Favourite Holy @#$% Moments in Deadhouse Gates
#81
Posted 28 April 2011 - 11:15 AM
Think the song "Liberty" would seem to be the most relevant.
http://lyrics.wikia...._Waters:Liberty
CHORUS
We've given, we've given
More blood, than we could turn to love
REVOLUTIONARY PRIEST
Come angles of mercy
Come doves of peace
Shine a light on all these warring clubs and cliques
OFFICER
The jackal and hyena who prowl these city streets
Would turn in their own mother for a little extra meat
REVOLUTIONARY PRIEST
From the piles of dead the Republic comes to life
Her mutilated body reeling like a drunken fishwife
Gives birth to the future
http://lyrics.wikia...._Waters:Liberty
CHORUS
We've given, we've given
More blood, than we could turn to love
REVOLUTIONARY PRIEST
Come angles of mercy
Come doves of peace
Shine a light on all these warring clubs and cliques
OFFICER
The jackal and hyena who prowl these city streets
Would turn in their own mother for a little extra meat
REVOLUTIONARY PRIEST
From the piles of dead the Republic comes to life
Her mutilated body reeling like a drunken fishwife
Gives birth to the future
#83
Posted 25 May 2011 - 08:12 AM
2 things that I don't think have been mentioned yet:
- At the Sekala Crossing, after the Chain crosses the river on the man-made road, Duiker turns to watch the rebel army be blown into a million bits and pieces by the Malazan Sappers. This was the definition of an "Oh S@#t" moment, and I loved how the scene played out almost in slow motion.
- When Fid and Co. are on their way to Tremorlor and they get attacked by D'ivers in the maze, Fiddler thinks he is about to use his last Cusser when he actually tosses the old Conch shell into the fray. I loved this because through the whole reading of DG, I found myself thinking back to Fiddler's scene with the Tanno Spiritwalker and wondering at its significance. This scene - only about 700 pages later - finally revealed the importance of Kimloc's gift.
- At the Sekala Crossing, after the Chain crosses the river on the man-made road, Duiker turns to watch the rebel army be blown into a million bits and pieces by the Malazan Sappers. This was the definition of an "Oh S@#t" moment, and I loved how the scene played out almost in slow motion.
- When Fid and Co. are on their way to Tremorlor and they get attacked by D'ivers in the maze, Fiddler thinks he is about to use his last Cusser when he actually tosses the old Conch shell into the fray. I loved this because through the whole reading of DG, I found myself thinking back to Fiddler's scene with the Tanno Spiritwalker and wondering at its significance. This scene - only about 700 pages later - finally revealed the importance of Kimloc's gift.
"I'm done talking. Witness."
#85
#86 Guest_ImpiusMotus_*
Posted 10 July 2011 - 07:07 AM
For me:
The part where Duiker starts strangling Nethpara.
The part where Leoman and that see the 'young girl and old man', and the reader initially thinks it to be Apsalar and her father, but then the girl says, 'careful with his hands' or something, and the reader goes
THAT IS FELISIN!
And a nice visually evoking scene was when one of the warlocks gets scorched to death by a wave of sorcery, and his eyes bubble and melt.
And of course, the bit where Duiker kicks Nethpara in the face.
And the whole concluding scene for Duiker is just brilliantly tragic.
And that damn lapdog
What is the deal with how he keeps turning up alive??
And the scene when the Tlan Imass dragon flies over the Silanah and Gesler and Stormy just wave up at it. And mostly every other scene with Gesler and Stormy for that matter, I think they were some of my favorite characters.
There were way too many epic scenes to list, the whole book is just sky-breaking
The part where Duiker starts strangling Nethpara.
The part where Leoman and that see the 'young girl and old man', and the reader initially thinks it to be Apsalar and her father, but then the girl says, 'careful with his hands' or something, and the reader goes

And a nice visually evoking scene was when one of the warlocks gets scorched to death by a wave of sorcery, and his eyes bubble and melt.
And of course, the bit where Duiker kicks Nethpara in the face.
And the whole concluding scene for Duiker is just brilliantly tragic.
And that damn lapdog

And the scene when the Tlan Imass dragon flies over the Silanah and Gesler and Stormy just wave up at it. And mostly every other scene with Gesler and Stormy for that matter, I think they were some of my favorite characters.
