Michael Moorcock

//Michael Moorcock
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  • Book II of The Dancers at the End of Time. At the world's end, all love is timeless and all age-old disputes irrelevant. But Iherek Carnelian is in danger of taking reality too seriously, and grows tired of his pleasures. Perhaps a hunt for aliens would lift his spirits. Or better yet - a journey through time. Yes, the past! So complicated and strange - especially with its scarcity of a time machine for a return trip.  Cover art by Robert Gould.
  • The sequel to Behold The Man. The new divine tragedy of Karl Glogauer - surrogate-Christ - begins in the unlikely locale of Derry and Toms' roof garden. He continues his quest through time and space, searching for Harmony and (if the two are not the same) Freedom From Fear. Cover art by Peter Goodfellow.
  • The sequel to The Warhound And The World's Pain. The Ritter Von Bek escapes the terrors of the French Revolution, goes ballooning with the Chevalier de St. Odhran and fights men and demons to find his one true love. Cover art by Robert Gould
  • Contains all three books of the Oswald Bastable Trilogy: The War Lord of the Air; The Land Leviathan and The Steel Tsar.  In 1903, Captain Oswald Bastable, in charge of a military mission in the Himalayas, enters the Temple of the Future Buddha at Teku Benga. He is catapulted into a brave new world decades in the future - a world where the British Empire is stronger than ever and giant airships rule the air. Cover art by Melvyn Grant.

  • Book IV of The Elric Saga. Elric of Melniboné, kinslayer and last lord of a dying race, comes in search of the evil sorcerer Theleb K'aarna and arrives in Lormyr, the oldest of the Young Kingdoms. His former foe Myshella, Empress of the Dawn, awaits the doom-driven albino in Castle Kaneloon, offering a pact against the Pan Tangian sorcerer. But although Elric bears and destiny greater than he knows and controls the mighty runesword Stormbringer, his pursuit of vengeance drives him to look despair in the face. Previously published under the title The Sleeping Sorceress. Cover art by Melvyn Grant.
  • Book I of The Adventures of Oswald Bastable. Suppose that a few of our present inventions had been made earlier and others not discovered at all? How would the last century have evolved differently?  Based on long-missing documents, this is the story of Oswald Bastable, a Victorian captain who found himself in an alternate future - 1973 (from Bastable's point of view, of course) and the airship rules supreme - a future thathas little relationship to his earth or his time. Cover art by Patrick Woodroffe.

  • Book IX of the Elric Saga.  Elric returns on the wings of a dragon to the ruined place of his birth, the Dreaming City. There, in the catacombs of his ancestors, he hears the tortured voice of his dead father. But to save his father's soul from eternal suffering, Elric must battle the princes of Hell itself - and put his faith in the hands of a woman. A woman called the Rose... Cover art by Robert Gould. For those confused as to where this much-later book fits into the Elric-verse:  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elric_of_Melnibon%C3%A9#Internal_chronology
  • Book II of The Roads Between Worlds. The Fireclown, a painted demon, a fat messiah, ever-masked, leading hysterical subterranean riots, inciting the people to tear down and revolt. For his own deadly power? Or for galactic salvation? A grotesque political charlatan - or the only voice of sanity left on Earth? No-one knew but everyone was frightened and there were those who were prepared to exploit that fear. Earth, with its savage class structure, was dying. Complacently rushing toward a holocaust, corrupt and weakened by an impotent administration, Earth trembled before the threat of solar war. Only Alan Powys and Helen Curtis saw sense in the Fireclown's vision. But by then, he had vanished - and the greatest space chase in history was on. Cover art by Bob Haberfield.
  • Book III of The Pyat Quartet. Colonel Pyat dreams and schemes his way from New York to Hollywood, from Cairo to Marrakesh, from cult success to the degradation of sexual degradation, leaving a trail of destruction, both human and mechanical in his wake as he crashes toward an appointment with the worst nightmare of this century.  The third book in the Pyat series, which began with Byzantium Endures and The Laughter of Carthage. Cover art by Andrew Hirniak.