'Heavy Metal' magazine January 1985
January, 1985, and on MTV, you can watch the latest video from Hall and Oates: Method of Modern Love'. Like so many of their videos, it's super-cheesy, but at the same time, a great rock song.
In the latest issue of Heavy Metal magazine, which features a front cover by Liberatore, there is not much worth noting in the 'Dossier' section, save for the book review page, titled 'Cystal Balls', which critiques two great 80s sf novels.
Mike McQuay's Jitterbug (my review here) is hailed as "...a scream - very hip, and deadly on-target about office politics and geopolitical behavior."
Sadly, the reviewer has much less praise for Harry Harrison's West of Eden, calling it a "hatchet-job", and "......Dino the Dinosaur Battles Tarzan the Apeman for the Fate of the Earth, a 481-page hardbacked sleeping pill...."
As far as the comics go, this issue of HM has new installments of "The Walls Of Samaris" by François Schuiten, "Tex Arcana" by John Findley, "The Hunting Party" by Pierre Christin and Enki Bilal, plus new material such as "Trance-End" by Lindahn and Lindahn, "Marlowskitz: Detective: Rock" by Riccardo Buroni and Ugo Bertotti, and the opening segment of a new El Borbah story, "El Borbah: Bone Voyage", by Charles Burns. All in all, a decent issue.
Here is that opening installment of 'El Borbah: Bone Voyage':
Thursday, January 15, 2015
Tuesday, January 13, 2015
Den II: Muvovum
Den II: Muvovum
by Richard Corben
by Richard Corben
'Den II: Muvovum' was one of the longest-running serials in Heavy Metal magazine, running in 13 parts from September, 1981 all the way to March, 1983.
While these installments all were very short in length, each of them delivered the D-cup imagery, T & A action, and sly humor that made the HM readership fond fans of Corben's work.
This trade paperback from Catalan Communications was printed in 1984, and compiles the entire 13-part series. It's a quality trade paperback, with 'slick' paper and very good color separations that show off Corben's unique color printing process - all the more impressive when you consider this was the early 80s, well before PC-based coloring was a mainstay of the industry.
It's not necessary to have read the first installment of 'Den' ('Den: Neverwhere') in order to understand the comparatively simple plot of 'Den II'. Without disclosing any spoilers, Den joins his friends in Zegium for a trip to the neighboring territory of Muvovum, there to search for the powerful Stones of Nar, the magic of which can transport Den (and his increasingly truculent girlfriend Kath) back to Earth.
No sooner have Den and Kath been transported to Earth, when trouble arrives in Zegium, in the form of the Queen, who seeks the Stones for her own use.
Events get even more dire when Den's friend Tarn goes astray in the Dramite country of Muvovum. Be prepared for some uniquely gruesome monster action......
It's up to Den to return to Neverwhere and set things aright....but he's not going to have it easy.
The softcore porn sequences that may have seemed racy back in the early 80s will probably be observed by contemporary readers with eye-rolling amusement; however, no matter how young and hip you are, Corben's artwork should impress.
'Den II' is an entertaining comic, whether you're reading it for nostalgia value; as an accompaniment to getting stoned; or both. I was fortunate to get this reasonably good-condition copy of 'Den II' for $5. Unfortunately, copies of this trade paperback compilation in good condition go for exorbitant prices.........indeed, this is true for many of the compilations of Corben's work Catalan issued in the 80s.
Maybe Dark Horse / New Comic Company, or UK publisher Titan Books, will reprint some of this work in new, affordable compilations.....?!
Labels:
Den II: Muvovum
Monday, January 12, 2015
Book Review: The Year's Best Fantasy Stories: 2
Book Review: 'The Year's Best Fantasy Stories: 2' edited by Lin Carter
4 / 5 Stars‘The Year’s Best Fantasy Stories: 2’ (192 pp) was published by DAW Books (No. 205) in August, 1986, and features cover art by George Barr.
