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 Elminster Must Die -- Chapters 32 - 36 & Epilogue

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T O P I C    R E V I E W
The Sage Posted - 03 Aug 2010 : 05:28:37
Well met

This is a Book Club thread for Elminster Must Die (part of "The Sage of Shadowdale" saga), by Ed Greenwood. Please discuss chapters 32 - 36 and the epilogue herein.
30   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
Dennis Posted - 23 Nov 2012 : 06:47:38

Full agreement, Neo. We had a rather long discussion about this book in a not so distant past here.
Neo2151 Posted - 23 Nov 2012 : 06:33:15
[I don't know why you'd be in this tome if you haven't finished the book, but in case you haven't, be warned! - Spoilers Ahead]

I won't lie - I had a lot of trouble working my way through this book, and the last few chapters were the worst.
Either Ed is losing his writing touch or the editor is about as graceful as a butcher with a meat cleaver.

Here's my big issues:
1- Characters should not be teleporting all over the place.
No, I don't mean with magic. This is why I think the editor is to blame and not Ed. All throughout the book you'd have characters suddenly in entirely different scenarios than when you just left them previously, but it's probably the worst I've ever seen in my literary life at the last few chapters. Mirt and Arclath manage to get all over the city in less than two pages without any sense of "scene conclusion." Transitions need to be smooth and they are anything but in this book.
2- Don't kill a character if their death literally means nothing!
Biggest slap in the face, ever. El died! But then he wasn't dead, cuz his ashes get to keep living? Even now, when his power is at a tiny fraction of what it once was? How the hell is he still alive? Because Ed wanted him to be? Not good enough.
Death is an inconvenient setback in D&D. Death should have meaning in fiction.
3- Let ye olde favorites go, hm?
Why the hell were Mirt and Vangerdahast in this book? They serve literally zero purpose. It feels like Ed wasn't done writing stories with some of his favorite characters, so he "cheated" their way into still existing 100 years later. Now, this criticism might be premature, I'll admit. Maybe they serve a real purpose in one of the upcoming related novels. But even if they do, they had no place in THIS novel.
4- You're thinking of the wrong Mystra...
Why is Mystra pining after Elminster in the epilogue? El had the romantic relationship with Mystra 2, not Mystra 3 (ie: Midnight). Or am I missing something here?

Don't get me wrong. I like Ed Greenwood and I love the characters he gives us. Hell, Making of a Mage continues to be one of my favorite Realms novels, and excluding the newest stuff, I've read them all. But this book just didn't hold up to snuff in my opinion.

(As to Manshoon, sorry THO, but there's no good excuse for him. Manshoon has never been portrayed as a competent villain. We know Ed hasn't been able to play with the Zhents the way he wanted to, and I'm sure Manshoon is terrifying in tabletop games where you've had Ed piloting him, but as far as what we, the readers, have seen? Failure after failure with never even a hint at getting ahead of the curve. He's Wiley Coyote to Elminster's Roadrunner.)
Blueblade Posted - 08 Aug 2012 : 21:39:53
And a triumphant conclusion. What a great book.
A yarn, a romp in places, and great fun. Not mighty literature, but then most fantasy novels aren't and don't try to be. Well worth the bucks, and stands up very well to rereading.
I liked BURY RLMINSTER DEEP, too, and am itching to read ELMINSTER ENRAGED when it (it feels like I should write "finally" here ) comes out.
BB
Malcolm Posted - 22 Feb 2012 : 18:49:12
Well, I liked ELMINSTER MUST DIE! a lot. It works better if you just read it as a novel, instead of reacting to how Ed depicts this or that character, place, or group in the Realms vs. the way you think of them.
He is, after all, THE expert on the Realms.
For Ed fans, FORESHADOWS: THE GHOSTS OF ZERO has just been released, and THE NEW HERO is coming out very soon. Next up - not counting the FR comic Ed is writing, his monthly DDI column, or paperback reprints of hardback Realms novels - is, I think, the WHAT SCARES THE BOOGEYMAN? horror anthology, that has an Ed story in it. Though I know he's been contributing to non-WotC games and some online sf mags, so one of them might debut first. I can hardly keep up with the guy.
Dennis Posted - 20 Jan 2012 : 14:43:25

