bunsen_h: (Default)
"The Eye of Argon", by Jim Theis, is mocked for... well, many things.  One of the speed-bumps in reading it is the description of the female protagonist as having a "lithe opaque nose".

I've just been reading The Complete Dying Earth, an SFBC 4-in-1 collection of novels by Jack Vance.  It's been sitting on my shelves, unread, for a couple of decades.  For some reason which escapes me at the moment, I was thinking about the classic D&D magic system, in which a magic user memorizes a spell, and then forgets it in the casting.  That premise originated in these stories by Vance, so I figured I'd give them a try.

They're pretty clunky.

I also don't care for the protagonist of many of them.  He's more than a bit sleazy, and has a high opinion of his own cleverness which is not borne out by events.

But I gather that they were popular in their day, so I'm curious as to how they'll play out.  Some were published in F&SF before being fixed up as a novel.

In one of those stories, I just encountered: "a man spare and taut, with a waxen skin, a fragile skull, hooded eyes and a meticulous nose so thin as to be translucent when impinged across a light".

Perhaps this is where Theis drew his inspiration.



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