Book#12, and the final installment in the Elric-Oona trilogy of, well, three books about Elric and Oona. The first two were unfavorably reviewed by me, though I promised myself I would finish, being a completist and all that.
So, Elric is in his Dream of a Thousand Years, so what happens here is hard to get overly excited/concerned about, at times. The nature of the Multiverse - which takes full flight here in a multitude (!) of ways - is on full, grandiose, mindbending, and stunning display. With the trilogy, and its (moderately) cordoned off timeframe (can you even say that for the Eternal Champion books?!?) Moorcock has brought into full recognition that what happens in one place is also happening in a, wait for it, multi(tude) of (uni)verse(s). So the battle between Law and Chaos is not only endless, it is also placeless, timeless, and quite possibly occurring everywhere (with a variety of individuals) and nowhere (maybe? Wth no one… all a dream…).
The problem I have with the Multiverse is the tendency for things to be repeated or feel that way, which sounds obvious, but relates more to the redundancy of the battles. One could almost make an operation, call it The Multiverse Algorithm, and plug in your Heroine/Hero, Villain, Lord (Chaos or Law), Sidekick(s), Weapon-of-Choice, Mythology, Desired Object, Random Filler Characters, Location, Date (if possible), and, OK, you get the point and I am likely minimizing the brilliance of the Multiverse concept, but still... OK, it is quite amazing, and in the current media frenzy for graphic novels, serializations, Comic Book films, etc. the idea is a seething and ever-expanding explosion of stories waiting for someone to run with. One is left to wonder how Elric and The Multiverse has not made it to movies yet. Fucking hell, there are 5 Twilight films and 12 Friday the 13th films (and if there is a Horror Multiverse, it may be the Jason Saga!), and strangely, only one film version of The Neverending Story. I mean, come on, it’s neverending, right?!? Anyway.
So Elric is dreaming, Ulric is aggrieved, and Oona, Oonagh, Una, and Uno (OK, made that one up! but as maddening as it is, I like how Moorcock backhands you that these characters are all in various ways manifestations of earlier - and later - characters in the Multiverse) are not dreaming - Oona may be, right? It IS her thing - but are actually fighting against real opponents for real stakes, where/whenever it is/was/will-be was fun, if not - like this sentence - hard to follow.
Some have praised Moorcock for his ability to connect the variable constructs of his Multiverse/Eternal Champion mythos, but I found it almost overloaded, and therefore kind of thin. But, he does accomplish the feat, and in doing so opens up a (non-standard) Elric tale to the vastness of his prose undertaking, ensorcelling you to read outside of the Elric-specific books.
Which cycles back to my earlier complaint, if it can be called that, in that the repetitive/recurring nature of the Multiverse means things feel, well, repetitive at times, and wouldn’t reading just the Elric books cover the ideas (good vs. evil, Law vs. Chaos, battles in whichever place/time, each Champion in one of many guises)? Does one need to read the Corum books, or the Eternal Champion Omnibus trade paperbacks? Hard to say.
Ultimately it is up to each reader to decide how this book, the Elric-Oona trilogy, and the Elric Saga satisfy the desire for escape, adventure, and reading enjoyment. I will admit to enjoying the “Canon Elric” books more than any that followed, but that doesn’t mean much, it’s just an opinion. Maybe I lack the capacity to mentally Venn diagram a “multi-book universe” to help it all make sense, or maybe “killing the dragon” once is enough, or maybe an “endless battle between Law and Chaos” is unspectacular and trite. Regardless, Moorcock has done something few authors have, and there’s something to be said for that. Which, for me, is “good job!”. Hah!