Wednesday, September 29, 2021

Book Review: Hiero's Journey

Book Review: 'Hiero's Journey'
Hiero's Journey
The Unforsaken Hiero 
by Sterling Lanier
5 / 5 Stars

‘Hiero’s Journey’ first was published by Chilton books in hardcover in 1973. A Bantam paperback edition was released in 1973, and a Del Rey paperback in 1983. 

A sequel, ‘The Unforsaken Hiero’, was released in 1983 by Del Rey. 

[Apparently, Lanier had prepared a third manuscript, with the intention of completing a Hiero trilogy, but it never saw publication.] 

Both Del Rey versions had excellent cover art by Darrell Sweet.

All these editions, being long out of print, nowadays have ever-steeper asking prices. 

An omnibus edition of both novels, titled ‘Hiero Desteen’ (532 pp), was published by the Science Fiction Book Club / Doubleday in 1984 and while it, too, has high asking prices, it probably is the most economical way to obtain the series. I was able to find a rather beat-up copy at Wonder Book and Video in Frederick, MD, for under $5.

Sterling Lanier (1927 – 2007) was an American sci-fi and fantasy author who, during the 60s, 70s and 80s, wrote a number of short stories for the digests, including many entries in the so-called ‘Brigadier Ffellowes’ series. Along with the two novels in the ‘Hiero Desteen’ series, Lanier wrote ‘Menace Under Marswood’ (1983), another sc-fi novel, for Del Rey.

In addition to being a writer of science fiction, Lanier is remembered as an editor who made a momentous decision: in the mid-60s, while an editor for Chilton books, who mainly published manuals for automobiles, Lanier received the manuscript for 'Dune' and persuaded the company to publish the book in hardcover. 'Dune' of course became a publishing phenomenon, thanks to Lanier’s willingness to have Chilton take a chance and issue its first-ever fiction title.

I remember reading the Hiero novels back in the early 80s, and finding them quite entertaining. How do they stack up when re-read nearly fifty years later ? Quite well, all things considered.......... 

The novels are set in North America, some 5,000 years after the late 20th century and the advent of World War Three (referred to as ‘the Death’). Most of the continent is a wilderness inhabited by small outposts of civilization. Due to the effects of radiation, mutant animals of all types have evolved to roam the fields, swamps, and forests. Some are harmless, while others are ferocious predators that must be treated with respect - if not fear. 

The territory of Kanda (i.e., Canada) is governed by the Metz Republic, which in turn operates under the precepts of the Kandan Universal Church, a kind of post-apocalyptic manifestation of Catholicism. The titular Hiero Desteen is a priest in the Church, and, despite his youth, an experienced woodsman and explorer.

Technology in North America is at a 19th-century level, but the absence of communications infrastructure is compensated for by the telepathic abilities of the priestly class of the Metz Republic. Hiero Desteen’s telepathy is powerful enough to enable him to befriend a sentient moose, named Klootz, and an intelligent bear named Gorm. 

These animals accompany Hiero on his eponymous Journey south from Kanda into the vast wilderness of what once was known as the United States. Hiero’s mission ? Find and recover a lost technology that will aid the Metz Republic in its clandestine war against the Dark Brotherhood, a coalition of fanatics who seek to empower themselves by reviving the destructive forces of the pre-apocalyptic era.

In his adventures in 'Hiero's Journey' and 'The Unforsaken Hiero', Hiero will encounter all manner of deadly adversaries, such as a psychic vampire who plucks its victims as they trudge though the marshes; S'duna, the malevolent leader of the Brotherhood who oversees a specialized torture chamber; and a mutated slime mold capable of absorbing and digesting grown men. 

But Hiero will benefit from the company of both human and animal allies in his struggle with the forces of evil. And the ultimate conflict to decide the future of Kanda will be decided by the clash of armies on the shores of the Lake of Weeping............

I mused long and hard as to whether or not the Hiero novels deserved a four star or a five star score. In the end, I settled on a five star score. 

While it's true that in the second volume the narrative begins to get a bit repetitive, it's also true that author Lanier's prose style throughout the series is clear and devoid of New Wave era self-indulgence. The books include an interesting collection of memorable characters and villains. The books impart their overarching theme of eco-awareness, and the benefits of a Return to Nature, in a subtle manner that avoids belaboring the reader with a 'message'. And the second volume culminates in a well-crafted battle scene that, although providing a predictable ending, does so in a suspenseful manner.

