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Midnight Tides (A Tale of the Malazan
Book Of The Fallen book 5) by Steven Erikson.
pub: Bantam. 698 page hardback. Price: £20.00 (UK).
ISBN: 0-593-04627-7
check out website: www.booksattransworld.co.uk
A
word of warning before I begin. If this review comes across as being
extremely confused and confusing, I disclaim all responsibility.
The blame falls squarely on the author, whose storytelling is so
convoluted it makes a maze easy to navigate. His stories are however,
marvellously gripping.
This novel is the fifth part and it follows on
from the fourth. ‘What an obvious thing to say!’ I hear you cry.
My reason for stating the obvious is because with Erikson it isn't
a given that part five will follow on from four. The first of his
novels, ‘Gardens Of The Moon’, is set mainly in a city called Darujhistan.
A city in danger of being swallowed by the Malazan Empire. Where
the Assassins' Guild rules covertly and the Councillors are mere
squabbling children.
You meet a host of characters who are anti-heroes,
assassins, saboteurs and thieves. The mythology behind the divinity
is based on positions within a deck of cards and split into houses.
Ascendants (Gods) can be killed and humans can ascend to take their
place. The world is cut-throat and the huge body of Empire is riddled
with wormholes of dissent.
The second novel, ‘Deadhouse Gates’, completely
jumps across the world to another continent and another war that
the Empire is waging. It deals with the story of the conquered under
their leader Sha'ik, who is preparing for a revolution known as
Raraku the Whirlwind. The main plotline however, runs with one of
the finest heroes in epic fantasy.
He is Coltaine, who leads a desperate line of refugees
and survivors of a devastating war across the continent, with only
a minuscule contingent of fighters, to betrayal from allies. The
pain, fear and sheer endurance the characters go through bleeds
through the text- wringing from the reader as much emotion as if
the reader, too, is part of the Chain of Dogs.
The third, ‘Memories Of Ice’, returns to the characters
we met in the first novel and to some extent provides continuation.
It is actually taking place at the same time as the second part
and so news of the doings of others filters through here.
The fourth part, ‘House Of Chains’, sees the end
of the revolution known as Raraku or the Whirlwind and the pathos
in this novel belongs to the sister who unknowingly kills her sister
as an enemy of the Empire. However, this novel begins with a character
called Trull Sengar, who has just been branded traitor by his people.
His story is a small thread in the tapestry of this work, but the
novel ends with him beginning to tell his story and how he got to
where he was at the start. The latest novel, ‘Midnight Tides’, jumps
straight into his story and throughout has next to no reference
to any of the stories gone before!
‘Midnight Tides’ can be read alone because of
the way Erikson jumps from story to story. But an integral part
of Erikson's character development depends on the slow build up
of personality through the little picture windows Erikson opens
within each novel. The author's style precludes instant comprehension,
however, so it is best to read them in order. The first is a relatively
gentle entry into the Malazan world and the rest build on this foundation.
I am about to make a bold claim here, the complexity
of Erikson's world is unrivalled in fantasy fiction. The depth of
its creation is incomprehensible and his novels should only be read
by those who enjoy the challenge of attempting to decode the universe
with the scattered information given. That is the first time I've
ever said that about any fantasy novel, but Erikson well deserves
it. Right, I know I've gone on for ages about the experience of
reading Erikson, I'll tell you about this latest novel now.
‘Midnight Tides’ goes back in time and to a different
place, where the Malazan Empire has never been heard of and presents
no threat. The people of this tale are the Tiste Edur, the Children
of Shadow. They are related to the Tiste Andii, Children of Dark,
from earlier books. The prologue tells of the betrayal of the Andii,
by the Edur.
Centuries later, the story has been altered and
the Edur believe they were the betrayed. This tale sees the rise
of an insane emperor among the Edur, who is patronised by a deformed
God. This emperor is repeatedly killed and sent back to life by
the Crippled God, each time a little more malformed, either in mind
or body. He overturns the tide of the current conquerors, who like
all conquerors are driven by greed and materialism.
The novel is a riveting read, punctuated as ever
with pockets of humour and fantastically individual characters.
Erikson focuses on threes in this novel and sets in play the three
brothers Sengar, who dominate among the Edur, and the three brothers
Beddict from the Letherii Empire. This continent seems to have become
a forgotten realm and has demanded very little attention from Ascendents.
Here are charted the events when the baleful, capricious eyes of
divinity are turned their way, culminating in a convergence.
The betrayed leader of the Tiste Andii is freed,
a Forkrul Assail is released (a creature that feels very strongly
about noise and sets about killing everything that disturbs its
peace), the Pack, the Toblakai (whose worshippers pray for them
to stay away) and Mael of the depths (who is rusticating as a manservant
named Bugg). The underlying theme throughout all of his novels is
of betrayal in its multitude of forms, both perceived and real.
He handles the theme well and does not shy away
from presenting the harsher realities of deceit. Insanity is a core
ingredient that has been added to this author's inkwell and this
is apparent in every brushstroke, his control however is exquisite.
Boy, am I glad I issued that disclaimer at the
beginning of this review! Seems my pen was dipped in the Warren
of Chaos whilst writing this review. My advice to you is that Erikson's
novels be read. His primary skill lies in his creation of character
and his ability to keep all of the balls of his complex plot up
in the air at the same time. His is a name that is gracing best-seller
lists and his stories are well worth hearing.
Sana Master
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Faerie Tales edited by Martin H.
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