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The Eternal Champion (Paperback)

Michael Moorcock

The Eternal Champion (Paperback) Michael Moorcock List Price: $14.99
By: White Wolf Publishing
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 22 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Tolkien-esque hero story fans need not apply. 4 out of 5 stars.
6 of 6 people found this review helpful.

The most important thing about this book is the first story out of the four in this book. Originally published in the 1950's, it was a very different type of fantasy writing than the L.O.T.R. and Conan the Barbarian style that was and remains insanely popular. The Eternal Champion features a hero who is at times scared, unwilling, and most importantly, evil. The protagonist does not fully agree with his own actions and this presents a hero who is *gasp* human.

This seriously rocked the boat when held up against the other fantasy and sci-fi of the day. Has the anti-hero concept been more skilfully rendered since? Of course, several have done it better, and Moorcock himself has improved upon his early writing greatly, which is to be expected since he was 17 when he wrote The Eternal Champion.

The stories in the book are interesting enough, but the real value of this volume is the way it changed the rules for a genre of fiction and the fairly complete introduction to a decent series of books it provides. The series is well worth the read if you have a couple of months or years to get through it all and you want to see fantasy done with more of a human realist perspective.

Editorial Review:

Books 3,4,&5:The Eternal Champion,Phoenix in Obsidian &The Dragon in the S together from Michael Moorcocks fantasy sequence

Lord of the Spiders/Blades of Mars (Planet Stories Library)

Michael Moorcock, Roy Thomas

Lord of the Spiders/Blades of Mars (Planet Stories Library) Michael Moorcock, Roy Thomas Amazon Price: $11.04
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 3.0 of 5

Super Reader 3 out of 5 stars.
0 of 0 people found this review helpful.

Not quite as enjoyable at the first. Kane returns to Mars after getting some help and financing in building a machine, especially from an author acquaintance looking to recount his tales to the public.

He helps yet another rebellion succeed, fights some spider monsters, builds an airship, stops a war, and returns to find he actually has come back to the same time period, as his betrothed is still hanging around.

Editorial Review:

Once more into the matter transmitter for an unforgettable journey to ancient Mars! Pulled back to earth on the eve of his marriage to the beautiful Princess Shizala, brilliant physicist Michael Kane must once again journey to the Red Planet to reclaim a life of swordplay and high adventure in the tradition of Edgar Rice Burroughs! Kane finds himself on a different Mars, a place of blue giants and red revolution that ultimately leads to a ruined obsidian city inhabited by savage spider-men.

Cities: The Very Best of Fantasy Comes to Town

China Mieville, Michael Moorcock, Paul Di Filippo, Geoff Ryman

Cities: The Very Best of Fantasy Comes to Town China Mieville, Michael Moorcock, Paul Di Filippo, Geoff Ryman Amazon Price: $15.30
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 10 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Strange new places and odd new themes to tease the brain 5 out of 5 stars.
7 of 7 people found this review helpful.

Cities is a compilation of four stories by authors who are all masters of their craft; Paul Di Filippo, China Mieville, Michael Moorcock, and Geoff Ryman.

Beginning with Paul Di Filippo's `A Year In The Linear City', the book takes off like a bullet from a gun. Di Filippo's envisioned city is hundreds of thousands of blocks long, but bordered on one side by a river and on the other side by railroad tracks. Beyond these boundaries exist The Wrong Side Of The Tracks and The Other Shore, places of myth and superstition. The world is cleansed of their dead by the Fisherwives and the Yardbulls, celestial beings who come for the spirits of the dead. This is a truly outstanding tale of a strange city in a strange world, with compelling characters and original plotline. Need I say more?

Next is China Mieville's `The Tain', a unique and horrifying tale of what lays in wait behind our own mirrors. Call it a tale of vampires, or a tale of spectral imagery, a curse behind vanity, or a strange sci-fi-fantasy yarn of alternate universe/reality, but what it really amounts to is a chilling tale that is well worth picking up this book strictly for `The Tain' by itself.

Michel Moorcock's `Firing The Cathedral' would be the one letdown in the book, regardless of what high esteem I hold Moorcock in. This is a `Jerry Cornelius' adventure, but I think even fans of Moorcock's `Jerry' will find this short story to be just a tad too meandering. Moorcock is an extremely talented writer whom I felt was merely left wandering through the haze of useless obliqueness when this story was conceived. `Cathedral' touches down into the prose style of "guess what I'm thinking" sci-fi jumbles that I usually try to avoid. The writing was just a little too disjointed, and Moorcock is normally much better than this individual story.

