Finished Steven Erikson's
Malazan Book of the Fallen series. Ten books and some 11000+ pages of the greatest and at times not so interesting fantasy writing behind me, I'd still recommend it to people who haven't read it - though not as enthusiastically as during the times I was at stretches in the story I found particularly strong (and there are many).
Erikson took a lot of effort in the final two books (to be read as one book actually) to bring an end to the series, still I found only some lines, then ultimately tied, satisfying. Now would be a great time to reread the whole thing, as I'm sure I'd get more of the complex intertwinings and details the second time around, but this would take me about a year focusing on just this series again, and I just can't.
Overall, it offers one of the best writing, inside fantasy as a genre and in general, especially the philosophic side of it. There was too much of a good thing though in this regard here and there - it's always interesting and deep, but when it happens chapter after chapter without much else going on story-progress-wise (as it does now and then), it got tiring nonetheless. Also, when a lot of the myriad characters indulge in these melancholic, introspective musings and the individuality of each of these people starts to fade because of this, it often seems as if you'd be listening to only one tragic mind.
If you wanna find out if this series might be for you,
this article maybe helps.