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Tales of Nevèrÿon

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Cover artist
  
Unknown

Language
  
English

Media type
  
Print (Paperback)

Originally published
  
1979

Publisher
  
3.9/5
Goodreads

Country
  
United States

Publication date
  
1979

Pages
  
264 pp

Followed by
  
Tales of Nevèrÿon t3gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcQB6pjm1SQJkOYVV3

Genres
  
Fantasy, Novella, Sword and sorcery, Speculative fiction

Similar
  
Samuel R Delany books, Return to Nevèrÿon books, Fantasy books

Tales of Nevèrÿon collects a preface (to the entire series) and five sword and sorcery stories by Samuel R. Delany; and finally an appendix. The stories are "The Tale of Gorgik," "The Tale of Old Venn," "The Tale of Small Sarg," "The Tale of Potters and Dragons," and "The Tale of Dragons and Dreamers." It is the first of the four-volume Return to Nevèrÿon series. This article discusses the five stories collected in the book. Discussions of overall plot, setting, characters, themes, structure, and style of the series are found in the main series article.

Contents

Contents

The following table of contents is from the most recent Wesleyan University Press edition:

  • "Return . . . a preface by K. Leslie Steiner"
  • "The Tale of Gorgik"
  • "The Tale of Old Venn"
  • "The Tale of Small Sarg"
  • "The Tale of Potters and Dragons"
  • "The Tale of Dragons and Dreamers"
  • "Appendix: Some Informal Remarks Toward the Modular Calculus, Part Three by S. L. Kermit"
  • The 3rd printing of the Wesleyan edition of Tales of Nevèrÿon is currently the most accurate and corrects some errors from previous editions that might actually have confused some particularly careful readers of Delany's series.

    The Tale of Gorgik

    “His mother from time to time claimed eastern connections with one of the great families of fisher women in the Ulvayn Islands: she had the eyes but not the hair. His father was a sailor, who, after a hip injury at sea, fixed himself to the port of Kolhari, where he worked as a waterfront dispatcher.” So opens “The Tale of Gorgik” (1979). In his youth Gorgik is one of the “brown, respectable” people of Kolhari, the major port of Nevèrÿon. When he is sixteen, because of a radical takeover of the government, Gorgik is captured and taken as a slave to work in an obsidian mine—not all the slaves are blond, blue-eyed barbarians. But the ones who are darker-skinned generally fare better than those who are not. Soon Gorgik is a mine foreman. When he is twenty-one, Gorgik is purchased by the Vizerine Myrgot as her catamite and is taken to live in the castle of the Child Empress Ynelgo, back in Kolhari, where he gets his first taste of the advantages (and disadvantages) of life among royalty. Eventually the Vizerine frees him and secures him a commission in the army. Finally, however, Gorgik becomes an outlaw, for a while even working as a guard for a slave pen. But he is so disgusted by what he sees there that he goes back to being an outlaw, working to free all the slaves of Nevèrÿon, no matter their color. To this end, he makes use of some of the friendships he made while living at the court.

    Themes and criticism

    Bernard W. Bell points out that Tales of Nevèrÿon is thematically concerned with "the reversal of conventional hierarchical, oppositional relationships." Larry McCaffery states that Delany "thoroughly expands, deepens, questions, and undercuts the premises of [the sword-and-sorcery] genre".

    References

    Tales of Nevèrÿon Wikipedia


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