I got my copy way back in August, 1976, when I saw it on the shelves among the other sf paperbacks at Gordon’s Cigar Store. At the time, I found it to be one of the better DAW anthologies. Upon rereading it nearly 40 years later, how does ‘Year’s Best Fantasy 2’ hold up ?
One thing that has become quite clear over the intervening years is that in 1976, as far as publishers were concerned, the category of fantasy was very much a sub-genre of sf. Most mass market paperbacks that dealt with fantasy were either the Lord of the Rings trilogy, or ancillary titles associated with that work. Aside from the LOTR, there might be some barbarian adventure titles on the shelving, but that was pretty much it. The idea that one day, much of the shelf space at major book retailers would be devoted to fantasy, would have seemed …..well……. fantastical.
The stories in ‘Year’s Best Fantasy 2’ all were first published in 1975, and at that time, print outlets for such stories were few. Most of the stories appeared in digest magazines like The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, small press magazines like Anduril, or anthologies from specialized publishers like Arkham House.
Most of the stories in this anthology are as much horror stories as they are fantasy, a reflection of the fact that in 1975, the genre was still centered on the tropes inherited from the pulp era.
In his Introduction, editor Lin Carter commiserates over the failure of 'The Silmarillion', the fabled Tolkein epic perpetually In Preparation, to be released in 1975 (the book finally came out in 1977, and turned out to be remarkably dull).
Carter is encouraged by the bestseller status of Richard Adam’s 1975 fantasy novel 'Shardik' (which also was a colossal bore).
The stories:
The Demoness, by Tanith Lee: self-consciously overwritten, but entertaining, tale of a female vampire.
The Night of the Unicorn, by Thomas Burnett Swann: an allegory set in Mexico’s Acapulco region.
Cry Wolf, by Pat McIntosh: Thula the warrior maiden meets a shadowy pair of adventurers. A fast- moving, and effective, sword-and-sorcery tale.
Under the Thumbs of the Gods, by Fritz Leiber: unremarkable Fafhrd and Mouser story; our heroes mourn lost loves.
The Guardian of the Vault, by Paul Spencer: a warrior is assigned a very special guard duty. One of the better entries in the anthology.
The Lamp from Atlantis, by L. Sprague de Camp: mild horror story about a fabled talisman. Surprisingly well-written, for a piece of de Camp short fiction.
Xiurhn, by Gary Myers: Lovecraft / Clark Ashton Smith homage involving an outcast mage who seeks vengeance on his tribe. Ponderous prose.
The City in the Jewel, by Lin Carter: as the editor of the ‘Year’s Best Fantasy’ series, Carter had no real scruples about promoting his own work. Sometimes his work was awful. But this ‘Thongor’ story, although employing a self-consciously ‘pulp’ –style prose, is reasonably entertaining.
In ‘Ygiroth, by Walter C. DeBill, Jr: Another Lovecraft-inspired tale about dark doings in ancient lands. Competent, if not all that memorable.
The Scroll of Morloc, by Clark Ashton Smith: this story was actually written by Lin Carter, one of a number of putative Smith tales Carter fabricated from plot scraps and titles from Smith’s posthumous belongings. The value of churning out a Smith pastiche is questionable; readers should prepare to encounter a remarkably constipated vocabulary, including words such as ‘jungle-girt’, ‘zenithal’ (pertaining to the zenith of astronomical bodies), ‘antehuman’, ‘thaumaturgies’, ‘shamanry’, ‘desuetude’ (to fall into disuse), and ‘protoanthropophagi’, among others.
Payment in Kind, by C. A. Cador: the corrupt citizens of a desert city receive their comeuppance. Another of the better entries in the anthology.
Milord Sir Smiht, the English Wizard: a ‘Dr. Eszterhazy’ story about an eccentric mage operating in Davidson’s proto-Steampunk version of late 18th century Central Europe. It relies on humor; unremarkable.
Summing up, ‘The Year’s Best Fantasy Stories: 2’ is one of the more rewarding volumes in the series. Well worth picking up.
