Michael Moorcock's hero, Dorian Hawkmoon, continues his adventures in
Count Brass, book 1 of "The Chronicles of Castle Brass." Five years have
passed since the conclusion of "The History of the Runestaff" and the bloody
Battle of Londra. Rather than return to his homeland of Koln where he is the
last of the ruling line, Dorian Hawkmoon rules the Kamarg with his wife (Count
Brass's daughter), Yisselda. Together with their two children, they restore
beauty and peace to the Kamarg.
Rumors that Count Brass's ghost has appeared in the swamps of the Kamarg
undermine Hawkmoon's reputation, for the ghost claims that Hawkmoon
betrayed the old count at the Battle of Londra. Disturbed and convinced that
the ghost is a cruel fabrication, Hawkmoon confronts the ghost, who tells him
that he has returned in order to slay the traitorous Hawkmoon.
At the same time, Hawkmoon receives word from Queen Flana of Granbretan
that old adherents to the beast orders have formed an underground movement.
When he learns that the ghosts of other slain comrades have returned as well,
Hawkmoon believes that the ghosts determined to kill him are connected with
the resurgence of the beast orders. Has some Dark Empire scientist captured
the souls of his comrades and turned them against him?
Thus, Hawkmoon learns that not all his old Dark Empire enemies died as he
believed. He retraces many of his steps from "The History of the Runestaff,"
determined to convince the ghosts of his true friendship and to discover who
from his past escaped the downfall of the Dark Empire. The only way to
accomplish this, it seems, is to follow his enemies through time and dimensions.
Hawkmoon is more like the protagonist of "The History of the Runestaff" here
than he is in any of the following books. He remains strong, practical, and
decisive. However, the type of story deviates greatly from the first series.
Absent in the first series is the philosophizing over time, space, the multiverse,
and fate, which creep into the Hawkmoon story for the first time. Still, Count
Brass both begins and ends with a jolt.
Fans of Moorcock will appreciate the book, but because of its otherwise limited
appeal, I rate it a 6.
Count Brass (Michael Moorcock)
By SC Bryce
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Second Printing:
SCBryce.com (Nov. 27, 2007).