lord of tragedy, on 08 December 2009 - 06:08 PM, said:
bauchelain perhaps i like to be provocative. you can't really start a debate without it. now my position is that TTH is an incredibly daring and provocative attempt to capture a city in words. it is beautiful poised and deserving of the sobriquet of best fantasy book ever. i am hoping someone will provide a coherent arguement to prove me wrong. that is how debates work and i like to discuss things.
back on thread. none of you seem to see the signifigance of whats staring you in the face? why did SE use an ox pov?
The Ox was Kruppe's narrative whimsy. Although, I bet he secretly wanted to do a doughnut POV, but shied away from that as he would then have to relate the doughnut's creation, sale/theft by Kruppe, consumption by the beglistened thief and perhaps the digestive process as well. Be glad he chose an ox.
There's being provocative and then there's setting the framework for discussion in really weird places. Yes, Erikson did something very different for TtH by having it be narrated by Kruppe. However, it does have its weak points (the Dying God arc was uneven, the T'lan Imass inventor being discarded so rapidly etc.) and stellar points (Endest Silann and Spinnock Durav are some overlooked gems). On the whole, the book was very well written in my opinion and worthy of praise both as an exercise of writing chops and as an installment in the Malazan series.
What's odd about your "provocative" points is that Kruppe doesn't necessarily spend a whole lot of time describing the actual city. He says things about it here and there, but the glimpses we get of how the city work, through his discourses and its inhabitants shown here and there, don't really add up to a portrait of the entire city. So much of the book was spent elsewhere too. At times, the city really was just the chosen destination for the convergences. To describe it as the best fantasy book ever is even further beyond the pale, as to get the true significance of that book the reader has to get through at least seven prior books. Or more. Those books are mostly doorstopper size too.
Best portrayal of a city I've seen yet goes to The Wire, which isn't a book (strictly). For literary cities, Mieville's New Crobuzon and Armada are truly commendable. I'm having difficulty coming up with some non-SF authors who've done entire cities truly well.
I survived the Permian and all I got was this t-shirt.