The Owl and the Ape
"The Owl and the Ape" | |||
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Short story by L. Sprague de Camp | |||
Country | United States | ||
Language | English | ||
Genre(s) | Fantasy short story | ||
Publication | |||
Published in | Imagination Stories of Science and Fantasy | ||
Media type | Print (Magazine) | ||
Publication date | November, 1951 | ||
Chronology | |||
Series | Pusadian series | ||
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"The Owl and the Ape" is a fantasy story written by L. Sprague de Camp as part of his Pusadian series. It was first published in the magazine Imagination Stories of Science and Fantasy for November, 1951, and first appeared in book form in the de Camp's collection The Tritonian Ring and Other Pusadian Tales (Twayne, 1953). It has also been translated into German.[1][2]
Plot summary
Young Gezun of Lorsk, bound to the service of the sorcerer Sancheth Sar, is sent by his master to bid on the Hordhum Manuscript, one of the magical effects of the retiring magician Dauskezh Van. The errand is complicated and the competition fierce, as the bidding is anonymous and his master's rival Nikurteu Bayla is also after the manuscript. But Gezun, though green, is no fool, and cannily parries all of Bayla's stratagems. Or rather, almost all of them...
Chronologically, "The Owl and the Ape" is the third of de Camp's Pusadian tales, and the first to feature his protagonist Gezun of Lorsk. Gezun is a teen-ager at the time of this story.[1]
Setting
In common with the other Pusadian tales, "The Owl and the Ape" takes place in a prehistoric era during which a magic-based Atlantian civilization supposedly throve in what was then a single continent consisting of Eurasia joined with Africa, and in the islands to the west. It is similar in conception to Robert E. Howard's Hyborian Age, by which it was inspired, but more astutely constructed, utilizing actual Ice Age geography in preference to a wholly invented one. In de Camp's scheme, the legend of this culture that came down to classic Greece as "Atlantis" was a garbled memory that conflated the mighty Tartessian Empire with the island continent of Pusad and the actual Atlantis, a barbaric mountainous region that is today the Atlas mountain range.
Critical reception
Groff Conklin described the Pusadian series as being "in the Conan tradition in every sense of the word, though better written."[3]
Notes
- ^ a b Laughlin, Charlotte; Daniel J. H. Levack (1983). De Camp: An L. Sprague de Camp Bibliography. San Francisco: Underwood/Miller. p. 222.
- ^ The Owl and the Ape title listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- ^ "Galaxy's 5 Star Shelf", Galaxy Science Fiction, June 1954, p.122