Last of the collection is `V.A.O.' by Geoff Ryman, perhaps not as well known as the other three authors, but he writes a masterpiece with this tale of elderly inhabitants of a nursing home. V.A.O. stands for Victim Activated Ordinance, a security system put into place to protect the wealthy elders from the violent youths of the time. Or is it the elderly who are violent? In a closely monitored `home', these aged folks hide their computer codes beneath videos of golf matches, codes that launder money and track the activities of The Silhouette, leader of the `Age Rage' gang.

Cities is an outstanding addition to your collection of strange places to go, and I highly recommend you pick up a copy if you are a fan of any one of these four talented authors. If you aren't now, you soon will be. Enjoy!

Editorial Review:

China Miéville, Michael Moorcock, Paul Di Filippo, and Geoff Ryman: These award winners are on any list of the most inventive, popular, and critically acclaimed talents writing in the realms of fantasy and science fiction today. Their four original creations for this collection range from surreal visions of the infinite to high-tech nightmare; from apocalyptic ruins stalked by heroes and vampires to a near future where the aged terrorize the young.

Corum: The Coming Of Chaos (Eternal Champion Series, Vol. 7)

Michael Moorcock

Corum: The Coming Of Chaos (Eternal Champion Series, Vol. 7) Michael Moorcock List Price: $16.99
By: White Wolf Publishing
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 15 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

All Pace, No Substance 1 out of 5 stars.
9 of 41 people found this review helpful.

If you haven't read Moorcock before, you will be suprised by the lack of depth to his writing. 'Corum' is no exception. Moorcock's style is amateurish, but by no means slow.

'Corum' is basically set in a Celtic, Bronze Age Europe as man is starting to dominate and destroy two elf-like races, one of which Corum is a member. Corum decides to seek vengeance, but as a result of being sidetracked, ends up going on an Odyssey-like adventure.

The pace is fast - too fast, because very rarely does Moorcock describe the setting of a location or develop the characters to any great extent, even the main character, Corum. Exposure to characters lasts only a few pages on occasion, as the odyssey is quickly into full swing again.

I don't recommend this book to anyone requiring depth or development of character, or intelligent themes, for there is no attention to detail. This book seems to be written by an inexperienced author for a teenage audience, but I don't think it has been. I think Moorcock is a very average author - even for a "light read" author. If you are looking for a light read, but with decent characters who have real motives than read David Gemmell's Drenai Saga.

Editorial Review:

Corum: The Coming Of Chaos presents another face of the Eternal Champion in this landmark series. The seventh volume includes The Knight of the Swords, The Queen of the Swords, and The King of the Swords.

Masters Of The Pit (Planet Stories Library)

Michael Moorcock, Samuel R. Delany

Masters Of The Pit (Planet Stories Library) Michael Moorcock, Samuel R. Delany Amazon Price: $11.04
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 3 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Early Moorcock Doesn't Impress 3 out of 5 stars.
1 of 1 people found this review helpful.

Written under a pen-name, this grade-C adventure SF takes place on Mars. It feels like a by-the-numbers imitation of Edgar Rice Burroughs' Mars books-- though you may be amused by his references to other authors (their names are spelled backwards) in the first ten pages. Moorcock has written dozens of books worth reading-- this is at the bottom of the heap.

Editorial Review:

Michael Moorcock's Eternal Champion returns in the form of Michael Kane, a brilliant Earthman stranded on the treacherous deserts of Ancient Mars! In this sweeping, epic sword-and-planet adventure in the tradition of Edgar Rice Burroughs, Kane and his blue giant companion Hool Haji must travel to the far reaches of the Red Planet to halt the hideous Green Death, an unstoppable disease that rots the mind as well as the body. From gorgeous Karnala, City of Green Mists, to the empty streets of tainted Cend-Amrid to the forgotten weird-science laboratories of the lost, highly advanced Yaksha culture, Masters of the Pit promises stunning locales, disgusting Martian creatures, and relentless action from the Nebula and World Fantasy Award-winning creator of Elric of Melnibone!

The Dancers at the End of Time (S.F.Masterworks)

Michael Moorcock

The Dancers at the End of Time (S.F.Masterworks) Michael Moorcock List Price: $14.45
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 24 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Romantic Comedy 4 out of 5 stars.
10 of 10 people found this review helpful.

