In my commentary on Gardens of the Moon, I mentioned that it took me reading the second volume, Deadhouse Gates, before I found myself wanting to read the Malazan series in full. This was back in 2002, when only three volumes had been the released and the fourth was near its release date. Since then, I believe I have re-read this particular book three other times, all before mid-2005.
Each of those previous reads left me considering this book to be the second-best in the entire series, behind only the third novel, Memories of Ice. But I am curious to see how a five year break will affect my perception of this book (as well as the series as a whole). There was much, after all, that I enjoyed in previous reads: the introduction of the tragic friendship of Icarium and Mappo, the deepening of the events, the Chain of Dogs, Kalam's quest to assassinate Empress Laseen, and the Path of Hands subplot. But were each of these elements integrated well into the text?
What I noticed more about this book (just as I recall noting about the last four books written by Erikson) compared to the first book is that there is more of a buildup to the action-oriented scenes. Whereas Gardens of the Moon placed the readers in the midst of a multi-sided war with little information provided that would orient the reader as to what was happening (this was intentional, I believe, rather than a mistake in approach, although the execution certainly was not flawless, as I noted in my prior commentary), Deadhouse Gates begins with a vivid scene in the Malazan capital city of Unta. New characters, such as Captain Paran's youngest sister, Felisin, the ex-priest Heboric, the mysterious Baudin, and the Wickan leader of the Malazan Seventh Army, Coltaine, are given strong introductions that allow the reader to find more depth to their characters than the staccato bursts of dialogue that marked much of the character interactions in the first novel. This greater focus on character I believe is the main factor that separates this novel from its predecessor and it serves to offset the structural problems I noticed with the narrative.
Felisin often has been criticized by several readers for being "unsympathetic." I, on the other hand, have always found her to be one of the more complex characters in this series to date and this re-read only strengthened my belief. Erikson does a good job, through the use of this character's actions and her comments to her companions, to show just how battered and embittered she had become during the course of her imprisonment on the orders of her older sister, Tavore, and her subsequent selling of her body in the slave pits in order to gain concessions for herself. Her bitterness at how Heboric and Baudin view her is in part justified, but the times where her actions cannot be defended end up feeling as though Erikson were showing this character's foibles instead of being entirely sympathetic toward her plight. By the time she comes to be Sha'ik Reborn and the leader of the Seven Cities' Rebellion, she has become perhaps the most well-rounded and morally ambiguous characters in the series to date. The scenes where she appears ended up being among my favorites this time.
Most readers would cite the Chain of Dogs as being the emotional heart of the novel. While I agree that it is a well-written novel of honor and courage in the face of antipathy and greed on the part of those being protected by Coltaine's forces, I am not for certain if it is greater than the rise of Felisin from the ashes of her imprisonment. I believe both of these subplots serve to establish the tumults that are taking place in the novel.
The other subplots, however, were at best underdeveloped (or rather, unfinished, since elements of events here appear in the next few novels with greater elaboration) and at worst a detraction from the two main subplots noted above. As intrigued as I was (and to a degree, still am) by the Icarium/Mappo mystery, I felt as though that and the entire Path of Hands were there more to set up events of another novel than building on the thematic issues contained within the Felisin and Chain of Dogs subplots. While I recognize that the Iskaral Pust scenes were meant to provide humorous relief from the traumas of Felisin's experiences and from the tragedy of the Chain of Dogs, there were moments that I felt that those scenes added little and detracted a lot from the narrative flow.
But despite these concerns about the unevenness of the subplots, on the whole I enjoyed my re-read of Deadhouse Gates. As I stated above, two of the subplots were very well-done, with the others feeling a bit underdeveloped or extraneous for this particular novel. If those had been pared down or excised and placed in a succeeding novel, I believe the story would have been stronger. As it stands, this is where the Malazan story, sprawling and messy as it can be at times, takes off. Looking forward to my re-read of Memories of Ice this weekend.
Each of those previous reads left me considering this book to be the second-best in the entire series, behind only the third novel, Memories of Ice. But I am curious to see how a five year break will affect my perception of this book (as well as the series as a whole). There was much, after all, that I enjoyed in previous reads: the introduction of the tragic friendship of Icarium and Mappo, the deepening of the events, the Chain of Dogs, Kalam's quest to assassinate Empress Laseen, and the Path of Hands subplot. But were each of these elements integrated well into the text?
What I noticed more about this book (just as I recall noting about the last four books written by Erikson) compared to the first book is that there is more of a buildup to the action-oriented scenes. Whereas Gardens of the Moon placed the readers in the midst of a multi-sided war with little information provided that would orient the reader as to what was happening (this was intentional, I believe, rather than a mistake in approach, although the execution certainly was not flawless, as I noted in my prior commentary), Deadhouse Gates begins with a vivid scene in the Malazan capital city of Unta. New characters, such as Captain Paran's youngest sister, Felisin, the ex-priest Heboric, the mysterious Baudin, and the Wickan leader of the Malazan Seventh Army, Coltaine, are given strong introductions that allow the reader to find more depth to their characters than the staccato bursts of dialogue that marked much of the character interactions in the first novel. This greater focus on character I believe is the main factor that separates this novel from its predecessor and it serves to offset the structural problems I noticed with the narrative.
