BurtonGuster
Member
- Joined
- May 28, 2013
- Messages
- 13
Does anyone have any idea of the title/author for this book? I believe its science fiction, not fantasy (though the human in the image has a sword). And it probably goes back to the 70s or so.
I could be misremembering but I swear this was on the Elric novel The Vanishing Tower.The artist is Michael Whelan, the picture was used on a heavy metal album cover by Cirith Ungol (who were influenced by Elric books), but I can't learn it's origin
View attachment 82143
A superb gang of geeksThanks everyone!
I have some of Michael Whelan's art books and thought it might be him or Jim Burns that created it, but couldn't find it.
You guys are always the best source to go to online for obscure science fiction references...
Yes, that is a brilliant scenario, and shows up in the story-cycles of each of the Avatars, each with a varying perspective/pov. I found the idea of these characters looking at different iterations of themselves, and some Avatars dislike/distrust other Avatars.I enjoyed the Eternal Champion Saga. My favorite parts was when the the diffract incarnations of them came together to battle a muitversal threat.
Yes, that is a brilliant scenario, and shows up in the story-cycles of each of the Avatars, each with a varying perspective/pov. I found the idea of these characters looking at different iterations of themselves, and some Avatars dislike/distrust other Avatars.
No, I dont think of read any in that series; must be later works. I read a lot of Moorcock in High School (over 30 years ago) and only recently (last 5-6 years) gone back to reread the titles I enjoyed then. I have some catching up to do. At that time, and in my middle class, california, suburban environ, i was uber-uncool for reading "obscure" pulp fiction authors like Moorcock and Lovecraft. Who's laughing now?Look up Elric Tales of the White Wolfe One the stories it contains is A Gothic Touch By Karl Edward Wagner . In this story Elric. Stormbringer and Moongluym meet up with Kane the Mystic Swordsman . Have you ever raised that series ? Its quite good. The first book to read in that series Bloodstone.
No, I dont think of read any in that series; must be later works. I read a lot of Moorcock in High School (over 30 years ago) and only recently (last 5-6 years) gone back to reread the titles I enjoyed then. I have some catching up to do. At that time, and in my middle class, california, suburban environ, i was uber-uncool for reading "obscure" pulp fiction authors like Moorcock and Lovecraft. Who's laughing now?
Yes, I know there is nothing uncool about these writers, was more commenting how the mainstream comes around decades later to catch up with the avant garde. Like Kate Bush's Running up that Hill all of a sudden blowing up again almost 40 years after its release. Yes, Ive read Howard, and much of Lovecraft's 'Circle of Weird.' i live not far from Ashton Smith's birthplace in Placer County, CA. (I am working on a serialized 'Lovecraftian Noir' in which the Femme Fatale is named Gelsamine Ashton Clark, in reference to smith; the intrepid forensic investigator is named Howard Phillips). I may actually have read the Road of Kings, and recognize Wagner's name and that of his Swordsman, but never pursued him. Was really into Cormac Mac Art for a moment, a legendary figure developed by Howard in fragments and short stories, then picked up and continued by Andrew Offut. I will have to look for Seaboard Quinn; him, I have not heard of, and did not know of Jack London story. Do you read Neal Stephenson? The Mongoliad Trilogy is an interesting collaboration (with Greg Bear and others) that feels a lot like Howard's Legendary Heroic Fiction. The impulse for rhe project came from Stephenson's disatisfaction with his own ability to describe combat sequences, so he enlisted the aid of a group of historical combat enthusiasts ( similar to Creative Anachronists?) who not only collected, restored and fabricated historically accurate arms and armour, but trained in their use. It appears Stephenson and his circle of like minded writers and amateurs would get together for mock combat and reenactments, and write what they observed. Like a figure drawing class for action sequences. Thank you for your reccomendations.Karl Edward Wagner began writing Kane stories in the late 1960's . In all, he wrote 5 books 3 of which are fulll length novels the last tow in the series are Novellas and short stories. Kane is an immortal heroic villain/antihero. This series is slowed and scored with a very lovcratian vein
1. Bloodstone
2. Darkness Weaves
3. Dark Crusade
4 Dear Angles Shadow
5. NightWinds
He also wrote an excellent Conan pastiche Conan The Road of Kings and another Howard Character Bran Mak Morn The Legion From the Shadows. With David Drake he court and excellent science fiction horror novel Killer nd he di excellent anthology of his bet horror stores In A Lonely Place
He was editor of and excellent 3 volume fantasy anthology series Echos of Valor I. II an III
For the record there's nothing uncool bout reading Michal Moorrock and H P Lovecraft. I also recommend Clark Ashton Smith and Robert E hpwrd very highly. Also Abraham Merritt , William Hope Hodgson , Francis Stevens C J Cutcliffe Hynd , Manley Wade Wellman
The Complete Tales of Jules De Grandin by Seaboard Quinn. He was contemporary of H P Lovecrat, Robert E Howard and Clark Ashton Smith. he was not nearly as well known but at a water . he was every bit their equal.
