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They named the
planet Chaos X, because one hemisphere was not in this
universe-and no one who ventured there would ever return. They named the other
universe Ultra, because it was beyond the laws of the
Milky Way galaxy. It was only by means of Ultra's
non-Euclidean physics that men could travel the starways.
They named the ruler
of that "immobile" planet Fury, because that
was the effect of his power on people.
But they were afraid
to call Craig Star Gazer by any other name, because he
was the space captain who was going to cross into Fury's
domain and wrench his loved one from Ultra's power-and
this was something that no one had ever done before
except the legendary Orpheus.
Cover art
by Kelly Freas
Published
in 1972 by DAW.
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Brian Stableford:
To Challenge Chaos.Dedicated to Mick
Morriss
Cast
of Characters:
Julius Watchgod, Craig Star Gazer, Ernst Ninrod, John
Wrath, Donna Teredo, Marc Coldflame, Gray Gay Storm, Dark
Aura and King Fury.
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Review:
This novel was originally called
Watchgod's Cargo, but Donald A. Wollheim changed the name to the more
dramatic, yet equally descriptive one above. Most of it was written
between Cradle of the Sun and The Blind Worm, and features the same
stylistic treatment of characterisation as the Dies Irae trilogy;
which here I found less irksome, because there are fewer characters
to deal with. An interesting device is starting a flashback with a
figure denoting how long before current events the sequence occured.
The descriptive
writing is vividly clear as we've come to expect and we
travel through the melancholy landscape of Chaos X in a
graceful black gondola; accompanyed by souls as dark and
shadowy as the landscape.
Personally, I like
this every bit as much as the Blind Worm and together,
they stand as the best of Brian's early novels.
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