Harman Patil (Editor)

Conan and the Death Lord of Thanza

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Cover artist
  
Keegan

Language
  
English

Publication date
  
1997

Originally published
  
1997

3.6/5
Goodreads

Country
  
United States

Media type
  
Print (Paperback)

Author
  
Roland J. Green

Publisher
  
Conan and the Death Lord of Thanza t0gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcR9tIGlCtF41i35l6

Similar
  
Roland J Green books, Sword and sorcery books, Other books

Conan and the Death Lord of Thanza is a fantasy novel written by Roland Green featuring Robert E. Howard's seminal sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in January 1997.

Contents

Plot

Following the events of "The Star of Khorala," Conan is a wanted man in Ophir, and flees to Aquilonia. He ends up in the city of Shamar in the Thanza Mountains bordering Nemedia. There he joins Captain Klarnides' volunteer Thanza Rangers, who protect the region against raiders. A greater threat soon emerges in Baron Grolin, who aspires to supremacy in the area. Grolin seeks a chest containing the Soul of Thanza, a gem said to gain its possessor mastery of death. He is aided in this quest by the bandit chieftainess Lysinka of Mertyos and a mysterious wizard. Lysinka changes sides after Grolin abandons her in a fight with the Rangers; warned by her of the baron's intention, the Rangers attempt to locate the Soul first to prevent him from becoming the Death Lord. Failing, they are aided in the final conflict by the Slayers of Death, an army of skeletal warriors army charged with defeating the Death Lord. Together they put an end to the transformed baron's ambitions.

Reception

Reviewer Ryan Harvey called the book "the second worst Conan novel I've read," superior only to Conan and the Mists of Doom another of Green's Conan novels. While crediting it with "clever monsters, sword fights, sorceries, and interesting plot ideas," all of these, in his opinion, "cannot overcome slipshod writing and lack of passion for the material." On the plus side, he feels that "[a] struggle with a water dragon works better than most other action scenes, and the skeleton army could have worked if handled with more imagination." He also notes that "Lysinka, a typical warrior-woman, works better than she should. Her attraction to Conan feels realistic and believable. It's a small touch, and one of the few successes in the novel." The Death Lord he considers "a good concept, and Grolin's seizure of its power makes for the most effective sequence in the whole novel. But it arrives after the book has lost most of its momentum and it doesn't renew interest in the story." Summing up, he rates the book "Conan pastiche at its most bland," that "feels like exactly what it is: a writer-for-hire pounding out pages in a short space of time. I can't imagine Mr. Green had much fun writing this book, and consequently I had very little fun reading it."

References

Conan and the Death Lord of Thanza Wikipedia


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