GARDENS OF THE MOON A Tale of the Malazan Book of the Fallen, Book 1
by Steven Erikson
Review by , November 2003
Book Rating:
This author, Erikson, is hailed by some as the next Shakespeare or Charles Dickens, so this review
will likely attract flamers and hate mail, but what the hey. Let it be known that I
consider reading Shakespeare to be a matter of academics rather than enjoyment, and I
personally prefer Stephen King over Charles Dickens; so my literary tastes are already questionable.
In spite of having all the proper elements for a compelling fantasy novel, Gardens of the Moon is more of a
vehicle for rambling prose than a story. I gave the book a chance all the way until the end. I thought that
my inability to comprehend the motives of the characters might be because I wasn't trying hard enough. Finally
I had to conclude that the author never explained them clearly. Why do the sorcerers willingly serve an Empress
who created a guild of assasins to cleanse the world of sorcery? Why would a Sergeant continue to loyally
serve a government that wants to kill him and his soldiers? Why would gods who can appear in the flesh
bother to use humans to carry out their plots? Why would a nearly omnipotent being who can destroy anything
fear a bunch of mortals? Why did the protagonists tolerate the presence of a murderously insane marionette
when they could have easily chopped him into kindling? Why should I care about any of this?
These questions and many others whirled through my head as I waded through scenes of dragons and demons
battling each other, between dividers of extraneous fantasy poetry. A large portion of the plot seems to be
intended as guesswork. I found it hard to empathize with characters that could walk out of any given
bad situation, but chose not to for no apparent reason, only to be suddenly rescued by
the inexplicable intervention of a god or demon or magic powder or something. The world magic system is
never clearly defined. What exactly is a Warren? What limits the gods?
How does a Mage become an Ascendant? I might have enjoyed the book better if any of that had been addressed.
On the brighter side--or darker, rather--Erikson is talented when it comes to imagery and description,
and he paints a rich nighttime atmosphere. That talent was probably the only thing that kept me
reading. The wide variety of cultures and creatures in the book are pleasantly creative.
Another original flair is the elegant dialogue, but the effect is ruined by the fact that it's used
uniformly by every character. Common soldiers and tavern patrons shouldn't speak exactly the
same as royalty and gods.
In the end, I felt like I had read an amateur novel that needed one or two more rounds of editing in
order to make the characters and story come alive. I guess I should have expected this from a book
that was recommended by Stephen Donaldson.
Fans of Donaldson: This is the book for you!
Fans of compelling characters and stories: Avoid this one!
Flame away.