There were way too many epic scenes to list, the whole book is just sky-breaking

#87
Posted 19 July 2011 - 07:42 PM
Probably my most epic moment was when Icarium goes on the verge of über rage and he is keening. I know it's quite minor but I completely visualised it. While it was happening I could -feel- Mappo's terror that he had lost it.
#88
Posted 10 November 2011 - 01:48 AM
The bit where you discover who is Sha'ik reborn, and you're waiting to find out who it is, and then, "Watch his hands." I did a fist pump in midair in public, hah.
"A life given for a life taken." Seems to be a theme throughout the entire book, and it all came full circle when Heboric was standing, blindly looking up to Duiker.
The final annihilation of the soldiers five hundred paces from the gates was a whirlwind. Throughout the entire book, I was expecting them to just go, and go, and then get surrounded and destroyed. But when Duiker gets atop the tower and sees Coltaine, all that rushed out the window, I got a surge of hope, and then realized I had been right the whole time as they were cut down. (And, in addition to Coltaine/Duiker, I'm wondering if the two dogs are going to become significant...)
When Fiddler tosses the conch shell and then is asked, "Did Kimloc touch you?" and Fid replies he couldn't remember, I flipped back through the pages and saw that Kimloc innocuously patted his shoulder in farewell.
"A life given for a life taken." Seems to be a theme throughout the entire book, and it all came full circle when Heboric was standing, blindly looking up to Duiker.
The final annihilation of the soldiers five hundred paces from the gates was a whirlwind. Throughout the entire book, I was expecting them to just go, and go, and then get surrounded and destroyed. But when Duiker gets atop the tower and sees Coltaine, all that rushed out the window, I got a surge of hope, and then realized I had been right the whole time as they were cut down. (And, in addition to Coltaine/Duiker, I'm wondering if the two dogs are going to become significant...)
When Fiddler tosses the conch shell and then is asked, "Did Kimloc touch you?" and Fid replies he couldn't remember, I flipped back through the pages and saw that Kimloc innocuously patted his shoulder in farewell.
#89
Posted 05 September 2012 - 10:45 AM
As the chain of dogs nears its end, duiker sees a bunch of soldiers playing some game with a ball they fashioned from whatever bits of leftover leather they could find, and so 'mocking the enemy, as well as their own exhoustion...' yeah, malazan soldiers are tough guys
liked that part =)
Also, when this whole army is being stripped of weapons, the enemy is like: right, we captured this idiot high fist, no i suppose we kill him... When they are bickering over the who and how, i half expected duiker to say: 'can i do it?'... Sadly he didnt

Also, when this whole army is being stripped of weapons, the enemy is like: right, we captured this idiot high fist, no i suppose we kill him... When they are bickering over the who and how, i half expected duiker to say: 'can i do it?'... Sadly he didnt

"In a world full of pits and sinkholes, you dance the edges." Ganoes Paran
#90
Posted 13 September 2012 - 04:19 PM
Excellent topic and subsequent replies! After only one reading, I am sure some of the more subtle plots mentioned here will have a "Holy $#^@" effect on me as well, but for this newbie, what stands out first and foremost is the Chain of Dogs story. Admittedly, I initially bored with the exodus...but the line grew on me..and grew..and grew...until I was an slobbering, emotional wreck upon reading of Coltaine's death. Even to the last, I was hoping for a miracle - that miracle was delivered via the crows - albeit bittersweet (that is an understatement!).
On the opposite end of the spectrum, I thought it was hilarious when the nameless marine came up to Duiker as they were preparing for the last haggard push to Aren and told him that she had something for him. Either Lull or Bult (forgive me for not remembering) commented, "What, here?" ...hahahaha!
As others have mentioned, Kalam's Claw Hunt was nothing other than uber badassedness. Absolutely a "Ahhh, now I see!" moment.
On the opposite end of the spectrum, I thought it was hilarious when the nameless marine came up to Duiker as they were preparing for the last haggard push to Aren and told him that she had something for him. Either Lull or Bult (forgive me for not remembering) commented, "What, here?" ...hahahaha!
As others have mentioned, Kalam's Claw Hunt was nothing other than uber badassedness. Absolutely a "Ahhh, now I see!" moment.