The Demoness, by Tanith Lee: self-consciously overwritten, but entertaining, tale of a female vampire.
The Night of the Unicorn, by Thomas Burnett Swann: an allegory set in Mexico’s Acapulco region.
Cry Wolf, by Pat McIntosh: Thula the warrior maiden meets a shadowy pair of adventurers. A fast- moving, and effective, sword-and-sorcery tale.
Under the Thumbs of the Gods, by Fritz Leiber: unremarkable Fafhrd and Mouser story; our heroes mourn lost loves.
The Guardian of the Vault, by Paul Spencer: a warrior is assigned a very special guard duty. One of the better entries in the anthology.
The Lamp from Atlantis, by L. Sprague de Camp: mild horror story about a fabled talisman. Surprisingly well-written, for a piece of de Camp short fiction.
Xiurhn, by Gary Myers: Lovecraft / Clark Ashton Smith homage involving an outcast mage who seeks vengeance on his tribe. Ponderous prose.
The City in the Jewel, by Lin Carter: as the editor of the ‘Year’s Best Fantasy’ series, Carter had no real scruples about promoting his own work. Sometimes his work was awful. But this ‘Thongor’ story, although employing a self-consciously ‘pulp’ –style prose, is reasonably entertaining.
In ‘Ygiroth, by Walter C. DeBill, Jr: Another Lovecraft-inspired tale about dark doings in ancient lands. Competent, if not all that memorable.
The Scroll of Morloc, by Clark Ashton Smith: this story was actually written by Lin Carter, one of a number of putative Smith tales Carter fabricated from plot scraps and titles from Smith’s posthumous belongings. The value of churning out a Smith pastiche is questionable; readers should prepare to encounter a remarkably constipated vocabulary, including words such as ‘jungle-girt’, ‘zenithal’ (pertaining to the zenith of astronomical bodies), ‘antehuman’, ‘thaumaturgies’, ‘shamanry’, ‘desuetude’ (to fall into disuse), and ‘protoanthropophagi’, among others.
Payment in Kind, by C. A. Cador: the corrupt citizens of a desert city receive their comeuppance. Another of the better entries in the anthology.
Milord Sir Smiht, the English Wizard: a ‘Dr. Eszterhazy’ story about an eccentric mage operating in Davidson’s proto-Steampunk version of late 18th century Central Europe. It relies on humor; unremarkable.
Summing up, ‘The Year’s Best Fantasy Stories: 2’ is one of the more rewarding volumes in the series. Well worth picking up.
Friday, January 9, 2015
Occupied Spaces
'Occupied Spaces'
by Brad Johannsen
Harmony Books, 1977
If, during the late 70s, you opened a copy of the Publishers Central Bureau mail order catalog of remaindered and overstocked books.....
I happened to meet Brad Johannsen in a conference room floating about the New York Public Library, where he opened a drawing book, borrowed some colored pencils from the art department, and instantly created a cover for a small booklet ... for cash (Brad was broke). Brad didn't own a single copy of his own books, and he had an interview coming up... so we agreed to meet again and I gave him my copy of his second book, Occupied Spaces.
by Brad Johannsen
Harmony Books, 1977
If, during the late 70s, you opened a copy of the Publishers Central Bureau mail order catalog of remaindered and overstocked books.....
.....you were certain to see listed one Occupied Spaces, a book of psychedelic artwork by Brad Johannsen.
Occupied Spaces (48 pp) was published by Harmony Books, a sub-imprint of Crown Books, who were the kingpin of remainder publishing and marketing in the 70s. They remain a force in retail bookselling even today, providing the 'bargain books' titles you see on the tables at the front of every Barnes and Noble.
Spaces contains some striking, intricate artwork, interspersed with excerpts of text and poems from sources as diverse as Arthur Rimbaud, science writer Louis Thomas, 'The Practice of Zen', and Johannsen himself.
Needless to say, Spaces belonged to that unique category of '70s stoner' art that Heavy Metal was soon to represent in such mannered glory......
