Kevin Wright's Blog: SaberPunk - Posts Tagged "epic-fantasy"
Review of 'The Black Company' by Glen Cook
Review of ‘The Black Company’ by Glen Cook
I’m not sure how I missed ‘The Black Company’ for the forty-one years of my life. It’s a fantasy novel that was published in 1984. I was born in 1976. I give myself a grace period for the first twelve to fifteen years of not having reading it. The other 26 to 29 years are a mystery/embarrassment.
I remember groping around in the late eighties and early nineties for decent fantasy books to read and coming up with a seemingly never-ending conveyor belt of Lord of the Rings rip-offs. Now, nothing against LOTR rip-offs, because some of them were pretty good (And also because I later wrote one and it was not pretty good). But ‘The Black Company’ was and is something different. It may have been ground zero for the birth, or rebirth, of the grimdark fantasy genre (When grimdark started is subject to debate, but look to the ‘Conan’ stories by Robert E. Howard and the ‘Elric’ series by Michael Moorcock).
So how is ‘The Black Company’ different than ‘Lord of the Rings?’
Let me start by saying that the Black Company from ‘The Black Company’ is a mercenary band. That means their motivation as a group is less about Nine Walkers bringing the One True Ring to Mordor for destruction and saving the world from darkness than it is about making cold hard cash to spend on gambling, women, and booze. These men are not heroes. These are cold hard men who are good at what they do, and what they do is what you pay mercenary companies to do. And often what you don’t pay them to do.
As an example, if the Black Company were working in Middle Earth, they would probably be working for Sauron. And in ‘Return of the King’ they would probably have sapped under the walls of Minas Tirith while simultaneously slinging sorcerous fireballs and attacking on all fronts with siege engines. On top of all that, behind the scenes, long before the siege even began, the baddest of the bad would have infiltrated the walls of the much vaunted seven-walled city and very likely have murdered Denethor and Faramir and any other nobleman with three or more syllables to their name. In fact, the only person left to lead the defense against the horde invasion would probably have been some dude named Doug who once, in his own words, ‘Used to swing swords with that guy named Boromir. Way back in the day.’
Conventional wisdom theorizes that Doug would not have lead a successful defense campaign against the orc horde.
Which means that Sauron wins.
And Middle Earth falls into shadow.
But most importantly, the Black Company gets paid.
So the Black Company is not a bunch of good guys. There’s not a white hat amongst the bunch. But they’re not morally bankrupt in every sense of the word. There are redeeming qualities amongst its many brethren despite the fact that you wouldn’t want to meet most of them in a dark alley. There are innocents who they save. There are lesser goods perpetrated in the name of greater evil. And there may not be honor amongst thieves, but there is amongst the Black Company. They fight as a unit, always having each other’s backs despite often being at one another’s throats. Petty squabbles are thrust aside when the chips are down. Which is often. Sacrifices are made in the name of honor and camaraderie. Ultimate sacrifices. Here are men who fight not for ideals or for king or country but for the man standing next to them in the lines, in the melees, in the trenches.
These are strong men. These are weak men. These are simply men.
So why am I reviewing ‘The Black Company’ some thirty-odd years after it was published? Because it’s good. Because I missed it. Somehow. And because maybe you missed it, too. And because there are ten books in the series. Ten. And that’s a beautiful damn number of books to have to look forward to.
Kevin Wright
-Amazon Author Page http://amzn.to/2noAXKj
I’m not sure how I missed ‘The Black Company’ for the forty-one years of my life. It’s a fantasy novel that was published in 1984. I was born in 1976. I give myself a grace period for the first twelve to fifteen years of not having reading it. The other 26 to 29 years are a mystery/embarrassment.
I remember groping around in the late eighties and early nineties for decent fantasy books to read and coming up with a seemingly never-ending conveyor belt of Lord of the Rings rip-offs. Now, nothing against LOTR rip-offs, because some of them were pretty good (And also because I later wrote one and it was not pretty good). But ‘The Black Company’ was and is something different. It may have been ground zero for the birth, or rebirth, of the grimdark fantasy genre (When grimdark started is subject to debate, but look to the ‘Conan’ stories by Robert E. Howard and the ‘Elric’ series by Michael Moorcock).
So how is ‘The Black Company’ different than ‘Lord of the Rings?’
Let me start by saying that the Black Company from ‘The Black Company’ is a mercenary band. That means their motivation as a group is less about Nine Walkers bringing the One True Ring to Mordor for destruction and saving the world from darkness than it is about making cold hard cash to spend on gambling, women, and booze. These men are not heroes. These are cold hard men who are good at what they do, and what they do is what you pay mercenary companies to do. And often what you don’t pay them to do.
As an example, if the Black Company were working in Middle Earth, they would probably be working for Sauron. And in ‘Return of the King’ they would probably have sapped under the walls of Minas Tirith while simultaneously slinging sorcerous fireballs and attacking on all fronts with siege engines. On top of all that, behind the scenes, long before the siege even began, the baddest of the bad would have infiltrated the walls of the much vaunted seven-walled city and very likely have murdered Denethor and Faramir and any other nobleman with three or more syllables to their name. In fact, the only person left to lead the defense against the horde invasion would probably have been some dude named Doug who once, in his own words, ‘Used to swing swords with that guy named Boromir. Way back in the day.’
Conventional wisdom theorizes that Doug would not have lead a successful defense campaign against the orc horde.
Which means that Sauron wins.
And Middle Earth falls into shadow.
But most importantly, the Black Company gets paid.
