Spoilers!
Spoilers!
Spoilers!
Spoilers!
After finishing Orb Sceptre Thorne I was not at first certain of my thoughts. I needed time to think things through. However the more time I took, the longer I mulled it over the more I realised how much the book failed, for me at least, thematically and narratively.
I think what threw me at first, and kept me from noticing the books growing flaws, was the books early chapter on the Seguleh. This was what we had been waiting so long to see and it was excellent. The Seguleh revealed, their culture explained the mystery at last answered. We saw from the PoV of the Seguleh second how a challenge is issued and answered. We learned there is a ruling Jistarii family. That they have priests and that within the temple at least the priests outrank the even the second. Then throughout the rest of the book we never learn anything of value ever again. The Seguleh culture is never built upon again. We never learn the truth about Darujhistan, the Tyrant or the Moranth. No, instead in true malazan tradition we are treated to another hundred vague hints, veiled foreshadowing, ominous comments and revelations of the world’s history which are more confusing than revelatory.
Let’s look at it in detail. We finally visited the land of Moranth and are treated to less than half a page’s description for their city. We still don’t know why the Silver are in charge or what the difference between the black, red and gold are. We are told about an ancient feud between them, darujhistan and the Seguleh and receive no details. We know now that Dancer and Kellenved infiltrated cloud city and signed a treaty with them along with Dassem. Why did they do it, why did they agree? We still know nothing. It’s what, the fifteenth book in the series, and we still don’t have any solid detail on one of the most important and interesting people in the stories.
Then there was the Tyrant. Why did he awake only now? We are told that he fashioned the Seguleh and that there has always been only one Tyrant. The Tyrant smells of Ice but is not Jhaghut. How was he defeated all those years ago when his power was all the greater than it is now. These confusing revelations also seem at odds with the hints, or at least the conclusions so many of us had for Assail. At least we got some insight (perhaps?) into Kruppe and his magnificence and why he refers to himself as Circle-Breaker.
As for the Seguleh. How did the Seguleh lose the unmarred mask? Why is it even important? Why was it on Moonspawn? How did Oru know? I also felt that there was what I can only describe as lazy and unimaginative writing involving them on two occasions. In a series which has made light of the power imbalance between Gods, Dragons, Ascendants and Mortals and no few occasion I felt unsatisfied to see that four hundred Seguleh were written as killing and routing 30, 000 Rhivi and ten thousand Malazan Infantry. I love the Seguleh and am happy for them to be the inhumanly willed, strong and fast duelling masters that they are but what they were described as doing broke my disbelief. A mass charge of ten thousand infantry with shields locked eight hundred wide and ten men deep would bowl over the widely spaced line of four hundred Seguleh. Even if in their inhuman skill they killed the entire front rank, momentum alone would have seen them all knocked over. Instead we see the fight written as the Malazans waiting to receive the Seguleh at their shield wall and they fight a hundred separate Duels in a row. Armies don’t fight like that. The second complaint of lazy writing I have is when the Moranth bomb the Seguleh and the Malazans and Torvald all react in Horror. I actually thought the horror was because Torvald and the malazans thought the proximity meant they would be bombed too. To discover that instead they felt pity for killing the Seguleh in this way just struck me as false. We have seen the Malazans do/witness things just as bad with no worries. Lets also not forget that the Seguleh had just killed or crippled 4000 Malazan Infantry and were about to do in the rest.
I won’t even mention the Timeline except to say I frankly don’t care about roughly which week or month things happen in but when a book series that used to start every chapter with the date down to the month of Burns Sleep in the corner should at least be able to keep historical events within the same millennium consistently. SAME MILLENIUM.
The back-story and details are piling up higher and higher and seldom if ever do they answer or address any of it. I wish they would stop introducing new characters when they are so obviously not finished with the old. Because of all of this I frankly find it difficult to care for fisher, I’m not interested in becoming invested in him or the new mercenaries/Culture who know him when we already have so much on the plate that is not receiving the attention it deserves. Who is Orchid? I feel like answering back who cares.
In fact the entire Spawn plotline left me cold. It was a break away from the real action with what seems like another entirely empty cameo appearance by Korbal and Broach. What did it bring to the table? It set up Orchids character when what it should have been doing was closing of the Bridgeburner question.
When I first started this series we were treated much the same, offered many mysteries and few facts. Back then these hints excited rather than frustrated me. They were something to look forward to in future books. It was Something to debate about on the forums. After Fifteen books I feel like we should at least be able to have some grasp about what the hell a Warren is. When this series delivers its one of my favourites but far too often I find it nothing more than a tedious Hint machine.
Beyond these faults I just thought I would mention that I felt the PoV changes are too swift and common. They make it very difficult to get into any one part of the story. ICE also has a bad habit of ntentionally with-holding a characters name or sudden revelation to build suspense. Its not very original, and I found it tacky rather than engaging. Also like all of his Novels so far (perhaps just the unfortunate effect of going second) there is an over-reliance on using our affection for characters from previous stories to drive excitement, why was it necessary to tell us about Karsa at all. Unfortunately many characters also just come across as wrong, envy seems a caricature of her past self and I feel this sadly also robs ICE of opportunities to create his own characters with their own real developed depth.
This post has been edited by Cause: 23 January 2012 - 03:01 PM