JasonZavoda wrote:I picked up a ton of William Morris on my kindle for free from Amazon and need to sit down with it. For $1.99 I bought the Robert E. Howard Omnibus (after picking up a number of the recent trade sized Howard collections). I just finished Gods of the North and Queen of the Black Coast.For $1.99 the Howard Omnibus has 99 Howard stories, but only 12 of the Conan stories (I think there were 16 or 18) but I saw another collection for .99c that has the complete Conan.The amount of material available for free on these ereaders is amazing (I have 780 stories and collections on mine right now). I've been reading through some of the authors that inspired Lovecraft, just finished a few Algernon Blackwood, namely the Wendigo which is very Lovecraftian. I'm going to start on Howard's Shadows in the Moonlight.
FormCritic wrote:How is the Howard Omnibus running on your Kindle? I have not purchased it because Nook Color reviews warn that it runs very slow.
MetamorphosisSigma wrote:I read the first Viriconium book (The Pastel City). I need to pick up the others.
JasonZavoda wrote:There is a soft cover collection of all 4 Viriconium books. I have it around somewhere I will have to see what the title and isbn are.
FormCritic wrote:One of the best books in my collection is a compliation by Zelazny titled, The Great Book of Amber.It is a collection of both series of Amber novels in one volume.
I head back to re-read at least the first series once every decade.
MetamorphosisSigma wrote:Me too. The first five (Nine Princes in Amber through The Courts of Chaos) are classic. The second five are the most disappointing sequel series ever, IMHO. They make the last three Dune books (EDIT: by this I mean the ones by Frank, I wouldn't read the others at all, so wouldn't know) look like masterpieces .
MetamorphosisSigma wrote:Me too. The first five (Nine Princes in Amber through The Courts of Chaos) are classic. The second five are the most disappointing sequel series ever, IMHO. They make the last three Dune books (EDIT: by this I mean the ones by Frank, I wouldn't read the others at all, so wouldn't know) look like masterpieces .The first-person perspective Zelazny uses (a rare thing in SF/F) gives the whole thing a hardboiled detective kind of feel which works great. The amnesiac godling angle is great, too. My favorite line: "Out of every life a little blood must flow. Unfortunately it was my turn again."
Badmike wrote: Yes, a Kane fan! I also am surprised at his lack of popularity...I run into fantasy afficianados all the time who have never even heard of him (?). I think it hurts that all of his works are now out of print (except in very pricey specialty edition), he's dead (not writing any new works), and that his output was so sporadic (only three novels and two short story collections in his career, plus a few scattered short stories in the mid 80's). Unfortunately alcoholism really destroyed his skills long before he actually died. In some of the critical analysis I've read from his friends, he was ahorrible procrastinator. Apparantly the Conan novel he wrote (the name escapes me right now) had to be rewritten in like one weekend because he had kept putting it off and finally turned in a load of crap that was rejected by the publisher. His Bran Mak Morn novel (Legion from the Shadows) was far superior and is the best non Conan pastiche written (vomit on the Offut Cormac Mac Art stuff...) I think another reason he's not better known, when you think about it, no one writes like him. His greatest creation is an anti-hero (the FIRST anti-hero, Kane of the bible). His stories often end with no triumph for good, and the "heros" dying pretty awful deaths, although Kane's plans are sometimes foiled he always escapes. I can't imagine a writer trying to pitch the concept of a Kane series to any publisher and not being laughed out of the office The strengths are the writing. KEW is simply the only author of the last 30 years I would dare to compare to Howard. His characters are memorable, his plots intriguing, his views of human nature chilling (but true). There are several scenes in his works that will stick with you for years. His battle scenes are some of the best I've ever read, Darkness Weaves has not one but two gigantic ship battles that are breathtaking. I would agree with Mark "Reflections" is a superior werewolf story, not to mention a very atypical Kane tale (he falls in love, for one) and a great plot for a DM to adapt to a D&D setting (a manor that is snowed in for the winter is beset by a werewolf that turns out to be one of the people inside the manor!). As a matter of fact, "Cold Light" and "Lynortis Reprise" would also make great D&D scenarios. I would also agree with Mark that the short stories are generally superior to the novels, but Darkness Weaves is pretty incredible (I've read it, oh, maybe 20 times the last 20 years, and enjoyed it every time....) Mark, have you ever read "Misericorde"? The best Kane story ever written and IMO one of the best fantasy stories bar none written the last 20 years. It's only found in the "Barbarians II" short story collection and in a few other various collections....hard to find, but well worth the search.Mike B.