Sea Kings of Mars and Otherwordly Stories (Fantasy Masterworks)

by Leigh Brackett

Paperback, 2005

Status

Available

Call number

813

Collection

Publication

Gollancz (2005), Paperback, 672 pages

Description

A collection of the best stories by one of fantasy and science fiction's most evocative writers, including Sea Kings of Mars, which combines high adventure with a strongly romantic vision of an ancient, sea-girt Martian civilisation.

User reviews

LibraryThing member paradoxosalpha
This book is a Fantasy Masterworks compilation of Golden Age science fiction novellas and short stories set on the habitable and human-populated Mars and Venus of mid-20th century imagination, as influenced by the fantasies of Edgar Rice Burroughs. By and large, Brackett's protagonists are rogue
Show More
archaeologists (self-confessed "tomb robbers"), thieves, and mercenaries. The complete absence of female protagonists might have been in keeping with the general run of the pulps at the time, but I note that her contemporary C(atherine). L. Moore was able to deliver a good lead heroine once in a while. Still, Brackett does include a respectable range of well-drawn female characters. And lest I accuse her of kowtowing to the white male science fiction hegemony, her recurring "Earthman out of Mercury" hero Eric John Stark is black.

Brackett's ancient Mars--as rendered in the title novella and several of the other stories in this anthology--is a terrific fantasy adventure setting, worthy of role-playing or other crossover exploitation. In addition to the Mars and Venus stories, the book supplies "The Jewel of Bas" on some nameless otherworld, and the short Mars-related "Tweener" set on Earth.

"Black Amazon of Mars" is pretty much Brackett's version of Lovecraft's "At the Mountains of Madness," and I liked it very much. Mind-transfer or psychic possession is a theme, usually a dominant one, in at least half of the stories in this volume, and telepathy is common. Once in a great while, Brackett has one of her spacefaring humans venture a "scientific" hypothesis about the mysterious ancient technology of Mars or Venus. These efforts may be somewhat cringe-inducing among educated 21st-century readers, but they are brief and thankfully rare.

Editor Stephen Jones provides a closing essay with a detailed bibliographic overview, for which I was grateful. I certainly look forward to reading more of Brackett's adventure stories, and he has helped me to identify some target titles for my wishlist.
Show Less
LibraryThing member salimbol
Good old-fashioned interplanetary adventures, full of rugged men and nubile, determined girls. Unsurprisingly, they're very dated. And although the author has a dab hand with her descriptions and the stories can be marvellously (if somewhat cheesily) atmospheric at times… frankly if you've read
Show More
one, you've basically read them all (she reminds me of Lovecraft in that respect.) Still, that's another entry in the Fantasy Masterworks series completed, and that makes me happy :-).
Show Less
LibraryThing member kevn57
Swords and Sorcery is a favorite genre of mine and Leigh Brackett really knew how to do it. If you read these planetary adventures be aware that Mercury is too hot for life, Mars is too cold and dry and Venus to hot. But Brackett has filled these worlds with characters and adventures that are so
Show More
entertaining. Short stories and novella’s offer hero after hero including her most famous John Eric Stark. The one short story that almost seems out of place is her science fiction story “The Tweener” that reminded me strongly of Ray Bradbury a good friend of Brackett’s. Bradbury co wrote “Lorelei of the Red Mist” with Brackett and the hero is “Conan” not Howards, but he might as well be.
Show Less

Awards

British Fantasy Award (Nominee — Collection — 2006)

Original publication date

2005-07 (collection)

Physical description

672 p.; 7.72 inches

ISBN

0575076895 / 9780575076891

Similar in this library

Page: 0.6084 seconds