Agreed on all acounts, gomez. Your review brings back some unsavory memories I'd rather forget.
gomez Posted - 20 Jan 2012 : 13:41:12
I finally got to writing a review for Elminster Must Die.
Initially at Goodreads, but that one is a bit short and may come over as a bit too negative.
I rewrote it, and while it is still not all that positive (after all, I DO have issues), I think I managed to also add a bit on what I did like.
Anyway, it is on the wizards bookclub:

http://community.wizards.com/bookclub/go/thread/view/110769/28857645/Elminster_Must_Die


Gomez
Thieran Posted - 30 Jun 2011 : 11:37:15
I wasn't too happy with the Knights novels, but "Elminster Must Die" was a great read - very well done! Looking forward to the sequel...
Longtime Lurker Posted - 26 Jun 2011 : 18:52:23
Just finished EL MUST DIE for the fourth time. It stands up better and better to repeated rereadings, and I keep noticing subtle hints and nuances I didn't pick up on in early reads. I'm sure those who want to read a hack-and-slash battle session brought from the gaming table to the pages of a novel have given up on Ed's writing a long time ago, though his battle descriptions are great (if short) when they finally arrive, but the depth of feeling like actually being in the Realms, in the middle of the everyday lives of thousands, is wonderful, the banter enjoyable, and the characters intriguing.
I can't wait for more. I've ordered the anthologies WHEN THE HERO COMES HOME and THE NEW HERO because Ed has stories in them (not to mention other Realms writers in the first one, and Robin Laws editing and lots of game writers in the second one), and BEAUTY HAS HER WAY just arrived yesterday; I ordered it for the Ed story in it, and wasn't disappointed. Short, very un-Realms-like, and made me wince. Just as it was supposed to.
Dennis Posted - 02 Feb 2011 : 01:40:03

I'm not giving up on his works. Not yet, at least. I only hope his future books will prove as entertaining as his older ones. There's still the "revival" of Alassra that I'm looking forward to. And perhaps his future novels will finally reveal that someone or something that deters Tam from conquering Aglarond despite the Simbul's prolonged absence.

-----

I tried to reread this book to gain some new perspective. But I just can't go on after chapter 2.
Arcanus Posted - 31 Jan 2011 : 18:21:28
quote:
Originally posted by Dennis

quote:
Originally posted by Arcanus

I sometimes find it very hard to read Ed's books. Too much 'hey nonny nonny' and pointless description but not enough story.



His older novels are way better, particularly the first 4 in the Elminster saga.



I agree wholeheartedly. I only half read the first book in the knights of myth drannor, I gave up waiting for something to happen. On the other hand I've read the spellfire books loads of times.
Dennis Posted - 31 Jan 2011 : 09:22:02
quote:
Originally posted by Arcanus

I sometimes find it very hard to read Ed's books. Too much 'hey nonny nonny' and pointless description but not enough story.



His older novels are way better, particularly the first 4 in the Elminster saga.
Arcanus Posted - 30 Jan 2011 : 16:41:51
I sometimes find it very hard to read Ed's books. Too much 'hey nonny nonny' and pointless description but not enough story.
Dennis Posted - 19 Jan 2011 : 07:13:50
quote:
Originally posted by The Hooded One

Or you could look a little deeper and see it as Manshoon FINALLY preparing enough, and being patient enough, that he has "enough up his sleeve" to deal with anything unforeseen that arises.
And if that sounds like what Manshoon has pretended to be rather than what we've seen Manshoon really is, and so sounds odd or "wrong" for the character . . . ah, NOW you're on to something. Stay tuned to later books to see just what it is. (According to Ed.)
love,
THO



I might do that---not because I want to see more of the roach; definitely not that; but because I still like Alassra and Elminster. I just HOPE I wouldn't be as disappointed as I was with this book.
Jakk Posted - 06 Dec 2010 : 03:35:20
quote:
Originally posted by geok1ng

I am less than impressed by this book. It does not have any of the 4th edition flavor of the pther novels. Were it not by the constatnt reminder of how powerful the characters were in the past, one could not find any difference from pre spellplague books.



