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STONEWIELDER: A NOVEL OF THE MALAZAN EMPIRE [Stonewielder: A Novel of the Malazan Empire ] BY Esslemont, Ian C.(Author)Paperback 10-May-2011
 
 
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STONEWIELDER: A NOVEL OF THE MALAZAN EMPIRE [Stonewielder: A Novel of the Malazan Empire ] BY Esslemont, Ian C.(Author)Paperback 10-May-2011 [Unknown Binding]

Ian C. Esslemont
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Unknown Binding
  • Publisher: Tor Books (10 May 2011)
  • ASIN: B0059EHS5M
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)

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Ian C. Esslemont
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
32 of 33 people found the following review helpful
By A. Whitehead TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover
Thirty years ago the Malazan Empire launched a devastating invasion of the island continent of Korelri. With the north-western approaches denied by the ferocious sea-dwelling creatures known as the Stormriders, the Malazans swung wide to the east and invaded the island of Fist, at the furthest edge of the archipelago. There, under the command of Greymane, a grinding war of attrition was fought across decades to no end, for the islands of Korelri are protected by a goddess known as the Blessed Lady. Her very presence inhibits the operation of Warren magic, the cornerstone of Imperial tactics. Eventually Greymane abandoned his post and the war effort faltered.

Now things are changing. In the wake of a devastating civil war on Quon Tali, a new Emperor sits the throne of Malaz, and he has determined that the time has come to take Korelri once and for all, despite the power of the goddess. A new invasion force is assembled, its task formidable but its soldiers keen. As war erupts once more, the stoic soldiers of the Stormwall keep to their task, holding the alien Riders back from their shores. Amongst them is a new champion, a warrior beyond compare, a soldier who cannot die...but his comrades are coming for him.

Stonewielder is the third novel by Ian Cameron Esslemont, the co-creator (along with Steve Erikson) of the world of the Malazan Book of the Fallen. Stonewielder takes place on that world, slotting into the timeline a few months after the events of Return of the Crimson Guard, roughly around the same time as Toll the Hounds. Familiarity with the Malazan novels is a major asset in reading this book, but only really Return of the Crimson Guard is needed to fully understand what is going on: several character and storylines begun in Return continue directly here. I also strongly recommend reading this novel before tackling Erikson's The Crippled God in a few months, as the ending of Stonewielder appears to be a direct set-up for that novel.

The island-continent/subcontinent (as we learn in the book, different governments and geographers argue as much as fans do about which it is) of Korel/Korelri/Fist (and we get another explanation why the place has so many names as well) has been discussed in hushed terms ever since Gardens of the Moon was published more than a decade ago, but curiously Korelri natives have been thin on the ground in the published novels and every character seems to have heard something different about what was going on there. Stonewielder clears all of this up, exposing secrets the Malazan Empire has been keeping about the place and the original invasion for some time. The first surprise is how small the place is: based on the map at the front of the book, it appears to be less than half the size of Quon Tali, itself a small landmass. Why hasn't the Malazan Empire outflanked and conquered it? As the book continues we learn why, and the frustrations of the Malazan high command become easier to understand.

Esslemont continues to develop and grow as a writer although, pleasingly, not in terms of word-count. Stonewielder is actually shorter than Return of the Crimson Guard and, whilst you'd never call a 620-pages-in-hardcover novel 'short', it's the shortest novel in the entire combined series bar only Night of Knives. At the same time it's as epic and vast as any of Erikson's novels, packing in a huge amount of story, major events and characters and still finding time for moments of comedy (Manask may now be my favourite Malazan comic character) and high tragedy. There's even some amusing metacommentary about fan discussions about the series: at one point two Malazan soldiers get into a discussion not about high philosophy, but about if the Malazans could beat the Seguleh in a stand-up fight, a discussion that feels like it's come right off the Malazanempire discussion boards.

Esslemont's characterisation is strong, stronger than his previous books, with characters like Suth (our resident new 'ordinary soldier' POV) set-up and well-motivated economically and skillfully, whilst Hiam, commander of the Stormwall, is an interesting character whose arc is full of pathos. Kyle, the callow youth soldier POV from Return of the Crimson Guard, has matured into a more interesting protagonist as well, whilst the Crimson Guard are more fully-rounded individuals this time, with better-established motivations. The action is also well-depicted, with both major land battles and naval engagements (featuring the occasionally-mentioned Moranth Blue doing some impressive things against the storied armada of Mare) showing that the Malazan Empire is still capable of kicking ass, even after its recent catastrophes.

