D, on 13 August 2012 - 02:34 PM, said:
Unlike most of his later 'alt-hist-fantasy' books, aside from loose geography and the 'city-state' system that existed before the two sorcerors walzed in, there is little analogy to Italy, unlike LIONS, SARANTINE, ARBONNE or HEAVEN that work with strong analogies to real countries (Spain, Roman Empire, France, Japan iirc) and historical periods.
Use Of Weapons, on 16 August 2012 - 06:02 PM, said:
Abyss and I differ in this, which is strange because in general, our tastes run along fairly similar lines. I re-read Tigana recently, and so my impression was confirmed. It does have a slow burn beginning, in the mould of more traditional fantasy, unlike Malazan which is very much in medias res. But Kay's strength has always been his characters, and Tigana's characters have an aching depth that is lacking in so much fantasy these days.
Bear with it. If the denoument doesn't move you, then blame me. But don't consign it to the scrapheap until you've read the ending.
I think that Kay generally hits a brilliant level of depth with his characters, but i thought Tigana was a weaker effort on this point as well.
But i utterly agree with you that the book is worth reading to make up one's own mind about.