There is no denying that Michael Moorcock is an inventive writer. I've only started to read his work recently, starting with that irreverent novel about Jesus "Behold the Man", the peripatetic adventures concerning Elric, and now "Dancers At the End of Time".

This series of books is set in a future well beyond our own time. For Jherek Carnelian and the rest of his kind, our world is so far in the past (hundreds of thousands of millenia in the past) that history and Hollywood, fiction and fact have blurred together. Moorcock takes us so far into the future that "sand" on a beach is actually crushed bone, and characters behave in ways which would shock even the most open-minded people of our own society.

In Jherek Carnelian's society it is impossible for anyone to feel shock. No one is encumbered with the conventions and standards which we in our own time feel obliged to live by. In the future life is one long game without rules, a fairground in which to indulge. Death is practically an obsolete notion. Sounds like heaven on Earth, doesn't it? As space and time are no longer barriers, it wouldn't surprise me if another time traveller like Karl Glogauer had gone into the past and "implanted" the concept of heaven - the misinterpreted promise that all the misery and suffering, the turmoil and deprivation, would eventually be rewarded with everlasting life and blissful harmony. All in exchange for clean living and a lot of faith. This would have been a cruel trick for a time traveller to play, even if it wasn't intentional.

In the early 20th century Marcel Duchamp once declared that anyone can be an artist. In Jherek's time everyone is an artist, able to create their own environments to whatever specifications they desire, alter their bodily appearance whenever the whim takes them, and build menageries filled with specimans culled from anywhere and anywhen.

Jherek has a fondness for anything associated with his favourite period the 19th century. When it comes to nostalgia past eras are best loved by those who never experienced them. It's like someone obsessed with Robin Hood holding a romantic view of the Middle Ages. One object of beauty coveted by Jherek is the elegant Mrs Amelia Underwood. Much of Moorcock's story concerns Jherek's attempts to win the heart of Amelia Underwood in a series of well-intentioned gestures and temporal wanderings. I don't want to say too much more than that, but rest assured, it's an eventful ride. Sometimes it's hard to keep track of what the characters look like as they keep changing their appearance, but just hang in there. When Jherek pursues Amelia in 1896 he's like the proverbial fish out of water. You won't be disappointed.

Editorial Review:

Enter a decaying far, far future society, a time when anything and everything is possible, where words like 'conscience' and 'morality' are meaningless, and where heartfelt love blossoms mysteriously between Mrs Amelia Underwood, an unwilling time traveller, and Jherek Carnelian, a bemused denizen of the End of Time. The Dancers at the End of Time, containing the novels An Alien Heat, The Hollow Lands and The End of All Songs, is a brilliant homage to the 1890s of Wilde, Beardsley and the fin de siecle decadents, satire at its sharpest and most colourful.

The Lives and Times of Jerry Cornelius: Stories of the Comic Apocalypse

Michael Moorcock

The Lives and Times of Jerry Cornelius: Stories of the Comic Apocalypse Michael Moorcock Amazon Price: $10.20
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 6 Average rating: 3.5 of 5

Moorcock Still the Coolest 5 out of 5 stars.
7 of 8 people found this review helpful.

Jerry Cornelius, a product of sixties hip when Moorcock's name never seemed to be out of the papers, died, was resurrected and died again, certainly in terms of his fashionability. Now here he is with a bunch of the best of his earliest adventures coupled with a quartet of his best new ones, dealing with Clinton's foreign policy, Lady Diana's death-cult, Middle Eastern Politics and, in what is probably the best story in the book, events around the catastrophe of 9/11. And, to this reader's surprise at least, he seems even more relevant today than he did when he first hit the pages of New Worlds, that magazine of early post-modernist senisbility, some forty years ago. Moorcock's fingers were definitely on the pulse of our times and this collection proves it. Elegant, fast and sardonic, these are tales that are, like Scott Fitzgerald's,
distinctly of their time and yet retain a universality lacking in most other contemporary fiction. This is the best value on the literary market. As he proves in his McSweeney's Mammoth
Treasury story, Moorcock is also provides great entertainment while making us think a lot deeper than, for instance, the Matrix's rabbit hole. Totally recommended!