And finally, 'Hiero's Journey' and 'The Unforsaken Hiero' are, first and foremost, fun. They don't take themselves too seriously (a sin made by many New Wave era novels), and they provide a very readable, modernized interpretation of the Planetary Romance genre. Accordingly, I'm comfortable with a five-star rating for the Hiero novels.

Monday, September 27, 2021

More Old School treasures

 More Old School Treasures
Poking around in the boxes in the back of the store continues to yield some nice Vintage Treasures, at affordable prices. Recent acquisitions include:

Conan the Barbarian: The Skull of Set: A Marvel Graphic Novel from 1989. Some great artwork by Paul Gulacy.

Hard-Boiled Defective Stories: an oversize compilation of Burns's 'El Borbah' comics from 1983 - 1988. 

Turbo Jones: Pathfinder : a 1991 compilation of the black-and-white sci-fi comic that first appeared in the UK magazine Wildcat (1988 - 1989).


And then we have..........

Daddy Cool: this 1984 graphic novel is a real rarity. It was issued by 'Melrose Square', an imprint of L.A. - based paperback publisher Holloway House. It didn't do well despite the fact that Holloway simultaneously released the book in paperback format (below). Which is a shame, because Daddy Cool features outstanding artwork by the talented Filipino artist Alfredo Alcala.

So, let the fanboys gather around the front of the store holding their 30 Pulls for the month, I'll head to the back........... where the good stuff resides.

Saturday, September 25, 2021

Magic Man by Herb Alpert

'Magic Man'
by Herb Alpert
September, 1981
September, 1981, and on the radio one can hear the latest single from Herb Alpert, a smooth jazz instrumental titled 'Magic Man', a track from the eponymous album.

The song would peak at number 79 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in mid-September.

Wednesday, September 22, 2021

Book Review: Nightrider

Book Review: 'Nightrider' by David Mace
0 / 5 Stars

‘Nightrider’ (304 pp.) was published by Panther / Granada (UK) in April 1985. The cover illustration is uncredited, but attributed to Chris Foss. The novel was published in the US in 1987 by Ace Books.

I have reviewed two other novels by UK author Mace; ‘Demon-4’ and ‘’Fire Lance’, which also mingle sci-fi with technothriller stylings and a determinedly mordant worldview. 

However, ‘Nightrider’ is much worse than those two titles. It’s so awful I gave up around page 70. I couldn't take it anymore.........

The plot has something to do with the eponymous spaceship being dispatched to find a rebellious colony located in ‘Hades’, a desolate region of space outside the boundaries of the solar system. Along with a multiethnic crew of six, Nightrider is equipped with the latest in AI and advanced weaponry. Once the rebel base is found, then Nightrider and its crew are expected to destroy the base and its inhabitants.

This sounds like a decent enough premise for a sci-fi action novel, but Mace’s prose in ‘Nightrider’ is an exemplar of how to not write a narrative. 

Routine shipboard maneuvers are ponderously related, as if being transcribed from an accompanying technical manual (an account of how much better it is to eat Chinese food, as opposed to other types of cuisine, in a higher gee environment takes up three-quarters of a page). 

And dialogue between crewmembers goes beyond wooden in its presentation, as this excerpt from an early chapter, where crewmembers Kim and Sandra are having a conversation, shows:

‘Well, let’s say it’s got most of the chaos back under control. It’s a principle of pragmatic rationalism not to underestimate the problem by exaggerating your achievements. Of course I like it. It works and it’s honest. Take us. It’s a much more intelligent procedure to co-opt and assign the right individuals to fill your requirements than to condition people to volunteer on grounds of national or political or religious chauvinism. How can you target that kind of conditioning to be sure that exactly the right people happen to volunteer ? If there’s a job to be done that’s evaluated as necessary for the Earth, then whatever the job is, do it right.’

‘You don’t have qualificationist sympathies, then ? Sometimes you almost talk as if you do.’

‘Ah, that’s just my flippant style. I wouldn’t question the reasons for necessity evaluation. Think of the economic load that Nightrider represents. We wouldn’t be here if there weren’t reasons enough. No, no – I’d just be interested in the reasons if they happen to be available. I just look at things that way. Maybe it’s the political instability in Westamerica during my formative years. Not as serene as Serenity.’ 

