|
||||||||
|
Forgotten Stories by Andy Beau David C. Smith (1952 - ) had five novels published in the late 1970s to early 1980s that occur on the island-continent of Attluma. Four of them concern the adventures of the warrior Oron. According to the series, Attluma was an island-continent that eventually sank into the ocean, giving rise to the legend of Atlantis. However, unlike many Atlantis stories, the sinking of the island-continent does not occur in this series. Also, Attluma does not contain a civilization brimming with super-science. Attluma could be considered a miniature version of Conan’s world, since it has many of the same types of countries, peoples, and cultures. The first of the four Oron books is titled, simply, Oron. Years before the beginning of this book, Oron, who belonged to a tribe of barbarians, killed his father and was exiled from the tribe. In exile, he joined bands of bandits and raiders, rising to high leadership in that collection of ruffians. As this story begins, Oron, about 30, is a soldier in the army of Amrik, the general of the army of the country of Salasal. The book opens immediately after a fierce battle, won by Amrik against the army of a rebellious city. Oron is walking among the dead and wounded on the battlefield. ![]()
Because of his prowess in battle, Amrik assigns Oron as one of his personnel guard. Amrik is actually plotting to overthrow the ruling king of Salasal and enlists Oron’s aid. However, Oron sees the methods Amrik uses in overthrowing the king--poisonings and surprise knifings in the night--as a dishonorable way to wage a battle. He leaves the service of Amrik and eventually gathers his own army and begins winning land from the ruthless rulers in the area. Here is Amrik and his army battling Dasagak, a despotic ruler of a small city-state, and his army.
Having set up a small kingdom himself, it was only natural that he and Amrik would eventually battle. Meanwhile, Amrik strikes up a bargain with a demon from Hell to provide him the means to eventually conquer the entire continent, and beyond. Many believe that every thousand years a battle is fought between the forces of Hell, represented by Kossuth, and the forces of humanity, represented by a special warrior the gods have chosen to protect humanity and defeat Kossuth. The victor controls the Earth for a thousand years, either Kossuth or humanity. In the past, Kossuth has won and has ruthlessly subjugated humanity; other times humanity has won and defeated the forces of evil. This is now the time of Kossuth’s return! The following describes the doom Kossuth plans to wreak upon humanity while sitting in his ebon citadel.
Because of his prior defeat and subsequent maiming at the hands of Oron, Amrik chooses to begin conquering the lands that eventually lead him into battle against Oron. Kossuth lends Amrik evil sorcery to defeat the armies in these lands. Oron is told that he is this savior from the gods, who will save humanity from Hell’s evil prince, Kossuth. He sees himself as a warrior who makes his own destiny, without the control or help of the gods. Eventually, Kossuth steals the soul of Oron’s wife, the queen, and keeps it in his special black fortress located in a lake near Amrik’s ruling city. As with all the books I review in this column, I recommend this book for readers craving action and excitement, sword and sorcery style. The demon, Kossuth, is one of the most evil opponents you can find in the genre. An added bonus is the great cover (Oron, looking like a bearded Conan, is standing over his dead enemy in a battlefield, scowling, partially armored, and carrying a five-foot long battleaxe) as well as the full-page interior illustrations, artwork painted by Clyde Caldwell, who later became a well-known artist for some of the books from TSR. In the next Oron novel, Mosutha’s Magic, Smith explains the history behind the Oron series. He wrote this first full-length novel,Oron, while in college in 1973 at the age of twenty-one. He’d written short stories prior to this but nothing this long. He felt that “Flawed though it is (and as I (Smith) suppose, it must be, written by a neophyte twenty-one-year-old with more ambition than experience), I felt that Oron was a solid story, and I was fully confident that it would be accepted immediately for publication by some farseeing, revolutionary-minded editor. Wrong.” Smith also published a 6-book series of Red Sonja novels with Richard Tierney in the early 80s. For about ten years, beginning in the mid-70s, Zebra Books printed several anthologies of forgotten Robert E. Howard non-sword-and-sorcery tales (horrors, swashbucklers, etc.), and Lin Carter’s four Weird Tales in book format, among other books of pulp-era stories and their modern equivalents. The 5 books in the Attluma series are divided into 4 about Oron and 1 about another warrior from four hundred years after. Zebra Books got confused with this arrangement, as is shown in the following list of books, shown in publishing chronology. The series numbers (ex. ‘#3’) are on the Zebra Books covers incorrectly. Oron - June 1978 The Sorcerer’s Shadow - September 1978 Mosutha’s Magic - Oron #3 - 1982 The Valley Of Ogrum - Oron #4 - 1982 The Ghost Army - Oron #5 - 1983. As can be seen, Zebra Books thought The Sorcerer’s Shadow was part of the Oron series and thus considered it the #2 book, thereby mis-numbering the subsequent Oron books. So, there isn’t an actual book with “Oron #2” printed on the cover. I’ll review the other four Oron books in future columns. These books can be found on Abebooks.com and other used book web sites for a few dollars. Forgotten Stories of Fantastic Sword-fighters. About the Author Andy Beau has lived in San Diego, CA since he was 16. There were no computer degrees in the 1960s, so he graduated with a degree in math and worked in the computer programming field from 1969 until 2003, when he retired early at 57. Prior to these articles all of his writing has been technical--the composition of user manuals--and there wasn't much call for analysis of plot and character development in that. Andy's been a fan of sword and sorcery tales since college in 1966. This has lead him to other fantasy adventure genres: lost race, supernatural thrillers, Lovecraftian horror, and more. He shares his long-term love for and knowledge of sword and sorcery with his readers in these columns. SwordAndSorcery.org is proud to have him. |
|
||||||
|
||||||||