Creation
myths are among the most powerful stories mankind has created. From the fertile, varied mix of Australian Aborigines to the Jewish Yahweh, the Greek Titans to the coalescence of the
heavens in Daoism, each culture, and eventually human, knows and relates to
stories which explain how the world, or some aspect of it, came into
being. An open tribute to Jack Vance,
Roger Zelazny’s 1971 Jack of Shadows
is one such story.
Never
named, Jack of Shadows takes place on
a planet stuck in rotation. The sun only
ever striking one side, the other half lies in perpetual twilight, the stars
lighting one’s path. But night and day
are not the only aspects separating the two halves. Mortality in the form of souls and science thrive
on the day side, while magic and immortality cohabit on the dark side. A precursor to Changeling and Madwand (from a premise point of view),
the novel tells of the eponymous Jack and the adventures he has on both sides
of a globe.
Born
nightside, Jack is a thief who desires the hand of Evene, the beautiful
daughter of a lord born in night and a woman born in day. But before her father,
the Colonel Who Never Died, will give her hand in marriage, he asks Jack to
steal a jewel as a bride offering. The
beautiful Hellflame—ultimate prize for the Hellgames of light side—is the
Colonel’s desire, and it is in the light Jack is found at the beginning of the
story, eying his goal. Seen and caught
immediately thereafter, Jack is beheaded, thrusting him back to square one:
Hades, night side. From that pit of
filth to the mansions of nightside’s most powerful lords and barons, the
mountains on the edge of twilight to the cities of light side again, the quest Jack
subsequently takes upon himself to enact revenge is everything the genre is
made for, and in its aftermath, the planet is never the same.
This Immortal borrowing from Greek
myth and Lord of Light from Hindu and
Buddhist myth just to name a couple of Zelazny’s real world influences, Jack of Shadows sees the author striking
out into his own territory. Synthesizing
the concepts in general, the novel is distilled myth: science-fantasy.
One
of the strengths of the aforementioned Zelazny novels is style. Save the action sequences, all is oblique, allowing
the reader to fill in the gaps of setting, dialogue, character, and plot from
the indirect details provided. Playing
to Zelazny’s strengths, the stories are a success from strictly a presentation
point of view. Jack of Shadows a direct narrative, it’s difficult to say the change
in style suits the story as well. Though
a highly focused narrative throughout, Zelazny chooses to expound the story in
overt fashion. By choosing to include
the details of such a world-spanning plot, something inevitably feels left out
or over-simplified. Shrouded in less
mystery, Jack is likewise not as strong a character as Sam or Conrad.
In
the end, Jack of Shadows is science
fantasy that synthesizes much of Zelazny’s knowledge regarding the world’s creation
myths. He Who Shapes, Lord of Light,
and This Immortal stronger stories
style-wise, Jack is nevertheless a more
focused and coherent effort than Creatures of Light and Darkness or A Rose for Ecclesiastes. The main storyline
skewed from conventional fantasy only by the intrusion of the real world, the
ending, transcends the whole. Fans of
Michael Moorcock, and yes, Jack Vance will enjoy the novel most.
I have to admit that I was not a fan of this particular Zelazny novel -- I CONCUR completely with the argument that This Immortal, Lord of Light, and The Dream Master were superior. I'm not sure why, Jack of Shadows felt flat despite the fantastic settings, unusual descriptions. I was unable to review novel as well.
ReplyDeleteMy guess is that Zelazny builds a frame but never fills it out. The light side gets some stage time and is therefore intriguing, but is never fully realized. The dark side, while being the setting in which the majority of the story takes place, still feels like so much more is happening that is not described. Being an exercise in world-building, it almost seems as though Zelazny needed to make the story longer so that the reader gets a feel for the planet as a whole. Without the feeling/understanding how the whole planet is affected, the grand metaphorical moment of the dawn guardian at the conclusion falls a bit short...
DeleteYes, there are better Zelazny stories out there. I've got Isle of the Dead on my to-read pile and I know you recently purchased some of Zelazny's more obscure works. Hopefully there's something with more substance still kicking around in his backlog.
This sounds ridiculous but I started reading Isle of the Dead but then the pages started falling out so I moved to The Dream Master instead. I really need to glue it back together... I finally put forth the effort to review The Dream Master -- loved it! Review is up.
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