KILLERAOC;156705 said:
Lets see, with this book...okay to begin with that "epic" battle between Tattersails band and the MoonSpawn was a huge downer...i remeber actually laughing outloud. I couldnt help but picture myself as one of the Marines, sighing as magic cloud began melting my comrads, "Well f*ck, what the hell am i doing here?".
I suppose it's personal preference, if you don't like mage battles then that's all there is to say really. As for the soldiers, they had to be there. They were still maintaining the seige of the city after all, and had to be ready to assault Pale as soon as Moon's Spawn was out of action.
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What little i learned about Tattersail didnt leave me impressed.....in the army yet soft (physically AND emotionaly). Overall she felt "weak", despite being something like a century old(?) and (supposedly) a master mage. Just my luck she is "reborn" and become "more powerful then you can possibly imagine" - cant stand this type of female character.
I liked Tattersail. You don't. I suppose there's not really much else to say there, except that her storyline is not as simple as it seems.
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I liked Lorn, i'm a sucker for "mere mortals" who can combat powerful magic through artifacts/natural ability/technology...her undead companion Tool was considerably less interesting, as was their mission. Ultimatly, after Paran harped about her enough, i knew she was going to die...bummer
You didn't like Tool?
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I'll accept that women serve in branches of the Empires' military in this sword/sorcery era army...but the idea that a professional sword-era regular army accepts 13 year old girls is stupid to the extreme...and nothing said can change my mind on that. I actually re-read that scene several times thinking i was missing something...but nope...thats what actually happened.
The recruiters had specific instructions. Take anyone with a head, two arms and two legs. The war was going badly enough that he would take anyone capable of swinging a sword, no matter how young.
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Paran was...okay i guess...but i couldnt buy into any of his character "development" seeing as i didnt really buy into his relationship with Tattersail...(oh she meant THAT much to you? Love at first sight? News to me!). We are told little about his relationship with Lorn except that he considered himself "a tool", and is willing to blame her (without any proof) for just about everything he can think of.
Paran gets better later in the series, and, well, it seems you really didn't like any of the characters anyway.
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Bridgeburners - What can i say...I didnt give a **** about these people...who can blame me? Whiskeyjack and Co. arnt given much book time, and he himself appears to be blind to the obvious. If some of your major characters are "faceless warriors in a faceless war", then the reader must establish an emotional connection with at least one of them...(Reading Black Company made me feel like i knew and cared about Croaker...and through him i eagarly learned about the Company and its exploits). Whiskeyjacks portions of the book just made him feel old, tired, and worn-down...yes i KNOW that was the point, but it wasnt presented in a way that made me care about him...or what he did in the past.
I haven't read the Black Company books so I don't know how they compare, but it just seems like you're not that into this book at all so there's not much more to say. I really liked Whiskeyjack in this, for what it's worth.
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Lastly the city scenes....yeah i can honestly say i basically started speed reading...hate characters like the "Foolish Mage" that it often focused around. I wanted him dead the instant he was introduced.
The Foolish Mage? Not sure who you mean. If you're talking about Serrat, she was female, so you obviously weren't reading that closely.
Another thing to note - Erikson uses far more fantasy cliches in this book than in later ones. For example there are no genre staples like the assassin's guild in later books, he takes things in a more original direction.
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I had mixed feelings about the thief Crokus...but as the book went on i quickly realized he was no Garret (from Thief, T2 etc...best damn thief ever). And looking at the novels outcome...his entire story arc felt "tacked-on" to me.
I'll give you this one - Crokus was worthless and his storyline meant almost nothing except for the one scene where he knocks out a high mage with a brick. Which is a bit stupid.
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anyway...rant over...thats all i can think of for now after finishing...ill comeback to it if i remeber more
The only thing to say is that everyone who reads these books agrees that the series only gets better. At this point, with six books out, I would comfortably rank GotM lowest. Deadhouse Gates is wonderful, doesn't concern itself with exactly the same characters as this one, and I think the vast majority of fans would rank it well above GotM.
One last thing - you never mentioned Anomander Rake. You must have liked him, surely.