Talking About Writing: Magic, Malazan, and Meandering with Steven Erikson

Discussing Magic In Fantasy with Steven Erikson (Malazan Book of the Fallen).
Steven Erikson and I discuss some aspects of how the magic in the Malazan world got started back in the gaming days with Ian C. Esslemont, and how it changed over time, as well as some general discussion of approaches to magic in fantasy worlds and the relationship between magic and religion in Fantasy.
Unfortunately I seem to have had an issue with my microphone that I didn't catch at the time. Sorry about that.
Intro and Music by Professor Trip.
If you would like to buy me a coffee or a book, Support me on Ko-Fi: ko-fi.com/criticaldragon

Пікірлер: 45

  • @PhilipChaseTheBestofFantasy
    @PhilipChaseTheBestofFantasy Жыл бұрын

    My favorite part of the video: Professor Fireballs expounding on the various types of fireballs one can cast and the sundry methodologies of conjuring them! 😁

  • @Paul_van_Doleweerd

    @Paul_van_Doleweerd

    Жыл бұрын

    AP has a secret cave full of bats, just in case...

  • @EricMcLuen

    @EricMcLuen

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Paul_van_Doleweerd Or at least a bellfry full.

  • @Paul_van_Doleweerd

    @Paul_van_Doleweerd

    Жыл бұрын

    @@EricMcLuen 🤣

  • @PhilipChaseTheBestofFantasy
    @PhilipChaseTheBestofFantasy Жыл бұрын

    I'm here for the meandering, but I'll take the magic and the Malazan too! 😁

  • @stevenmuise9285

    @stevenmuise9285

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm also here for the meandering, so much cool stuff comes out when they go off topic

  • @bookswithbanks8943
    @bookswithbanks8943 Жыл бұрын

    "... The poet recoils. All those tales of childhood, the magicks and the witches and wizards, the cursed gems and sacred swords - magic, my young friend, belongs to twin goddesses... I see them still. Name this first one Wonder, and she leads you by the hand into unlikely realms..." - Fall of Light, ch. 25 Great video! Your conversation reminded me of the Old Lord and Wreneck scenes at the end if this book. Hmm... this is giving me my own video ideas. Thanks again!

  • @GiovaniPablo1
    @GiovaniPablo1 Жыл бұрын

    Okay you guys have convinced me to read Malazan, great discussion thank you!

  • @ActionMan153

    @ActionMan153

    Жыл бұрын

    If you need a second opinion, you should definitely read the first book Gardens of the Moon. See of you like it

  • @GiovaniPablo1

    @GiovaniPablo1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ActionMan153 thanks man will do

  • @haroulasf

    @haroulasf

    Жыл бұрын

    @@GiovaniPablo1 maybe read the second one as well (Deadhouse Gates) and then decide if you like it or not 😊 personally, I loved Gardens but Deadhouse opens the world a lot and you get the first taste (not even close to the whole picture) of what’s to come

  • @nickb220

    @nickb220

    Жыл бұрын

    @@GiovaniPablo1 don't know if you started yet but it's worth keeping with it despite the possible confusion lol. personally, i loved it so much despite the confusion that i felt motivated enough to read it again which helped a lot. it's a confusing book i couldn't understand fully the first time, so please don't feel bad! it's on audible too

  • @JLchevz

    @JLchevz

    Жыл бұрын

    just go

  • @birdiesanders7788
    @birdiesanders7788 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you 😊 23:45

  • @neveragain125
    @neveragain125 Жыл бұрын

    a brilliant discussion! it shows that the importance of studying myth, philosophy and culture is integral to anyone wanting to write in the fantasy genre. thank you!

  • @jarrodcourtemanche1444
    @jarrodcourtemanche1444 Жыл бұрын

    I cannot emphasize how much this discussion hits home for me. I've been playing D&D for forty years and love the game to death, but I've never really liked D&D type spell systems in my readings. I've lived with it in some of the books I've enjoyed, but for the most part veered toward the malleable style of magic like the Malazan or the Covenant series reveal. The discussion of how cultures shape magic was fascinating and spot on for me. Great job!!!!

