Sigurth, on 12 February 2014 - 11:25 PM, said:
My main confusion is of the basic mechanics of Ascendants and gods in this series. I've only read two and a half books so far, and would prefer no big spoilers, though it shouldn't be necessary to say "read and find out" either when I'm mostly asking general questions.
1. First basic question, how does one ascend? It appears to simply be a manner of being in the right place at the right time. For example, waltzing into an Azath House (doesn't always work, apparently) or getting a beautiful tan while exposed to a fiery warren. It often appears accidental, though sometimes (such as the Path of Hands) very specific. And obviously some of the more famous ascendants of the series didn't just trip and fall into Ascendancy.
2. What exactly does Ascendancy do? Does an Ascendant simply just not age? Do they gain access to more powerful magic, get stronger, smarter? Can they still be killed by a random arrow to the face? Same questions for godhood. And do gods immediately get access to some private warren to hide in and spy on the mortals?
I like Ganoes Paran's allusion of Ascendants to "pinnacles of [people]" speech in tBH. The basic gist being that Ascendants are just generally exceptional people who have accumulated enough power in form or another that you could say they've gone past the limits of an "ordinary" person (though "ordinary" might mean different things depending on your race). There doesn't need to be any fixed attributes of an Ascendant, so each and every Ascendant could be entirely different from another. The only thing that generally applies to all of them seems to be that the vague belief by other people that they are indeed Ascendants gives them some additional general potency - not enough to survivng having their heads chopped off, but enough to resist most diseases, age better and perhaps have a bit more will-power.
Sigurth, on 12 February 2014 - 11:25 PM, said:
3. Why do the gods never get directly involved? It's always some form of manipulation. I'd think gods would be more proactive. Is there some kind of limit to how much they can interact with mortals or the mortal plane? In Deadhouse Gates why would Shadowthrone not simply send a couple Hounds to fulfill his plan or be like "Yo, I'm a god now, I'll take that throne back."
I appreciate any answers, even if they are purely speculative. Thank you

It seems the gods mostly don't get too directly involved in mortal affairs (like taking over a kingdom) because the other Ascendants and gods would see it as stepping too far / as a threat and team up on them.
Meanwhile, the gods don't just fight amongst themselves because for them it seems rather easy to hide and defend themselves. ie, for Shadowthrone to attack, say, Oponn, directly he or his servants need to find and travel directly into the warren/piece of a warren that Oponn has taken over as their home, where Oponn has a lot of control and defenses because it is the heart of their realm. Even if ST and his Hounds are stronger in a stand-up fight than Oponn, it would not be a stand-up fight. Nor can ST just pick up a mountain and throw it at Oponn - how would you get the mountain through whatever twisted paths are needed to reach their warren's stronghold?