, you could probably use context to figure it out 😊

    • @thelmahannah1327
      @thelmahannah1327 Před 4 lety

      Books Rebound I can't wait, I've read it 3 times and I'm still discovering a lot of stuff.

    • @tomascanas9143
      @tomascanas9143 Před 4 lety

      Saída de emergência é uma shit não concordas?

    • @kwazhims3lf
      @kwazhims3lf Před 4 lety

      @@BooksRebound
      all 10 books 9 times?
      holy shit... i thought i read it too many times.. started on GOTM in 2003 and since have finished all 10 just 3 times..
      9 gold stars for you i guess!

  • @99Michaelthom
    @99Michaelthom Před 4 lety +1

    Malazan is better understood if you actually read the book rather than listen to it. It requires the full attention only real reading can bring, imo.

  • @tiananesbitt7156
    @tiananesbitt7156 Před rokem

    Hey you ever read Ringworld?

  • @ANIMEGAMESBestforeverything

    Is that edition readable ? It’s showing mass market paperback on my amazon I mostly don’t get them but is it readable ?

    • @Newt5996
      @Newt5996 Před 4 lety

      The mass market has the same cover and is smaller. It’s only 666 pages but if you don’t like mass markets go to the regular paperback

    • @ebnovels
      @ebnovels  Před 4 lety

      My edition is tall, and I found it quite readable :) The mass market is much smaller.

    • @robpaul7544
      @robpaul7544 Před 4 lety +1

      It's a matter of preference, but I'm a big mass market paperback fan and find them perfectly readable 😃

  • @nicodemogawronski2052
    @nicodemogawronski2052 Před 4 lety

    Wow you read Vagabond :) Have you read Slam Dunk as well?

  • @hunterjones1651
    @hunterjones1651 Před 4 lety +3

    Glad to hear your comments on the amount of characters because we end up with several hundred lmao

    • @ebnovels
      @ebnovels  Před 4 lety +2

      Hahahaha, hurray? 😆 Just kidding; I’d imagine I’ll feel more connected to established characters the more time we spend with them :)

  • @jaxi122
    @jaxi122 Před 4 lety

    Will you update us once you've read the rest of the books? Or atleast after you finish Deadhouse Gates

    • @ebnovels
      @ebnovels  Před 4 lety +2

      I’m planning on making reviews for each of them and doing updates in reading vlogs :)

    • @kwazhims3lf
      @kwazhims3lf Před 4 lety

      @@ebnovels
      for the love of god please get to the end of book 4 before/if you decide to pull the plug
      its so dam good

  • @Malikar001
    @Malikar001 Před 3 lety

    I do think Malazan is difficult in that you have to read it carefully. In every paragraph there could be something critical to the story. For contrast, when I read Wheel of Time, I found I skipped a lot of the writing and just read what the characters said because the rest of the writing didn’t move the story along, or matter at all 95% of the time. With Malazan I found most of the writing moved the story along, and having developed my bad habits from reading WoT I had to retrain myself to actually read every paragraph. Also, reading anything that Kruppe (sp?) said had me looking for the real meaning behind his words.

  • @alcoholicmuppet129
    @alcoholicmuppet129 Před 4 lety

    You completely nailed most of my criticisms of the book. Not giving a shit about any of the characters is the biggest turn off for me so far. Without spoilers, does this improve at all later on in the series?

    • @robpaul7544
      @robpaul7544 Před 4 lety

      The general consensus I think would be yes, yes it does.
      Erikson said the whole series is a plea for compassion - which it succeeds at in my opinion. Can't do that without caring for the characters 😉

    • @theriddler2277
      @theriddler2277 Před 4 lety

      you get the same depth in characters that you do in the best trilogies - here it's just 450+ characters spread over 10books so it takes time before you get to know them.

    • @sernoddicusthegallant6986
      @sernoddicusthegallant6986 Před 4 lety +1

      I felt the same about GotM, DG completely turned me around on it around the half way mark I found myself more emotionally attached to the chain of dogs than I did to most real people

  • @Cieges
    @Cieges Před 4 lety

    Book 2 review when?😭

  • @esteban280889
    @esteban280889 Před 3 lety +1

    I take it you just read the first book. This series doesn't start and the beginning and you need to work to learn and follow what happens. There's a reason people say read the first 3 books before giving up coz once everything clicks its amazing. You are meant to be confused and lost at times. You are meant to not understand the magic until later. There will be whole books where you don't see the characters in this one. The world Erikson and Esslemont have made is massive