Thursday, 11 June 2026

Disappearance

Three Hearts And Three Lions, NOTE (pp. 154-156). 

By the end of this NOTE and therefore also of the novel, Holger Carlsen has ransacked bookshops for:

"'Grimoires. Treatises on magic.'" (p. 156)

- and has disappeared. 

In A Midsummer Tempest, we learn that he has traveled between universes and is spending a night in the Old Phoenix. 

Poul Anderson's short story, "Losers' Night," confirms that Holger Danske has been in the Old Phoenix and also mentions other guests of that inter-universal inn:

Theseus (Greek myth)
Scheherazade (Arabian nights)
Falstaff (Shakespeare)
Huck Finn (Mark Twain)
Irene Adler (Sherlock Holmes)
Red Hanrahan (Yeats)
blind Rhysling (Heinlein)
"...an Abelard who remained a whole man..." (Anderson's "House Rule")
"...a Rupert of the Rhine who outfought Cromwell..." (Anderson's A Midsummer Tempest)

"Losers' Night" also lists several outstanding women including:

Gunnhild (Anderson's Mother Of Kings; Wikipedia article mentions Anderson twice)

Valeria Matuchek (Anderson's Operation Otherworld and conversation with Holger in the inn)

Not a small world but a big multiverse.

Poul Anderson, "Losers' Night" IN Anderson, All One Universe (New York, May 1997), pp. 105-123 AT p. 111.

4 comments:

S.M. Stirling said...

It's an ingenious way to get characters from different books to meet!

Anonymous said...

Kaor, Paul!

Besides what Stirling wrote above I want to stress another point. "Losers' Night" rightly focuses on Winston Churchill and Vincent Van Gogh, but we see another woman in that story most readers pay no attention to: Queen Mary I of England.

Ad astra! Sean

Jim Baerg said...

I was impressed by a snippet of overheard conversation between two unnamed characters in "Losers' Night". Enough information was given in the conversation for me to identify them as Brutus & Louis Riel. Few non-Canadians would have identified the latter.

Anonymous said...

Kaor, Jim!

At least I recognized Brutus the first time I read "Losers' Night."

Ad astra! Sean