My review of John Shirley's A Sorcerer of Atlantis
This review was published in the current issue of Phantasmagoria magazine.
A SORCERER OF ATLANTIS with A PRINCE IN THE KINGDOM OF GHOSTS by John Shirley
£20.00 paperback; £4.24 Kindle
Published by Hippocampus Press, 305 pages

Humour is mixed with high adventure and bloody skirmishes, with homages to both Howard and Lovecraft on the way.
I found the main protagonists engaging in their attempts to save Atlantis – and the evil mermen are a wonderfully horrific menace, given to eating their victims alive as they scream in agony!
The final part of this book, A Prince in the Kingdom of Ghosts (68 pages) is a completely different sort of fantasy. Set in the present day, Kerrin Kim is a Korean American who works as a diamond cutter, like his father before him. And like his father suddenly dies at a young age, awakening to find he is a prince in an outlandishly strange world inhabited by ghosts and other spirits. Here he learns that his late father is the king but was inexplicably cut down only a short time before by a mysterious poison that has left him in a coma. Bewildered to find that his father is still alive whole decades after he died on Earth, Kerrin is drawn into a bewildering conflict that has him completely confused over which side to support. It is a bizarre tale of ghostly intrigues, with real-life protagonists like Boadicea and Marcus Aurelius thrown in. It is definitely one of the strangest stories I have ever read, but amazingly well conceived by John Shirley who manages to tie all its oddities together in an impressive way.
I am not really sure why it was decided to publish these two particular tales in one volume, as the swords and sorcery story of Atlantis is certainly long enough to have been published as standalone novel. And A Prince in the Kingdom of Ghosts, though an excellent fantasy, is not a swords and sorcery story. Put together they are an odd meld of two sub-genres. Still, they are both worth reading and are definitely entertaining in their different ways, so if you don’t mind mixing your genres like this it’s no problem.
