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Most helpful customer reviews
2.0 out of 5 stars
Split Personality,
By A Customer
This review is from: 16 Guardsmen Of Gor (Paperback)
Volume 3 of the Jason Marshall trilogy is a book with a split personality. The first 136 pages is nearly nonstop action and the last 162 pages is nearly nonstop bondage play. When I started reading it, I thought that John Norman had gone back to the good old days of emphasizing the adventure aspects of his creation. It even took about 60 pages before a slave girl showed up, surely a record for all but the earliest volumes in the Gor series. That said, the action in this volume is not up to the level of the Tarl Cabot books. Basically it consists of a protracted battle between pirates and the forces of the defending towns on the Vosk River. As such, it somewhat lacks variety compared to Cabot's adventures but has scenes which are just as ludicrous, such as the one where Jason finds himself bound to the ram of an enemy ship but escapes by inducing eels to bite off his bonds. Yeah, right! I've discovered that you can pretty much tell when you are in for a dissertation on the glories of bondage. Just count the pages in the chapter. The chapters in the first part of the book range from 2 to 19 pages. Those in the second part range from 16 to 58 pages. Figure it out. It's not like he has something new to say that he hasn't already said far too often. Enough already! Give it a rest! It's really a shame. The Gor books could have been one of the all-time great action-adventure fantasy series. If only John Norman hadn't ruined it with his obsession with bondage...
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta) Amazon.com:
3.2 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews) 5 of 8 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
Last of the Fighting Slave trilogy,
By The Old Philosopher "The Old Philosopher" - Published on Amazon.com
Guardsman of Gor continues the story of Jason and Beverly, both from New Your City who were captured and transported to Gor in Fighting Slave. Guardsman begins with a naval battle on the Vosk river between pirate fleets and a loose confederation of river cities. Norman spends the first several chapters on three days of the battle during which time the battle is almost lost and the remaining 3 confederation ships make and escape. In a dramatic turn around things get better from there. While the river battle has been going on the men of the cities have formed a fighting alliance on land and wait in ambush for the remaining pirate vessels. Victory over the pirates is complete with Jason earning considerable wealth, including female slaves, captured from the pirate fortress. The last part of the book describes Jason as a dominant man of Gor, no longer the Earth wuss who had been controlled by feminist women in a feminist dominated culture. Jason plays match maker, distributing appropriate female love slaves to the heroes of the pirate battle who are now his friends. Because they are slaves, the females fall deeply in love with strong manly men who control and dominate them, much more so than Earth feminist women. Finally, Jason completes his complete enslavement and domination of the former Beverly of New York City, now transformed into a submissive Gorian love slave. Jason gives her a good whipping and makes her grovel at his feet. Miss. Beverly, now transformed into Norman's vision of true femininity, loves her life as Jason's salve and vows to serve him fully and well.I found the book tedious in many places with slow action and long repetitive conversations that could be skipped, especially in the last half. If you're reading the whole Gor series you might enjoy it and it wraps up the 3 Jason books. Tarl Cabot of Port Kar is not mentioned, nor are the Priest Kings or other space aliens, nor the war between Cos and Ar. The Fighting Slave trilogy stands by itself set on Gor as a commentary on Earth men and women. John Norman's commentaries on human sexual instincts and personalities is interesting, though some would disagree with his assessments. 2 of 4 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
Happiness is A Great Book,
By FaeJay "Wielding The Pen" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Guardsman of Gor 16 (Paperback)
My first recommendation would be to start at the beginning of the series. While you can figure out what is going on; and each book is a story unto itself - the climax which builds in knowing the full history of Gor, the characters and emotions driving the plot line, is critical in my opinion. As any who have encountered Norman's undertakings knows, there are aspects of his writing style that are dry; redundant and so explicitly technical it borders on dullness. However, this also denotes a seeming trademark, something you come to expect and almost relish as you submerse yourself into the world he has created for us to escape to. Holding true to form, there are twists and turns that leave you cheering for the hero and celebrating a clearly ingenious mind! I highly recommend picking this up, whether you are a long time follower of Gor or if you are just beginning .. you'll get hooked I promise!
1 of 3 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
Interesting New Yarn,
By Anathaniel Wallace "Nosidino" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Guardsman of Gor (Paperback)
Guardsman of Gor culminates the trilogy centered on the new character of Jason Marshall, an everyday man who was abducted to Gor and forced into slavery. In the first two books Jason was bewildered at his circomstances, but his coming of age came when he escaped from slavery and gained his freedom.Like the great Fredrick Douglass (Read My Bondage My Freedom), Jason escapes and forces his former owners and tormenters to learn the error of their ways. Then he becomes a guardsman who fights against the pirates who are opressing the river towns of the Vosk River. This book was one of the few books where Norman went into detail concerning pirates, who had previously only been alluded to. Here we see pirates and a massive naval battle (A Rarity In The Gor Books). This was what enthralled me-and why I give it Four Stars. Seeing the fighting aboard vessels and the tactics that were used. I wish that Norman had gone into more details like these in his later books instead of boring us with verbose and pedantic ideas on the "superiority" of one gennder over another. I felt like saying: "OK, I get the idea and I heard it all before 100 times. Now I want adventure and action with the principle characters!" Ironic, because there is actually very little sex in any of these Gor books. Just theoretical discussions about what can and will and should be done, etc. If you want to read a really good book trilogy with lots of sex but with plenty of thick plot, I highly reccomend The Seer King, The Demon King and The Warrior King by the late Chris Bunch. See my review concening the Seer King. It was great! The character Damastes Cimabue would give Tarl Cabot a serious run for his money. A. Nathaniel Wallace, Jr. |
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