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Title: Dancer's Lament
Title: Dancer's Lament
Series:
Malaz: Path to Ascendancy #1
Author:
Ian Esslemont
Rating:
4.5 of 5 Stars
Genre:
Fantasy
Pages:
418
Format:
Hardcover
Synopsis: |
Before there was Cotillion and Kellanved, there was Dorin Rav and Wu. Taking place in the city of Li Heng, this is the story of how they became partners.
The plot of the book, however, is how the city of Li Heng survived a besiegement by a jumped up king who thought he was somebody. The 4 mages of the city, under the direction of the Protectress (a tiste liosan) end up confining Ryllandaras, the man-jackal in a magical prison. The Itko Kan'ians, the besiegers, have the help of a Jaghut and it takes the Protectress unleasing the full might of her Warren of Light to drive back the besiegers.
Wu, and Dorin, have plans to take over the city during the turmoil but they simply aren't strong enough and end up being exiled from the city. But now they are partners and can begin working together.
My Thoughts: |
Finally. A Malazan
book that I can simply sit down and read straight through and enjoy
fully without feeling like I'm juggling 3 different 5000 piece
puzzles all mixed together. You have no idea how much that upped my
enjoyment of this book.
I think Esslemont
showed his true colors with this book. He is a good standard fantasy
writing kind of guy. His Malazan
Empire novels felt very much like he was trying to copy
Steven Erikson's style and it just didn't work for me. But this?
Besides Gardens
of the Moon, this was the most enjoyable Malazan book that
I've read. Now I am really looking forward to the rest of the
trilogy.
In the Malazan
books, Cotillion/Dancer and Kellanved were shadow'y characters doing
things behind the scenes and never being fully fleshed out. Even when
they were supposed to be main characters, they were actually hiding
and felt like side characters. This time, they were simply people. It
was refreshing.
There were lots of
hints and little asides from other Malazan characters, so if you're
one of the Book of the Fallen fanboys who who loves unlocking a ton
of meaning from 2 sentence fragments, you'll still have something to
chew on with this book. The rest of us can simply sit back and enjoy
the story.
In Esslemont's The Return of the Crimson Guard the malazan army unleashed Ryllandaras and in
this book we see how, and why, he was confined. It was nice to make a
clear cut connection between one book and the other instead of having
to guess and speculate and turn my brain into 77 pretzels to make my
pet theory fit.
Another aspect of
this that I enjoyed was the lack of Existential Despair philosophy.
Everybody was NOT whining about how meaningless their lives were. In
fact, they acted like real people and didn't even think about that.
Dorin and Wu had to survive, plan how to take over a newly discovered
Warren of Shadow and see if they could take over the city. Not much
time to sit on their fat asses and complain about how hard they have
it (unlike almost every Steven Erikson character. Man, that guy has
his characters doing more talking than doing, in the middle of
freaking battles for goodness sake!!!).
To end, I really
enjoyed this book. A lot. In fact, I plan on buying it in hardcover,
I enjoyed it so much. How don't know how much more of an endorsement
I can give a book. * grin *
★★★★ ½
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