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City of the Beast (aka Warriors of Mars) (Trade Paperback)
Paizo Publishing, LLC
by Michael Moorcock, with an introduction by Kim Mohan
Michael Moorcock’s Eternal Champion returns as Kane of Old Mars, a brilliant American physicist whose strange experiments in matter transmission catapult him across space and time to the Red Planet.
Kane’s is a Mars of the distant past, a place of romantic civilizations, fabulous many-spired cities, and the gorgeous princess Shizala. To win her hand and bring peace to Mars, Kane must defeat the terrible Blue Giants of the Argzoon, whose ravaging hordes threaten the whole planet!
Adventure in the Edgar Rice Burroughs tradition from the creator of Elric of Melniboné.
First stand-alone American printing since 1979!
160-page softcover trade paperback
ISBN: 1-60125-044-4
ISBN-13: 978-1-60125-044-5
About the Author
Michael Moorcock (1939– ) has been recognized since the 1960s as one of the most important speculative fiction writers alive. Born in London, Moorcock began editing the magazine Tarzan Adventures at the age of 15, and quickly gained notoriety for his character Elric of Melniboné, an anti-hero written as a deliberate reversal of recurring themes he saw in the writings of authors like J.R.R. Tolkien and Robert E. Howard. Many of his works, including both the Elric books and those of his popular androgynous secret agent Jerry Cornelius, are tied together around the concept of the Eternal Champion, a warrior whose many incarnations battle to maintain the balance between Law and Chaos in the multiverse, a term popularized by Moorcock referring to many overlapping dimensions or realities. In addition, Moorcock has also been recognized for his non-genre literary work, and his influence today extends into music, film, and popular culture. His writing has won numerous critical accolades, including the Nebula Award, the World Fantasy Award, the British Fantasy Award, and the Bram Stoker Lifetime Achievement award, and in 2002 he was inducted into the Science Fiction Hall of Fame.
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Product Reviews
Average product rating:
   
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I picked this book up on a day when I was exhausted and did not want to read anything heavy. It is a lot of fun. An easy read and reminds me of Burroughs Barsoom. I am sold on the whole Planet Stories line and thank Erik for his love of books and his work to bring us these out of print classics. I look forward to reading them all. Can't wait for the subscription to be available so I know I won't miss any.
Classic tales of a contemporary hero swept into an epic world distant in both space and most definitely in time... just by chance it so happens he learned to fence at the feet of a master swordsman so can hold his own in archaic combat. After all, with a strong sword-arm and unswerving moral standards, what else can he do but sweep fair lady off of her feet... Thoroughly enjoyable adventure for its own sake. Enjoy!
Product Discussion
7
posts.
See all discussion for this product.
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The title seems to imply there are two books collected here, but I believe there were three, and they were City of the Beast, Lord of the Spiders and Master of the Pit(?).
Were these published under different names in the USA, or condensed into two books instead of three?
Or is the Warriors of Mars part of the title a complete red herring? Or an editorial or essay?
As I recall, they are very influenced by ER Burroughs, and were written long before the Eternal Champion stories of the 1960s. I believe they were probably written while Moorcock was editing Tarzan Adventures in his late teens/early twenties, which would explain the theme, the style, and even some of the plot devices (LOL!)
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Snorter wrote:
The title seems to imply there are two books collected here, but I believe there were three, and they were City of the Beast, Lord of the Spiders and Master of the Pit(?).
Were these published under different names in the USA, or condensed into two books instead of three?
Or is the Warriors of Mars part of the title a complete red herring? Or an editorial or essay?
Michael Moorcock's original manuscripts for the trilogy were entitled City of the Beast, Lord of the Spiders, and Master of the Pit.
However, they were first published by Compact Books as Warriors of Mars, Blades of Mars, and Barbarians of Mars, all under the pen name Edward P. Bradbury.
This publication contains only the first book in the trilogy.
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Thanks for that clarification. I am aware that Moorcock wrote under pseudonyms, possibly to deflect criticism that he had a conflict of interest in editing and publishing his own work! (Can anyone confirm if that was indeed the case, or were these published under another editor's tenure?).
As for the titles; personally I prefer the UK versions. I think using the initials EPB, and 'xxxx of Mars' as your titles is too likely to confuse the public and lead to accusations of copyright infringement, when placed alongside E R Burroughs own, much earlier work.
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Snorter wrote:
As for the titles; personally I prefer the UK versions.
Compact Books, in the UK, was the original publisher, so Warriors of Mars was the "UK version." (Lancer, the first US publisher, also used their titles, but they originated at Compact.)
The titles you like (the ones we're using) are maybe better identified as "the Moorcock titles," not "the UK titles."
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Vic Wertz wrote:
Warriors of Mars was the "UK version." The titles you like (the ones we're using) are maybe better identified as "the Moorcock titles," not "the UK titles."
Thanks for that clarification; I have the first two books, but not the third. It's a long time since I read them (probably 20 years), and since I never had the whole set, I've not been tempted to go back to them until I knew I had the ending.
You've got me intrigued, now. I'll have to have a dig round my attic, to find out who published my copies, since I definitely only know them by the 'Moorcock' titles...
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PZO8003
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