Rane Longfox
Red Rane
- Joined
- Jul 30, 2004
- Messages
- 2,651
Advanced warning: These posts may contain very very generalised spoilers, such as the geographical and character focus of some of the books. They will not contain any specific spoilers though, such as which characters die, major events etc. Worry ye not!
Now... I started writing this in another thread, but it was in response to someone who had just read Gardens of the Moon, so I realised I should try to avoid spoiling to much for them. If this turns out to be any good, it would be great if a mod could sticky the topic
The Malazan Book of the Fallen, as a 10-book epic, is not all there is to the world of Malazan! The world was co-created by Erikson and his good friend Ian Cameron Esselmont (from here-on referred to as ICE, because it's an awesome set of initials!) Erikson was the first to be published, so a lot of people assume that he is the "owner" of the world. This is not true, and ICE's 6-book series is just as relevant to the world as Erikson's.
The vast majority of people will have gotten into Malazan through Erikson and Gardens of the Moon, however, and this is a good thing, because here is a rough reading order for the two series:
Gardens of the Moon, Deadhouse Gates, Memories of Ice, House of Chains, Midnight Tides, Night of Knives, Bonehunters, Reaper's Gale, Return of the Crimson Guard, Toll the Hounds, Dust of Dreams, Stonewielder, The Crippled God.
The italics being Erikson's series, and the bolds being ICE's. They are seperate series, so you don't have to read both, but it definitely fills in some details to do so, and there are references to each other's books that otherwise you might thing was just jibberish. I definitely recommend reading at least Return of the Crimson Guard and Stonewielder as if they are part of the main series though, personally. Return of the Crimson Guard has some relevance to the story of Toll the Hounds, and Stonewielder has some juicy information on the Crippled God, which it's worth knowing before reading the final book in Erikson's series. ICE deals more directly with the Empire itself, which Erikson moves away from somewhat after Bonehunters.
That was a bit of a ramble I know... if it's not clear what the hell I'm talking about, let me know, because I intend to continue adding to this thread. Feedback would be nice - let me know what would be useful to see here!
Now... I started writing this in another thread, but it was in response to someone who had just read Gardens of the Moon, so I realised I should try to avoid spoiling to much for them. If this turns out to be any good, it would be great if a mod could sticky the topic
The Malazan Book of the Fallen, as a 10-book epic, is not all there is to the world of Malazan! The world was co-created by Erikson and his good friend Ian Cameron Esselmont (from here-on referred to as ICE, because it's an awesome set of initials!) Erikson was the first to be published, so a lot of people assume that he is the "owner" of the world. This is not true, and ICE's 6-book series is just as relevant to the world as Erikson's.
The vast majority of people will have gotten into Malazan through Erikson and Gardens of the Moon, however, and this is a good thing, because here is a rough reading order for the two series:
Gardens of the Moon, Deadhouse Gates, Memories of Ice, House of Chains, Midnight Tides, Night of Knives, Bonehunters, Reaper's Gale, Return of the Crimson Guard, Toll the Hounds, Dust of Dreams, Stonewielder, The Crippled God.
The italics being Erikson's series, and the bolds being ICE's. They are seperate series, so you don't have to read both, but it definitely fills in some details to do so, and there are references to each other's books that otherwise you might thing was just jibberish. I definitely recommend reading at least Return of the Crimson Guard and Stonewielder as if they are part of the main series though, personally. Return of the Crimson Guard has some relevance to the story of Toll the Hounds, and Stonewielder has some juicy information on the Crippled God, which it's worth knowing before reading the final book in Erikson's series. ICE deals more directly with the Empire itself, which Erikson moves away from somewhat after Bonehunters.
That was a bit of a ramble I know... if it's not clear what the hell I'm talking about, let me know, because I intend to continue adding to this thread. Feedback would be nice - let me know what would be useful to see here!