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The Crippled God
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The Crippled God
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The Crippled God
Audiobook45 hours

The Crippled God

Written by Steven Erikson

Narrated by Michael Page

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars

4.5/5

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Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this audiobook

Savaged by the K'Chain Nah'Ruk, the Bonehunters march for Kolanse, where waits an unknown fate. Tormented by questions, the army totters on the edge of mutiny, but Adjunct Tavore will not relent. One final act remains, if it is in her power, if she can hold her army together, if the shaky allegiances she has forged can survive all that is to come. A woman with no gifts of magic, deemed plain, unprepossessing, displaying nothing to instill loyalty or confidence, Tavore Paran of House Paran means to challenge the gods-if her own troops don't kill her first.

Awaiting Tavore and her allies are the Forkrul Assail, the final arbiters of humanity. Drawing upon an alien power terrible in its magnitude, they seek to cleanse the world, to annihilate every human, every civilization, in order to begin anew. They welcome the coming conflagration of slaughter, for it shall be of their own devising, and it pleases them to know that, in the midst of the enemies gathering against them, there shall be betrayal.

In the realm of Kurald Galain, home to the long-lost city of Kharkanas, a mass of refugees stand upon the First Shore. Commanded by Yedan Derryg, the Watch, they await the breaching of Lightfall and the coming of the Tiste Liosan. This is a war they cannot win, and they will die in the name of an empty city and a queen with no subjects.

Elsewhere, the three Elder Gods, Kilmandaros, Errastas, and Sechul Lath, work to shatter the chains binding Korabas, the Otataral Dragon, from her eternal prison. Once freed, she will rise as a force of devastation, and against her no mortal can stand. At the Gates of Starvald Demelain, the Azath House sealing the portal is dying. Soon will come the Eleint, and once more, there will be dragons in the world.

"The kind of epic narrative that will have you scrambling for more." -Stephen R. Donaldson

"This novel and all others in the Malazan Book of the Fallen series follow my own pronunciations of 'Malazan' words and names. My thanks to Michael and Jane and everyone at Brilliance Audio." -Steven Erikson, Victoria, B.C. Canada, January, 2014

LanguageEnglish
Release dateAug 4, 2015
ISBN9781469225951
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The Crippled God
Author

Steven Erikson

STEVEN ERIKSON is an archaeologist and anthropologist and a graduate of the Iowa Writers' Workshop. His Malazan Book of the Fallen series has met widespread international acclaim and established him as a major voice in the world of fantasy fiction. The first book in the series, Gardens of the Moon, was shortlisted for a World Fantasy Award. The second novel, Deadhouse Gates, was voted one of the ten best fantasy novels of the year by SF Site. He lives in Canada.

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Rating: 4.370165538674033 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    “You stand before a god! Speak your eloquence for all posterity. Be Profound!"
    "Profound ... huh." Temper was silent for a long moment, studying the cobbles of the alley mouth. And then he lifted his helmed head faced Shadowthrone, and said "Fuck off.”


    Wow.
    I really can't put it any other way. I expected to finish the Series with a slight feeling of disappointment, as it is almost always the case when finishing a larger series. I expected an ending that was either too massive and unrealistic (If you can apply that term to fantasy) or too tiny and disappointing, but I am happy to say that the ending is just plain wonderful.

    I really can't discribe why it was wonderful without giving the most cruel spoilers imaginable, so you will just have to trust me on this.

    All my criticism feels minor, although it would have been a major problem in almost any other book (Like, for example, me not understanding a siginificant element of the story). All that is left to say is: Read this Series! Yes, it is long, and yes, it sometimes can feel more like work than like recreational reading (Especially the first book), but it is worth the trouble.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The ending of a massive series delivers. It is a long road, but when it is done it was sorely missed. The last book was really written really well and held my attention through the whole thing. It has its fill of character introspection, final little bits of growth, and heroics. With the massive amount of characters in this series, I felt like I got to know each one. The focus of this series is about the characters and the world building, not really about a plot. While I got hooked with the premise of this and the last few books, the plot itself seems to be just something needed to be done to make the characters really shine. I'm okay with this. This book also featured every single character introduced in the series (I believe), which not only an amazing feat, but also brought back a lot of great memories of previous books. It is a great series that is worth the time.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The last book of the Fallen. Amazing. As usual, finishing a wonderfully complex and fascinating series is sad even if it is also satisfying. Amazing that Erikson can wrap up such a series that had so many characters, threads and motives and themes. Not everything was wrapped up, there are still questions in my mind, but it was surely enough of closure to feel satisfied and still surprised. THe series certainly didn't go where we all must have believed it would go when we started out on this journey.And, of course, it said a lot about the human condition, our prejudices, our fears, our conceits and yes, our hopes.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    As endings to 10-book cycles go, this was adequate. It gets a little bogged down in introspective weirdness, and feels like it could have been about a third shorter without loosing much. Satisfying in its way, wrapping up a lot of threads while leaving several prominent ones loose. So, I guess let's just call it mixed.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Wow... What an amazing story...

