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Nifft the Lean (1982)

by Michael Shea

Other authors: See the other authors section.

Series: Nifft the Lean (1)

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346675,201 (3.73)12
Follow the adventures of Nifft the Lean, the master thief whose felonious appropriations and larcenous skills will lead you through Stygian realms to challenge your most lurid fantasies and errant imaginings. Places where horror, harm and long eerie calms flow past the traveler in endless, unpredictable succession. Travel with the man whose long, rawboned, sticky fingers and stark length of arm will lead you down to the vermiculus grottoes of the demon sea, to stand beneath the subworld's lurid sky and battle monsters who seem the spiritual distillations of human evil itself We invite you to the very gates of Hell and beyond--come if you dare… (more)
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» See also 12 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 6 (next | show all)
"The Fishing of the Demon Sea" novella is what makes this book; it's by far the most memorable thing that Shea's written that I've read. It includes demons that, perhaps because of their organic, physical, non-spiritual quality, seem more predatory than those in any other work. A fantasy classic. Bruce Sterling wrote about it in one of his early newsletters as an example of the then-new decadence in fantasy, and it's a fine decadence. ( )
1 vote rpuchalsky | Oct 5, 2022 |
Limited Signed Edition
  bookstopshere | Mar 15, 2019 |
I ordered this book a while back but only got round to reading it now. It's a collection of four longish S&S tales set in a far-future dying Earth where science and magic have merged and demons (aliens?) stalk the land. At the start of the book Nifft, the titular character, is presumed dead, and the tales that follow are arranged as a sort of series of reminiscences by his good friend and chronicler Shag Margold. In addition, each piece has an introduction giving a bit of background to the story that follows whilst the stories are narrated by Nifft, a self-aggrandizing rogue with a flair for words and who, one suspects, cannot entirely be trusted to be telling the entire truth of his exploits. This method of successive removes help the reader form an impression of added richness and depth to the world.

Stylistically and in general tone, Nifft the Lean reads like a mixture of Vance, Leiber, Moorcock and Clark Ashton Smith. To say that Shea writes like an elaborate pasticheur, however, would be unfair. These are fine tales, that can stand with the best in the genre. Nifft himself is a marvellous storyteller, a not-quite-lovable rogue who relates his various thefts, rescues and daring crackpot schemes with a zeal and panache that's wonderfully entertaining and, sometimes, touching. His world is a brutal one, but also filled with fascinating details, and much of the pleasure of these tales lies in simply savoring its wonders lying nestled amidst its horrors.

As a writer, Shea has talent. Like Leiber, he knows when to add little touches of realism to counterpoint the fantastic elements. And like Vance, he knows when to temper his imagination to increase its potency. In the wonderfully titled opening story, Come Then Mortal, We Will Seek Her Soul, Nifft and his companion embark on a literal descent into hell to reunite the soul of a witch with her lover in return for a key to a tower of untold riches. It's a fantasmagoric ride through a horrific netherworld straight out of the mind of Hieronymus Bosch. Yet the horrors are not merely visual but underline a particular moral or philosophical point. The close of the tale is fitting and poignant.

The second piece, Pearls of the Vampire Queen, is a little more down to earth, being a tale of a rather odd pearl hunting expedition in a marshland that's no less hellish than the setting of the first piece. It's a stronger tale, however, due to the presence of an elegantly developed setting and a stronger cast of characters. Shea creates an entire mini-ecosystem here, as well as a culture revolving around vampire worship that's not only plausible (within the confines of the setting) but, perhaps, preferable as a system of rule compared to the despotic regimes otherwise in abundance.

The third story, Fishing on the Demon Sea, is by far the longest and most ambitious of the tales. It's also my least favorite, however, being marred by some sloppy writing, plotting and unrealistic characterization. Some, mind. Arrested on trumped up charges whilst vacationing in a cattle town on the edge of nowhere, Nifft and his companion Barnar are forcibly coerced into rescuing a rich landowner's spoilt son, who has been taken to hell by an aquatic demon inhabiting the fabled Demon Sea. This is more or less a standard quest plot, and goes on for just a shade too long, though it includes some of Shea's most imaginative conceptions.

