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Chargement... Flight to Opar (original 1976; édition 1976)par Philip José Farmer, Roy G. Krenkel
Information sur l'oeuvreLe Cycle d'Opar, Tome 2 : Hadon, le guerrier par Philip José Farmer (1976)
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Appartient à la sérieLe Cycle d'Opar (2) Appartient à la série éditorialeDAW Book Collectors (197 and 475) Est contenu dans
Published for the first time anywhere, the Restored Edition of Philip Jos Farmer's Flight to Opar features nearly 4,000 words that were cut from Farmer's original manuscript when the novel was published in 1976. This new Meteor House edition is the first and only publication of the novel ever to include the excised material, which encompasses long passages of narrative, dialogue, and rich world-building details on Ancient Opar and the civilization of Khokarsa that readers have never previously been able to enjoy―until now. The Restored Edition of Flight to Opar also features rare and previously unpublished bonus material, including: * A Preface to the Restored Edition by Christopher Paul Carey (coauthor with Philip Jos Farmer of The Song of Kwasin, the third novel in the Khokarsa series) * A brand-new introduction by S. M. Stirling (New York Times bestselling author of the Change series) * The Khokarsan Language by Philip Jos Farmer * Khokarsan Glossary by Philip Jos Farmer and Christopher Paul Carey * A Guide to Khokarsa by Christopher Paul Carey * Early Notes on the Khokarsa Series by Philip Jos Farmer * Original Outline to Flight to Opar by Philip Jos Farmer * Cross-section Map of Opar by Philip Jos Farmer Hadon of Opar was the winner of the Great Games and the rightful claimant to the throne of Khokarsa, a mighty empire that stretched along the shores of ancient Africa's great inland seas. But the old king has refused to surrender his power, and Hadon finds himself caught in the middle of a bloody civil war between the zealous priests of the sun god and the beneficent priestesses of the great mother goddess. Now a divination of the oracle hurls Hadon on his most dangerous adventure yet. With a tyrant's armies and warships hot on their heels, Hadon and his companions must set out on a journey through perilous jungles and across storm-racked seas to reach the city of his birth―for only in far-flung golden Opar can he fulfill the oracle's prophecy and save the land from utter doom. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)843.91Literature French French fiction Modern Period 20th CenturyClassification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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Even without the incompleteness of its predecessor, this one gathers speed towards its abrupt finish and entirely dispenses with denouement. Character development is sparing, and the prose is workmanlike. Despite all of the abundant action, these are ultimately books of ideas, centered on the imagined world: the culture and vanished history of a pre-patriarchal human empire. There is even more attention in this second book to various ceremonial functions, technological circumstances, and modes of personal status, which are some of the features that go to make this world interesting and credible.
Although Farmer's nods to model literature are mostly to Burroughs' Tarzan (whence the city of Opar), he has clearly incorporated a lot of ideas from H. Rider Haggard's "lost civilizations" of Africa, and mixed in his own readings of Frazerian anthropology and 20th-century gender theories.