Also Jack London's astral projection fantasy novel The Star Rover . Its totally unlike anything. else London ever writer and, it's great book .
Yes, I know there is nothing uncool about these writers, was more commenting how the mainstream comes around decades later to catch up with the avant garde. Like Kate Bush's Running up that Hill all of a sudden blowing up again almost 40 years after its release. Yes, Ive read Howard, and much of Lovecraft's 'Circle of Weird.' i live not far from Ashton Smith's birthplace in Placer County, CA. (I am working on a serialized 'Lovecraftian Noir' in which the Femme Fatale is named Gelsamine Ashton Clark, in reference to smith; the intrepid forensic investigator is named Howard Phillips). I may actually have read the Road of Kings, and recognize Wagner's name and that of his Swordsman, but never pursued him. Was really into Cormac Mac Art for a moment, a legendary figure developed by Howard in fragments and short stories, then picked up and continued by Andrew Offut. I will have to look for Seaboard Quinn; him, I have not heard of, and did not know of Jack London story. Do you read Neal Stephenson? The Mongoliad Trilogy is an interesting collaboration (with Greg Bear and others) that feels a lot like Howard's Legendary Heroic Fiction. The impulse for rhe project came from Stephenson's disatisfaction with his own ability to describe combat sequences, so he enlisted the aid of a group of historical combat enthusiasts ( similar to Creative Anachronists?) who not only collected, restored and fabricated historically accurate arms and armour, but trained in their use. It appears Stephenson and his circle of like minded writers and amateurs would get together for mock combat and reenactments, and write what they observed. Like a figure drawing class for action sequences. Thank you for your reccomendations.
Oh, fantastic. Yes, I need to read the Jules de Gandin. It sounds much like I was imagining with the Howard Phillips adventure; occult detective and Natural Philosopher. And I am hunting down the "Star Rover" right now. Will look for Kings of the Night as well. "Snowcrash was my introduction to Stephenson as well, and its fun, very cyberpunk; but later works have really blown my mind; I think, literally, rearranged neural pathways. There are novels I just couldn't enter, but others I'm transported. His Baroque Cycle is epic in a macro and micro level. The trilogy is historic in its setting, Sir Isaac Newton, Leibniz, Robert Hook and the Members of the Royal Society all play significant roles in the narrative; it is science fiction in the sense that it is grounded in the scientific spirit of the times, the spirit of inquiry and accompanying naiveté; touching upon social sciences as well economics, physics, geography; and the decline of alchemy even as it laid the foundation for the scientific method. I last read the Mongoliad Trilogy, pandemic reading. The Diamond Age is also amazing; you might call it Nano-punk; cyberpunk at the level of engineering information and intelligence. More akin to Bruce Sterling than WIlliam Gibson. There is always so much left to read.
They must have been influenced by Tolkien, as well, as they have taken the name of a place in LOTR. Cirith Ungol is "Spider Pass" in one of Tolkien's elvish languages.The artist is Michael Whelan, the picture was used on a heavy metal album cover by Cirith Ungol (who were influenced by Elric books), but I can't learn it's origin