  • @willharper1326
    @willharper1326 Жыл бұрын

    This was a incredible conversation. I thought AP’s point on how video games have changed what we expect of certain kinds of magic in storytelling was great. Fascinating as always, thank you both for the time.

  • @Jedidiah13
    @Jedidiah13 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent discusion. I really enjoyed it. thank you.

  • @Philosiphyzer
    @Philosiphyzer Жыл бұрын

    Thanks so much for these discussions. I honestly think they're an important part of contemporary discourse regarding fantasy literature. Reducing magic to technology, like Erikson talked about in the video, is a major issue for me. Stripping the "magic" out of magic (and fantasy as a whole) has become a bigger and bigger annoyance of mine over the past few years. I'm sure I've rambled about this in the past, but I've started reading literary fiction instead of fantasy to get my fix of wonder. It all comes down to taste, etc. etc.--we've all heard the arguments and there's a lot of truth to them. However, I think it's important to push back against many readers' insistence on the importance of magic "systems" as a part of "good" worldbuilding. Maybe I've just had a bad sampling of fantasy readers, but I've noticed increasingly rigid views of what fantasy "is" and how authors "should" write it. They pay lip service to taste and the subjectivity of art and say that authors should do whatever they want, but as soon as they start discussing specific books that all falls away and they get real prescriptive real quick. Similarly, maybe it's just the authors I've read, but I've found that a *lot* of modern fantasy seems to conform to these views. For me, The Black Company is pretty much the gold standard for magic and worldbuilding, and I have a hard time imagining that book being published today. Maybe I'm a curmudgeonly old bastard at the age of 27, but I'm frustrated. I guess that's why I write, though, since no one else seems to be writing what I want to read. I'm curious to see how fantasy continues to evolve over the coming years, in any case. Thanks again for the video!

  • @osoisko1933
    @osoisko1933 Жыл бұрын

    Loved this convo, especially the difference between personal animism and gods, along with religious schisms. It's something I wish more Fantasy and even Scifi authors would tackle more.

  • @simeonbassey6821
    @simeonbassey6821 Жыл бұрын

    A fascinating discourse, as always. Magic and technology are tools, to put it crudely, to solve problems that would otherwise be difficult or outright impossible to achieve by normal strengths or abilities. The one defining difference between them is, while technology is devised by man, magic is a mysterious, otherworldly force which can be manipulated by a few who understand it sufficiently (note, not completely). And, the manner in which an inventor or engineer understands his machinery differs vastly from the way in which a mage understands magic. While the former knows in and out the nuances of his craft and is able to improve upon them, the latter knows only barely enough and is fully aware there is a much vaster knowledge he doesn't possess and never will. Magic, in my opinion, should be this incomprehensible, mysterious force, yet subject to the will of a mage as an infinitesimal section of an ocean is subject to a ship seeking to navigate it. With the abrupt bloom of these so-called hard magic systems (and this is merely my own observation), modern fantasy unfortunately has been reduced to a scientific or technological tool by which the characters can solve problems. And how do we understand science/technology? By learning and learning and learning. This is why these authors cram their stories with exposition dumps and appendices about the magic system, this losing all its sense of wonder, mystery, mistique, enigma... Magic then becomes formulaic and predictable, which defies the purpose of its existence. If I wanted such, I would have read a Sci-fi novel instead. But, with magic being a major - if not defining - element of fantasy, I'd say fantasy as a genre is slowly losing its way. This trend of harder magic systems being considered not just an alternative to softer magic systems, but superior to it, is one I find rather absurd. There is a reason the Lord of the Rings and the Malazan Book of the Fallen are the best works of fantasy to have ever existed, and this is because readers (and authors) forget magic isn't all there is to fantasy, even if it is a major element.