Editorial Review:

Jerry Cornelius – English assassin, physicist, rock star, messiah to the Age of Science – is one of fantastic literature’s greatest creations. Acclaimed by Moorcock’s readers, critics, and peers from Mick Jagger to J. G. Ballard, Cornelius is the ultimate postmodern antihero, more Borgesian than Asimovian. Three of the stories in this collection are here anthologized for the first time: "The Spencer Inheritance," which enmeshes Jerry with Princess Di; "Cheering for the Rockets," involving an attack on a Sudanese pharmaceutical plant; and "Firing the Cathedral," a novella based on 9/11 and its aftermath.

The Revenge of the Rose

Michael Moorcock

The Revenge of the Rose Michael Moorcock List Price: $5.99
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 8 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Questions answered and new questions posed 4 out of 5 stars.
8 of 8 people found this review helpful.

I really didn't have as much of a problem with the "talky" format of this book. After all, Elric tends to be a pretty contemplative guy. It filled in some background for me on Elric and his father,Sadric, which was welcome. Although we hear about Sadric in other books this is, as far as I know having read everything, but the Fortress of Pearl, the only time we see him in action. This book also provided some background on how Melnibone came to be what it was, as well as clarifying where its citizens may have come from. I liked seeing a female character, the Rose, who is quite capable of taking care of herself, who aside from Myshella Emporess of the Dawn and maybe Queen Yishana, tend to be absent from the other books. I'd like to see more stories in the future covering her other adventures.I love Wheldrake,as well, perhaps because I am a writer myself, albeit a definite amateur. He asked some of the questions I would ask and made some of the comments I would make, if I were able to talk to Elric. I also related to his poetic ramblings, being prone to them myself, and other aspects of his personality. I actually like the narrative style of this book better than the style of the earlier books, it seemed richer somehow. I would recommend reading it, but only if you've read at least the first few books, just to get an idea of the nature of Stormbringer, which is Elric's sword, the concept of the multiverse, and who, or what Elric's patron is and the relationship of the rulers of Melnibone to chaos. Chronologically, although not in order of publication, Revenge of the Rose follows book 4: Bane of the Black Sword.

As a further note, there is a mistake in the Kirkus review. The agent of chaos is named Gaynor the Damned, not Charion. Charion is a clairvoyant whom Elric and his companions meet in the Gypsy Nation.

Editorial Review:

Returning to the Dreaming City, the mad albino warrior Elric hears the tortured voice of his dead father amid the catacombs of his ancestors, and must battle the forces of hell with the help of a special woman. Reprint.

A Nomad of the Time Streams

Michael Moorcock

A Nomad of the Time Streams Michael Moorcock List Price: $14.99
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 20 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

One of Moorcock's most enjoyable EC volumes. 5 out of 5 stars.
2 of 2 people found this review helpful.

This is a book that mixes political commentary with fantastic voyages. Being more of prone to reading sword and sorcery types of novels, I was a bit apprehensive going into this one, but it kept me turning the pages until the end.

Our hero is thrust through a series of alternate realities for how our world might have turned out if certain turns of events were different. There isn't really anything magical or fantastic about these alternate realities, which is what makes it exciting. You feel like things could have been that way.

It was a thoroughly enjoyable departure from dark sorcery and demons of other Eternal Champion novels - not that I don't love those!

Editorial Review:

Strange worlds occupy the infinite multiverse. They are worlds very much like the Earth we know--worlds that but for a vew differences could be our own. Visit an Earth where historical fact is turned on its head; slavery remains a practice in the United States. This is the fourth volume in the epic. Includes The Warlord of the Air, The Land Leviathan, and The Steel Tsar.

The History of the Runestaff: "The Jewel in the Skull", "The Mad God's Amulet", "The Sword of the Dawn", "The Runestaff" (Fantasy Masterworks)

Michael Moorcock

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Editorial Review:

The earth has grown old, her landscapes mellow, her people lost in abrooding dream. It is an age of antique cities, scientific sorcery, crystal machines, great flying engines with mechanical wings. And the armies of the Dark Empire are relentlessly taking over the once-peaceful city states, ravaging and destroying as they advance, mile by brutal mile ...The Dark Empire has humiliated and multilated Dorian Hawkmoon, but it cannot rob him of his two consuming passions: his love for Yisselda of Brass and his hatred of her ruthless suitor Meliadus. But before he can defy the Dark Empire and win the beauteous Yisselda, he must seek the Runestaff, a quest that will send him into barbaric wonder and perverse evil ...and only if he succeeds will her avert the doom of all the world ...

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