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Cargando... El perro de la guerra y el dolor del mundo (1981)por Michael Moorcock
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. In a list of my favourite books... one of my all time favourites, out of a body of work that's staggering this is IMO the finest book Moorcock has ever written .. its short , fast and yet perfect, not an idea or a concept wasted, not a verb misplaced . First read on a plain to Yugoslavia a couple of years before the war. I read it in the 4 hour flight , again on the beach , and again on the flight back . I was 17, impressionable and you would think that in the years since with more cynical eyes it would lose that charm , but it never has. If you read one moorcock in your life this is the one to read Graf Ulrich von Bek is soldier who finds himself in a bit of a predicament. He's in love with a witch who has sold her soul to the Devil, and his actions in the 30 Years war has consigned in own soul to Hell. So when Lucifer gives him a slim chance to redeem himself and his lady love, he takes it and so engages upon a quest to find the Holy Grail - a tool to ease the World's pain. As his endeavor unfolds, though, the entire wold seems to rise up against him and he wonders (rightfully) whether he will get the reward he was promised even if he does succeed... It's enough to rock even a pious man's faith. I really, REALLY liked this book. We had a bit of Dante's inferno; a little of the Davinci Code; some Victorian Gothic horror and a little Night of the Living Dead all mashed up into a very good read. I've always been intrigued by the supposition that the Devil was either just a guy (like in the Incarnation of Immortality series by Piers Anthony) or that he was fallible or less than omnipotent. This book plays it as well as any I've ever read. And unlike most of the Eternal Champion stories, in this one, the Devil's bargain was easy to keep as well as easy to read about. Ulrich Von Bek discovers that Lucifer had claimed his soul. Now the only chance for redemption is to go on a quest for the holy grail to restore lucifer in god's good grace. Very well written adventure novel. Unique writing style but I enjoyed the plot and development of the characters very much. Highly recommend to anyone who likes the fantasy adventure genre with a little theology mixed in. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
Pertenece a las seriesThe Eternal Champion (Von Bek book 1) Von Bek Family (1) Pertenece a las series editorialesScience Fiction Book Club (6496) Contenido enPremiosListas de sobresalientes
Heartsick at the atrocities he has seen perpetrated in the name of God during the Thirty Years' War (1618-1648), Captain Von Beck is sent by Satan to find the "Cure for the World's Pain," in order to free his soul from the Devil's grip. The sequel is The City in the Autumn Stars (1987). No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)823.914Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999 1945-1999Clasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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Von Bek is a typical tortured Moorcock hero, but less tortured than some, a battle hardened veteran, having come to terms with his base nature. After being shown the Hell that awaits his soul, he makes a deal with Lucifer to take on a quest, not in search of enlightenment, but to heal the pain of the World
Ostensibly this is the story of a grail quest, but it's classic Moorcock, so things are never simple. All of his trademark flourishes are in evidence here, with wild rides through shifting reality, musings on the nature of humanity and its place in the many facetted universe, and simpler matters, like the nature of comradeship, and the power of a man to make his own reality through force of will.
Reading this I was transported again to my first Moorcock readings in the very early '70s, and felt the same sense of awe and wonder at the force of his vision that I did back then.
This is sword and sorcery at its finest, and, by Arioch, I love it. ( )