Whether you are motivated by nostalgia, or the desire for appropriate visual accompaniment to getting stoned, Spaces is worth investigating. Copies in good condition can be had from your usual online retailers for reasonable prices.
Johannsen provided cover artwork for a number of books and record albums during the 70s. These include album covers for two LPs from the Canadian group Lighthouse: 'Thoughts of Movin' On', and 'One Fine Morning'. An interesting, if rather esoteric, article about the fonts used for the album cover of 'One Fine Morning' is available here.
Johannsen contributed art to 'High Tide', an illustrated compendium of stories and poems from Herman Hesse and Lao Tzu (.......very 70s.......) published in 1972. Unfortunately, used copies of High Tide are very pricey (starting at $95).
I periodically do a Google search using his name, but sadly, information about Brad Johannsen remains scant. Interestingly, one of the reviewers of High Tide at amazon.com relates an anecdote about meeting Johannsen:
Unfortunately, online searches for additional information about Brad Johannsen turn up little else. He was present when someone met Steve Wonder......and that's about all I could find.
Labels:
Occupied Spaces
Monday, January 5, 2015
Book Review: The Garments of Caean
Book Review: 'The Garments of Caean' by Barrington J. Bayley
4 / 5 Stars
I picked this book up, along with another 10 treasured old paperbacks, at the Utah Book and Magazine store on 327 S. Main Street in Salt Lake City this past October.
'The Garments of Caean' first was published in 1976; this DAW Books version (206 pp) was released in February, 1980.
Upon first glance, the cover artwork, by H. R. Van Dongen, is unimpressive. It makes the book seem like yet another entry in humorous sf, the kind of book regularly written by Ron Goulart, and published by DAW, throughout the 70s.
However, the adage 'don't judge a book by its cover' makes sense here, because 'Garments' is actually a very readable examination of anthropology and sociology within the framework of a space opera, offering a more imaginative approach to this sub-genre then most other works of its era.
As the novel opens, Peder Forbarth, a resident of the planet of Ziode, finds himself filled with trepidation. He has reluctantly teamed up with the notorious smuggler Realto Mast, to make a clandestine space voyage to the remote world of Kyre. There, Forbarth is to explore the site of crashed spaceship, a spaceship originating from the planet Caean.
Caean is famed through the system for the style and textures of its clothing; however, few retailers on other planets have access to Caean inventory. Forbarth's mission is to locate the downed spaceship and loot its hold......a hold crammed with all manner of Caean clothing.
Although Peder Forbrath is a corpulent, timid man whose main occupation is as a clothing salesman and tailor, he braves the dangers of Kyre and succeeds in emptying the hold of the crashed spaceship. He selects as his reward seemingly modest article from the haul: a single suit of clothing.
But this is no ordinary suit; it is in fact a suit of wondrous Prossim cloth, a rare fabric whose origins are known only to the Caeans. And the suit selected by Forbarth is one of only five ever crafted by the finest tailor in the known worlds, Frachonard.
Once clad in his Frachonard suit, Peder Forbarth finds himself possessed of a new confidence......a new sense of self-worth, a new willingness to embrace, and overcome, life's challenges. As Forbarth embarks on a new career as a stylish 'man about town', easily mingling with the upper crust of society, he learns that when a man is clad in Caean clothing, the clothes do indeed make the man.
But for Peder Forbarth, donning the Frachonard suit is only the beginning. For there is a troubling mystery underlying the evolution of Caean, its society, and its fashion sense. And as Forbarth and his fellow citizens of Ziode are going to discover, there is much more than what meets the eye when it comes to Caean clothing......
'The Garments of Caean' is first and foremost an effort by Barrington J. Bayley to emulate Jack Vance. The narrative routinely makes use of a large assembly of eccentric, obscure adjectives, and adopts the same dry, slightly sardonic narrative tone that characterizes's Vance's literary style. The inclusion of a character named Realto Mast pays tribute to the Vance character 'Rhialto the Marvellous'.
