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The Dreamthief's Daughter: A Tale of the Albino
 
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The Dreamthief's Daughter: A Tale of the Albino (Hardcover)

by Michael Moorcock (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (27 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 49.00
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From Amazon.com

In the elaborate fictional cosmos Michael Moorcock has created, Elric and the various vonBeks are all aspects of the Eternal Champion who fights for the Balance, preventing both Law and Chaos from dominating the universe and trapping it in either barren sterility or pointless fecundity. Elric, the albino sorcerer and last prince of the inhuman empire of Melnibone, was the creation of Moorcock's adventurous pot-boiling inventive youth, just as the vonBek family featured in the heroic fantasies of his more thoughtful middle-life.

In The Dreamthief's Daughter, he brings together Elric and Ulric vonBek, last scion of the family, and we finally learn the sin for which the perpetual villain Gaynor the Damned was doomed: Nazi occultists are searching for the Grail and the Black Sword and must be prevented from attaining them. Ulric seeks allies wherever he can find them, including Oona, who wanders through dream realities and with whom he falls in love. This is fast-moving phantasmagorical stuff with ambiguously virtuous heroes and baddies whose villainy and charm is total. Moorcock's immensely powerful visual imagination and sense of the innate drama of crucial scenes make this a breathtaking read. --Roz Kaveney, Amazon.co.uk



From Publishers Weekly

In this latest installment in his multivolume saga of the Eternal Champion, Moorcock (War Amongst the Angels) teams his favorite hero, the melancholy albino swordsman Elric of Melnibon?, with Count Ulric von Bek, the last in a line of German noblemen who have made several previous appearances in the series. War is in the offing, and Hitler, having learned that the von Bek family may own both an enchanted sword and the Holy Grail itself, sends SS Major Gaynor von Minct to take possession of these mystical relics so they may be used to further the cause of the Third Reich. Von Bek and Gaynor, however, are merely the current earthly avatars of the Eternal Champion and one of his greatest foes; they are knights fighting in the causes, respectively, of Chaos and Law, in innumerable, gorgeously described, alternate realities. Von Bek and Elric, aided by the book's title character, a female archer who can take the shape of a white hare, must confront a variety of gods and monsters in an effort to preserve the balance of the Multiverse, which stands in dire danger of falling under Gaynor's control. Over the years Moorcock has produced a number of highly original genre and mainstream novels. In the Eternal Champion series, however, he has essentially been writing well-done variations on the same story for decades, gradually polishing his stylistic skill and occasionally making veiled allusions to contemporary political events. There's nothing particularly new here, but fans of the series should enjoy this addition. (Apr. 11)
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Customer Reviews

