Most helpful customer reviews
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Those who persevere with this will be rewarded BIG TIME..., Dec 29 2003
"Mane of Chaos...Anomander Rake. Lord of the black-skinned Tiste Andii...who has looked down on a hundred thousand winters, Who has tasted the blood of dragons, who leads the last of his kind, seated in the Throne of Sorrow and a kingdom tragic and fey...a kingdom with no land to call its own." - Steven Erikson, Gardens of the MoonSo Steven Erikson introduces one of his major characters. This series is quite simply outstanding, grandiose, magnificent - the word epic is often used as a cliche but if ever a series is worthy of being called that, this is it. It's staggering in its scope. Erikson's narrative style is to throw you in the thick of the action with minimal background information. This can be quite disconcerting when starting this book - you just don't, and won't, know what the hell's going on. You won't understand how magic works, what a Warren is, where the Malazan empire actually is and what the hell is a Tiste Andii anyway?? It'll be like that for the first hundred pages or so. Keep up or be left behind. You'll find yourself rereading various passages, trying to glean some tiny seed of understanding. It can be pretty frustrating, not knowing a damn thing about anything. But Erikson gives you enough teasing glimpses of quality under the survace for you to feel that understanding is just around the corner if you keep perservering with it, even if you don't initially understand what's going on - Erikson's world is incredibly rich in detail and history, and this is slowly revealed as you get further into the book. And the more this world - and the storyline set in this world - is revealed the more and more impossible it gets to put the book down. The originality is quite amazing, and it's a MAJOR rush when you start to piece things together. Everything starts to fall into place. It's called approaching comprehension - and it creeps up on you, till you get to the last page of the book and realise that you can't wait to go back to the bookstore to get the second in the series, Deadhouse Gates, just so that you can find out more about this world and the people who live in it. Then when you finish that you'll want to get the third, Memories of Ice. And the fourth, House of Chains. And the fifth, Midnight Tides. And so on and so on...and the best thing? It gets better and better and better as you get deeper into the series - if ever there's a world and a series to lose yourself in, it's this one. Not only that, the rereadability quality of this series is amazing - better than anything else I've read before. Two very enthusiastic thumbs up.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Highly intriguing and well conceived., April 2 2004
If you like intrigue and complicated, interweaving storylines then "Gardens of the Moon" is the next book you should read. Set in a land torn apart by an invading empire, "Gardens..." follows a variety of characters, from various groups, who would eventually collide through the interferance of gods, elder races and politics. Erikson has an excellent grasp of character development (often sorely lacking in Fantasy) as events alter the perspectives of each character. This enables the reader to empathise with these believable characters. I found the most intriguing aspect of "Gardens..." was the ambiguity of the characters. Never had I read a Fantasy novel which blurred the lines between good and evil so well - the characters are not your typical good guy battling the typical bad guy. Erikson writes from all persectives: the invading army soldiers who are ordered to complete their missions without question. For example, the officers in the invading force not neccessarily agreeing with the job they had to do, but completing it nonetheless. We read the perspectives of various political factions in the targeted land; both for and against the conquest, and also the persectives of civilians caught up in the struggle to save their city. What makes this book interesting is that I can now really envision war through similar perspectives. I had been told a number of times that if I like George RR Martin, then I would also enjoy Steven Erikson as their style and subject matter are similar. This is true. They both have an excellent technical grasp of the English language; not poetic, like Kay or Wolfe, but like Donaldson, they always seem to write the correct word when needed every time. For this reason, you need to read "Gardens of the Moon", and the whole series for that matter.
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12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Step out of your life and into the Malazan Empire!, Dec 29 2005
Okay, let me preface this review by saying that by picking up this book you will be obliged (by your own need and curiosity) to buy and read the other 4 that are out so far (namely Deadhouse Gates, Memories of Ice, House Of Chains, and Midnight Tides {with The Bonehunters set for release in March '06}). It really is THAT good of a series.Gardens of the Moon will likely do to you what it did to me and countless others. Whereas other 1st books in fantasy series (A Game of Thrones, Assassins Aprentice...ect) spend alot of time setting up the world and it's characters, and making you feel quite comfortable in it before moving you foreward. Gardens of the Moon simply grabs you by the shirt collar on the way by and pulls you along at a lightning pace. The characters and setting get introduced to you almost in passing, as if you should already know them whilst Erikson is pushing the intricate plot foreward at an alarming pace. This is the sheer brillinace in Eriskons writing. Though you have to just keep reading and take alot of strange words and ideas at complex face value, you get to understand them later, so by the time you are ready to start Deadhouse Gates you have a DECENT grasp of the world he has created, but you'll likely never know it all till the whole series is out, and in this lies the key to these books holding up to multiple reads.....it keeps you guessing and intrigues, beyond anything I've read anyway. The world is HUGE, and the cast of characters is staggering in this series, and Erikson continuously introduces you to new characters, but the difference between him and alot of other authors is that almost all mentioned characters have a purpose related to the plotlines, whereas other authors throw names at you of charcters you needn't really care about. Trust me when I say READ this book. Enjoy it, and don't worry about explanations....you'll get there in time, after a few books are under your belt, and that's the fun!! You won't put it down, I promise. As far as I am concerned Erikson is the best author I have read in years (if not ever)! Oh, and Erikson doesn't miss his deadlines. Meaning no long waits.
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