However, Bayley also displays his own innate skill and worthiness as an author. While it focuses on anthropology and sociology in terms of its scientific focus, 'Garments' avoids getting bogged down in the sort of exposition that tends to render other sf novels addressing these themes dull and plodding.
'Garments' is filled with offbeat, imaginative passages that transcend the typical space opera. There is a gruesome 'Planet of Flies'; deep-space-dwelling races of highly modified humans who engage each other in brutal warfare; a planet with an ecology that that has evolved sonic weaponry; and a prison planet from which escape is seemingly impossible.
This is the first Bayley sf novel that I've ever read. Some critics call him one of the overlooked talents of late 20th century sf. Whether or not this is true, I certainly will be checking out his other novels in this regard.
4 / 5 Stars
I picked this book up, along with another 10 treasured old paperbacks, at the Utah Book and Magazine store on 327 S. Main Street in Salt Lake City this past October.
'The Garments of Caean' first was published in 1976; this DAW Books version (206 pp) was released in February, 1980.
Upon first glance, the cover artwork, by H. R. Van Dongen, is unimpressive. It makes the book seem like yet another entry in humorous sf, the kind of book regularly written by Ron Goulart, and published by DAW, throughout the 70s.
However, the adage 'don't judge a book by its cover' makes sense here, because 'Garments' is actually a very readable examination of anthropology and sociology within the framework of a space opera, offering a more imaginative approach to this sub-genre then most other works of its era.
As the novel opens, Peder Forbarth, a resident of the planet of Ziode, finds himself filled with trepidation. He has reluctantly teamed up with the notorious smuggler Realto Mast, to make a clandestine space voyage to the remote world of Kyre. There, Forbarth is to explore the site of crashed spaceship, a spaceship originating from the planet Caean.
Caean is famed through the system for the style and textures of its clothing; however, few retailers on other planets have access to Caean inventory. Forbarth's mission is to locate the downed spaceship and loot its hold......a hold crammed with all manner of Caean clothing.
Although Peder Forbrath is a corpulent, timid man whose main occupation is as a clothing salesman and tailor, he braves the dangers of Kyre and succeeds in emptying the hold of the crashed spaceship. He selects as his reward seemingly modest article from the haul: a single suit of clothing.
But this is no ordinary suit; it is in fact a suit of wondrous Prossim cloth, a rare fabric whose origins are known only to the Caeans. And the suit selected by Forbarth is one of only five ever crafted by the finest tailor in the known worlds, Frachonard.
Once clad in his Frachonard suit, Peder Forbarth finds himself possessed of a new confidence......a new sense of self-worth, a new willingness to embrace, and overcome, life's challenges. As Forbarth embarks on a new career as a stylish 'man about town', easily mingling with the upper crust of society, he learns that when a man is clad in Caean clothing, the clothes do indeed make the man.
But for Peder Forbarth, donning the Frachonard suit is only the beginning. For there is a troubling mystery underlying the evolution of Caean, its society, and its fashion sense. And as Forbarth and his fellow citizens of Ziode are going to discover, there is much more than what meets the eye when it comes to Caean clothing......
'The Garments of Caean' is first and foremost an effort by Barrington J. Bayley to emulate Jack Vance. The narrative routinely makes use of a large assembly of eccentric, obscure adjectives, and adopts the same dry, slightly sardonic narrative tone that characterizes's Vance's literary style. The inclusion of a character named Realto Mast pays tribute to the Vance character 'Rhialto the Marvellous'.
However, Bayley also displays his own innate skill and worthiness as an author. While it focuses on anthropology and sociology in terms of its scientific focus, 'Garments' avoids getting bogged down in the sort of exposition that tends to render other sf novels addressing these themes dull and plodding.
'Garments' is filled with offbeat, imaginative passages that transcend the typical space opera. There is a gruesome 'Planet of Flies'; deep-space-dwelling races of highly modified humans who engage each other in brutal warfare; a planet with an ecology that that has evolved sonic weaponry; and a prison planet from which escape is seemingly impossible.
