The text is episodic, I think. At the end of Part Three (of Four), Conan has resolved, or at least for the time being seems to have resolved, a particular conflict. Now he continues his pursuit of Valeria after yet another change of horse. The novel reads as though it could have originally been published as a serial or even as a series of reasonably discrete instalments. Many genre novels were first published in that format so a new novel in the same genre can be constructed with a recognizably similar structure. Conan is moving on. He is not going back. As Poul Anderson's Le Matelot says, "We are on our way."
Kaor, Paul!
ReplyDeletei finally got my copy of Stirling's THE WINDS OF FATE yesterday.
Ad astra! Sean
Conan's life, as shown by Howard, is highly episodic -- periods of terror and bloodshed, separated by travel, basically.
ReplyDelete