  • @MrHehj
    @MrHehj Жыл бұрын

    Fascinating conversation - thanks both.

  • @ravenbellebooks5665
    @ravenbellebooks5665 Жыл бұрын

    I always love these discussions - I'm so behind because I only want to watch them when I can make sure to pay attention... I don't just want them on as background noise!

  • @claudiaiovanovici7569
    @claudiaiovanovici7569 Жыл бұрын

    Damn, I had forgotten how much I enjoyed these. This was so much fun to listen to! And now the comments 😁. Steve was saying that we, in the West, are only now achieving this ccthonic level of understanding of the world around us, but I don't know that this is necessarily true. I would rather say that we used to have it and that we lost it at some point. And that we are now returning to it. It brings to mind a story from our folklore teacher who went to a folkloric festival at some point during his life and there he met, among other nations, a group from Belgium. Being a curious man, he asked about their traditional clothing and its symbolism (as an aside, our traditional clothes do have meaning, or at least they used to, and the geometrical patterns sewn on them used to tell a story, unique to the weaver). He was interested in particular by the fact that they wore an ear of wheat on their heads ( I hope I used ear correctl here). To his surprise, they had no idea why they did that. The response they gave was that they had seen it in an old painting and they had replicated it for the festival. Then he told them that in our culture, wheat is seen as a symbol of the cycle of life and death, and as such, in a way, or immortality. Life sprouts from the seed, and in giving life, it dies. I guess that through the prism of this story, it would be easy to conclude that there was a point in time where the Belgians too understood the meaning of these symbols, and that everything else they did held a meaning that was now lost to modern man. It's just an alternative point of view. Then there was something you discussed that drew my attention, and that's the worshipping of dead gods, where people aren't even aware that the god is dead. Or if they are aware, they don't care. I am pretty sure that the worshippers of Meanas knew that there was nobody sitting on the throne of Shadow. That's why there was so much surprise when an occupant showed out of nowhere. And that's a point that has long had my attention. A god may rule temporarily over an aspect, but the god is not its life. The aspect is eternal, the god may not be, and so it feels to me that the books have done a very good job at separating god from realm from aspect. After all, we have aspects with no realm and no god and no worship (Denul being one of them). Take the example of the Tiste Andii. Do they worship Mother Dark, do they unknowingly worship Draconus, or do they worship Elemental Darkness? And is the death of a god even relevant? What does death even constitute for gods? Is Draconus dead, killed by Rake, or is he merely in a state of.... non living? How does his non death impact the power he holds over his domain? And should both he and Mother Dark die for real, would the Tiste Andii stop worshipping Kurald Galain? Nor would Kurald Galain die if its gods are dead, or if there is nobody sitting on its throne. The same could be said for Fener, and Trake, and the Wolves of Winter. So I guess that in worshipping a god, people are worshipping the eternal through them. And the eternal, in these books at least, is the magical aspect. For last, Steve says that mortals can interfere with the godly realms and cause a mess, and he used Quick Ben as an example, but is Quick Ben truly mortal? That doesn't make his statement incorrect, obviously (it's just me being a smart ass 😋)

  • @ActionMan153
    @ActionMan153 Жыл бұрын

    Reading House of Chains and it is fucking awesome. Love it! Always great to see this mostly dry Steven laugh here and there, you two definitely seem great buddies.

  • @talonraker1140
    @talonraker1140 Жыл бұрын

    Listen to SE analyse his work is always such a joy. Wonderful conversation which gave me a lot of things to think about, both in regards to fantasy/my D&D games and the world at large. Thank you ^^

  • @Surgebinds
    @Surgebinds Жыл бұрын

    your videos are getting me through my flu, thank you for the amazing content and discussions!

  • @EricMcLuen
    @EricMcLuen Жыл бұрын

    Always get a warm fuzzy feeling when people call it AD&D. And the mention on Rolemaster which is probably why I didn't find warrens confusing at all from jts magic system. As mentioned, Malazan also makes use of multiple cultural as well as geographic magic systems/traditions as opposed to having essentially one for the world.

