Original paperback novel. Belmont issued four printings with various cover art.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars
Swords and laser guns,
By This book is technically science fiction but has the feel of fantasy. It is a story of captures and escapes, gruesome fights and rollicking high adventure. For much of the story there seems to be absolutely no themes. Not even the old standby of 'good verses evil' seems to apply as a hero who would instantly chop four men into pieces, rather than be captured, is hardly good. Still Thane of Two Swords is a hero of a kind. He is not quite bad enough to be an antihero and the enemy is evil enough to be considered worse than him. In an interesting reversal of the Western genre convention of 'the bad guy dressed in black' Carter's villain, Prince Chan, is an albino. By making him thus Carter manages to imply that Chan is in some way warped, a mutant, twisted inside. At one point Thane suggests that Chan is also a homosexual, once again implying something 'unnatural' in him. (This certainly may upset real albinos and homosexuals, but none-the-less works as an effective, but crude, plot mechanism.) In the end the book does prove to have the theme of greed and wealth, and Thane evolves into something better than he first was. Carter easily manages to keep the reader turning pages by including interesting plot twists and cliffhanger chapter endings. As you will have worked out by now this book is pure pulp-fiction, but pulp-fiction at its best. If you want to something light that will entertain you for a few hours this is the book for you, but if you want prize winning fiction which makes you think deeply you should look elsewhere. If the novel has one failing it is the long lists of unpronounceable and meaningless names of planets, cities, gods, etc., which add nothing to the story (though I am sure they are meant to provide 'cultural depth'). This book would suit high school readers and up.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Swords and laser guns,
By This book is technically science fiction but has the feel of fantasy. It is a story of captures and escapes, gruesome fights and rollicking high adventure. For much of the story there seems to be absolutely no themes. Not even the old standby of 'good verses evil' seems to apply as a hero who would instantly chop four men into pieces, rather than be captured, is hardly good. Still Thane of Two Swords is a hero of a kind. He is not quite bad enough to be an antihero and the enemy is evil enough to be considered worse than him. In an interesting reversal of the Western genre convention of 'the bad guy dressed in black' Carter's villain, Prince Chan, is an albino. By making him thus Carter manages to imply that Chan is in some way warped, a mutant, twisted inside. At one point Thane suggests that Chan is also a homosexual, once again implying something 'unnatural' in him. (This certainly may upset real albinos and homosexuals, but none-the-less works as an effective, but crude, plot mechanism.) In the end the book does prove to have the theme of greed and wealth, and Thane evolves into something better than he first was. Carter easily manages to keep the reader turning pages by including interesting plot twists and cliffhanger chapter endings. As you will have worked out by now this book is pure pulp-fiction, but pulp-fiction at its best. If you want to something light that will entertain you for a few hours this is the book for you, but if you want prize winning fiction which makes you think deeply you should look elsewhere. If the novel has one failing it is the long lists of unpronounceable and meaningless names of planets, cities, gods, etc., which add nothing to the story (though I am sure they are meant to provide 'cultural depth'). This book would suit high school readers and up.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Swords and laser guns,
By This book is technically science fiction but has the feel of fantasy. It is a story of captures and escapes, gruesome fights and rollicking high adventure. For much of the story there seems to be absolutely no themes. Not even the old standby of 'good verses evil' seems to apply as a hero who would instantly chop four men into pieces, rather than be captured, is hardly good. Still Thane of Two Swords is a hero of a kind. He is not quite bad enough to be an antihero and the enemy is evil enough to be considered worse than him. In an interesting reversal of the Western genre convention of 'the bad guy dressed in black' Carter's villain, Prince Chan, is an albino. By making him thus Carter manages to imply that Chan is in some way warped, a mutant, twisted inside. At one point Thane suggests that Chan is also a homosexual, once again implying something 'unnatural' in him. (This certainly may upset real albinos and homosexuals, but none-the-less works as an effective, but crude, plot mechanism.) In the end the book does prove to have the theme of greed and wealth, and Thane evolves into something better than he first was. Carter easily manages to keep the reader turning pages by including interesting plot twists and cliffhanger chapter endings. As you will have worked out by now this book is pure pulp-fiction, but pulp-fiction at its best. If you want to something light that will entertain you for a few hours this is the book for you, but if you want prize winning fiction which makes you think deeply you should look elsewhere. If the novel has one failing it is the long lists of unpronounceable and meaningless names of planets, cities, gods, etc., which add nothing to the story (though I am sure they are meant to provide 'cultural depth'). This book would suit high school readers and up.
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