I'm not sure what 'qualificationist sympathies' refers to.........but by this point in the novel, I was too bored to care.

The verdict ? If you absolutely have to read a David Mace book from the 1980s, then 'Demon-4' and 'Firelance' are much better reads than 'Nightrider'.

Monday, September 20, 2021

Mickey Rat 'In Old Chinatown'

Mickey Rat: 'In Old Chinatown'
by Robert Armstrong
from Mickey Rat No. 3
Last Gasp, 1980

Our favorite rat goes seeking adventure in an Ethnic Enclave.......


Friday, September 17, 2021

Valerian: Heroes of the Equinox

Valerian: Heroes of the Equinox
by Pierre Christin (writer) and Jean-Claude Mézières (art) 
Dargaud, 1984
'Valerian: Heroes of the Equinox' first was serialized, as Les Héros de l’équinoxe, in 1978 in the French magazine Pilote. In 1984 it was one of a number of Valerian album de bande dessinee titles selected for republication as a graphic novel, in English, for the U.S. market.

The plot has something to do with a competition being held on the planet Simlane, where the entire population is senescent and its renewal dependent on having an offworld male provide a kind of space-age sperm donation (?!) to the Supreme Mother, the planet's female Goddess.

Representing the Galaxity federation, Valerian finds himself competing alongside Ortzog of Bourgnouf, Blumflum of Malalum, and Irmgaal of Krahan. 

Imgraal and Ortzog are over-muscled blockheads clearly meant to satirize American superheroes (particularly Marvel superheroes), while Blumflum probably is meant to satirize Dr. Strange.

The competition involves ascending the mountain atop the island of Filene, where a temple to the Supreme Mother awaits at the summit. During their ascent the contestants must negotiate hostile terrain, and hostile wildlife. 

Valerian, physically smaller and far less imposing than the other Heroes, relies on Gallic pluck and perseverance, in contrast to the bombastic styles of the other contestants. Along the way, Christin and Mezieres sneak in a homage to Moebius:

'Heroes of the Equinox' is a decent enough example of a late 70s entrant in the Valerian canon. Mezieres' art is imaginative, aided by a coloring scheme as good as, if not better, than anything being used in US comics at the time (with the exception of Richard Corben).

Given that Pilote was aimed at what is nowadays termed the Young Adult audience, it's a bit odd that Pierre Christin's plot would emphasize political satire (the Heroes each represent a different political ideology, all of which are completely unsuitable for Simlane, but the Heroes are too arrogant to realize this) which, presumably, would have been over the heads of the juvenile readership. But then, by the time 'Heroes of the Equinox' was published in Pilote every reader had to know that Christin was prone to using the comic to make political statements.

Summing up, if you are a fan of the bande dessinee of the Pilote and Metal Hurlant era, and you have some familiarity with the subtleties of the French approach to political satire, then 'Heroes of the Equinox' likely will have its appeal. 

While copies of these early 1980s graphic novels from Dargaud can be hard to find (I was lucky to grab a copy in decent condition for just 10 bucks), 'Heroes of the Equinox' is one of several episodes compiled in Cinebook's Valerian: The Complete Collection: Volume 3, published in 2017. You can find copies of Volume 3 on sale from your usual online retailers for under $25.

Tuesday, September 14, 2021

Burning Bridges by the Mike Curb Congregation

'Burning Bridges' by the Mike Curb Congregation
1971
While a student at California State University, Northridge, in the early 1960s, Mike Curb (b. 1944) wrote a jingle that was used by the Honda motorcycle corporation for a highly successful advertising campaign

Sensing opportunity, Curb dropped out of the college and embarked on a rewarding career as a scorer and composer for film and TV productions. 
In the late 60s, Curb formed The Mike Curb Congregation, a vocal group styled after the popular mixed-gender group 'Ray Conniff and the Singers'. 

In 1970 the Congregation performed the song 'Burning Bridges', composed by Lalo Shifrin and used as the theme for the opening and closing credits of the Clint Eastwood film Kelly's Heroes

A year later, the song was released as a single by the Congregation, and peaked at No. 34 in the Billboard top 40 in March, 1971.


According to a YouTube commentator, the video clip posted here likely is taken from a 1971 episode of the Mike Douglas Show, with Curb playing piano in the foreground.