That's probably why I enjoyed it so thoroughly. Looking forward to "Bury Elminster Deep" with great interest!

quote:
Originally posted by The Hooded One

Or you could look a little deeper and see it as Manshoon FINALLY preparing enough, and being patient enough, that he has "enough up his sleeve" to deal with anything unforeseen that arises.
And if that sounds like what Manshoon has pretended to be rather than what we've seen Manshoon really is, and so sounds odd or "wrong" for the character . . . ah, NOW you're on to something. Stay tuned to later books to see just what it is. (According to Ed.)
love,
THO



Heh... I was thinking something similar, but yet different... more along the lines of, this is how I expected Manshoon to be (apart from the maniacal gloating) from the first publication of the Realms... but I understand that TSR's ethics guidelines prevented that. I have my theories as to what's "wrong" with Manshoon, and I think much of it goes back to the "Manshoon Clone Wars" and the status/condition of the winner of said conflict.

THO... you said earlier that this is a SIX-book series!? Will this storyline then take us through to the next RSE and Fifth Edition, or is that still under wraps? (he says, only half jokingly)

And yes, this is my first post in quite some time; I've been busy with assembling and testing a homebrew ruleset, playing in three campaigns (one in the Realms, one in Golarion, and the last in a universe based on, but not identical with, that of StarCraft II), and real life... electronics retail is a busy industry at this time of the year.
The Hooded One Posted - 03 Dec 2010 : 03:22:16
Quite true. And hardly surprising, being as they're different characters. Both created by Ed, but very different from each other.
One of Ed's ongoing themes, over his last forty-some years of Realms fiction, has been how power, and longevity, affects archmages differently. Elminster and Khelben, the Seven, the Srinshee, Manshoon, Szass Tam, Larloch, and for that matter Elaith . . . all creations of his, all very different.
And no, Szass Tam ISN'T as mad as Manshoon. I have that directly from Ed. Who says you might have been right about that, about sixty clones and more than a century back.
love,
THO
Dennis Posted - 03 Dec 2010 : 02:26:40
quote:
Originally posted by The Hooded One

Or you could look a little deeper and see it as Manshoon FINALLY preparing enough, and being patient enough, that he has "enough up his sleeve" to deal with anything unforeseen that arises.
And if that sounds like what Manshoon has pretended to be rather than what we've seen Manshoon really is, and so sounds odd or "wrong" for the character . . . ah, NOW you're on to something. Stay tuned to later books to see just what it is. (According to Ed.)
love,
THO



Preparing and blabbering about it.

Tam did prepare his ascension to Thay's sole sovereign but he didn't ridiculously blabber about it even though he's as mad as the cockroach.
WildRyc Posted - 02 Dec 2010 : 02:56:18
Well, that would explain why Manshoon keeps on saying his name over and over again...
The Hooded One Posted - 01 Dec 2010 : 18:45:41
Or you could look a little deeper and see it as Manshoon FINALLY preparing enough, and being patient enough, that he has "enough up his sleeve" to deal with anything unforeseen that arises.
And if that sounds like what Manshoon has pretended to be rather than what we've seen Manshoon really is, and so sounds odd or "wrong" for the character . . . ah, NOW you're on to something. Stay tuned to later books to see just what it is. (According to Ed.)
love,
THO
Dennis Posted - 01 Dec 2010 : 02:05:54
quote:
Originally posted by WildRyc

However, I did feel a bit upset with how Manshoon seemed so omnipresent. No one could escape his grasp, no one could put up a fight. Beholders, wights, wizards and whatnot - all fell before the guy who could control the mind of anyone he could think of. All he did was sit in a command centre with TV's turned onto all the stations and played around every trick everyone else tried.



