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Simon of Gitta #1

Sorcery Against Caesar: The Complete Simon of Gitta Short Stories

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A REBEL AGAINST ROME!




Simon of Gitta, an escaped slave turned magician, roves the Roman Empire battling dark magic and demons, all the while pursued by Caesar's soldiers. Join Simon as he flees across the ancient world evading cultists and Legionaries, outwitting sorcerers and Centurions, and fighting gladiators and gods, even the deities of the Cthulhu Mythos. Yet all these foes cannot prepare him for his greatest the pursuit of his lost soul-mate Helen, a love so deep even death can't stand in its way for long.




These stories were one of the inspirations for the Cthulhu Invictus campaign for the Call of Cthulhu role playing game by Chaosium. Enjoy sixteen stories combining superbly researched historical fiction with sword & sorcery and Lovecraftian horror,




The Sword of Spartacus

The Fire of Mazda

The Seed of the Star-God

The Blade of the Slayer

The Throne of Achamoth

The Emerald Tablet

The Soul of Kephri

The Ring of Set

The Worm of Urakhu

The Curse of the Crocodile

The Treasure of Horemkhu

The Secret of Nephren-Ka

The Scroll of Thoth

The Dragons of Mons Fractus

The Wedding of Sheila-Na-Gog

The Pillars of Melkarth

Vengence Quest (poetry)

433 pages, Kindle Edition

First published December 21, 2020

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Richard L. Tierney

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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Derek.
1,381 reviews8 followers
March 18, 2022
Tierney's cosmology draws from Lovecraft, Zoroastrianism, and early mystery religions in equal quantities, and I'm of two minds as to the results. On one hand he carefully laced the Mythos figures and imagery into the historical period, with a better assemblage of the material into the actual cultures.

On the other I couldn't help but roll my eyes every time he trotted out the "High One"/"True Soul" concept and stapled it to poor Simon, an intriguingly developed character that stands well by himself but groans under the weight of Chosen One baggage. The "True Soul" business is interesting but is grafted into resoundingly sword-and-sorcery plot structures.

Simon himself falls into the sorcery/mysticism business seemingly by happenstance and his training at the hands of mystics is more along the lines of thievery and stage magic than anything truly wizardly. It's like David Copperfield serving as Sorcerer Supreme at times, but I suspect that this idea is actually historically accurate: the temples had the best stage magic, and their learning encompassed more than esoterica.
Profile Image for S.E. Lindberg.
Author 22 books208 followers
April 10, 2022
Review posted on Black Gate April 10th, 2022
https://www.blackgate.com/2022/04/03/...

Greg Mele recently paid tribute to Richard L. Tierney at Black Gate. That memorial post covers the author’s life and bibliography very well, so check that out
https://www.blackgate.com/2022/02/06/...

Tierney co-authored books with David C. Smith will be echoed here. The Goodreads S&S group is hosting a two-month group read of his work presently (March-April 2022), which spurred me to read The Scroll of Thoth: Simon Magus and the Great Old Ones: Twelve Tales of the Cthulhu Mythos.

That book lingered way too long on my shelf. It was packaged as horror influenced by history, with a mage protagonist; however, having read it now, I argue that it is more Fantasy than Horror or Historical Fiction. If assigning genre categories floats your boat, then Sword & Sorcery is more accurate.

As the post title indicates with “Sica and Sorcery,” Simon often fights with a Thracian long-dagger/short-sword called a sica, and evil sorcery abounds. With cover art by H. E. Fassel (below), Scroll of Thoth has all twelve Tierney-written, short stories tracking Simon of Gitta with comprehensive essays from Robert M Price for each; he covers both the actual history drawn from, as well as the Lovecraftian and Howardian (REH) mythos call-outs. The collection was published by Chaosium in 1997 and inspired (or augmented) their Call of Cthulhu role-playing game; in 2009, the Cthulhu Invictus campaign (6th ed) released, and that, in turn, spawned a 2015 collection of similar “Sica and Sorcery” (Tierney did not contribute, but Robert M. Price did).