The wardrobe for the Congregation shows a fascinating mix of 'Groovy' hippy style, melded with a sci-fi sensibility...........as if the Congregation were visitors from the future, as the future might be envisioned in 1971. 

When combined with the wholesome appearances of the young people in the Congregation, it makes for a trippy 70s experience like no other........!   

Saturday, September 11, 2021

Book Review: Morningstar

Book Review: 'Morningstar' by David Gemmell

3 / 5 Stars

'Morningstar' (290 pp) first was published in the UK in 1992; this Del Rey paperback was released in October, 1993, and features cover artwork by Mike Posen.

[This is a standalone novel, with no continuity with any of Gemmell's fantasy series.]

The book is framed as a flashback by an elderly Bard, Owen Odell, who is reminiscing about his younger days as the friend and confidante of the legendary freedom fighter......... the swashbuckling outlaw who took from the rich and gave to the poor........... the Morningstar: Jarek Mace !

As the novel opens, Odell - the outcast son of a wealthy and influential royal family of the Angostin clans - is struggling to earn his keep as a singer and a magician in the increasingly lawless northern city of Ziraccu.

Odell has heard rumors circulating about the Angostin King of Ikenas, a ruthless tyrant named Edmund. Edmund seeks to subjugate not just Ziraccu, but the entire region surrounding it. Odell decides to flee the city for the wilder, less developed Highlands; there, he encounters Jarek Mace and his loose coalition of thieves and bandits, who earn their living preying on the travelers who take the forest roads.

Although Mace is a criminal, who cares only for himself, he has sufficient charisma to induce Owen Odell to join the band of cut-throats and malcontents who look to Mace as their leader. 

As the tyranny of King Edmund settles over the land, Mace finds himself pressured to be more than a bandit chieftan.......to be, in fact, the leader of the Resistance. 

But as Mace, Odell, and the hastily rebranded 'freedom fighters' are to discover, Edmund and his lieutenants have no qualms about using the foulest of dark sorceries to crush any rebellion........ 

As with Gemmell's other fantasy novels, 'Morningstar' is a fast-moving and engaging read. And, as with those other novels, its major themes revolve around injecting notes of realism into the template of the Heroic Fantasy narrative. 

We witness Owen Odell's transformation from a naive, idealistic young man into an adult who recognizes that the legends of every hero hide some Uncomfortable Truths, truths that wind up being carefully edited from the retelling. 

Notes of Humanism also are injected - somewhat obviously - into the story; for example, we come to know that beneath his seeming insouciance and casual disregard, Jarek Mace is struggling with his sense of duty to free his fellow man and woman from the cruelties callously imposed by the Privileged Classes.

The major weakness of 'Morningstar' comes in the later chapters, in which author Gemmell introduces some plot contrivances ( including Time Travel ?! ) that, in my opinion, are too facile to be effective.

Summing up, 'Morningstar' is a solid 3-star adventure fantasy novel, particularly if you're looking for an alternative to the brick-sized novels that make up the majority of the books currently on the store shelves; just be prepared for an underwhelming ending.

Thursday, September 9, 2021

Blast Bartleby by John Workman

Blast Bartleby
by John Workman
from Heavy Metal magazine, May 1979
also from Wild Things, 1986
Another one-pager that adroitly sums up the Heavy Metal aesthetic.......... 

Monday, September 6, 2021

The End of Summer from 'Salem's Lot

The End of Summer
Chapter One, Ben (I)
'Salem's Lot by Stephen King
October 17, 1975
By the time he had passed Portland going north on the turnpike, Ben Mears had begun to feel a not unpleasurable tingle of excitement in his belly. It was September 5, 1975, and summer was enjoying her final grand fling. The trees were bursting with green, the sky was a high, soft blue, and just over the Falmouth town line he saw two boys walking a road parallel to the expressway with fishing rods settled on their shoulders like carbines.

Saturday, September 4, 2021

Book Review: Shining Steel

Book Review: 'Shining Steel' by Lawrence Watt-Evans

5 / 5 stars

‘Shining Steel’ (216 pp.) was published by Avon Books in June, 1986. The striking cover illustration is by Carl Lundgren. It is one of several novels by Watt-Evens loosely organized into the so-called ‘Shining Steel’ series.

Since 1980, Watt-Evans (b. 1954) has been a prolific author of original sci-fi and fantasy novels, as well as novels for franchise properties such as ‘Aliens’ and ‘Star Trek’. 