It's just the concept of 'puppet master' with unsavory exaggeration.
WildRyc Posted - 30 Nov 2010 : 20:44:12
I'll admit: I thoroughly enjoyed this book. I could barely stop reading it after I purchased it on Saturday.

However, I did feel a bit upset with how Manshoon seemed so omnipresent. No one could escape his grasp, no one could put up a fight. Beholders, wights, wizards and whatnot - all fell before the guy who could control the mind of anyone he could think of. All he did was sit in a command centre with TV's turned onto all the stations and played around every trick everyone else tried. Granted, controlling beholders to do that is WAY cooler than how I described it.


The jump-frames during the end may have have been used to build the tension, but they definitely jarred me from the immersion. I had to reread each section so that I could be sure I knew what happened. I'm not sure if this came down to bad editing, but I feel as though you might need a bit more substance to each little part. Shows can do this because the image conveys a lot more information - I'm unsure as to whether it's the best option in writing.

For me, the best parts were when Storm or El managed to bring the weight of their years and accolades to bear upon other characters - like when she convinces Starbridge to give her the ring. Being impressed with titles is still something that gets me: I'm trying to stop gibbering like an idiot whenever I meet someone famous, or that I look up to. Being dressed down by the person who created the organization that you claim to lead - that's something else.

Malcolm Posted - 30 Nov 2010 : 14:56:37
A complete disappointment for you, but not for me.
You've posted repeatedly about your boredom while reading it, and your hatred of the "cockroach" Manshoon.
Fair enough.
However, I respectfully disagree. Completely.
I loved this book. Parts of it weren't pleasant for the characters, but given the situations, that's hardly surprising.
And geok1ng's comment about following Manshoon's recipe is simply wrong. The three characters he cites all survived the Spellplague in very different ways. He obviously didn't read the book very closely.
As for his comment not having "the 4th edition flavor" - - I think Ed, as the creator of the world, "gets" the Realms better than any of us.
I hope we can avoid, in this thread and others, the Internet trap of posters equating their opinions with absolute fact or definitive judgment. "I didn't like this book" is NOT the same as "This book stinks."
Dennis Posted - 29 Nov 2010 : 13:04:16
quote:
Originally posted by geok1ng

I am less than impressed by this book. It does not have any of the 4th edition flavor of the pther novels. Were it not by the constatnt reminder of how powerful the characters were in the past, one could not find any difference from pre spellplague books.

And the formula of keeping old chars in play is repetitive: a princess of cormyr, a royal mage and a chosen all follow manshoons recipe for surviving the spellplague.



I HIGHLY agree.

This book is a complete disappointment.

quote:
Originally posted by geok1ng

But Arclath Delcastle lost most of my respect on the dialogue on chapter 36, pages 338 to 339. First i was mildly amused to discover that the author wasnt brave enough to created a truly queer anti-hero. A gay noble swordsman without any morals would be a welcome addition to the line of sexual oriented chars of the novel. Oh, how i would love to see a Forgotten Realms Marquis de Sade, but Delcastle is already on the way to romantic love with Amarune. How i miss Pharaun Mizzrym, spoiled and sarcastic.