This is the first Bayley sf novel that I've ever read. Some critics call him one of the overlooked talents of late 20th century sf. Whether or not this is true, I certainly will be checking out his other novels in this regard.
Labels:
The Garments of Caean
Saturday, January 3, 2015
Bunker's Family by Nicollet
'Bunker's Family' by Nicollet
from Metal Hurlant No. 14, February, 1977
Unfortunately, my efforts to translate the text of this comic using Google Translate are singularly unsuccessful, yielding mainly gibberish. And, as best as I can tell, an English translation of this comic was never printed in the pages of Heavy Metal.
Nonetheless, the warped, satiric genius of 'Bunker's Family' will come across regardless of your fluency in French.......
from Metal Hurlant No. 14, February, 1977
Unfortunately, my efforts to translate the text of this comic using Google Translate are singularly unsuccessful, yielding mainly gibberish. And, as best as I can tell, an English translation of this comic was never printed in the pages of Heavy Metal.
Nonetheless, the warped, satiric genius of 'Bunker's Family' will come across regardless of your fluency in French.......
Labels:
Bunker's Family by Nicollet
Thursday, January 1, 2015
Christmas 2014 Acquisitions
Christmas 2014 acquisitions
The majority of these paperbacks were obtained from Books and Melodies LLC, a bookstore located at 2600 James Street in Syracuse, New York:
The entire storefront is occupied by the bookstore. The sf section, while not overly large, contained a number of obscure and less frequently encountered titles, most priced at $2 - $3 each.
Horror fiction is interspersed with the mysteries. There is an extensive section of general fiction, and a large section for nonfiction works, as well as lots of shelf space for DVDs and records (the vinyl kind).
Books and Melodies is well worth visiting if you are in the Syracuse area.
I can't say I'm a big Delaney fan, but these two volumes may be worth investigating.
The Margaret St Clair novel was an utter mystery, while The Ophiuchi Hotline is a well-known example of mid-70s sf.
I'm skeptical of The Steel Crocodile, but it does have a classic late 60s - early 70s cover illustration from The Dillons. The Elwood anthology is likely mediocre, but worth a try.
Lowland Rider may be another over-rated early 90s 'psychological thriller' masquerading as a horror tale. The Chaos Weapon is a sequel of sorts to Kapp's 1972 novel Patterns of Chaos (review coming soon).
The Dead Astronaut is a collection of sf tales appearing in Playboy during the 60s. The Destroying Angel is second-gen cyberpunk, and seems like a worthy read.
The majority of these paperbacks were obtained from Books and Melodies LLC, a bookstore located at 2600 James Street in Syracuse, New York:
The entire storefront is occupied by the bookstore. The sf section, while not overly large, contained a number of obscure and less frequently encountered titles, most priced at $2 - $3 each.
Horror fiction is interspersed with the mysteries. There is an extensive section of general fiction, and a large section for nonfiction works, as well as lots of shelf space for DVDs and records (the vinyl kind).
Books and Melodies is well worth visiting if you are in the Syracuse area.
I can't say I'm a big Delaney fan, but these two volumes may be worth investigating.
The Margaret St Clair novel was an utter mystery, while The Ophiuchi Hotline is a well-known example of mid-70s sf.
I'm skeptical of The Steel Crocodile, but it does have a classic late 60s - early 70s cover illustration from The Dillons. The Elwood anthology is likely mediocre, but worth a try.
Lowland Rider may be another over-rated early 90s 'psychological thriller' masquerading as a horror tale. The Chaos Weapon is a sequel of sorts to Kapp's 1972 novel Patterns of Chaos (review coming soon).
The Dead Astronaut is a collection of sf tales appearing in Playboy during the 60s. The Destroying Angel is second-gen cyberpunk, and seems like a worthy read.
Labels:
Christmas 2014 Acquisitions
Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Book Review: The Eyes of the Overworld
Book Review: 'The Eyes of the Overworld' by Jack Vance
5 / 5 Stars
The stories in ‘The Eyes of the Overworld’ were first published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction in 1965 – 1966, with the compilation first appearing as an Ace paperback in 1966. This Pocket Books edition (190 pp.) was published in March, 1980; the cover artist is uncredited.
