Salt-Man Z, on 11 January 2013 - 04:31 PM, said:
yuna_anomander25, on 11 January 2013 - 04:02 PM, said:
oh, and SMZ, i think i saw a thread somewhere where you said you liked the Elric of Melnibone books, i've been curious about it as i read somewhere that he is compared with Anomander Rake, with the sword, and i want the omnibus ver, is it worth it,
I haven't actually read any Elric books yet. I've got four of them at home: one of the White Wolf edition omnibuses, and three of the newer Del Rey omnibuses. I've also got a crapload of related Eternal Champion omnibuses that I want to read this year. I have read the Elric story "Red Pearls" from the
Swords and Dark Magic anthology, and it was interesting enough that I picked up all of these other Moorcock books. And I've read the White Wolf
Eternal Champion omnibus, which was fantastic, mostly because of the two Erekose stories (Erekose being an aspect of the Eternal Champion, like Elric.)
With my limited exposure, I would say that if you like sword & sorcery fantasy with some thought behind it, you will probably enjoy Moorcock (his fantasy at least; the sci-fi story "Sundered Worlds" in the Erekose omnibus left me cold.)
Use Of Weapons, on 11 January 2013 - 06:57 PM, said:
If you love emo characters, Elric will definitely be up your street. He is the definitive emo.
I've read most of Moorcock's Elric books... i know there are some short stories in anthologies i've missed, but otherwise i've pretty much covered it.
Two common misconceptions : Elric is emo, and Elric is Rake (or chronologically, Rake is Elric).
Elric doesn't spend his time moping and contemplating the darkness of it all. He's grim, certainly, and a bastard absolutely, but whiny and overly emotion oh hell no. His whole story starts out because he's bored, not angst-ridden. There's some angst, but we're not talking L'estat here. He gets more grim towards the end of the cycle, but there's a reason for that.
As for the Rake analogy... well... both are fantasy race characters, tall, with white hair and big ass swords that are immensely powerful. That's where it ends. We could stretch abit on the 'my race is a bunch of immortals sitting around looking for a reason to live' angle, but while Rake actively works to keep his people alive, Elric is kind of the opposite of that.
I liked those stories. They're classic dark sword and sorcery fantasy lit that set the stage for a lot of what followed. The quality varies, but i think they're worth the read.
The only downside is that once you've read Elric, most of the other Eternal Champion stuff Moorcock wrote reads as derivative.