Corum: The Coming Of Chaos

by Michael Moorcock

Segunda Trilogía de Corum (libro 3), Corum (Collections and Selections — Omnibus 1-3), The Eternal Champion (Collections and Selections — Corum novels 1-3)

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Prince Corum is the last of the Vadhagh, his family and people brutally slain by the Mabden. Vowing to wreak vengeance on the killers, Corum sets out on his terrible quest only to fall in love with a beautiful Mabden woman, and to confront the fury of the Lords of Chaos. For they fear that he is the hero who could tip the balance in their cataclysmic war with the forces of Law and free his world from Chaos's vicious grip. His epic struggle against them and his ultimate victory is only bought show more at a considerable price. Moorcock's evocation of a rich, dark world, a time of magic, phantasms, cities in the sky, oceans of light and wild flying beasts of bronze is one of the pinnacles of modern imaginative literature. show less

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Corum is my favorite of the Eternal Champions. He's not as evil or twisted or conflicted as Elric, nor does he carry around a soul sucking sword (usually). He's also not quite as damned as Dorian Hawkmoon. In fact, in this trilogy he's determined to get revenge for his people, and wipe out the deities that are Elric's patrons!
Unlike several of the volumes in this collection, the Corum novels are three linear, sequential adventures covering the aforementioned hero's struggle against a Chaos invasion of his home world. It's good old-fashioned sword and sorcery, complete with magic limb replacements, gods good, evil, and capricious, a wisecracking sidekick with a flying cat, a cardboard cutout love interest, etc. All the basics.

It's solid stuff, although I found Corum himself a little flat - Moorcock hit a home run with the Eternal Champion concept, because it means he can put the same broody hero into any possible situation and have a ready-made conflict, but the heroes themselves, with the notable exception of Elric, tend to all blur together. But that show more multifaced hero has definitely grown on me. show less
https://nwhyte.livejournal.com/2921219.html

This trilogy, first published in 1971, is the first of two trilogies featuring Corum Jhaelen Irsei, one of the incarnations of Moorcock's Eternal Champion; the first and third volumes won the first two August Derleth Awards. I'm not super familiar with Moorcock's heroic fantasies; I did find it striking that he successfully takes the traditional storyline of chivalry, questing and manly derring-do, and underpins it with lashings of melancholy, destiny, and cosmic balance. Corum's own hand and eye are replaced by magical substitutes belonging to supernatural beings at an early stage, and this physical change also resonates through the three books. Also, unusually for Moorcock, he rooted a lot of show more the vocabulary in a real language, Cornish, which I felt gave it a bit more sub-surface coherence. I can't argue that it's terribly profound, but I did think it was well done. show less
BOOK 1 Knight of Swords 4 Stars

Sometime in the early 80's I was reading a lot of Moorcock, Elric, Hawkmoon, Count Brass and some of his sci-fi stuff. My buddy Eric Messerol decided to get in on the fun, but didn't want to read the same books I did, so he started reading the Corum books. I'm not sure if he ever finished them, but I do know that I never got around to reading them, even though I've had them on my shelves for more than 30 years.

Obviously, I finally got to them. I would normally give a book like this 3 stars, but I'm giving an extra point for it NOT seeming dated, more than 50 years later. I don't mean that it has a style similar to modern books, I just mean that it wasn't cringy and didn't have me laughing at its show more seriousness. Of course it is nostalgic to hear names like Arioch and Xiombarg so that may have helped too.

BOOK 2 Queen of Swords 3 Stars
This one moved along quicker than the first book. It got a little repetitive with Corum using his special eye to summon one monster to fight the next and then summoning that one to fight the next etc... Jhary and the cat were the best characters in this very linear, swords & sorcery adventure. Nothing really blew me away, but it was kind of fun and nostalgic.

BOOK 3 King of Swords 2.5 Stars
So ends the first Corum trilogy. I didn't like this one as much as the others. It seems like he got lazy with what could have been exciting/interesting battle scenes. I was disappointed that even though some of the other eternal champions incarnations made guest appearances they were treated like minor characters and not given much "personality", they didn't get the "epic-ness" that they deserved.
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My reactions to reading tis omnibus in 1999. Spoilers follow.

“Introduction” -- In a short introduction, Moorcock notes this is only fantasy whose language and mythology derives from a specific source, specifically Cornish.

