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E. R. Eddison (1882–1945)

Autor von Der Wurm Ouroboros

11+ Werke 4,026 Mitglieder 65 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 11 Lesern

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Werke von E. R. Eddison

Der Wurm Ouroboros (1922) — Autor — 2,302 Exemplare
Die Herrin Zimiamvias (1935) 635 Exemplare
Das Tor des Mezentius (1958) 392 Exemplare
Zimiamvia: A Trilogy (1935) 119 Exemplare
Styrbjörn der Starke. (1926) 55 Exemplare
Le Serpent Ouroboros, Volume 1 (2017) 3 Exemplare
Le Serpent Ouroboros, Volume 2 (2018) 3 Exemplare
In Valhalla 1 Exemplar

Zugehörige Werke

Egils Saga (1240) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben1,075 Exemplare
The Big Book of Classic Fantasy (2019) — Mitwirkender — 167 Exemplare
The Young Magicians (1969) — Mitwirkender — 139 Exemplare
Heroic Fantasy Short Stories (Gothic Fantasy) (2017) — Mitwirkender — 82 Exemplare
Epic Fantasy Short Stories (Gothic Fantasy) (2019) — Mitwirkender — 35 Exemplare
Kingdoms of Sorcery: An Anthology of Adult Fantasy (1976) — Mitwirkender — 21 Exemplare
An introduction to A fish dinner in Memison, by (1941) — Subject — 2 Exemplare

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The language is delightful, but one can't help but agree with Tolkien's assessment that what underlies the entire saga is "an evil and indeed silly 'philosophy'" and the ending has one wondering indeed if Eddison admired "arrogance and cruelty."
 
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mirryi | 45 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 1, 2024 |
Well, it took me 15 months and a stack of dictionaries, but I've finally finished this epic! I feel as much a sense of accomplishment in the reading as Eddison might have felt in the writing of it!

I don't recall it having been so laborious from my first time of reading back in my teenage years, but I guess without internet reference rabbit-holes to fall down, it would be faster, though somewhat more archaic and obscure.

Anyway, the plot takes precedence over character, and there's barely any plot to speak of, so what you are left with is a framework over which Eddison drapes his sumptuous language, weaving moods and reveries, sometimes loud, brash and theatrical, at othertimes delicate fretworks of bejewelled, gilded traceries. It's definitely a love/hate book, and I've needed my own mood to be right to enter into Eddison's world, but I was happy to take my time and approach it as a feast of many courses, rather than a fast food binge.… (mehr)
 
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Michael.Rimmer | 45 weitere Rezensionen | Nov 19, 2023 |
Abandoned read. Wading through a jungle of archaic language to find the story proved to be too tiring and just wasn't worth the trouble.
 
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Jason--Gray | 45 weitere Rezensionen | Feb 14, 2023 |
I‘d first read it when I was around 13 and picked it up again now. At the first chapter in “Demonland”, I was sure I wouldn’t get through it and didn’t understand how my younger self had managed. Then, with the wrestling match, I was captured, and read on in sheer delight. This time round, what’s outstanding is the way the sexual relations implied are consensual and very discreet as would be standard in most literature of the time. There is a stronger sensuality in these books which evokes the atmosphere of sex, rather than references or allusions to the act itself.

You might like to consider E. R. Eddison, unfortunately almost forgotten these days, but in his time counted among one of the premier fantasy writers -- the man who Tolkien's publisher asked for a blurb for “The Lord of the Rings”. His novel “The Worm Ourobouros” and the three novels of the Zimiamvian series deserve to be rediscovered. They're not easy reads, and maybe not for a contemporary reader of SF. But for lovers of language, they're a must-read.

“The Worm Ourobouros” is a fine example of a feudal fantasy not in decline, where the heroes are thoroughly heroic and entirely human, where magic is real and as deadly to its practitioners as to those who suffer its effects, where sex is vitally important, omnipresent but not explicit, where violence is conducted on a massive, monstrous scale, but is again not explicit in its descriptions.

After reading this, I don’t look forward to another sloppily paced contemporary Fantasy novel, full of characters (who will disappear for 4-5 episode stretches) making frustrating decisions and being treated along the way to pages worth of exposition, some of which will be be delivered during sex scenes, just because. And when some Fantasy novels are afraid your attention may be waning, it will jolt you back with some extreme violence. Thank God we still have stuff like “The Worm Ourobouros” to get back to when we want to treat ourselves to something good SF-wise.

NB: This blog is mainly is for the books that slipped through the net of full-length “reviews” and normally one or maybe two people read them, grumbling that there's fantasy in what was a fantasy-horror-SF grab-bag…This time, because it's the Post-Summer doldrums, this review might become a bit more noticeable (or not).



SF = Speculative Fiction.
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antao | 45 weitere Rezensionen | Sep 26, 2022 |

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