One-eyed was the mutant baby whose incredible mental powers were shaking the newer world to pieces. Two-eyed were the acolytes who saw the chaos coming and sough to release an anti-force. Three-eyed was the one within whose mind hid the third eye of ancient wisdom and who alone could stabilize the coming society.
Name: Gordon, Richard Alexander Steuart Birthplace: Banff, Banffshire, Scotland, UK, (18 May 1947 -7 February 2009
Alternate Names: Richard A. Gordon, Richard Gordon, Alex R. Stuart.
One-eye was the mutant baby whose incredible mental powers were shaking the newer world to pieces. Two-eyed were the acolytes who saw the chaos coming and sough to release an anti-force. Three-eyed was the one within whose mind hid the third eye of ancient wisdom and who alone could stabilize the coming society.
The series is set in a post-apocalyptic world where the same nature was torn and mutated. The origin of the catastrophe is uncertain, due to the passing of centuries and to the sheer scale of destruction it unleashed upon the land. In book two it is hinted that the original cause might be a large-scale nuclear war or a cometary impact. The plot revolves around a mutant child with god-like powers called the Divine Mutant, the reincarnation of a former mutant king born one thousand years before, shortly after the catastrophe, who is determined to spread chaos in the slowly rebuilding world. Most of the events are seen through the eyes of a group of people involved in his schemes.
Set in a future Earth where an man-made accident had previously wiped (literally) away most of Human civilization. A mutant cyclops baby is born who is actually a reincarnation of the individual responsible for said accident (this is a small spoiler :)).
I read this book in the 1980s and then read my paperback copy recently. A quick read. A little dated, rather "pulpy" perhaps but still an enjoyable read and worth 3.5+/5 . I love the Cuyahogan golem concept the most in this book. The rest is a mish mash of tropey scifi with lashings of mutants, genetic purity, Mad Maxish barbarians playing with technology they do not understand, and apocalypsism, still fun. Having read the other books (Two-Eyes and Three-eyes) helps give this book overall context. It should be noted the book reflects a zeitgeist of the late 1970s, written when concerns of energy (and other resource) limitation and overpopulation were existential threats so younger readers may think it a waste of time on face value. Also was written when "new age ideas" were popular as you will discover if read the next book!