Book description for Toll the Hounds:
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January 1st 2020 we began the re-read of the main series of the Malazan books. The plan being to read one book a month. We've now added additional Erikson and Esslemont publications to the schedule, to be read roughly according to the publication order.
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January: Gardens of the Moon
February: Deadhouse Gates
March: Memories of Ice
April: House of Chains
May: Midnight Tides
June Night of Knives & The Bonehunters
July: Return of the Crimson Guard
August: Reaper's Gale
September: Stonewielder
October: Toll the Hounds
November: Orb Sceptre Throne
December: Dust of Dreams
2021
January: The Crippled God
February: Blood and Bone
March: Assail
April: Forge of Darkness
May: Fall of Light
You can read our thoughts from earlier months in these threads:
2020 Malazan Re-read: Gardens of the Moon
2020 Malazan Re-read: Deadhouse Gates
2020 Malazan Re-read: Memories of Ice
2020 Malazan Re-read: House of Chains
2020 Malazan Re-read: Midnight Tides
2020 Malazan Re-read: Night of Knives
2020 Malazan Re-read: Bonehunters
2020 Malazan Re-read: Return of the Crimson Guard
2020 Malazan Re-read: Reaper's Gale
2020 Malazan Re-read: Stonewielder
October 1st we begin the re-read of Toll the Hounds, the 8th book of the Malazan Book of the Fallen series.
There will be spoilers for all published books. So beware. Spoiler blocks are not mandatory but if people want to use boxes for the latest Kharkanas books or the Path to Ascendance books for example, I'd personally appreciate it.
Are you ready? What do you remember about Toll the Hounds.
I remember this book being a slow burn. A very long run up to an excellent convergence on the last 200 or so pages.
I remember finding the whole Black Oil and puppet god stuff more confusing and weird than satisfying to read about. Why was Bellurdan brought back as a puppet character and not Hairlock?
Kallor was cool in this book. It's the first book where some humanity is introduced to the character and we get a glimpse of the man as more than just a stereotypical bad guy.
I remember finding the whole Hood needs to manifest so Rake can chop him and the commit suicide plot stupid. We've seen plenty other gods manifest in physical form. Or been Dragged into that situation, Quick Ben threatened to do just that to Hood in Memories of Ice. It's also ridiculous that Rake needed to have Dassem defeat him. Maybe if you believed that Dassem was needed to protect the blade you can see some logic in it, but that doesn't explain what the point of the fight was. I for one believe that Rake controlled that fight and manipulated Dassem into the killing blow. At which point you may ask: Why didn't Hood and Rake just meet in a deserted area, Rake kills Hood, Rake stabs himself. Done.
Was a cool convergence though. "Now turn this wagon around".
This post has been edited by Aptorian: 05 October 2020 - 09:06 AM