The Knight of the Swords -- I liked this fantasy more than I thought I would, especially since I found out it was based on Cornish mythology. I found several things surprising, variations on the other fantasies of the Eternal Champion saga. The book wastes no time making Corum as a mournful, melancholy figure. In short order he finds himself virtually the last Vadagh, a complacent, rational, anti-social race that he finds upon venturing out of his castle, almost dead at the hands of the upstart race of man, here show more called Mabden. He gets maimed, losing an eye and head, and then falls in love with a Mabden woman. Unlike Elric, he is a rational, dispassionate sort who dismisses sorcery, in this world practiced by the upstart Mabden. His lover Rhalina is much more learned in it. The ship of corpses, including that of her husband, is one of the most startling images of the book along with the vast, naked form of Arioch, Lord of Chaos, Knight of Swords (the Sword Rulers are Chaos Lords in this series) with men, lice-like, crawling over his body, feeding on crumbs, sweats, and scabs. Unlike Elric, Corum is never allied with the Chaos Lords. He finds out they want the destruction of all the older races on his plane and want to supplant them with Mabden who they have been aiding. His quest for vengeance against the Mabden man who killed his family broadens to take on the Chaos Lords. Like Elric, Corum possesses an unreliable, murderous weapon in his prosthetic Hand of Kwill (the only remnant of a dead god). Unlike Stormbringer, the Hand doesn’t feed on souls nor does it seem to kill indiscriminately (it seems to kill those suborned by Arioch), but its sudden, uncontrollable violence against those Corum does not wish to kill distresses him, makes him guilt-ridden like Elric. I liked the character of sorcerer Shool-an-Jyvan who wants to overthrow Arioch. Vain, vague he wants, in his own words to be the first truly omniscient and omnipotent god, to “make the universe concerned” to “change all the conditions” of the universe. He sends Corum on a quest to recover the hidden heart of Arioch to gain power over the god. He doesn’t realize he’s a pawn of Arioch’s, that Arioch has given him his power, can’t get at his heart and wants it taken by Corum so he can roam the Planes at will. Arioch is a Chaos Lord (Chaos leads to injustice, death, but also creation – the older races, under the sway of the Lords of Law were degenerating into stagnation). Chaos is the enemy of truth, and Arioch says that mortals never accept the natural state of the universe is anarchy. At novel’s end, Corum meets Lord Arkyn (who he unknowingly met earlier as the Giant of Laahr), a Lord of Law weakening on the mortal plane, a lover of the dead Vadhagh. At novel’s end, after the death of Shoal, he knows, like most Eternal Champion, his happiness must be put aside for the struggle to restore the Cosmic Balance, here tipped too far towards Chaos. It usually is tipped toward Chaos in the Eternal Champion perhaps because a world overly dominated by Law is less dramatic.

The Queen of the Swords -- I liked this quest story of Corum entering the Chaotic Fire Planes of Xiombarg, the Queen of Swords. The baroque details of the chaotic landscape and degenerate armies of Chaos were quite stunning and inventive. I also liked Jhary-a-Couel, sort of an Eternal Sidekick to Eternal Champions, and his knowledge (with bouts of amnesia and vagueness) of the multiverse and the struggles between Law and Chaos. I also liked his cat. The fact that neither the gods of Law or Chaos can act directly but only through mortal agents is driven home when Law God Arkyn reveals the manipulations he has put Corum through just to destroy Xiombarg (and, almost incidentally, help Corum). Corum notes he could grow to hate the gods to which Arkyn replies he would understand that attitude.

