From the Bookshelf of Sword & Sorcery: "An earthier sort of fantasy"…
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Leigh Brackett's sword & planet adventure The Sword of Rhiannon is a short novel but a favorite among aficionado's. It was first published Sea-Kings of Mars and Otherworldly Stories in "Thrilling Wonder" Magazine in 1949 (cover artist Earle Bergey).
It is like Indiana Jones looted Cthulhu's tomb!
This really is a gem. Written before Sci-Fi and Fantasy really became substantial genres of their own, the summary of this sounds Sci-Fi but really is Fantasy. The Mars milieu features little technology; ...more
It is like Indiana Jones looted Cthulhu's tomb!
This really is a gem. Written before Sci-Fi and Fantasy really became substantial genres of their own, the summary of this sounds Sci-Fi but really is Fantasy. The Mars milieu features little technology; ...more

Jun 25, 2020
Jason Ray Carney
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
fantasy,
sword-and-planet
Entertaining "sword and planet" / "planetary romance" novel with elements of "space opera" (it is set on a pre-modern Mars with swords, triremes, kings, pirates, princesses, and gods). To an extent, the protagonist Carse is a victim throughout the novel. He doesn't act so much as he is acted upon by dire circumstances. This wasn't 100% to my taste but skillfully executed. There is also an intriguing romantic / antagonistic relationship between the protagonist and a beautiful, cruel woman: Ywain.
...more

A classic work of science fiction.
The Earthman Carse, walking through the night of a seedy Martian town, is followed. Which leads in turn to an offer of the title sword. Which, he knows, means the one making the offer knows where the legendary tomb is, and goes to loot it, forcing the would-be seller to come. It holds a black bubble-like sphere, of the ancient science of Mars, and Carse is too careless, and plunged into the depths of history.
It involves the ancient seas of Mars, the difficulty i ...more
The Earthman Carse, walking through the night of a seedy Martian town, is followed. Which leads in turn to an offer of the title sword. Which, he knows, means the one making the offer knows where the legendary tomb is, and goes to loot it, forcing the would-be seller to come. It holds a black bubble-like sphere, of the ancient science of Mars, and Carse is too careless, and plunged into the depths of history.
It involves the ancient seas of Mars, the difficulty i ...more

May 07, 2012
J.W. Wright
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
fantasy-science-fiction,
owned


Dec 10, 2016
Kendall Moore
marked it as to-read