When Michael Moorcock created his most famous character Elric of Melniboné, the Beatles had yet to record Hard Days' Night. Surely we've gotten used to his name by now?Probably the last name...
When Michael Moorcock created his most famous character Elric of Melniboné, the Beatles had yet to record Hard Days' Night. Surely we've gotten used to his name by now?Probably the last name...
As an old SF-fan joke put it (except we can now modify it slightly):Probably the last name...
I haven't finished the book yet, and I'm not entirely sure how much I can say about the book as the BBC is persnickety about information and stuff.Allyn, just how well does Moorcock manage to integrate the DW universe into his Multiverse? Are there any referenes to other novel series and characters he's written? Any references to past Doctor adventures?
I read it a long time ago. I'm getting the Dark Horse Comics collection (Chronicles of Conan Volume 3) that reprints it sometime next week.This actually won't be the first time Moorcock has crossed over his creations with other literary characters. In the 1970s he came up with a story for Marvel's Conan the Barbarian comic, wherein Conan crossed paths with Elric, Queen Xiombarg, and Prince Gaynor the Damned. I love that story.
When Michael Moorcock created his most famous character Elric of Melniboné, the Beatles had yet to record Hard Days' Night. Surely we've gotten used to his name by now?Probably the last name...
Well, considering I'd never heard of Moorcock until it was announced he was writing for DW, I imagine there are people out there who have not gotten used to his name. The first time you hear it, it's pretty funny.
... and that guy was like "hey, ever read some Shakespeare", and I was like, "shake what?!"Well, considering I'd never heard of Moorcock until it was announced he was writing for DW, I imagine there are people out there who have not gotten used to his name. The first time you hear it, it's pretty funny.
Michael Moorcock's name is pronounced [mʊəˌkɒk]. Incidentally, it's another name for the male red grouse.How do you really pronounce his name?![]()
Michael Moorcock's name is pronounced [mʊəˌkɒk].
It's "moor" as in "door". It is indeed "more cock", my dear 'rod.Michael Moorcock's name is pronounced [mʊəˌkɒk].
I can't read this (boxes instead of letters). So is it "moor" as in "door" or in "poor"?
I haven't finished the book yet, and I'm not entirely sure how much I can say about the book as the BBC is persnickety about information and stuff.
To the point I've reached in the book, I've noticed references to the Kane of Old Mars books, to The Metatemporal Detective, and to Sexton Blake (which Moorcock didn't create, but which he likes a lot).
You'll have to read the book.I wonder if Moorcock is going to drop any hints that the Doctor might be an incarnation of the Eternal Champion? That'd be interesting.
It doesn't. Which I think is Moorcock's point; the main characters, the Terraphiles, have built their society on what they think they know about (for them) ancient history. Kane's Mars (which is basically Burroughs' Barsoom) may not be a literal truth, but as far as they're concerned it is true.Interesting. Wonder how the Kane of Mars stuff relates to what we know of Mars' distant past in the Whoniverse.I haven't finished the book yet, and I'm not entirely sure how much I can say about the book as the BBC is persnickety about information and stuff.
To the point I've reached in the book, I've noticed references to the Kane of Old Mars books, to The Metatemporal Detective, and to Sexton Blake (which Moorcock didn't create, but which he likes a lot).
No, I meant Sexton Blake. Begg is the star of The Metatemporal Detective, and he's explicitly referenced in Terraphiles as well. So, we have the "mundane" version of the character -- Blake -- and the "multiversal" version of the character -- Begg -- mentioned within the same manuscript.And by Sexton Blake, don't you mean Seaton Begg, a character Moorcock created based on Blake to some extent? (I don't actually know much about Begg, just what I've heard here and there)
Moorcock was asked about that -- the vok Bek devil versus "The Satan Pit" and "End of Days" -- on his forum:Now that I think about it, I'm not too sure it's such a good idea to include a reference to Seaton Begg in this book. Begg has connections to the von Bek saga, which involves a whole lot of craziness about God and the Devil and the Holy Grail and whatnot, which I don't feel really gels with the Whoniverse and just overcomplicates things IMO. I mean, the Doctor met the archetypical Devil in The Satan Pit, and we saw its son Abaddon in TW End of Days. Once you add the von Bek/Second Ether books to the equation....you just end up with sheer madness.
I don't see those Who devils as religious figures but as myth figures from our murky past -- general supernatural beings we have either created from our psyches or which, as the stories suggest, have existed in our psychic memory for thousands of years. The Devil the von Beks deal with is the conventional Christian figure who might or might not having anything to do with the Dr Who devils.
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