Felisin often has been criticized by several readers for being "unsympathetic." I, on the other hand, have always found her to be one of the more complex characters in this series to date and this re-read only strengthened my belief. Erikson does a good job, through the use of this character's actions and her comments to her companions, to show just how battered and embittered she had become during the course of her imprisonment on the orders of her older sister, Tavore, and her subsequent selling of her body in the slave pits in order to gain concessions for herself. Her bitterness at how Heboric and Baudin view her is in part justified, but the times where her actions cannot be defended end up feeling as though Erikson were showing this character's foibles instead of being entirely sympathetic toward her plight. By the time she comes to be Sha'ik Reborn and the leader of the Seven Cities' Rebellion, she has become perhaps the most well-rounded and morally ambiguous characters in the series to date. The scenes where she appears ended up being among my favorites this time.
Most readers would cite the Chain of Dogs as being the emotional heart of the novel. While I agree that it is a well-written novel of honor and courage in the face of antipathy and greed on the part of those being protected by Coltaine's forces, I am not for certain if it is greater than the rise of Felisin from the ashes of her imprisonment. I believe both of these subplots serve to establish the tumults that are taking place in the novel.
The other subplots, however, were at best underdeveloped (or rather, unfinished, since elements of events here appear in the next few novels with greater elaboration) and at worst a detraction from the two main subplots noted above. As intrigued as I was (and to a degree, still am) by the Icarium/Mappo mystery, I felt as though that and the entire Path of Hands were there more to set up events of another novel than building on the thematic issues contained within the Felisin and Chain of Dogs subplots. While I recognize that the Iskaral Pust scenes were meant to provide humorous relief from the traumas of Felisin's experiences and from the tragedy of the Chain of Dogs, there were moments that I felt that those scenes added little and detracted a lot from the narrative flow.
But despite these concerns about the unevenness of the subplots, on the whole I enjoyed my re-read of Deadhouse Gates. As I stated above, two of the subplots were very well-done, with the others feeling a bit underdeveloped or extraneous for this particular novel. If those had been pared down or excised and placed in a succeeding novel, I believe the story would have been stronger. As it stands, this is where the Malazan story, sprawling and messy as it can be at times, takes off. Looking forward to my re-read of Memories of Ice this weekend.
Illusions fall like the husk of a fruit, one after another, and the fruit is experience. - Narrator, Sylvie
Je suis méchant.
Je suis méchant.
Steven Erikson and Ian Cameron Esslemont, Malazan Book of the Fallen (series reviews)
17/05/2010 01:09:47 PM
- 1301 Views
Gardens of the Moon (2002-2005 re-reads; 2010 re-read)
17/05/2010 01:10:14 PM
- 914 Views
I have the same experience with rereads of Erikson always bringing new things to the fore.
17/05/2010 01:32:28 PM
- 773 Views
Re: I have the same experience with rereads of Erikson always bringing new things to the fore.
19/05/2010 02:12:42 PM
- 672 Views
MT was just as good as those two, IMHO of course.
21/05/2010 12:29:22 PM
- 613 Views
Re: MT was just as good as those two, IMHO of course.
21/05/2010 03:39:10 PM
- 717 Views
For me, GotM remains a half-failure
22/05/2010 06:05:30 PM
- 907 Views
I think even most fans of the series will agree with you there.
22/05/2010 07:32:25 PM
- 723 Views
Re: I think even most fans of the series will agree with you there.
23/05/2010 10:32:49 PM
- 823 Views
Ye gods, that reply was long.
27/05/2010 04:20:35 PM
- 691 Views
Re: Ye gods, that reply was long.
27/05/2010 10:57:00 PM
- 784 Views
Oh, it's not about a lack of action.
28/05/2010 08:56:48 AM
- 785 Views
I'm pretty sure that I found MbotF from Wotmania, so thanks for that.
17/05/2010 03:28:08 PM
- 737 Views
Never quite thought of Erikson's series as being akin to screwing in the backseat...
18/05/2010 07:14:01 PM
- 882 Views
It's not my cup of tea. Good luck reading it!
19/05/2010 03:42:08 PM
- 812 Views
I've got to ask.
20/05/2010 08:56:14 PM
- 699 Views
Fans of the series told me that "Gardens of the Moon" isn't a good book to start with.
21/05/2010 10:47:52 PM
- 771 Views
Deadhouse Gates (2002-2005 reads; 2010 re-read)
21/05/2010 06:13:47 PM
- 763 Views
I find myself...
06/06/2010 03:21:07 AM
- 862 Views
Memories of Ice (2002-2005 reads; 2010 re-read)
27/05/2010 08:47:02 AM
- 778 Views
As I posted in your blog RE: Themes.
27/05/2010 05:25:19 PM
- 802 Views
I was going to respond later today to those
27/05/2010 05:39:38 PM
- 878 Views
The Pannion Seer had been brainwashed by the Crippled God, he was a slave to his will. Inocent
27/05/2010 06:34:05 PM
- 726 Views