The Champion of Garathorm

by Michael Moorcock

Chronicles of Count Brass (2), Hawkmoon (6), The Eternal Champion (Hawkmoon novel 6)

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After journeying across the multiverse with other manifestations of the Eternal Champion, Dorian Hawkmoon is stunned to discover that he has returned to a version of his world in which it was his friend and ally, Count Brass, who survived the Battle of Londra, rather than Brass's daughter - and Hawkmoon's beloved wife - Yisselda. Driven close to madness by the loss of his wife and children (who never existed in this world), he locks himself away in Castle Brass, painstakingly recreating the show more battle of Londra, in an attempt to discover a version in which Yisselda also survives. But the paths through the multiverse are treacherous .. show less

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“Champion of Garathorm” by Michael Moorcock picks up soon after the end of “Count Brass” the first novel in the “Chronicles of Castle Brass” trilogy. The twist ending of the “Count Brass” leaves the main character, Hawkmoon, in a delicate mental and emotional state, wasting away in his room in Castle Brass, playing with toy soldiers trying to refight the battles of the war again and again to see how to fight the battle with all the main heroes surviving.

Castle Brass is visited by a noble warrior woman, Katinka Van Bak who has stories to tell of invaders across the mountains that are just enough to get Hawkmoon interested in a taking a temporary break from his toy soldiers and think he can be a hero again.

As they get show more farther from Castle Brass and farther, Hawkmoon gets in better physical condition, they run into Eternal Companion, Jhary-a-Conel, and then we find out they don’t really need Hawkmoon. Katinka and Jhary have other plans for the Champion Eternal, they just need his soul, and playing with his toy soldiers, he wasn’t really using it.

Through some magic, Hawkmoon becomes Ilian, a royal princess of Garathorm, in a far away place that needs help fighting invaders from another dimension.

I’d read this book once before as a teenager in the mid-80’s. At the time I didn’t like this trilogy at all, and in this one I was particularly disappointed in because I didn’t like the hero, Hawkmoon, becoming a woman.

Now that I’m older, now that I’ve read a lot more books overall, seen more of the world and met a lot more random people, my previous main issue with it didn’t bother me at all.

Overall I enjoyed it. It was a quick book to get through. But it didn’t leave me in awe like other novels, it was simply a nice, enjoyable read.
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After saving Count Brass, Hawkmoon returns to Kamarg to find Yisselda and his children gone - it was Yisselda, not Count Brass, that had died in the Battle of Londra and so his children were never born. In this untenable set of circumstances, Hawkmoon goes insane. He locks himself in a tower of Castle Brass playing Army trying to find a way to replay the Battle of Londra so that none of the six die - and this simply pushes him farther and farther off the edge until his body is wasted and his spirit is hanging on by a thread. Hope arrives in the person of Katinka van Bak who asks for Hawkmoon's help to recover a her adopted land that is overrun by a vast Army of outsiders. Hawkmoon agrees to help her, but he doesn't quite know how he's show more supposed to help. We quickly find that Hawkmoon himself is not required, but the spirit of the Eternal Champion is needed to animate the body of another aspect of the Champion who has had her spirit stolen by Baron Kalan of Granbretan.

It's amazing how much trouble Kalan and others have caused in the multiverse. Messing around with trans-dimensional portals and mucking about in the time streams apparently cause issues even for the Lords of Law and Chaos. I guess I'll shut down my own experiments - just in case.
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659+ Works 65,137 Members
Michael Moorcock, 1939 - Writer Michael Moorcock was born December 18, 1939 in Mitcham, Surrey, England. Moorcock was the editor of the juvenile magazine Tarzan Adventures from 1956-58, an editor and writer for the Sexton Blake Library and for comic strips and children's annuals from 1959-61, an editor and pamphleteer for Liberal Party in 1962, show more and became editor and publisher for the science fiction magazine New Worlds in 1964. He has worked as a singer-guitarist, has worked with the rock bands Hawkwind and Blue Oyster Cult and is a member of the rock band Michael Moorcock and the Deep Fix. Moorcock's writing covers a wide range of science fiction and fantasy genres. "The Chronicles of Castle Brass" was a sword and sorcery novel, and "Breakfast in the Ruins: A Novel of Inhumanity" uses the character Karl Glogauer as a different person in different times. Karl participates in the political violence of the French Revolution, the Paris Commune, and a Nazi concentration camp. Moorcock also wrote books and stories that featured the character Jerry Cornelius, who had no consistent character or appearance. "The Condition of Muzak" completed the initial Jerry Cornelius tetralogy and won Guardian Literary Prize in 1977. "Byzantium Endures" and "The Laughter of Carthage" are two autobiographical novels of the Russian emigre Colonel Pyat and were the closest Moorcock came to conventional literary fiction. "Byzantium Endures" focuses on the first twenty years of Pyat's life and tells of his role in the Russian revolution. Pyat survives the revolution and the subsequent civil war by working first for one side and then another. "The Laughter of Carthage" covers Pyat's life from 1920-1924 telling of his escape from Communist Russia and his travels in Europe and America. It's a sweeping picture of the world during the 1920's because it takes the character from living in Constantinople to Hollywood. Moorcock returned to the New Wave style in "Blood: A Southern Fantasy" (1994) and combined mainstream fiction with fantasy in "The Brothel of Rosenstrasse," which is set in the imaginary city of Mirenburg. MoorCock won the 1967 Nebula Award for Behold the Man and the 1979 World Fantasy Award for his novel, Gloriana. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Gould, Robert (Cover artist)
Habberfield, Bob (Cover artist)

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Champion of Garathorm
Original title
The Champion of Garathorm
Original publication date
1973
People/Characters
Katinka van Bak; Queen Ilian of Garathorm; Dorian Hawkmoon; Jhary-a-Conel; Ymryl; Yisselda (show all 8); Count Brass; Kalan of Vitall
Dedication
For Trux
First words
Dorian Hawkmoon was no longer mad, yet neither was he healthy.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Fantasy
DDC/MDS
823.914Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991945-1999
LCC
PR6063 .O59Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature1961-2000

Statistics

Members
614
Popularity
47,558
Reviews
3
Rating
½ (3.44)
Languages
English, French, German
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
8
ASINs
17