On the weaker side of things, there is a lengthy subplot involving Kiska and a sojourn into the Warren of Shadow which is basically just set-up for future events (both in Esslemont's novels and possibly in The Crippled God and Erikson's planned Toblakai Trilogy as well). This section is well-written and features and the unexpected return of a fan-favourite character, but it lacks a defining climax.

Still, Stonewielder (****½) is both a gripping, bloat-free military fantasy which further illuminates and explores this intriguing world, and one of the strongest books in the series since the mighty Memories of Ice. The novel is available now in the UK and will be published in May 2011 in the USA.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
I must admit that I rather rushed to judge Ian Esslemont's Malazan novels, comparing them unfavourably to Steven Eriksons tales from the same imagined world. I initially considered Esslemont's works a bit shallow by comparison, but they've grown on me and they have improved with each subsequent novel.

Stonewielder is the best of Esslemont's books to date, a touch exposition-heavy given the length of the novel, in my opinion, but his style of prose gives the story a good pace. It definitely helps if you're an Erikson/Malazan Empire fan as a lot of those 'unexplored vistas' from Erikson's books are now being expanded upon in Esslemont's.

I've read enough cr*p fantasy novels over the years to recognise chaff when I see it, but this is another solid entry in an interesting series, with just enough musings on The Meaning Of Things to raise it well above the average.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
By Gareth Wilson - Falcata Times Blog TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover
With previous offerings, Ian's writing has felt that it hasn't quite matched up to par with Eriksons, not that the word building or the characters have felt less detailed but Ian's pace felt a little lacklustre. Here in this title, his writing has gone from strength to strength. The characters are cracking, the dialogue is also wonderful but it's the way that he brings together the threads from previous titles that clearly demonstrates an understanding of the world as well as the deeper machinations of the desires of the players within that make this an epic in its own right.

Add to this some great sense of timing, solid world building and topped off with a masters touch of creativity and you know that Ian's writing is going to be something that fans will just demand in a similar way to Steven. This is a real gem of a title and one that shows the way in which the author is growing with each successive tale. Great stuff.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Very good indeed
I read all 10 of the Steven Erikson books but gradually fell out of love with them and with Erikson's writing style. Read more
Published 2 months ago by C. Jack
rigstock
bought as a present for my son, has not put it down since, he just wishes these two writers could produce their books quicker
Published 5 months ago by G. LOCKWOOD
Watered wine
Well he's a tough act to follow is Erikson. Let's face it there are a few writers in any genre that stand out and can really write. Erikson's one of them; Esslemont isn't. Read more
Published 8 months ago by A. J. Gilchrist
Stand the Wall
This is Esslemont's third Malazan novel, and his writing has continue to develop with every book. A host of his previous characters and a whole bunch of new faces clash as we... Read more
Published 9 months ago by David Ford
ICE finds his mark ?
Ok well, as a huge fan of the Malazan Books of the Fallen, I have found Ian Esslemont's 2 previous offerings a bit hard going, something just didn't seem to gel with them, and I... Read more
Published 10 months ago by Aerduin
Esslemont getting better
I have really enjoyed this book; and would go as far as saying there were time I forgot this wasn't a mainstream Malazan book. Read more
Published 14 months ago by bluemoose
Solid entry in the novel series
Although it lacked some fleshing out of details and expected answers (STORMRIDERS ffs!), the story itself and the worldbuilding was excellent.
Published 15 months ago by Michel Nita
not very good
I really didnt like this book much. I thought NoK and RotCG were much better efforts, and the Erikson malazan books in another league. Read more
Published 16 months ago by Mr. John Ogden
Meh
*** SLIGHT SPOILER IN REGARDS TO DIRECTION OF THE SERIES ***

Meh...

That pretty much sums up my response to the book as a whole. Read more
Published 16 months ago by Mr. D. I. Newton
Fascination with secrecy leads to disappointment
Overall the book is enjoyable and worth the money, however the ending is rather badly rushed and, as now seems inevitable in all Malazan books, there is a horrible tendency to... Read more
Published 16 months ago by J. M. Norton
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