This is the second volume in the four-volume series of ‘The Dying Earth’, the other volumes being ‘The Dying Earth’ (1950), ‘Cugel’s Saga’ (1983), and ‘Rhialto the Marvellous’ (1984).
‘Eyes’ introduces the main character for two of the four books in the saga: Cugel the Clever, probably one of the most well-known antiheroes in sf and fantasy literature. Cugel is routinely amoral, grasping, and avaricious, and often as not has only himself to blame for getting into trouble with various wizards, deities, and angry townspeople.
At the same time, Cugel is often a source of ironic amusement, and often winds up getting the better of individuals who are as unpleasant as he is himself. The reader can’t help but wind up liking Cugel, despite his faults.
The opening chapter of ‘Eyes’ sees our hero running afoul of a powerful mage, who dispatches Cugel to a remote hinterland, there to recover two marvelous jeweled loupes, which allow their user to visualize a world of wealth and magnificence existing on a higher plane, a world quite nicer than that of the Dying Earth.
In the course of executing this quest Cugel has various adventures, all of which are related by Vance with the semi-stilted diction that characterizes his written works, a stilted prose that relies on sardonic humor laced with sharp bits of violence.
This being a Vance novel, of course, readers also must prepare to encounter a vocabulary of nouns, adverbs, and adjectives that rarely (if ever) appear in most literature of any genre.
Despite its comparatively short length, ‘Eyes’ remains an exemplary fantasy / sci-fi novel and is a more worthy read than many of the 500+ pp novels that now dominate the retail shelves.
If you haven’t yet read any of the Dying Earth novels, ‘Eyes’, along with ‘Cugel’s Saga’, remain the two best entries in the series, and are well worth getting, even though copies in good condition are often expensive.
5 / 5 Stars
The stories in ‘The Eyes of the Overworld’ were first published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction in 1965 – 1966, with the compilation first appearing as an Ace paperback in 1966. This Pocket Books edition (190 pp.) was published in March, 1980; the cover artist is uncredited.
This is the second volume in the four-volume series of ‘The Dying Earth’, the other volumes being ‘The Dying Earth’ (1950), ‘Cugel’s Saga’ (1983), and ‘Rhialto the Marvellous’ (1984).
‘Eyes’ introduces the main character for two of the four books in the saga: Cugel the Clever, probably one of the most well-known antiheroes in sf and fantasy literature. Cugel is routinely amoral, grasping, and avaricious, and often as not has only himself to blame for getting into trouble with various wizards, deities, and angry townspeople.
At the same time, Cugel is often a source of ironic amusement, and often winds up getting the better of individuals who are as unpleasant as he is himself. The reader can’t help but wind up liking Cugel, despite his faults.
The opening chapter of ‘Eyes’ sees our hero running afoul of a powerful mage, who dispatches Cugel to a remote hinterland, there to recover two marvelous jeweled loupes, which allow their user to visualize a world of wealth and magnificence existing on a higher plane, a world quite nicer than that of the Dying Earth.
In the course of executing this quest Cugel has various adventures, all of which are related by Vance with the semi-stilted diction that characterizes his written works, a stilted prose that relies on sardonic humor laced with sharp bits of violence.
This being a Vance novel, of course, readers also must prepare to encounter a vocabulary of nouns, adverbs, and adjectives that rarely (if ever) appear in most literature of any genre.
Despite its comparatively short length, ‘Eyes’ remains an exemplary fantasy / sci-fi novel and is a more worthy read than many of the 500+ pp novels that now dominate the retail shelves.
If you haven’t yet read any of the Dying Earth novels, ‘Eyes’, along with ‘Cugel’s Saga’, remain the two best entries in the series, and are well worth getting, even though copies in good condition are often expensive.
Labels:
The Eyes of the Overworld
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)