So the Black Company is not a bunch of good guys. There’s not a white hat amongst the bunch. But they’re not morally bankrupt in every sense of the word. There are redeeming qualities amongst its many brethren despite the fact that you wouldn’t want to meet most of them in a dark alley. There are innocents who they save. There are lesser goods perpetrated in the name of greater evil. And there may not be honor amongst thieves, but there is amongst the Black Company. They fight as a unit, always having each other’s backs despite often being at one another’s throats. Petty squabbles are thrust aside when the chips are down. Which is often. Sacrifices are made in the name of honor and camaraderie. Ultimate sacrifices. Here are men who fight not for ideals or for king or country but for the man standing next to them in the lines, in the melees, in the trenches.
These are strong men. These are weak men. These are simply men.
So why am I reviewing ‘The Black Company’ some thirty-odd years after it was published? Because it’s good. Because I missed it. Somehow. And because maybe you missed it, too. And because there are ten books in the series. Ten. And that’s a beautiful damn number of books to have to look forward to.
Kevin Wright
-Amazon Author Page http://amzn.to/2noAXKj
Published on June 14, 2017 07:06
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Tags:
dark-fantasy, epic-fantasy, grimdark, military-fantasy
Review of 'Taran Wanderer' by Lloyd Alexander
This is my fourth installment as I reread and review Lloyd Alexander’s ‘Prydain Chronicles,’ a series of five high fantasy novels written in the 1960’s.
‘Taran Wanderer’ is the fourth book of the series and while there is an overarching storyline thoughout, the third and fourth books are a little off the path of the main arc. Where ‘Castle of Llyr’ is a sort of side-quest in the series, TW takes a look at the story through a microscope. That is, we really magnify and focus in on Taran the assistant pig-keeper as a character and more specifically as a young man.
One of the main themes of the Prydain Chronicles, in my opinion, is ‘what makes a good man?’ We see fully formed adult, good men in the form of Coll and Dalben and Gwydion, the three main influences in Taran’s life. Each of the three is intelligent, wise, and formidable. What we also see from the very start of the series, ‘The Book of Three,’ is an impatient, headstrong kid who does things based on what he thinks a storybook hero should do.
As we move through the books, we see glimpses of Taran making progress, getting wiser, humbler, more patient. Having more regard for what is truly important in life.
In TW, Taran, on the cusp of manhood, takes a final step forward.
He knows he loves Eilonwy. He knows he wants to marry her. He also knows that she is a princess and he is an assistant pig-keeper of unknown parentage. He hopes he is more.
And so he goes off in search of his parentage in the hopes that he will be proven worthy enough to marry his love. What follows is a series of short episodic adventures as Taran crosses the land of Prydain in search of the Mirror of Llunet, a magic mirror that a trio of witches claim will ‘show him something of interest’ with regards to his ancestry.
I won’t spoil what happens. I’ll only say that Taran’s adventures are as exciting as ever if a little shorter individually and with some, more internal. More personal. But the stakes are as high as ever. Lives are on the line. Kingdoms. Livelihoods. Self-fulfillment. Everything that makes a great story, and as always, Alexander writes clearly, concisely, beautifully. There aren’t many books that make your heart both pound and ache. The Chronicles of Prydain achieve these effects more often than any others I’ve read, and Taran Wanderer is no exception.
Read it.
Kevin Wright Author Page http://amzn.to/2noAXKj
Link to Taran Wanderer https://amzn.to/2VTbN5s
‘Taran Wanderer’ is the fourth book of the series and while there is an overarching storyline thoughout, the third and fourth books are a little off the path of the main arc. Where ‘Castle of Llyr’ is a sort of side-quest in the series, TW takes a look at the story through a microscope. That is, we really magnify and focus in on Taran the assistant pig-keeper as a character and more specifically as a young man.
One of the main themes of the Prydain Chronicles, in my opinion, is ‘what makes a good man?’ We see fully formed adult, good men in the form of Coll and Dalben and Gwydion, the three main influences in Taran’s life. Each of the three is intelligent, wise, and formidable. What we also see from the very start of the series, ‘The Book of Three,’ is an impatient, headstrong kid who does things based on what he thinks a storybook hero should do.
As we move through the books, we see glimpses of Taran making progress, getting wiser, humbler, more patient. Having more regard for what is truly important in life.
In TW, Taran, on the cusp of manhood, takes a final step forward.
He knows he loves Eilonwy. He knows he wants to marry her. He also knows that she is a princess and he is an assistant pig-keeper of unknown parentage. He hopes he is more.
And so he goes off in search of his parentage in the hopes that he will be proven worthy enough to marry his love. What follows is a series of short episodic adventures as Taran crosses the land of Prydain in search of the Mirror of Llunet, a magic mirror that a trio of witches claim will ‘show him something of interest’ with regards to his ancestry.
I won’t spoil what happens. I’ll only say that Taran’s adventures are as exciting as ever if a little shorter individually and with some, more internal. More personal. But the stakes are as high as ever. Lives are on the line. Kingdoms. Livelihoods. Self-fulfillment. Everything that makes a great story, and as always, Alexander writes clearly, concisely, beautifully. There aren’t many books that make your heart both pound and ache. The Chronicles of Prydain achieve these effects more often than any others I’ve read, and Taran Wanderer is no exception.
Read it.
Kevin Wright Author Page http://amzn.to/2noAXKj
Link to Taran Wanderer https://amzn.to/2VTbN5s
Published on January 15, 2019 09:59
•
Tags:
epic-fantasy, high-fantasy, lloyd-alexander
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As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
I'll also offer some posts about writing in general, some of my own works, and anything else that strikes me.
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As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
I'll also o My favorite genres are fantasy, science fiction, and horror. I'll be reviewing fiction books and roleplaying games from those genres.
As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
I'll also offer some posts about writing in general, some of my own works, and anything else that strikes me.
Rock on. ...more
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