With Sorcery Against Caesar: The Complete Simon of Gitta Short Stories(cover art above by Steven Gilberts, Pickman’s Press 2020), readers are treated to all 12 stories and essays in Scroll of Thoth (with an abridged version of the introduction), plus 4 more tales that are pastiche or co-authored tales (also with contextual essays). Pickman’s Press also released a novel-length Simon of Gitta adventure penned by Tierney called Drums of Chaos (originally published in 2008, available now with cover art by Zach McCain, published 2021), which would have been too big to include with the short stories. In short, both Sorcery Against Caesar and Drums of Chaos are available in print and electronic form. This review covers the short stories, but Drums of Chaos is included in the tour guide below. According to the essays by Price, even more Simon of Gitta stories were planned but, unfortunately, are left in limbo.

Sorcery Against Caesar: The Complete Simon of Gitta Short Stories, official blurb:

A REBEL AGAINST ROME.

Simon of Gitta, an escaped slave turned magician, roves the Roman Empire battling dark magic and demons, all the while pursued by Caesar’s soldiers. Join Simon as he flees across the ancient world evading cultists and Legionaries, outwitting sorcerers and Centurions, and fighting gladiators and gods, even the deities of the Cthulhu Mythos. Yet all these foes cannot prepare him for his greatest challenge: the pursuit of his lost soul-mate Helen, a love so deep even death can’t stand in its way for long.

Who is Simon of Gitta?

For the non-history and non-religious folk, Simon is actually a biblical character. The Christian Bible’s Acts of the Apostle presents him as a Samaritan magus. Tierney presents Simon similarly, a mage hailing from Tyre (modern-day Lebanon), but has his heroic origins emerge from being an enslaved gladiator. Essentially, Tierney rebranded Simon as genuinely as Karl Edward Wagner did the biblical Cain (with his Kane tales); in fact, Tierney emphasized this by having the characters meet in the “The Blade of the Slayer” story.

Having excelled at fighting, Tierney’s Simon is skilled at the sica and hand-to-hand combat. The first tale “The Sword of Spartacus” has him escaping the pits and starting his studies as a mage. Frankly, he casts few spells himself. He does ally with many other active mages (his mentors), and he applies his knowledge of the arts frequently (low-level actions like casting illusions and enhancing disguises, letting his companions do the heavy spellcasting). Even though a mage describes his character well, he is much more of a rogue gladiator/fighter. Simon’s companions are more sorcery-focused and include the mages Dositheus and Menophar, and even a raven named Carbo.

“…I studied the arts of the mages at Persepolis, but before that I was trained as a gladiator — sold into the profession by the Romans, who slew my parents in Samaria because they could not pay the taxes imposed on them by a corrupt regime. I escaped, after two years of fighting for my life — of spilling blood for the Roman mob —!” The character Simon explains

Simon is completely fascinated with two goals: (1) seeking revenge against Rome, and (2) seeking out his love named Helen. The villains are usually Roman Emperors like Tiberius, Claudius, and Gaius (aka Caligula), or they are subordinates or Senators seeking more power. The antagonists are constantly summoning eldritch gods with grand rituals that are completely over the top, and wonderful (we are talking’ coliseums full of sacrifices’ and ‘mating rituals with Star Gods’!). As Simon ventures, he learns his True Spirit has existed beyond/before his current life and that he is always paired with the same female companion who also pervades time; this approach reminded me of Michael Moorcock’s Eternal Champion with a love interest. Even though each short story is stand-alone, these two themes persist across all.

Style

Sorcery Against Caesar really is a splendid mashup of history from Ancient Roman times, with lore from Judaism, Zoroastrianism, polytheistic Etruscan & Egyptian religions, and more… all equally weighted with Lovecraftian Mythos, Robert E, Howard’s Hyborian Age history, and even lore from David C. Smith’s Attluma cycle. For most readers, there will be instances in which determining which gods are based on historical deities or fictional ones will be difficult (for me it started right away with the summoning of Tuchulcha in the first story; that daemon is based on Etruscan myths, not a Lovecraftian Elder). Like Lovecraft, Tierney reinforces a pseudo-real mythos by referencing faux books like the Necronomicon with reverence; here we have the Sapientia Magorum written by Ostanes, the titular Scroll of Thoth, and the Tomb Texts of Ani.