The fourth tale, The Goddess in Glass, returns Nifft to the world of men. The city of Anvil Pastures is threatened by the imminent collapse of a nearby mountain after decades of careless mining have destabilised its foundations. The city's "goddess" (really a dead alien encased in a vast glass cage) instructs the townsfolk via her oracle that the only way to deal with the threat is to retrieve a flock of her ancient cattle, giant, rock eating grubs that were lost centuries ago in a vast war that wiped out all trace of the aliens save the goddess herself. Nifft is very much a background character in this one, and whilst the story itself isn't bad, it suffers from a slightly too detached feel which the other pieces (all written in the first person) lack.

Even given these two relatively weaker pieces, the collection as a whole is a work of fine quality and well worth seeking out if you enjoy literate fantasy of the Leiber and Vance variety. Shea wrote two more books involving Nifft, The Mines of Behemoth and The A'rak, the first of which was collected together with the tales I summarised above in The Incompleat Nifft. ( )
1 vote StuartNorth | Nov 19, 2016 |
I ordered this book a while back but only got round to reading it now. It's a collection of four longish S&S tales set in a far-future dying Earth where science and magic have merged and demons (aliens?) stalk the land. At the start of the book Nifft, the titular character, is presumed dead, and the tales that follow are arranged as a sort of series of reminiscences by his good friend and chronicler Shag Margold. In addition, each piece has an introduction giving a bit of background to the story that follows whilst the stories are narrated by Nifft, a self-aggrandizing rogue with a flair for words and who, one suspects, cannot entirely be trusted to be telling the entire truth of his exploits. This method of successive removes help the reader form an impression of added richness and depth to the world.

Stylistically and in general tone, Nifft the Lean reads like a mixture of Vance, Leiber, Moorcock and Clark Ashton Smith. To say that Shea writes like an elaborate pasticheur, however, would be unfair. These are fine tales, that can stand with the best in the genre. Nifft himself is a marvellous storyteller, a not-quite-lovable rogue who relates his various thefts, rescues and daring crackpot schemes with a zeal and panache that's wonderfully entertaining and, sometimes, touching. His world is a brutal one, but also filled with fascinating details, and much of the pleasure of these tales lies in simply savoring its wonders lying nestled amidst its horrors.

As a writer, Shea has talent. Like Leiber, he knows when to add little touches of realism to counterpoint the fantastic elements. And like Vance, he knows when to temper his imagination to increase its potency. In the wonderfully titled opening story, Come Then Mortal, We Will Seek Her Soul, Nifft and his companion embark on a literal descent into hell to reunite the soul of a witch with her lover in return for a key to a tower of untold riches. It's a fantasmagoric ride through a horrific netherworld straight out of the mind of Hieronymus Bosch. Yet the horrors are not merely visual but underline a particular moral or philosophical point. The close of the tale is fitting and poignant.

The second piece, Pearls of the Vampire Queen, is a little more down to earth, being a tale of a rather odd pearl hunting expedition in a marshland that's no less hellish than the setting of the first piece. It's a stronger tale, however, due to the presence of an elegantly developed setting and a stronger cast of characters. Shea creates an entire mini-ecosystem here, as well as a culture revolving around vampire worship that's not only plausible (within the confines of the setting) but, perhaps, preferable as a system of rule compared to the despotic regimes otherwise in abundance.

The third story, Fishing on the Demon Sea, is by far the longest and most ambitious of the tales. It's also my least favorite, however, being marred by some sloppy writing, plotting and unrealistic characterization. Some, mind. Arrested on trumped up charges whilst vacationing in a cattle town on the edge of nowhere, Nifft and his companion Barnar are forcibly coerced into rescuing a rich landowner's spoilt son, who has been taken to hell by an aquatic demon inhabiting the fabled Demon Sea. This is more or less a standard quest plot, and goes on for just a shade too long, though it includes some of Shea's most imaginative conceptions.

