Emperor of dreams Review and Opinion

 

 

 

The Emperor Of Dreams
Clark Ashton Smith
Gollancz paperback £7.99

review by Patrick Hudson

Clark Ashton Smith was a contemporary of Robert E. Howard and H.P. Lovecraft and, with them, one of the most influential of the Weird Tales authors. All three were instrumental in laying the foundation of modern fantasy and horror, but Smith has been somewhat neglected in comparison with his celebrated peers. Gollancz has addressed this oversight by adding this fine selection of his stories to their already excellent Fantasy Masterworks series.
   Smith was born in 1893, and was gifted with a prodigious talent for poetry. In 1912, at just 19 years old, he published a volume of poetry - The Startreader And Other Poems - that was feted in its time as the debut of a great talent. He continued to write highly praised poetry throughout his life, but never regained the acclaim of his youth as the market for his brand of ornate, macabre verse dwindled. He found a market, however, in the pulp magazines, selling his poetry to Weird Tales from the mid-1920s. At the urging of Lovecraft and others he turned his hand to fiction and sold his first story in 1928. His great creative period was from 1928 to about 1940, during which time he published over 100 stories in the pulps but after that his output became more sporadic, and he was forced to work at a variety of menial tasks to get by that left him drained of energy and enthusiasm. He died in 1961, largely forgotten by the fantasy community. His stories have been re-issued from time to time - by Panther in the early 1970s, and more recently in limited editions by specialists such as Necronomicon Press - but this is the first widely available collection of Smith's work for nearly 30 years.
   Like his contemporaries, Smith worked on a series of related story cycles. This isn't really represented in this anthology, which is a shame: the Panther paperbacks of the 1970s collected the stories by theme and were, I think, better because of it. (As an aside, can someone go back in time to 1995 and give me a big slap as I take my copy of the Zothique volume to the secondhand shop? Ouch!)
   Averoigne is an imagined version of medieval France where troubadours and courtly maidens pursue romantic intrigues. These high romantic medieval fantasies feature witches, vampires and werewolves, evoking the folklore and literature of the Old World. They have a charming fairy tale quality, and reading them brings to mind swashbuckling films of Errol Flynn and Tyrone Power. Hyperboria is Smith's imagined prehistoric world, similar to Howard's Hyborian Age. These stories usually have a humorous bent, although of the blackest sort as in The Weird Of Avoosl Wuthoqquan, where a greedy merchant ends up as dinner for the alien god Tsathoggua. The thief Satampra Zeiros, who appears in several of the stories, typifies the jocular, morally flexible scoundrels that populate Hyperboria, bringing to mind the work of Damon Runyan, where similarly roguish characters plot to rob their enemies and each other. The Theft Of The Thirty-Nine Girdles in particular has an intricately planned heist at its heart that comes straight from a hardboiled crime story. Other stories in this cycle emphasise strange magic, weird gods and alien creatures, such as The Doorway To Saturn and The Coming Of The White Worm, but again give matters a weird, delightful humour.
   Smith's other major setting, and perhaps his greatest, is Zothique, the last continent in the far future when the Earth is old and the sun is dying. The Zothique stories all share a morbid, erotic tone and tendency toward wild melodrama. They are often about love frustrated in some way, with healthy doses of sadism and necrophilia thrown in for good measure. A striking example is Necromancy In Naat, wherein a young prince Yadar goes in search for his lost love Dalili and finds her animated corpse serving three necromancers on an island of the coast of Zothique. Via a somewhat complicated plot, Yadar falls victim to the necromancers but by the end of the story the necromancers are all dead, and their mindless undead servants continue to perform their duties. Smith's mastery of dreamlike, melodramatic prose produces a moment of genuine frisson as Yadar is reunited with Dalili in death: Giantess Videos and comics

 

And Yadar, being with Dalili in that state now common to them both, was drawn to her with a ghostly yearning, and he felt a ghostly comfort in her nearness. The quick despair that had racked him aforetime, and the long torments of desire and separation, were as things faded and forgot, and he shared with Dalili a shadowy love and a dim contentment.

A similar delight in the morbid and perverse can be seen in The Isle Of The Torturers, The Empire Of The Necromancers and perhaps most of all in The Garden Of Adompha. Smith was a genius at painting these strange, gothic scenes and evoking from them glamorous, languid melodrama that stays with the reader long after the story is done. Smith also wrote horror stories in the modern mode, and a selection of these is included here. They are generally less interesting than the fantasies, although The Return Of The Sorcerer is suitably morbid, and The Gorgon features some moments of brilliant poetic prose.
   In his day, Smith was regarded as equal to Howard and Lovecraft, and this volume does nothing to disprove that. To Howard's machismo and Lovecraft's pugnacious intellectualism, he adds a broad dash of sardonic humour and worldly sensuality. His stories ring with a passion for life and experience that Howard and Lovecraft never manage. In their own specific areas, each was without rival, and Smith's morbid fantasies stand shoulder to shoulder with Howard's heroic swashbucklers and Lovecraft' modern chillers.
   Smith's stories influenced several of the most important fantasy writers of the next generation. Fritz Lieber's Lankhmar tales owe much to Smith's The Black Abbot Of Puthuum, a tale of two companions battling the supernatural published three years before Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser made their fist appearance in Two Sought Adventure. The work of Michael Moorcock has strong echoes of Smith, in particular the Elric stories, with their melancholic denouements and grotesque demons and sorcerers. One of the strongest influences can be seen in the work of Jack Vance, whose stories in The Dying Earth - the first volume in a series - are so reminiscent of Smith, emulating the dark style of the Zothique stories, that they almost classify as pastiche. Vance does somewhat better with the second and subsequent volumes of the series, where he takes the humorous tone of the Hyperborean tales and soars away with it somewhere else entirely.
   This volume concludes with a fine afterword by Stephen Jones, outlining Smith's life and the context of his work, and all in all this is a superb collection. Smith was a writer of great talent who still has much to offer the modern reader, even outside of the academic interest of his place in the fantasy genre. Gollancz are to be congratulated on their fine Masterworks series, both science fiction and fantasy, but here they have produced an overview of an important, neglected writer that no serious fantasy fan will want to be without.


Comprar Emperor of dreams Review and Opinion

Emperor of dreams Review and Opinion

Emperor of dreams Review and Opinion

The Emperor Of DreamsClark Ashton SmithGollancz paperback £7.99review by Patrick HudsonClark Ashton Smith was a contemporary of Robert E. Howard and H.P. Love

arapps

en

https://scifi-uk.com/static/images/arapps-emperor-of-dreams-review-and-opinion-175-0.jpg

2024-05-21

 

Emperor of dreams Review and Opinion
Emperor of dreams Review and Opinion

Acording with the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (“DMCA”), Pub. L. 105-304 If you believe that your copyrighted work is being infringed, notify our team at the email [email protected]

 

 

Update cookies preferences