"What can be asserted without evidence can also be dismissed without evidence." - Christopher Hitchens
#91
Posted 24 November 2012 - 10:09 AM
I Finished Deadhouse Gates yesterday, and it's probably the most tragic and intense book I've ever read. The moments that I consider to be Holy @#$%, although in different degrees, are these:
-Baudin brutally killing the old woman at the very start, cutting her head off, then throwing it into the crowd.
-Leoman and the Toblakai fighting off an entire squad of Red Blades after Sha'ik was murdered.
-Kulp being devoured by thousands of rats. The confusion and intensity of that scene was amazing.
-Duiker finding Gesler, Stormy and Truth sitting on the sand near the burnt Silanda.
-Kalam being stabbed by Salk Elan, then thrown overboard.
-Kalam stalking the Claws through Malaz City with makeshift weapons.
-Coltaine's final stand. The most tragic and intense thing I've ever read.
-Pormqual being beheaded by Korbolo Dom.
-All 10 000 Seventh soldiers being nailed to trees, and Duiker being the final one. Probably the most depressing thing I've ever read, especially knowing that he died never reading the bit of cloth his nameless marine gave him.
-Laseen telling Kalam that outlawing Dujek was all a part of her plan (if she is to be believed, which I'm not sure yet.)
-Servant being revealed to be Apsalar's father.
-Sha'ik being shot through the eye with a crossbow bolt.
-Mappo and Icarium at the very end, when you realize that Icarium's mind is just stuck in a cycle, and their journey will continue, with him not remembering the events of Deadhouse Gates.
There's probably more, but I can't remember all of the book, so these will do.
-Baudin brutally killing the old woman at the very start, cutting her head off, then throwing it into the crowd.
-Leoman and the Toblakai fighting off an entire squad of Red Blades after Sha'ik was murdered.
-Kulp being devoured by thousands of rats. The confusion and intensity of that scene was amazing.
-Duiker finding Gesler, Stormy and Truth sitting on the sand near the burnt Silanda.
-Kalam being stabbed by Salk Elan, then thrown overboard.
-Kalam stalking the Claws through Malaz City with makeshift weapons.
-Coltaine's final stand. The most tragic and intense thing I've ever read.
-Pormqual being beheaded by Korbolo Dom.
-All 10 000 Seventh soldiers being nailed to trees, and Duiker being the final one. Probably the most depressing thing I've ever read, especially knowing that he died never reading the bit of cloth his nameless marine gave him.
-Laseen telling Kalam that outlawing Dujek was all a part of her plan (if she is to be believed, which I'm not sure yet.)
-Servant being revealed to be Apsalar's father.
-Sha'ik being shot through the eye with a crossbow bolt.
-Mappo and Icarium at the very end, when you realize that Icarium's mind is just stuck in a cycle, and their journey will continue, with him not remembering the events of Deadhouse Gates.
There's probably more, but I can't remember all of the book, so these will do.
#92
Posted 19 December 2012 - 09:07 AM
To add another, I really loved the scene where Moby appears at Tremorlor. I wasn't expecting it at all, and I love the image of him coming around the corner, this tiny little furry thing, trailing smoke after having devastated the ones pursuing the gang. I loved it so much I'll type it out:
Pust's reaction is hilarious, too.
Quote
"Let's get moving," the sapper said. Something was indeed coming up behind them, making the air redolent with sickly spice. The Hounds had pulled their attention from Mappo and Icarium and now faced the other way, revealing restless nerves as they shifted position. The trail made a sharp bend twenty paces from where the huge beasts stood.
A piercing scream ripped the air, coming from just beyond that bend, followed by the explosive sounds of battle. It ended abruptly.
"We've waiting too long!" Pust hissed, cowering behind his god's Hounds. "Now it comes!"
Fiddler swung his crossbow around, eyes fixed on the place where their pursuer would appear.
Instead, a nut-brown creature half flapped, half scampered into view. Tendrils of smoke drifted from it.
"Ai!" Pust shrieked. "They plague me!"
A piercing scream ripped the air, coming from just beyond that bend, followed by the explosive sounds of battle. It ended abruptly.
"We've waiting too long!" Pust hissed, cowering behind his god's Hounds. "Now it comes!"
Fiddler swung his crossbow around, eyes fixed on the place where their pursuer would appear.
Instead, a nut-brown creature half flapped, half scampered into view. Tendrils of smoke drifted from it.
"Ai!" Pust shrieked. "They plague me!"
Pust's reaction is hilarious, too.