  • @Gascon12
    @Gascon12 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for the video, AP! It was great! So following your previous video about hard and soft magic and now this one: In the Malazan world, is it hard magic disguised as soft magic o viceversa? I am sure Steven turned the tables in one situation or another, but I am interested in your take one this.

  • @billyalarie929
    @billyalarie929 Жыл бұрын

    This is getting me through my having to go through, ehm, let’s call it The Thing, as is the wont of some friends and colleagues of mine who are thoroughly over it. To call this period The Thing.

  • @LusipherPE
    @LusipherPE Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing this conversation, I hope your lingering sickness fades soon

  • @eugenemurphy6037
    @eugenemurphy6037 Жыл бұрын

    We all like to feel safe while we are sleeping. "Locks are for honest people." No surprise that humanity has always requested that deity's and the like "Watch the door" while we sleep. Better safe than sorry~!

  • @Larckov
    @Larckov Жыл бұрын

    It is a great talk these one. During the talk, I wander what are the personal religion of both of you. I can't imagine how to reconcile the knowledge of the believing of different cultures and the beliefs on religion that you both may have. Are you atheists? Best wishes from Mexico! By the way. I am at Dust of Dreams and can see the similitudes from many of the cultures around Lether, near the wastelands, and some of the mexican/american cultures from pre Colombian times. It is just awesome.

  • @oniflrog4487
    @oniflrog4487 Жыл бұрын

    Oh boi, story of my life in RPGs... "what if I want a paladin with high dex!?" 🤣🤣🤣

  • @Paul_van_Doleweerd

    @Paul_van_Doleweerd

    Жыл бұрын

    But a clumsy paladin is so much more fun! - DM

  • @talonraker1140

    @talonraker1140

    Жыл бұрын

    This video really made me wish I had a group who were more willing to branch out and try different systems rather than (as Steve said) fighting against 5e's constraints to tell the kind of story we want to. Ah well, a man can dream :P

  • @stevenmuise9285

    @stevenmuise9285

    Жыл бұрын

    I never had the chance to play D&D, though I own the handbooks lol

  • @feral7523
    @feral7523 Жыл бұрын

    Grey Helms & Grey Swords are the Peoples front of Judea vs the Judeans peoples front of Malaz!

  • @emptycages136
    @emptycages136 Жыл бұрын

    Tiles. Cards. Runts..

  • @zannatulferdous6455
    @zannatulferdous6455 Жыл бұрын

    wanna write a book in abroad

  • @C4rn4ge-th3wis3
    @C4rn4ge-th3wis35 ай бұрын

    Came here just to learn out how to pronounce "Malazan". Never heard it pronounced the same way on any videos.

  • @ACriticalDragon

    @ACriticalDragon

    5 ай бұрын

    I doubt there will ever be a consensus. Whatever makes sense in your head is probably the best pronunciation. 😁

  • @derrisreaditbefore
    @derrisreaditbefore Жыл бұрын

    ah, the OhGod of Hangovers... he comes into being in Hogfather - in removing the Hogfather, the villain has created an excess of unexpressed belief, and we get the Veruca Gnome, the Eater of Socks, and various buzzy insectoids that appear when anyone swears. Pratchett as ever, looks at religion, belief, and the interaction of the two, as a mutually fueling system that is inherently unbalanced and wobbles. A LOT.

  • @KyleAPemberton
    @KyleAPemberton2 ай бұрын

    I wish you had someone there who disagreed with you guys. I saw a lot of big holes in your points.

  • @ACriticalDragon

    @ACriticalDragon

    2 ай бұрын

    The internet is full of people who disagree with us. We were just hanging out and chatting about the things we love, and how we see things. We aren't the arbiters of anything, and just like everyone else, we have our perspectives and try to articulate them as best we can.