    Sad to have it end
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    After a brutal battle with the K'Chain Nah'ruk, the Bonehunters march towards Kolanse, the location of their final battle. To get there they must first cross a desert of glass, agreed by all as an impossible task. Awaiting them at journey's end: Forkrul Assail, the arbiters of humanity. Elsewhere, in the realm of Kurald Galain, is the city of Kharkanas. A mass of refugees stand on its Shore, awaiting the breach of Lightfall and the coming of the Tiste Liosian. This is a fight they cannot win in the name of an empty city and a mad queen. Yet elsewhere three Elder Gods plot to shatter the chains of Korabas, the Otataral Dragon, from her eternal prison. Her release will send a force of devastation across the realms that no mortals can withstand. And if that is not enough the gates of Starvald Demelain are about to open which will release the Elient, true dragons, across the world.The Crippled God is the tenth and final tale of the Malazan Book of the Fallen. Picking up exactly where book 9 left us, the story immediately takes off and the reader must hang on tight. Everything you have come to expect from a Malazan novel is here: humor, action, magic, philosophy, utterly realistic characters, elder races, gods, heartbreak, joy and more. It amazes me at how set ups from the very first novel are all tied together in this book. Many story threads are given closure. Many important questions are answered. It wouldn't be a Malazan novel if some plot points and questions didn't remain. For me I can't say they bother me at all.Where Erikson really shines is his representation of the human condition. He is able to dig deep into the heart, mind and soul of his characters to give us an array of views on war, love, hate, pain, sorrow, joy, life, death and all those themes that are the core of what makes us human. And compassion. If there is one theme for this series it is that of compassion. While Erikson forces us to look into the mirror and see all the ugly we wish we could hide he also shows us the beauty of the soul. These are the scenes that will move you.The Crippled God is a fitting ending to what has become my all time favorite series. I started these books in 2012 and it has been quite a journey. To say that I have enjoyed these books doesn't do them justice. Amazingly complex, overwhelmingly hearbreaking, laugh out loud funny and everything in between this series elevates what it is to be epic fantasy. Thank you Steven Erikson for such an amazing story. I look forward to rereading this series in the future.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This tenth and concluding volume is decidedly true to what's come before, featuring all the flamboyant action and unresolved mysteries we've come to expect. The traditional structure of establishing who-versus-who at the beginning of a series and then building up to a final confrontation has always been manipulated and thrown into disarray throughout, and it would have been unreasonable to anticipate anything changing at this point. Many will question why the villains were not better foreshadowed, or the role of the Crippled God. This tenth volume is almost self-contained in a way we haven't seen since the first five books, even despite the ninth being its "first half". The result is a sort of discordant, asymmetrical ending to the series that does not tie up all threads, answer every question (it even inspires some new ones) or establish all fates. One key element is resolved: I think a very solid case can be made that Tavore Paran is the main protagonist of the series. That was rarely obvious during the prior volumes, with so many competing stories and points of view, but it becomes clearer as the thematic elements address one simple question: who or what is worth saving?What strikes me most about this book, and what makes it my personal favourite in the series, is that I was made to feel every high and low. I complained in my review of MOI, for example, that it was often like watching the author set up and knock down a bunch of toy soldiers, all too remote. Not this time, possibly because I've finally spent enough hours with these characters and their world and because I knew this was the end. More likely, it's because enough time was spent on the "why" questions. Clearer motivations, more thoughts centered on confronting fate rather than abstract philosophizing, mixed with heartwarming reunions and painful separations or farewells - more heart, more of what was missing in most of the previous books. More real people, feeling and thinking real things like real people do. Prior to reading this series I scoured the Internet for Erikson's posts where he illuminates what he intended, how much thought he put into what he created, what his goals were, etc. I wanted reassurance that taking on ten thousand pages would be worth it. The author claims it is ultimately about compassion, most explicitly stated in the contrast between Shadowthrone and Cotillion. He also likens reading this series to opening a history book at some random page, reading a hundred years' worth, and closing it again. These observations have proven true and helped me with the reading. I found less illuminating his claim