The Wizard of Lemuria

The fantasy community has always had a schizophrenic response to Lin Carter. Mention his stint as the editor of the justly renowned Ballantine Adult Fantasy series and you’ll hear plaudits (from readers of a certain generation at least.) Carter was the man responsible for bringing a bunch of neglected classics back into print. He had […]
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Published on July 15, 2015 02:08
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message 1: by Michael (new)

Michael In addition to ransacking Howard and Burroughs, Carter 'appropriated' a lot of material from Blavatsky's Theosophical writings about Lemuria, including the lizard men and advanced technology.


message 2: by Joseph (new)

Joseph Carter was one of those writers who, when I read the back cover copy I said, "That's exactly the story I want to read!" but in almost all cases the execution left much to be desired.

But add me to the "plaudits for his stint as an editor" list.


message 3: by William (last edited Aug 22, 2015 01:39PM) (new)

William King Hi Michael, sorry about taking so long to reply. I didn't even know anyone could comment on my blog posts in Goodreads until I saw this (or maybe I did and just forgot!). Just wanted to say you were right about Blavatsky. I suspect she was one of the great unsung influences on S&S what with the whole prehistoric world thing.


message 4: by Michael (new)

Michael No problem, William :-)

I've a memory of Ignatius Donnelly possibly being an influence, too, though it's a long time since I read about him. I think he claimed to have 'translated' Mayan writings about Atlantis and a sunken Pacific continent called Mu. I don't know if Carter was aware of him, but I'd be surprised if not as I think Donnelly was pretty well known in the USA in his time.


message 5: by Joseph (new)

Joseph Michael wrote: "No problem, William :-)

I've a memory of Ignatius Donnelly possibly being an influence, too, though it's a long time since I read about him. I think he claimed to have 'translated' Mayan writings ..."


This is making me think I should reread
L. Sprague de Camp's Lost Continents again.


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