Look, I like that KCCM have machinery-type constructs. It's a nice thing to set them apart from the other elder races. I enjoyed in Taxilian's story how they describe all the gears and coils and oil. In Kalyths at the beginning too. I liked Rooted and the other KCCM dens throughout that were grounded - they're crazy lairs of genius that any mortal stumbling upon it would have trouble accepting. That they're filled with weird lizards, even cooler.
But I don't like the idea of giant flying war land masses.
I am OKAY at best with steam and gunpowder in fantasy, preferring the middle ages to the enlightenment. It is all right. If used well, it can make the world more unique and hip. If used poorly it detracts from the magic of the fantasy realm. I love the use of munitions in Malazan and like how few other things use mechanical advancement throughout the story. It's there, but not prominent.
Pale was cool, but Moonspawn seemed very separate from the rest of the world. Out of place, even.
Black Coral was even cooler, with Rake letting Moonspawn crash into the heart of the cult. At least then it was the last of its kind - cooler by proxy to the fact that better tech existed in the past and it was now all gone.
The end of Dust of Dreams was good stuff, for sure - but did no one else feel like flying mountains firing *cough* lasers at each other was more out of an episode of Babylon 5 or Stargate SG-1 than Malazan? Sure, they involved characters we love: Icarium, mainly. Others. But where books 7 and 8 had the most awesome one on one finishes and dramatic character-driven scenes, DoD almost tried to do too much. Almost over-epic. It reminded me of how the LOTR: Return of the King movie suffered because the big battles were just heartless CGI mash-ups - whereas the battles in LOTR: Fellowship of the Ring were tight and tense scraps between main characters and immediate foes. Did anyone else find the Sky-Keeps battle... cheesy?
I like their lore, I'll admit their importance to the plot, sure, but flying mountains blasting at each other - though more epic in scope - has nothing on the tent-to-tent fighting at the end of House of Chains or Karsa versus Rhulad versus Icarium in Reaper's Gale.
I loved almost everything else about the book.
This post has been edited by Tatterdemalion: 06 April 2010 - 04:50 AM