xombi said:
Newbie on this board but wanted to come on a forum and discuss the Malazan series, so this seemed a good place to start.
A quick bit about how I came to read the series. I initially started reading Game of Thrones as a result of seeing the first series and then once I finished reading all of GRRM's ASOIAF series up to where he has got so far I wanted something else to read and after a few searches The Fall of The Malazan showed up, I did some checking on Amazon in the reviews and decided to give it a try and I am glad I did. I read all ten books one after another and just finished the crippled god this week.
I was impressed with how much he actually managed to get in the last book and how many characters appeared all be it briefly in some cases but did wish a few plot thread either were resolved or if they have been resolved were clearer so I didn't miss them! (Although over 10 books I guess I don't feel too bad if I missed a couple of things!).
Anyway I was wondering out of those who have read both ASOIAF and TFOTM which do you prefer? Personally I actually prefer TFOTM more, I have read a reasonable amount in my times and Steven is one of the few fantasy writers who has actually taken me through a whole range of emotions in his books, most I tend to read almost on auto pilot even though I have enjoyed them.
With this series I have laughed, been repulsed made to feel emotional wont put what exactly but one particular part of epilogue 1 of the crippled god springs to mind for that but there were other points both in this book and some of the ones before.
I love the way he introduced characters with a decent background even if they were only to be killed off a page later lol
Trying to decide whether to go straight into book 1 of the new trilogy or read Esselmont's novels next any thoughts?
I'd recommend hitting up ICE's series first, just because it ties in with the MBotF so closely at points, and it's best if that's still fresh in your mind. You can't go wrong either way, though.
My own situation is peculiar: I was introduced to Malazan six years ago, and have read everything except the most recent ICE and B&KB books. But I just started reading ASoIaF a couple months ago for the first time (having remained almost entirely spoiler-free all these years) and just recently finished the third book.
GRRM is one heckuva storyteller. And his characters are very richly drawn. All around, the series (so far) is masterfully written. What his work hasn't done yet that SE's has is make me think and make me feel. Yes, GRRM has given me the occasional emotional gut-punch and made my jaw drop in wonder. But it's very much like watching a great TV series: I'm invested, yes, but it's all external to my self, if that makes any sense. SE plays with theme and voice and style such that I've internalized the MBoTF; I haven't shed a tear once for ASoIaF, but a single line from the MBotF (many of them, in fact) can get me bawling. As Donaldson says, SE "does something that only the rarest of books can manage: it alters the reader’s perception of reality." GRRM hasn't done that, but that's no slight against him; I don't think his series was written with that purpose. The MBotF was, and more importantly, it does.