that the reader is sent on a hero's journey during the course of reading, as I can't line that up.The primary "pros" of the series that stood out to me: incorporating an enormous scale without making the story feel dragged out; demonstrating the significance of soldiers even within the context of massive-scale battles involving incredible magic and chaos, where individual lives still matter; a sharp sense of humour across all forms be it puns, farce or subtle insinuations, equally balanced with tragedy; creative choices in where the story is carried to next with each succeeding volume; a stab at literary aspirations through meta-fiction elements, particularly in the eighth volume (although the tenth I believe is his best work.)The primary "cons": his bad habit of not establishing setting; a lack of concern with drawing the reader into his tale, like a driver who never inquires how his passengers are faring, challenging us through meta-fiction to blame ourselves if we don't feel properly engaged; being forced as the reader to treat every detail as important in case it becomes significant later and not always being rewarded; the awkward division of writing labour between Erikson and Esselmont, such that major threads are left hanging by one or the other and neither has produced something entirely self-contained.Erikson succeeds brilliantly on the big-picture macro level, magnificent at marshalling an entire world of characters and peoples, history and geography. The weakness of his approach lies in the micromanaging: he can rarely develop any single character sufficiently for us to care enough about their fate in order for it to have the emotional impact he clearly desires (Coltaine the most glaring example, imo.) Readers' favourite books in the series vary widely, probably tied to who they managed to care most about. I find Erikson's greatest weakness is his portrayal of children, not one of whom I found believable unless I forgot how old they were.This series has generated more fascinating Internet discussion than most fantasy novels, prompting readers to help one another make connections across volumes as though studying real life history, parsing phrase and line for subtext as I've usually only seen done with classic literature. Malazan earns and deserves more than a cursory scan of its surface - but how much reward does it ultimately provide for the effort? At its heart the story is rather a simple collection of numerous adventures, a sort of "Arabian Nights" except that the stories interweave and influence one another. Its complexity derives more from the manner of its telling than any message it delivers. It is hardly likely to be (or at least to remain) the most challenging literature you ever read in your life, contrary to the hype. I am not even convinced it is the most literary fantasy series (Gene Wolfe? Stephen R. Donaldson? Ursula LeGuin?). Happily I did feel compelled to consider those questions, which says something. My personal rating for the series as a whole would be four stars out of five, and I've no regrets for any of my time spent here.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Amazing series. I can't express how awesome the story and how the author built the characters. If you are a fantasy fan, do not miss this.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    SPOILER ALERT!Erikson evidently had a contract to write 10 huge novels because nothing else can explain the last 5 books in the Malazan series. Though the first 5 books were top notch fantasy, well written, engaging, and exciting, the last 5 books were a self-indulgent mess, with pages and pages of introspective whining, and endless internal monologues decrying deforestation, hunting, religion, and civilization.Erikson comes off as a left-wing, self-hating human (as apposed to all the inherently innocent alien creatures).He can't resist reforming all his nasty characters, eventually resurrecting them as misunderstood good people. And don't get me started on resurrection, because no one dies in these books, ever, they just keep coming back and back and back.Then there are the tough characters, warriors, and leaders, each and every one of them eventually breaks down and weeps and bemoans their fate. No matter how much out of character it is, they all end up cry-babies. Boo hoo. And then there are the people who always know everything about what’s going on, but never, ever share it with anyone, no matter how much others beg to know, even when it means that their unexplained, obstinate silence will kill them all. Just because. And why start each chapter by intentionally hiding the identity of the character (easy to do when there are 10 simultaneous plots going) so that by the time you figure out who he's talking about, you have to reread the last two pages. Every time. In the last 5 books, the humor is forced and unfunny. In the last book, the words 'grief' and 'despair' appear on almost EVERY page. It must be some kind of record, I almost killed myself.Lastly, did anyone else notice that Krupp's place in the scheme of things was similar to Tom Bombadil? Apparently Erikson sought to emulate the singular most irritating thing in the Lord of the Rings.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Remember the Fallen!

