This is the story of Childeric, called The Shatterer, Last Emperor of the Eidolon Empire. He swashbuckled through a swordly and sorcerous universe...in four novels written by A. E. Phillips during the fantasy revival of the late 1960s.
This is the story of Arcadia Stanton McCauley, who spent a couple of summers being A. E. Phillips and got on with her life...until her life was over.
Only it wasn't. Not quite. Because when Cady McCauley sailed off an LA freeway and over a cliff in a Porsche, she woke up in the Eidolon Empire....
She was born long enough ago to have seen Classic Trek on its first outing and to remember that she once thought Spock Must Die! to be great literature. As she aged, she put aside her fond dreams of taking over for Batman when he retired, and returned to her first love, writing. Her first SF sale (as Eluki Bes Shahar) was the Hellflower series, in which Damon Runyon meets Doc Smith over at the old Bester place. Between books and short stories in every genre but the Western (several dozen so far), she's held the usual selection of odd and part-time writer jobs, including bookstore clerk, secretary, beta tester for computer software, graphic designer, book illustrator, library clerk, and administrative assistant for a non-profit arts organization. She can truthfully state that she once killed vampires for a living, and that without any knowledge of medicine has illustrated half-a-dozen medical textbooks.
Her last name -- despite the efforts of editors, reviewers, publishing houses, her webmaster, and occasionally her own fingers -- is not spelled 'Edgehill'.
I adored this book. I find it hard to find a really good uberhuman-human story. I especially like the elf-like characters and they can be hard to find done as well as Childeric is handled here. The human Cady McCauly adds spunk, humor, and of course, the human touch. I could really relate to her and kept plowing ahead to see how she and Childeric would interact next. Never disappointing. In places it was a dark and violent fantasy and in others it was romantic and funny to the point of making me laugh out loud. Started out a bit slow, but became a real page turner. I debated giving it four stars because of the slow start and because it needs a little cleaning up on a proofing level, but really, my enjoyment of it was five stars worth. I would definitely buy book two.