by Steven Erikson
One of the most ambitious works in epic fantasy, the Malazan Book of the Fallen follows the campaigns of the Malazan Empire and the forces that resist, survive, and outlast it across multiple continents and thousands of years of accumulated history. The series is told from dozens of perspectives - soldiers, gods, assassins, ancient races, and ordinary people caught in the machinery of empire - with no single protagonist anchoring the whole. Characters disappear for entire volumes before resurfacing changed; events whose significance is obscure in one book resolve into clarity three books later. The series is notable for its deliberate refusal to explain itself. Gods, warrens, ancient races, and historical cataclysms are presented without preamble, trusting the reader to accumulate understanding gradually. This makes the opening books among the most demanding entry points in the genre and the later books among the most rewarding. The Malazan Book of the Fallen rewards patience and rereading in ways that few series match. The ten-book sequence concludes with Dust of Dreams and The Crippled God, written and published as a single narrative split across two volumes.
1Gardens of the Moon
1999
2Deadhouse Gates
2000
3Memories of Ice
2001
4House of Chains
2002
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Midnight Tides
2004
6The Bonehunters
2006
7Reaper's Gale
2007
8Toll the Hounds
2008
9Dust of Dreams
2009
10The Crippled God
2011