Bauchelain and Korbal Broach Gruntle
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祝日 / Permanent Vacation
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Sweet Seals For You, Always
DEAR READER
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@tremorlor
Bauchelain and Korbal Broach Gruntle
(August 1, 2020)
I finished the Malazan Book of the Fallen series.
Holy shit, what a ride.
“We are all tired. Battered by circumstance. Pity grows sparse in this season.”
— Fall of Light - Steven Erikson
Cotillion drew two daggers. His gaze fell to the blades. The blackened iron surfaces seemed to swirl, two pewter rivers oozing across pits and gouges, the edges ragged where armour and bone had slowed their thrusts. He studied the sickly sky’s lurid reflections for a moment longer, and then said, ‘I have no intention of explaining a damned thing.’ He looked up, eyes locking. ‘Do you understand me?’ The figure facing him was incapable of expression. The tatters of rotted sinew and strips of skin were motionless upon the bones of temple, cheek and jaw. The eyes held nothing, nothing at all. Better, Cotillion decided, than jaded scepticism. Oh, how he was sick of that. ‘Tell me,’ he resumed, ‘what do you think you’re seeing here? Desperation? Panic? A failing of will, some inevitable decline crumbling to incompetence? Do you believe in failure, Edgewalker?’ The apparition remained silent for a time, and then spoke in a broken, rasping voice. ‘You cannot be so … audacious.’ ‘I asked if you believed in failure. Because I don’t.’ ‘Even should you succeed, Cotillion. Beyond all expectation, beyond, even, all desire. They will still speak of your failure.’ He sheathed his daggers. ‘And you know what they can do to themselves.’ The head cocked, strands of hair dangling and drifting. ‘Arrogance?’ ‘Competence,’ Cotillion snapped in reply. ‘Doubt me at your peril.’ ‘They will not believe you.’ ‘I do not care, Edgewalker. This is what it is.’ When he set out, he was not surprised that the deathless guardian followed. We have done this before. Dust and ashes puffed with each step. The wind moaned as if trapped in a crypt. ‘Almost time, Edgewalker.’ ‘I know. You cannot win.’ Cotillion paused, half turned. He smiled a ravaged smile. ‘That doesn’t mean I have to lose, does it?’
“Toll the Hounds” Subterranean Press Edition (Illustrations by Marc Simonetti)
Barghest Calls by Marko Djurdjevic and Claudiu Antoniu Magherusan
You know what’s a million times more exciting than a random plot twist that comes out of nowhere? A plot twist that was foreshadowed by things you didn’t realize were foreshadowing at first. Nothing makes me go absolutely bananas like the feeling of “oh FUCK…[seemingly unrelated thing] WAS FORESHADOWING”
Always finding things that are foreshadowing on re-reads.
“The sounds of fighting had stopped. Toc heard iron bars snap, one after another, metal clang on the flagstones.
Then someone was crouching down beside him. A hand that was little more than rough bone and tendon settled on Toc’s forehead.
The Malazan could not see. There was no light. But the hand was cool, it’s weight gentle.
‘Hood? Have you come for us, then?’ The words were clearly spoken in his mind, but came out incomprehensibly—and he realized that his tongue was gone.
‘Ah, my friend,’ the figure replied in a rasp. ‘It is I, Onos T’oolan, once of the Tarad Clan, of the Logrod T’lan Imass, now kin to Aral Fayle, to Toc the Younger.’
Kin.
Withered arms gathered him up.
‘We are leaving now, young brother.’”
—832 pg, Memories of Ice, Malazan: Book of the Fallen, Steven Erikson
This book has been an emotional rollercoaster for the passed thirty pages or so. I love it so much!
“I imagine you know little of what it is like to see your kin fall into dissolution, to see the spirit of an entire people grow corrupt, to struggle endlessly to open their eyes - as yours have been opened by whatever clarity chance has gifted you.”
— Trull Sengar
“Order ever succumbs to chaos, broken unto itself by the very strictures it imposes.”
— Steven Erikson, Memories of Ice (The Malazan Book of the Fallen, #3)
Dragon sketch by Swang .
that source link is broken here it is on his Instagram
Korabas harried by the storm?
(vía ArtStation - The Gardens of the Moon by Steven Erikson, Marc Simonetti)
Quick Ben, from the Malazan Book of the Fallen series by Steven Erikson, commissioned by Anabella : )
““Karsa reached down, gathered the skeletal figure into his arms, and then settled back. ‘I stepped over corpses on the way here,’ the Toblakai said. ‘People no one cared about, dying alone. In my barbaric village this would never happen, but here in this city, this civilized jewel, it happens all the time. (…) What is your name?’ ‘Munug.’ ‘Munug. This night – before I must rise and walk into the temple – I am a village. And you are here, in my arms. You will not die uncared for.’ ‘You – you would do this for me? A stranger?’ ‘In my village no one is a stranger – and this is what civilization has turned its back on. One day, Munug, I will make a world of villages, and the age of cities will be over. And slavery will be dead, and there shall be no chains – tell your god. Tonight, I am his knight.’ Munug’s shivering was fading. The old man smiled. ‘He knows.’ It wasn’t too much, to take a frail figure into one’s arms for those last moments of life. Better than a cot, or even a bed in a room filled with loved ones. Better, too, than an empty street in the cold rain. To die in someone’s arms – could there be anything more forgiving? Every savage barbarian in the world knew the truth of this.” ― Steven Erikson, The Crippled God”
— (via theunwitnessed)
“There is wisdom, Faradan. The wisdom that comes with knowing – right to the very core of your soul – just how fragile life really is.”
— Steven Erikson, The Crippled God (The Malazan Book of the Fallen, #10)
“One day, perhaps, you will see for yourself that regrets are as nothing. The value lies in how they are answered.”
― Steven Erikson, House of Chains (via trakethetigerofsummer)
The structures of a culture do not circumvent nor excuse self-evident injustice or inequity. The status quo is not sacred, not an altar to paint in rivers of blood. Tradition and habit are not sound arguments—
Janath Anar (Reaper’s Gale by Steven Erikson)