‘Shining’ is set on the planet of Godsworld, colonized centuries ago by a starship carrying Christian Fundamentalists anxious to escape the turmoil afflicting Earth. 

The descendants of these colonists have turned the planet into a patchwork of sects, all constantly warring with each other over obscure questions of doctrine. Since technology on Godsworld has regressed to that of the of 19th century, battles are conducted with edged weapons, and those few firearms for which there is sufficient ammunition are deployed with deliberation and care.

The novel’s protagonist is John Mercy-of-Christ, a model of Christian rectitude and the military commander of the True Word and Flesh sect. In the opening chapters, John leads an attack on a village known to support heretics. John expects a quick victory, followed by the requisite execution of those enemy survivors who refuse to convert to the True Word sect, and the rape and enslavement of their women, actions considered justifiable by the martial codes governing the sectarian conflicts on Godsworld.

However, John and his troops encounter the unthinkable: the villagers are equipped with advanced weapons, weapons that can change the balance of power on Godsworld. John learns that the weapons were obtained from a new faction on Godsworld: The People of Heaven.

The Heaveners, as they are called, not only have advanced weapons, but an astonishing variety of material goods never before seen by anyone on Godsworld. It seems the Heaveners have formed an alliance with an offworld entity, the Bechtel-Rand corporation. Indeed, after centuries of isolation, a resurgent Federation is contacting long-lost colony worlds and auctioning development rights to those worlds to corporate entities. Godsworld has, in essence, been turned into the modern-day equivalent of a trading post.

John struggles to cope with the changed reality of life on Godsworld, life now dictated by corporate administrators who are indifferent, even amused, by the theological conflicts of its inhabitants. But although John is not an educated man, he is willing to alter his doctrinal rigidity when circumstances dictate it prudent to do so. And John realizes that there may be a way to turn the tables on the planet’s new corporate masters……….  

In 1980s sci-fi, it wasn’t unusual to have Christian Fundamentalists as villains; for example, they control the near-future Earth in John Shirley’s ‘Eclipse’ (1985), and visit cruel punishments on hapless villagers in Lester Neil Smith's 'The Crystal Empire' (1986). The first half of ‘Shining Steel’ has considerable fun in depicting John Mercy-of-Christ as a hapless scripture-quoting rube, whose devotion to dogma has left him ill-prepared to deal with a technologically advanced society indifferent to religion.

However, the second half of the novel diverts from a mocking treatment of Christian Fundamentalism and instead takes a more subtle and nuanced path: is the secular Corporation, with its single-minded focus on profit and economic exploitation, any better a substitute for religious zealotry ? 

‘Shining Steel’ s allegorical nods to the real-world exploitation of Third World countries and cultures, by those of the mercenary First World, gives the novel a depth that is adeptly conveyed by Watt-Evans’s clear and crisp prose style.

I finished ‘Shining Steel’ comfortably convinced that this novel deserves a five-star rating. Readers looking for a treatment of the conflict between Religion and Science that is more imaginative than most will find much to like here.

Thursday, September 2, 2021

August 2021 Graphic Novels

 August 2021 Graphic Novels

On a trip to a comic book store in upstate New York last week, I came across a trio of vintage graphic novels that were nicely priced.

'The Jewel in the Skull' was issued by Savoy Books in 1979 in partnership with Big O Publishing. This was one of a number of graphic novels released in the 1970s, illustrated in black & white by James Cawthorn, depicting Michael Moorcock's characters. 

Savoy Books was a rather unique, rather eccentric UK publishing house

'Blueberry 5: The End of the Trail' was one of a number of graphic novels issued by Marvel's Epic Comics imprint, offering English translations of Moebius's 'Lieutenant Blueberry' bande dessinees

'The End of the Trail' (1990) compiled the 1983 and 1986 episodes La dernière carte ('The Last Card') and Le bout de la piste ('The End of the Trail'). 

These Epic translations of 'Blueberry' have steep / exorbitant asking prices, so I was happy to get this copy for $15.

'Alien Legion: Slaughterworld' (Marvel / Epic Comics, 1991) is a compilation of issues 1 (April 1984) and 7 - 11 (April 1985 - December 1985) of the comic published by Epic.

All in all, some worthwhile reading material to close out the Summer of 2021.