Mazirian the Magician

Tales of the Dying Earth, Book I. , #1

Hardcover, 162 pages

English language

Published by Spatterlight Press.

ISBN:
978-1-61947-402-4
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3 stars (5 reviews)

Earth is a decadent world older than memory, the bloated red sun soon to wink out forever.

Through ruined cities, fantastical palaces, and shadow-haunted forests, dueling wizards, a heartless highwayman, a pair of lovers doomed to be a demon’s playthings, a brave swordsman sent on a hopeless quest, and a beautiful woman cursed to hate all that she encounters all struggle to defy their destinies.

In his unique, sardonic prose, SF grandmaster Jack Vance weaves tales of adventure, treachery and intrigue.

Originally published as The Dying Earth, Mazirian the Magician is a series of linked tales, in a setting that has entranced generations of those who seek a sense of wonder.

Cover art: Konstantin Korobov. Foreword: Michael Moorcock.

7 editions

A foundation of the genre

4 stars

I got really sick in the middle of reading this -it honestly doesn't take me a month to read a couple of hundred pages.

Vance's world is a dreamy, fin de siècle where the world is ending not with a bang but with a slow and decadent slide. His characters (with a few remarkable exceptions) are horrible people doing horrible things to other horrible people, speaking the sort of flowery language that make Fritz Lieber seem like he's writing a Norse saga, but somehow it all works and you're immersed in it.

Few writers could pull off dialogue like

“We go in the mental frame of adventure, aggressiveness, zeal. Thus does fear vanish and the ghosts become creatures of mind-weft; thus does our élan burst the under-earth terror.”

or

"Guyal turned away and they continued down the gallery. Past the real expression of man’s brightest dreamings they walked, until the …

Review of 'The Dying Earth' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

Read it mostly in order to learn where from DnD has gotten it's weird magic system.
And yes, many influences on DnD can be clearly traced to this book.

The writing itself is odd, and would be perhaps better adapted to a comic book - it has a certain purple yet abrupt quality characteristic of comic books.

It was difficult for me to get into this book and in the end it did not resonate with me, mostly because of the oddness if both the language and the setting. There was not enough familiarity to keep me grounded

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Subjects

  • American Science fiction

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