The fourth tale, The Goddess in Glass, returns Nifft to the world of men. The city of Anvil Pastures is threatened by the imminent collapse of a nearby mountain after decades of careless mining have destabilised its foundations. The city's "goddess" (really a dead alien encased in a vast glass cage) instructs the townsfolk via her oracle that the only way to deal with the threat is to retrieve a flock of her ancient cattle, giant, rock eating grubs that were lost centuries ago in a vast war that wiped out all trace of the aliens save the goddess herself. Nifft is very much a background character in this one, and whilst the story itself isn't bad, it suffers from a slightly too detached feel which the other pieces (all written in the first person) lack.

Even given these two relatively weaker pieces, the collection as a whole is a work of fine quality and well worth seeking out if you enjoy literate fantasy of the Leiber and Vance variety. Shea wrote two more books involving Nifft, The Mines of Behemoth and The A'rak, the first of which was collected together with the tales I summarised above in The Incompleat Nifft. ( )
  StuartNorth | Nov 19, 2016 |
More appropriately named “Nifft the Tour Guide” since the four short stories comprising this do not develop Nifft’s character or his motivations. His presence is a mere instrument for the author (or the author’s fictional historian, Shag Marigold) to describe entertaining adventures worthy of recording.

Shae offers a strange, effective mix: non-scary, detailed, weird narratives (this is weird fantasy to be sure, but a “fun” version). Readers should expect engaging, detail-packed guided tours through hell and otherworlds. There are battles and adventures, but one should NOT expect being terrified (it is not weird horror like Lovecraft) and do NOT expect heroic battles (Nifft is not Howard’s Conan).

Shae’s strength is his meticulous detail of strange worlds which can only be conveyed by using examples:

“Those waters teemed, Banar. They glowed, patchily, with a rotten orange light, and in those swirls of light you could see them by the score: little bug-faced ectoplasms that lifted wet, blind eyes against the gloom, and twiddled their feelers imploringly; and others like tattered snakes of leper’s-flash with single human eyes and lamprey mouths. And there were bigger things too, much bigger, which swam oily curves through the light-blotched soup. One of these lifted a complete human head from the waters on a neck like a polyp’s stalk. It drooled and worked its mouth furiously, but could only babble at us. All these things feared the raft, but you could feel the boil and squirm of their thousands, right through your feet. The heavy logs of the raft seemed as taut and ticklish as a drumskin to the movement of the dead below.” --- From the first story: Come Then Mortal--We Will Seek Her Soul

“Some grottoes, for example, were densely carpeted with victims whose faces alone retained their human form. The rest of their bodies—everted and structurally transformed—now radiated from each face’s perimeter in wormy coronas. They resembled giant sea-anemones. The souls within those faces still—all too eloquently—lived …
And there were others of our species who lay in nude clusters resembling the snarls of kelp which a northern sea will disgorge on the sand in storm season. Their legs and hips merged with central, fleshy stalks, while their arms and upper-bodies endlessly and intricately writhed and interlaced. These were the very image of promiscuous lust, but the multiple voice they raised made a hospital groan, a sick-house dirge of bitter weariness. Crablike giants, hugely genitaled like human hermaphrodites, scuttled over them with proprietary briskness—pausing, probing, nibbling everywhere.” --- From the third story: Fishing of the Demon Sea ( )
1 vote SELindberg | Jan 27, 2013 |
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» Add other authors (2 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Michael Sheaprimary authorall editionscalculated
D'Achille, GinoCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Whelan, MichaelCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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Follow the adventures of Nifft the Lean, the master thief whose felonious appropriations and larcenous skills will lead you through Stygian realms to challenge your most lurid fantasies and errant imaginings. Places where horror, harm and long eerie calms flow past the traveler in endless, unpredictable succession. Travel with the man whose long, rawboned, sticky fingers and stark length of arm will lead you down to the vermiculus grottoes of the demon sea, to stand beneath the subworld's lurid sky and battle monsters who seem the spiritual distillations of human evil itself We invite you to the very gates of Hell and beyond--come if you dare

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