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Space-wanderer Earl Dumarest is on the planet Toy, hoping he'll get information on the whereabouts of Earth, his lost home world. But nothing is given freely there and he must fight in the Toy Games to gain the information he needs. He's forced to be like a tin soldier in a vast nursery with a spoiled child in command - but there's nothing playful about the Games on Toy. Everything is only too real: pain, wounds, blood - and death...Tags
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For my money, the Dumarest Saga of E.C. Tubb ranks up there as one of the best science fiction series written in English.
Set in the far distant future, when mankind has spread across the galaxy, they feature the inimitable Earl Dumarest, a man with lightning fast reflexes who is forever trying to find the home world he fled as a child and has long since lost: Earth.
The galaxy he travels through is a hard, deadly place for a man with no affiliations and little money. Tubb pulls no punches in his depictions of the many harsh, hellish worlds and people whom Dumarest encounters, and invariably survives, if only just, during his quest.
Perhaps one of the best things about this series (which consists of some 32 books) is that each book is show more short, with no unnecessary padding; they're generally between 150 and 190 pages long. So they're a reasonably quick read, too.
I recommend reading all books in the series, preferably in the intended order. If you can, though, avoid the Arrow Books editions - the cover illustrations are, to put it simply, the pits. The artists clearly had never read the books, or if they did, didn't bother to note down a lot of details about the scenes they chose to portray in these illustrations, e.g. clothing, weaponry, etc. Shame on Arrow Books for using such second-class amateurs.
Did I mention? Unlike the seemingly interminable Wheel of Time series of Robert Jordan, or the never-ending Chronicles of Thomas Covenant by Stephen Donaldson - both of which I find way too verbose, i.e. a lot of words pass by without very much happening - the Dumarest Saga has an actual ending - in volume 32, The Return, Dumarest finds his way home! show less
Set in the far distant future, when mankind has spread across the galaxy, they feature the inimitable Earl Dumarest, a man with lightning fast reflexes who is forever trying to find the home world he fled as a child and has long since lost: Earth.
The galaxy he travels through is a hard, deadly place for a man with no affiliations and little money. Tubb pulls no punches in his depictions of the many harsh, hellish worlds and people whom Dumarest encounters, and invariably survives, if only just, during his quest.
Perhaps one of the best things about this series (which consists of some 32 books) is that each book is show more short, with no unnecessary padding; they're generally between 150 and 190 pages long. So they're a reasonably quick read, too.
I recommend reading all books in the series, preferably in the intended order. If you can, though, avoid the Arrow Books editions - the cover illustrations are, to put it simply, the pits. The artists clearly had never read the books, or if they did, didn't bother to note down a lot of details about the scenes they chose to portray in these illustrations, e.g. clothing, weaponry, etc. Shame on Arrow Books for using such second-class amateurs.
Did I mention? Unlike the seemingly interminable Wheel of Time series of Robert Jordan, or the never-ending Chronicles of Thomas Covenant by Stephen Donaldson - both of which I find way too verbose, i.e. a lot of words pass by without very much happening - the Dumarest Saga has an actual ending - in volume 32, The Return, Dumarest finds his way home! show less
Not my favorite of the Dumarest books, especially coming after Derai, which I thought one of the better ones. This one's just a little too pro forma "land on a planet and fight in an arena" type of thing. However, the series as a whole is still enjoyable and re-reading them in order makes the larger story line flow well.
Still holding my interest...I am loving the fact that I might just get to read this series all the way through one last time in my long life. I don't like changing it from 4 stars to 3 stars but as one gets older one is a bit fussier (not more discerning :-)
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Author Information

320+ Works 7,121 Members
E. C. Tubb was born in London on October 15, 1919. He wrote under about 65 pseudonyms including Gregory Kern, Carl Maddox, Alan Guthrie, Eric Storm and George Holt during his 60 years as a freelance writer. He mainly wrote science fiction novels including Moon Base, Alien Dust, The Space-Born, Death Is a Dream, and the series The Dumarest Saga or show more Dumarest of Terra in the United States. He died on September 10, 2010 at the age of 90. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Series
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title*
- Planet der Spieler
- Original title
- Toyman
- Original publication date
- 1969
- People/Characters
- Earl Dumarest; Mac Legrain; Jack Sachen; Grego Groshen, The Toymaster; Leon Hurl, Stockholder of Toy; Mere Evan, Stockholder of Toy (show all 24); Cyber Creel; Webmaster Vogel; Brother Elas; Elgar; Restern, Stockholder of Toy; Sheem; Mulwo, Stockholder of Toy; Quara Groshen, Stockholder of Toy; Ledra, Stockholder of Toy; Amrush; Melange; Mother Jocelyn; Commander Gyrn; Director Conrad of Grail; Vohmis, Stockholder of Toy; Krailton; Techon; Krul
- Important places
- Toy; The Library, Toy; Artus; The Maze, Toy
- Dedication
- To Linda
- First words
- For thirty hours the sun had arched across the sky, baking the desert with its oven-heat, but now that it was night the temperature had already fallen to the point where water turns to ice.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Dumarest swallowed the bittersweet wine.
- Publisher's editor*
- Schelwokat, Günter M.
- Original language*
- Englisch
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.
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Statistics
- Members
- 193
- Popularity
- 169,063
- Reviews
- 3
- Rating
- (3.27)
- Languages
- Dutch, English, French, German
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 8
- ASINs
- 5




























