27 Reviews
5 star:
 (20)
4 star:
 (6)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (27 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant development, Mar 29 2004
By Alan Roberts (Rochester, NY) - See all my reviews
I was amazed by this book. Somehow Mr Moorcock has managed to create another Elric book which comes close to having the power of what is indisputably the best of the series, Stormbringer. Unlike the previous reviewer, I found it fresh and exciting and a deepening and broadening of the Elric mythos. While the 'underground' sequences are slower than the rest of the book, I felt that this was deliberate, recreating the kind of 'classic' effect you find in writers like E.R.Eddison or even the great Professor Tolkien who is Mr Moorcock's only equal. Other reviewers have described the plot very thoroughly and anything I added would be a spoiler. But I would recommend this novel one hundred percent. Not only has Mr Moorcock lost none of his old magic, he has added to and made deeper what has gone before. Highly recommended to new and old Moorcock fans!
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5.0 out of 5 stars Excelent, April 19 2003
By A Customer
Moorcock returns to his Multiverse here. The story is about the stuggle of Ulric Von Bek against the Nazi's. Elric plays a significant part here, but this is only partially his story. The story moves slower than most of Moorcock's works. While some people find this a fault, to me it adds more versimultitude than his previous books. Ulric and Elric are interesting in their similarities and differences. Ulric while sharing Elric's albinoism and brooding nature, is still the production of a more civilized era. If you are looking for a simple retread of the previous Elric books, don't look here, but if you want a novel that takes the Multiverse and expands on it you will enjoy this.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Moorcock at his best, Mar 11 2003
By A Customer
It's been a while since I picked up a Moorcock fantasy novel, having spent most of my time reading his non-fantasy novels like Mother London, King of the City and The Brothel in Rosenstrasse. I thought that I had kinda outgrown his fantasies, I will admit. But either I'm going through an early second childhood or there's no chance of my outgrowing anything by Moorcock because I found this book a wonderful change from his 'straight' novels. There are subtleties here which maybe I never noticed when I first read the fantasy books. The references to the underground world, whose entrance is in Hamlyn in Germany, make extra sense to me now and relate to 'Nazi Science' which Hitler's people were promoting at the time when this book opens. The obsession with romantic emblems was another feature of Nazism and Moorcock subtly undercuts the normal material of generic fantasy, just as he subtly undercut the material of the imperial adventure novel in his Nomads of the Time Streams stories of airship captain Oswald Bastable (who makes a guest appearance here - to underline the significance of the story). This is a rich, brilliant, beautifully paced book which offers insights into Elric's character as well as into the world of our recent history.
As with all Moorcock, it is a generous book, a book full of heart and soul -- and a thrilling read as well. If you have
blood, brain and, yes, soul, you'll love this book. There isn't a better fantasy writer living.
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Most recent customer reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars A Plague of Heroes
I have been reading Michael Moorcock's stories since the 1960's. So, I have been through almost every incarnation of the Eternal Champion, as well as many efforts in other... Read more
Published on Jan 13 2003 by Marc Ruby™

5.0 out of 5 stars As great as Tolkien, but different.
When I was growing up there were only Tolkien, Moorcock, Howard and Leiber writing this kind of fantasy and for me Moorcock was always the best, in spite of a certain haste in one... Read more
Published on Dec 23 2002 by gordian27

5.0 out of 5 stars MOORCOCK MATURES
Michael Moorcock is best known for his Elric Saga, the first book being "Elric of Melnibone". Several sequels followed, including "Stormbringer", which is considered one of the... Read more
Published on Aug 3 2002 by EMAN NEP

4.0 out of 5 stars Return of the Eternal Champion
Once upon a time, Michael Moorcock wrote a whole bunch of fun books centered around the concept of the Eternal Champion, a being who inhabits various incarnations and is in... Read more
Published on Jul 1 2002 by mrliteral

5.0 out of 5 stars The greatest living English fantasist
Admiring American models like Cabell and Howard, knowing Lewis, Tolkien, White and Peake personally, with a broad, sophisticated reading taste by the time he was twenty, Michael... Read more
Published on Jan 15 2002

5.0 out of 5 stars Good Elric movie!
Reading this, I thought what a great first Elric movie it would make. It starts in recognizeable history, then moves into weird fantasy worlds, then back into the real world. Read more
Published on Nov 3 2001

5.0 out of 5 stars Simply Stunning
Moorcock has done it again! This book is captivating to say the least. Moorcock's imagery and vivid descriptions add a life to this novel, I have never seen before. Read more
Published on Oct 18 2001 by Eric D Zollman

5.0 out of 5 stars Youth and Maturity
The first Elric stories -- wild and full of power -- were the work of a twenty-year-old. These later Elric books bring the wisdom, technique and still a quite astonishing energy,... Read more
Published on Sep 17 2001 by Leonard Steel

5.0 out of 5 stars Fantasy blends with elements of history
In the past the counts of Germany have allied with different forces, but as nazism envelopes Germany, the family legend about supernatural powers draws one Rudolf Hess, Hitler's... Read more
Published on Sep 9 2001 by Midwest Book Review

5.0 out of 5 stars Moorcock does it again...
...after ten years, Elric is back, this time together with Ulric von Bek (the last Graf von Bek), in a truly amazing blend of two of the Eternal Champion series. Read more
Published on Jul 24 2001 by William M. Feagin

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