This post has been edited by ShantyKing: 19 December 2012 - 09:08 AM
#93
Posted 19 December 2012 - 03:24 PM
ShantyKing, on 19 December 2012 - 09:07 AM, said:
To add another, I really loved the scene where Moby appears at Tremorlor....
Pust's reaction is hilarious, too.
Pust's reaction is hilarious, too.
I also love the next bit where Crokus picks up Moby and someone tells Crokus that in veered form Moby could pick HIM up the same way.
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#94
Posted 19 December 2012 - 07:05 PM
If I remember correctly, there was some part where the horse Duiker was riding bit some guys face off. That was a big ''holy fuck'' moment for me. Super random.
#95
Posted 19 December 2012 - 07:23 PM
'Twere Fiddler's horse, but yes, that one...harsh...I personally loved the bringing down of Fener. The way he described the noise, and the giant foot, the woad tattooing. Yeeha!
Theorizing that one could poop within his own lifetime, Doctor Poopet led an elite group of scientists into the desert to develop a top secret project, known as QUANTUM POOP. Pressured to prove his theories or lose funding, Doctor Poopet, prematurely stepped into the Poop Accelerator and vanished. He awoke to find himself in the past, suffering from partial amnesia and facing a mirror image that was not his own. Fortunately, contact with his own bowels was made through brainwave transmissions, with Al the Poop Observer, who appeared in the form of a hologram that only Doctor Poopet could see and hear. Trapped in the past, Doctor Poopet finds himself pooping from life to life, pooping things right, that once went wrong and hoping each time, that his next poop will be the poop home.
#96
Posted 19 December 2012 - 07:32 PM
Overactive Imagination, on 19 December 2012 - 07:05 PM, said:
If I remember correctly, there was some part where the horse Duiker was riding bit some guys face off. That was a big ''holy fuck'' moment for me. Super random.
Stalking Stonny, on 19 December 2012 - 07:23 PM, said:
'Twere Fiddler's horse, but yes, that one...harsh...
Fid's Gral horse bites a tribesman's face off, but we also find out that during the Wickan Wars Bult's horse bit off Dujek's arm iirc.
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'VIEW NEW CONTENT' BUTTON THAT
ALLOWS YOU TO VIEW NEW CONTENT
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#97
Posted 01 January 2013 - 07:13 AM
Geese, there were quite a few of them. Off the top of my head:
*Coltaines last stand was near infuriating, but maybe more than that was Pormqual not helping even when Coltaine was right outside the city walls
*The 10,000 Malazan soldiers being spiked along the road
*Duiker being killed off, that really suprised me, well it suprised me that he left the city to begin with
*Coltaines last stand was near infuriating, but maybe more than that was Pormqual not helping even when Coltaine was right outside the city walls
*The 10,000 Malazan soldiers being spiked along the road
*Duiker being killed off, that really suprised me, well it suprised me that he left the city to begin with
#98
Posted 25 February 2013 - 10:27 PM
Salt-Man Z, on 15 July 2009 - 09:32 PM, said:
I always feel bad, because, even after only two reads through the series, I cannot for the life of me remember not knowing the secret identities of Shadowthrone and Cotillion. I feel like I'm missing out on a great moment of revelation, even though I know it must have occurred at some point.
+1 Glad I'm not the only one!
#100
Posted 21 August 2013 - 04:52 PM
Not a Holy Sh*t moment, but one that made me unbearably sad was the idea that Duiker never got to read the scrap of cloth with the unknown marine's name on it. For some reason that one stabbed my heart big time. Any musings by Mappo on the subject of his stewardship of Icarium had the tendency to make me misty as well.
The original Sha'ik's death was kind of a "WHAT???" moment for me.
The whole Chain of Dogs story had a kind of grand, tragic, epic "this is the end, my friend" feel to it. I hated what was happening, but I couldn't look away.
If I had a son, I would name him Coltaine.
I'm finished my 5th read of this book, and I never get tired of its story or the story of its people. It reads like a true history.
The original Sha'ik's death was kind of a "WHAT???" moment for me.
The whole Chain of Dogs story had a kind of grand, tragic, epic "this is the end, my friend" feel to it. I hated what was happening, but I couldn't look away.
If I had a son, I would name him Coltaine.
I'm finished my 5th read of this book, and I never get tired of its story or the story of its people. It reads like a true history.
'If you can't be a good example, then you'll just have to be a horrible warning."