    This was the perfect ending to the Malazan Book of the Fallen and I was very happy to see that Steven Erikson has returned to the writing style of the earliest books. I hope he continues to write in this world since I for one am not quite ready to leave yet.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    BUAA IT'S OVER! I DONT WANT IT TO BE OVER!!!!!!!!! BOOKS LIKE THIS MAKE ME WANT TO CREATE A MEMORY ERRASER MACHINE THAT WILL ALLOW ME TO READ IT OVER AND OVER AGAIN FOR THE FIRST TIME!!!!!!!!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I really wanted to end the series on four or five stars, but three is all we get. (I am not avoiding spoilers here, fyi.)

    It's workmanlike. It wraps things up. It explains almost everyone's motivations that were previously hidden, and we get a number of genuinely touching final scenes for characters that were genuinely pleasant. Even the woman who was raped to death (because women are vindictive shrews who hate one another) is brought back to life with no memory of all that unpleasantness.

    But it's clearly a rush job, in pagecount at least. Major characters, who had been heavily implied to be critical to the conclusion of all this, do little or nothing. I would have preferred 75% less "Karsa Orlong treks across the plains bantering wittily with his companions" in Toll the Hounds in exchange for 75% more "Karsa Orlong does anything in general except finally get consensually laid, hug someone, and hit something." Icarium is a non-factor. The invasion of Darkness is maybe sort of interesting except it's really not super clear why we give a shit about the Tiste Liosan or what they're after other than being assholes.

    And there were some serious, confusing copyediting issues and/or name conflations that drove me batty. Ublala Pung is not a Teblor. He's never been called a Teblor. The only people called Teblor are Karsa Orlong's particular pocket of tribes on the other freaking continent. Likewise the army that arrives is described as Teblor. Now, had there not been the aforementioned confusion, I would assume that this is literally Karsa's tribe come to kick ass. But I don't think they are. I think they are the Tarthenal exiles from Lether - context certainly suggests this is so. They could be fairly called Toblakai, I guess. But NOT TEBLOR. Jesus. Likewise, the Sister of Cold Nights was a particular character, and giving another character that title confuses the fuck out of me.

