Return of the Crimson Guard
A Novel of the Malazan Empire
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Narrated by:
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John Banks
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Written by:
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Ian C Esslemont
About this listen
The return of the mercenary company the Crimson Guard could not have come at a worse time for the Malazan Empire. Drained by constant warfare, betrayals and rivalries, many see the grip of Empress Laseen weakening. Conquered kingdoms and principalities test their old independence.
Into this fermenting civil war on Quon Tali - the empire's homeland - comes the Guard and the ingrained memory of their vow of undying opposition to the existence of the empire. Yet rivalries and betrayals plague the Guard as well - elements of its elite, the Avowed, scheme to open paths to even greater power. Ancient, powerful entities, Ascendants, also seek to exploit all sides to further their own arcane ends. Meanwhile, a swordsman called Traveller and his companion, Ereko, move from one strange encounter to another on a mysterious path that will lead the swordsman to a confrontation from which none has ever returned.
As the Crimson Guard gathers itself for its assault on the empire, the empress faces more immediate threats. Feeding her wars has bled dry provincial garrisons across Quon Tali, and now regional nationalists see their chance to break free. Behind their insurrections stand the veteran commanders of Laseen's predecessor, Emperor Kellanved. These powerful generals and mages, the Old Hands, have lost patience with what they see as Laseen's mismanagement and have chosen one of their own to replace her.
Yet there are hints that Laseen may be using the uprisings to draw out and finally eliminate these last irksome survivors of her predecessor's rule....
©2016 Ian C. Esslemont (P)2016 Random House AudiobooksWhat listeners say about Return of the Crimson Guard
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
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Performance
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- Adam
- 2021-09-08
Not Steven Erikson But Still Fun
This is a pretty great chapter in the Malazan world. Lots of action, world building, and great character arcs. I’m reading this in between The Bonehunters and Reaper’s Gale (which I’d suggest since it directly follows the events of the Bonehunters and the ending is casually spoiled in Reaper’s Gale), and going from Erikson to Esslemont is a bit of a culture shock. Esslemont just simply isn’t as good at writing prose than Erikson, especially by that point in the Book of the Fallen, but he’s also a lot less self-indulgent with his inner monologues and philosophizing, so the action and character arcs are a lot more digestible. Plus the Avowed are just fun characters to follow.
For the first half of the book I think perspectives jumped a little too often between disconnected storylines. Probably would have been better to have larger chunks of character perspectives that are closer together for one chapter, then skip them for the next chapter instead of trying to include a little bit of everyone in each. Just made it really hard to remember who was doing what when you only have 10 minutes with them at a time and you’re literally hopping across the globe in between. This is made up for in the climax that won’t quit, since the last third of the book is all the storylines finally converging, and man is that epic!
The narrator also isn’t quite as good as the current narrator for the Book of the Fallen, but he is passable. Some of his voices are inconsistent but otherwise I thought the performance was good enough. I think that he sometimes had trouble determining what was inner monologue and what was narration, but that’s more a fault of the author, since the book isn’t all that consistent with using italicizes to designate inner monologue in the text. A solid 3/5, no more no less.
I will say, Penguin Random House really should have had a general overseer for the Malazan Audiobooks to try to keep accents, voices, and especially pronunciations consistent. Going from one book to the next it’s always a shock and ruins the suspense of disbelief when the performances aren’t done consistently. Same idea as changing actors midway through a TV series for the same characters.
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- Langer MD
- 2019-03-13
Outstanding Fantasy Novel
Esselmont weaves a lot into this story. Malazan vs Malazan. Crimson Guard vs Crimson Guard. Malazan vs Crimson Guard. Throw in humor and Political intrigue. Add Ascendants, Seguleh, Stormriders. Wow. Too bad the reader isn't great. Most accents are okay. A couple are pretty bad.
This installment rates 7.5 stars out of 10.
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- adam
- 2024-03-12
Better than most of the Malazan books
Really enjoyed the writing style and the way the plot flowed. It really fit this story
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