The King of the Swords -- This book is not as compelling a quest and adventure tale as Moorcock’s The Queen of the Swords, but it is still interesting for the most detailed literary and philosophical exploration I’ve seen yet of Moorcock’s multiverse. Erekosë, Elric, and Hawkmoon (though just via a brief bit with the Runestaff) show up as Corum and the first two band together briefly to defeat a sorcerer. Jhary-a-Couel (companion to many Eternal Champions throughout space and time) continues his role in the trilogy as a sometimes vague, sometimes keen guide to the multiverse and the Eternal Champions’ role in it. Neither Law or Chaos is absolutely good or evil, both are necessary, life is rooted in paradox of all sorts. This novel serves as sort of veiled explication of Moorcock’s narrative devices. Not only is paradox rife in the multiverse – as well as self-similarity of the Mandlebrot sort, but it is remarked at one point, that correspondence is rife in the lives of the Eternal Champion thus explaining Moorcock’s ricocheting narrative where the heroes sometimes get caught up in battles and quests that seem to have little to do with their goals and where problems are solved via very unexpected means. It is explained that both gods (the products of men]s dreams yet, in another paradox, gods may have created mortals) must obey the Cosmic Balance. Law acknowledges the authority and obligation. Chaos doesn’t (but still, in the end, has to obey) thus (and because Law recognizes the need for some Chaos and also leads to justice) the Eternal Champion usually serves Law even if sworn to Chaos like Elric. The novel opens strongly with the genuinely horrifying Cloud of Contention which sets friends and lovers against each other with eventually murderous emotions of rage and annoyance (though Moorcock depicts the effects well, he sort of seems to forget the emotional consequences of this as Corum and company careen through various planes looking for a cure – it sort of reappears at novel’s end, via corpses, as a theme). The Cloud of Contention does lead to a humorous and truthful bit from Jhary when he annoyedly remarks that he is “tired of the company of gloomy heroes, of those doomed to terrible destinies – not to mention a lack of humor”. When Kwll (Corum has to return the Hand of Kwll and the Eye of Rhyun to their original owners) kills not only the Gods of Chaos on the Fifteen Planes but also the Gods of Law, it is quite unexpected. (Kwll does not have to obey the Cosmic Balance, and he decides the Conjunction of the Million Spheres is a time for changes.) However, it is in keeping with a theme in the later part of the book that the gods are embodiments of mortals’ desires and fears, that mortals create the gods, sustain them, and can get along without them and their manipulations. Jhary departs at novel’s end, bound for planes where gods still exist. Moorcock seems to good naturedly have his tongue in cheek when Jhary remarks he would hate a world where he must blame himself for his misfortunes. “Gods – a sense of an omniscience – not far away – demons – destinies which cannot be denied – absolute evil – absolute good – I need it all.”
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(Alistair) Well, sometimes I like some good, old-fashioned sword-and-sorcery, and having the two Corum trilogies sitting about on the shelves previously unread by me, I turn to these. One thing I have noted in the past about Moorcock's work is that the worldbuilding is generally both pretty decent and interesting, which is not, I suspect, generally the case for the plenitude of genuine pulp sword-and-sorcery I also have sitting about on the shelves.

It's also good for my regular dose of Humans Are Bastards, because in this trilogy, man ("who in those days, called his race Mabden"), are pure bastard-coated bastards with bastard filling, to quote a quotation from the above-linked TV Tropes page. This trilogy drops us right in the middle of show more what in so many fantasy worlds is implied or backstory, the time at which the humans largely wipe out the older races, and while the more civilized folk of Lywn-an-Esh provide some counterpoint to this, our lovely human envy and xenophobia are shown in full, ugly flower. Anthropophiles be warned.

Anyway, this book is an omnibus, containing the first of the two Corum trilogies, The Knight of the Swords, The Queen of the Swords, and The King of the Swords. It is part of the Eternal Champion cycle, and as such concerns itself with part of the ongoing and eternal struggle between Law and Chaos (as represented by the three eponymous Sword Rules, each of whom governs five of the Fifteen Planes through which the setting of these books moves, and each of whom is eventually overthrown in the appropriate book).

They are, of course, somewhat reminiscent of the Elric books (the primary other part of the Eternal Champion cycle which I have read), but frankly, while I did enjoy Elric's books, I nevertheless prefer these; much as I understand the reasons for it, Elric's angst does not make him terribly good reading for me, and this is a condition Corum does not suffer from, despite having at least as much reason to. This makes it, while still harsh in plenty of places, significantly more enjoyable reading overall.

Recommended for those who like this particular fantasy subgenre.

( http://weblog.siliconcerebrate.com/cerebrate/2009/04/the_swords_trilogy_michael_... )
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The Knight of Swords: http://www.librarything.com/review/85471577
The Queen of Swords: http://www.librarything.com/review/25465906
The King of Swords: http://www.librarything.com/review/85471601

I first read these books as a twelve year old. I was fascinated by the darkness they contained. My previous experience in the genre was limited to Terry Brooks and J.R.R. Tolkein - so reading Moorcock was a significant departure. I read Elric and then Corum. Elric was just very depressing and more cerebral. Corum, though, was right up my alley - swords, fighting, revenge. I still remember reading about "the gaping maw of Chaos". That particular image is still the one I see in my head when I read the word "maw". Rereading it now as a forty year old, show more I still find a lot to like about this particular incarnation of the Champion. For all that he's not human, he's very human - full of doubt, hate, rage, lust for revenge, a penchant for sloth and arrogance... Very human. His torture at the hands of the Mabden was gruesome and another vivid image. But he refuses to lie down. When a challenge presents itself, he steps up. He's a man of action, and I very much appreciate that. show less

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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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823.914Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991945-1999
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PR6063 .O59Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature1961-2000
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