    So yeah, I think this was a rush job on a bunch of levels. I will probably write a long wrap-up of the series on my own blog, because I have some overall thoughts that are less directly connected to any given book, but this one was just... acceptable. Barely.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    With The Crippled God, Erikson finally draws his ten-book epic to a conclusion, and actually manages to do a decent job tying together the thousands of disparate plotlines therein. I found this volume to be MUCH more enjoyable than Dust of Dreams (book 9), as the veil of mystery was finally lifted on what the characters were ultimately trying to accomplish--there was actually a sense of cohesion in the events here. The rapid slaying of the purportedly near-invincible Forkrul Assail was pretty odd, but most everything else seemed to make sense. There were still a slew of loose ends (Draconus? The Azath? Tavore vs. Laseen?), and I would have liked to see more interaction between Tavore and Ganoes at the end. Yes, the multitude of plotlines and characters is overbearing at times, but if you enjoy Erikson's writing style, it's certainly worth your while to make it to the end.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Steven Erikson’s massive ten volume series comes to an end, on time and with the vast majority of its myriad plotlines and characters finding some sense of closure. And while, all in all, I feel that the final three books of the series don’t match the amazing storytelling of the series at its best, I stand by my often repeated assertion that this, for me anyway, is the greatest fantasy series ever written.The Crippled God is not really a stand alone novel, but the second half of a concluding duology begin in Dust of Dreams. In addition to picking up the story of the survivors of book nine’s bloody climax, book ten gives a few new characters and brings back others whom we haven’t seen for awhile. This book had its fair share of surprises, as well as plenty of moments that made me laugh and plenty of moments that made me cry. On the other hand, I couldn’t help but feel that there was something quite contrived about the coming together of so many successive seemingly hopeless situations to be won nonetheless. And despite their haughty self assurance, the supposedly uber-nasty Forkrul Assail prove in the end almost comically ineffective, reminding me of Robert Jordan’s Foresaken.But these quibbles don't diminish my overall regard for the series. I finish the last book ready to go back and start again from the beginning, knowing that there are many layers to this story and world that I have not fully appreciated the first time around. I expect to return to these books often for the rest of my life.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Steven Erikson's The Crippled God is one of those books that, once you finish reading, you just sit back with your mouth agape and think to yourself, How am I ever supposed to review that?It is the tenth and final volume of The Malazan Book of the Fallen, capstone to a series whose individual entries possess a scope and ambition that defies easy description. This is all a remarkable achievement in and of itself, never mind the accomplishment of releasing a completed ten-book series of epic fantasy doorstoppers inside twelve years.As for the concluding volume itself, woe betide anyone attempting to provide a relatively spoiler-free summary of any "volume ten", much less a Malazan book. However, unlike earlier entries in the series, this book is basically a direct continuation of the previous volume, Dust of Dreams: The Bonehunters are marching across the continent of Lether, headed to Kolanse, along with the armies of the Letherii, the Perish Grey Helms, and the Bolkando. The Shake prepare to make their stand on the First Shore against the invading Tiste Liosan hordes. And a cabal of Elder Gods move to play their hand.Put that way, it almost sounds simple. And yet Erikson still manages to defy all expectations. Where DoD ended in a slam-bang confrontation that resulted in a massive "who's dead/who survived?" cliffhanger, TCG takes its time getting back into the proverbial swing of things. The first chapter is an eye-opener—raising the stakes by introducing a couple of new threats, while also finally thrusting some old favorites back into the mix—but then the pace slows down again as the march to Kolanse recommences. Though that plot doesn't move much for the first half of the book, Erikson thankfully writes in a lot of intrigue: betrayals and counter-betrayals and hints of further betrayal to come that leave you guessing how exactly it will all shake out at the final convergence. There's a nice, epic battle mid-book that breaks the perceived tedium of the Lether-based plot, but though it's satisfying in its own right, it's also a bit frustrating in that it's difficult to see how it relates to the main plot of the book, and indeed the series. When the final final battle does come, though, it's quite the spectacle; Erikson pulls out all the stops, throwing one thing after another at the reader. And when it's finally run its course, all you can do is sit back and breathe a sigh of relief that it's done. It is perhaps telling that there are two epilogues here, and I don't think that a third would have been too much to ask.Everyone knows that a series finale is supposed to tie up everything that came before, or at least to mostly do so; but Malazan fans have always been aware that Erikson had no intention of following the old formulae. So it comes as no surprise that numerous plot-threads and mysteries go unresolved here. And yet for all of that, it's still impressive how much he is able to resolve in this book. The number of direct references to the first two books alone are ridiculous; one almost gets the mental image of Erikson rereading the series, making notes of everything he needs to address in the final volume. The number of previously-loose threads that actually do get tied up is impressive, especially in light of just how many years some of them had been left dangling. And there are a couple of key concepts that get completely turned on their heads, inviting a reread of the entire series with this newfound insight. Finally, the way the last epilogue mirrors the very first pages of Gardens of the Moon works beautifully, bringing the entire sequence full-circle in a fitting conclusion.All of this is not to say that it's a perfect book. Besides the issue I had with the occasionally glacial pace, Erikson does some serious teasing. It's one thing to leave a mystery from a previous book unresolved; it's another thing entirely to take such a mystery and then build on it, adding new layers of mystery and fascination—and then just ignore it or brush it aside. There are a couple of mysterious characters that get this treatment; Erikson teases like he's going to do the big reveal here, and then fails to deliver. Another complaint I have is similar to the issue I took with Esslemont's writing in Stonewielder, which is to say that though events get resolved, much of the resolution goes unexplained. To be fair to Erikson, though, I've seen some good discussion online about the end of The Crippled God, and it looks like many of those answers might be hiding in plain sight, squirreled away within the text and just waiting for a reread to bring them to light. It is perhaps unfair, but I'm willing to give Erikson the benefit of the doubt here, even as I withhold it from Esslemont. Finally, dare I say that I found the ending to be not tragic enough? Like I said, Erikson continues to defy all expectations, including those that he himself has fostered throughout nine books.When all is said and done, The Crippled God is a memorable and fitting finale to one of the most ambitious fantasy epics ever written. I've heard from fans who have finished it, unable to bring themselves to read anything else for a time afterward. I had a similar reaction, though in my case it just meant finishing my reread of Deadhouse Gates before moving on to something outside the Malazan universe. So for current Malazan fans, it's an absolute must-read. If you're not a fan yet, might I humbly recommend starting at the beginning with Gardens of the Moon to see what you're missing. [4 out of 5 stars] for The Crippled God, but [5 out of 5 stars] for The Malazan Book of the Fallen as a whole.