Arclath is bisexual. I don't think his mother would simply jest that he liked young men if she hadn't seen him bed one or two.
Brimstone Posted - 23 Oct 2010 : 21:37:22
Ed is always playing a 'Deep Game'...
Malcolm Posted - 23 Oct 2010 : 03:53:20
Thente, I agree with you about the caricature of an evil villain, and talked about that with Ed at the last Phantasm - - and he said the character in question acts like that because he's flat-out mad, and that there's a reason for that madness the character is unaware of, and that readers won't see until the third book. (And no, he told me, it's not "too many clones active, making all of them mad.")
Which made me revise my opinion of those scenes a lot. Ed is playing a deeper game here than I, and a lot of others, gave him credit for!
Malcolm
Thente Thunderspells Posted - 22 Oct 2010 : 01:22:46
I just finished this book last night (I was on vacation when it arrived) and must say that I'm having VERY mixed reactions to the book.

It hurts to read about all the dead and gone characters that I loved so much in the FR before they were destroyed for marketing purposes. It hurts to see how powerless and down trodden El, Storm, & the Simbul are too. And I'm elated with the ending because it makes me hope that possibly a lot of our refusals to buy 4E Shattered Realms stuff has made the WotC bean counters see the light, and perhaps they are trying to lure us back in by regenerating the Realms (sort of).

At the same time, I thought those scenes with a certain Lord were a bit contrived, and the main villain of this book is pretty much a caricature of an "evil villain". Did anyone else see that? I mean he always has been, but here it's "oooh I'm so powerful, everyone else is a play thing... wait for it, wait for it... BOOM! Hahaha it is 'I'" and then blast, he's gone for the rest of this book.

Don't know, I loved it and disliked parts of it for sure. I would love if some of the theories posted earlier are correct...
Shadowaxe Posted - 14 Oct 2010 : 17:02:00
quote:
Originally posted by The Hooded One

I'll convey your post to Ed directly. I know he's finished and turned in the final draft of BURY ELMINSTER DEEP, the sequel (to be released next August), and has started on the third book of the six.
He's REALLY enjoying writing these - - and thus far, like you, I've REALLY enjoyed reading them.
love,
THO



Tho, that is great to hear and means the [realm] to me!

You can tell that Ed is enjoying writing these; the fun shines through like a twinkling golden lion, flipped on high by Mirt - complete with cheeky grin and drinking breeches firmly on - and sparkling in the Faerunian sun's rays.

All I can say is bring on August, Bury Elminster Deep will be mine. O yes, it will be mine *Wayne's World smile on a Manshoon face* ...and I can't wait.




The Hooded One Posted - 14 Oct 2010 : 16:32:37
I'll convey your post to Ed directly. I know he's finished and turned in the final draft of BURY ELMINSTER DEEP, the sequel (to be released next August), and has started on the third book of the six.
He's REALLY enjoying writing these - - and thus far, like you, I've REALLY enjoyed reading them.
love,
THO
Shadowaxe Posted - 14 Oct 2010 : 09:08:36
Finished ‘Elminster must die.’

An absolutely superb book.

Thank you Mr Ed Greenwood, please do not stop writing like this – what an inspiration to wanna-be-writers!

What an outstanding ending/teaser and set-up for the next (and the sly Old Mage got up close and personal to Storm too. Nice.)

Right, time to re-read…
Caolin Posted - 29 Sep 2010 : 08:38:51
Ed has his own very distinct writing style. I personally love it but at times I find it hard to follow so I can see why some would not take to it. After recently reading through all of Tolkien's books (yes even the Silmarillion) I have noticed heavy influences from Tolkien in Ed's writing style. Where as Tolkien is very heavy on the description of landscapes and the setting in general, Ed fleshes out the characters in more detail in his writing.
Elfinblade Posted - 25 Sep 2010 : 13:05:14
An amazing novel by Ed. It was a mixed feeling reading about El, Storm and The Simbul, great to see them again, but just awful reading about how far they have fallen the past century. It really felt for them, and was teary-eyed in several parts of the novel. I felt Ed conveyed their lack of confidence in their abilities in a well written and heartfelt manner. I was very excited about seeing more of Mirt, Vangey and Mystra also of course. Seeing more of the interior of the Palace and Suzail itself was also a real treat :)

-Stig-

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