Eispeis, on 25 January 2010 - 08:26 AM, said:
George Awesome, on 25 January 2010 - 02:36 AM, said:
And about magic being rare/valuable: then shouldn't mages be super-billionaires? Regarded as godlike, above mere mortals?
All these normal humans priding themselves on being good at fighting (the Toblakai bodyguard) - irrelevant next to a casual handwave by a random magic user.
Regarding "a casual handwave" I don't see how this is any different from, for instance, the weilders of Saidin/Saidar in Wheel of Time or any other random magic user in any other random fantasy series for that matter.
Well, yeah, the problem is somewhat genre-systemic (though I stand by Sanderson's "Mistborn" and Michael Scott Rohan's "Winter of the World" [from what I remember] series for consistent, limited magic systems). Mistborn and Malazan are the only two fantasy books I've picked up in about 8 years, so it seems like a lot of dormant objections are rising to the surface.
Cobbles, on 25 January 2010 - 11:54 PM, said:
Hello George,
I was hoping to hear from you about the second book. Thanks for the long writeup. I'm currently 2/3rds through Memories of Ice and I hope you give the books a chance because it only gets better (in particular book 3 has plenty of explanations coming, even early on).
Let me try to answer some of your concerns with the knowledge of a person who's not that far ahead of you in terms of pagecount.
1) The dissolving priest. I think the reactions are somewhat appropriate. Magic is not that commonplace. Most mages seem to be recruited into the Malazan army. There were a few mages in Pale and few in Darujhistan, mostly part of the governing class. So, to see magic wouldn't be a daily experience. I think someone explained it very well. The priest reacted because he really understood what he saw. The others might just not be used to magic on a daily basis. It's also a game of expectation. Everybody expected a real priest.
Hey Cobbles. Thanks for naming your new thread after mine - even if I can't go there yet cuz I can only read about 20 pages of this book at a time before my brain shuts down.
About the flies reaction: I thought somebody earlier compared it to a person getting gutshot or a car crashing: not supernatural, just dangerous and nearby: I guess, but based on the exact words used, it sounded more like a supernatural awe reaction to me: my main problem, I guess, was that I got the impression that SE expected me to be surprised by something so out of the ordinary, when I had read the denouement of GotM the night before.
Cobbles, on 25 January 2010 - 11:54 PM, said:
5) I agree with your point on SE's sentence structure. It takes me much more time to read his books than mostly anything else. It doesn't flow well with me. Now, I personally enjoy reading the books because they're challenging in terms of plot etc.
Thank you. So, he doesn't smooth out later on? Nuts.
Bauchelain the Evil, on 25 January 2010 - 04:27 PM, said:
@George Awesome
As for the flies thing, Felisin and all the others were probably fucked up by that , while Heboric, who as High Priest to Fener has probably seen his fill of magic, wasn't surprised that there was no man inside the cloud of flies, but that Hood,the God of Death, had just manifested in front of him.
As for it being a personal manifestation of Hood, I didn't get that - it couldn't have been, like, Hood's secretary, as far as Heboric knew? Plus, from what we knew, Heboric and the random NPC's had the same reaction for the same reasons: I understand that things like this are RAFO's, but it seems like ... SE is expecting us to have certain reactions to events that we can't have due to our ignorance: all I can do at these plotpoints is shrug and keep reading, having no clue what's going on, what the context is, or why characters are doing what they're doing: I accept that this may be consistent in-universe if facts are being withheld, but it's kind of alienating to the reader (me, anyway).
To clarify some more: normally, authors consider their readers' state of knowledge, and then tell us more things so as to produce certain reactions in us: I guess it's just how SE rolls, but he doesn't seem to give a damn about this, either for the sake of "style" or, uh, trouble saving his MS word files in the right order ... stuff happens, characters react, and we readers just follow along "like dogs being shown a card trick" (to quote Bill Hicks).
Illuyankas, on 26 January 2010 - 12:21 AM, said:
It almost was GOTM -> MOI -> DG, but a hard drive failure killed the first draft of MOI so SE went onto DG instead.

(Imagine this smiley's eyes rolling a little, too.)
So ... should I read the first quarter of MOI while I'm reading this?
**************
General note that may or may not be RAFO: if this planet's medievalish civilisation has been around so long ... how? Shouldn't somebody have mage-nuked it to glass or developed steam-power by now?
This post has been edited by George Awesome: 26 January 2010 - 01:31 AM