For the Howard fans, you will enjoy entire stories that build on Conan’s first story “The Phoenix on the Sword.” Both the Ring of Set mentioned therein as well as the Phoenix on the Sword get full stories; also for the Kull of Atlantis fans, delight in the “The Dragons of Mons Fractus” tale that features Pontius Pilate exhibiting Vlad the Impaler vibes along with Valusian serpent people. “The Scroll of Thoth” reinforces the Pain Lords from the Red Sonja Books (co-authored by Tierney and David C. Smith).

Even though there is a ton of sorcery, most of it is redirected toward evil Emperors, Simon usually is not the sorcerer. He is a fighter who hangs out with friendly sorcerers while taking down the evil ones. The fight scenes and action reminded me of Howard’s action-packed Sword & Sorcery. Anyway, don’t expect dry history or old-style, meandering pre-pulp gothic horror. Expect (a) bloody melee, (b) fantastical sorcery, and (c) links to Howardian and other fictional mythos. Excerpts below the Tour Guide reinforce these.

Roman-inspired adventure by Chaosium and related Call of Cthulhu content





Table of Contents (and Chronological Tour Guide of Simon’s Tales)

* content in Sorcery Against Ceaser (i.e., not in Scroll of Thoth). All stories by Richard L. Tierney unless noted.

“Sword of the Avatar” Introduction (by Robert M. Price); the unabridged version is in The Scroll of Thoth.
“The Sword of Spartacus” first published in Swords Against Darkness #3 (Zebra Books, 1978).
“The Fire of Mazda” first published in Orion’s Child #1 (May-June 1984).
“The Seed of the Star-God” first published in Crypt of Cthulhu #24 (Lammas 1984).
“The Blade of the Slayer first published in Pulse-Pounding Adventure Stories #1 (December 1986).
* “The Throne of Achamoth” by Richard L. Tierney & Robert M. Price, first published in Weirdbook #21 (Autumn 1985).
Drums of Chaos is a separate novel-length, Simon of Gitta adventure by Tierney (originally published in 2008, available now via Pickman’s Press 2021, 415pages) that occurs chronologically after “The Throne of Achamoth.” Here’s the blurb (cover below):

CAN A HANDFUL OF HEROES STOP AN APOCALYPSE CENTURIES IN THE MAKING?

Escaped gladiator-slave Simon of Gitta returns to Judea — during the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth — on a mission to avenge the deaths of his parents, seeking revenge in blood against the Roman officials who committed the murders and sold Simon into slavery. But as Simon travels the Holy Lands with his mentor Dositheus and their students Menander and llione, they gradually become entangled in a complex occult plot designed to call down a monstrous alien entity to herald a new aeon on Earth. The mysterious time traveler John Taggart (from Tierney’s The Winds of Zarr) also becomes involved with Simon as their separate quests converge toward a common goal of saving all life on Earth from extinction.

But can a handful of travelers really thwart a covert scheme backed by the power of the Roman Empire? As the apocalyptic supernatural events slowly unfold, Simon and his allies are in a race against time to prevent the devastation of the world. Using mystery cults and early Christian Gnosticism as his vehicle, with meticulously researched Roman history and Biblical scholarship, this is author Richard Tierney’s magnum opus: an epic Lovecraftian alternate history dark fantasy novel that features Tierney’s most famous characters, Simon of Gitta and John Taggart. This novel will appeal to fans of historical fantasy and sword & sorcery fiction in the vein of Robert E. Howard, and the elements of cosmic horror and the Cthulhu Mythos will satisfy many fans of H.P. Lovecraft.

* “The Emerald Tablet” by Robert M. Price; first published in Strange Sorcery #24, Rainfall Books (August 2017).
“The Soul of Kephri” first published in Space & Time #66 (Summer 1984).
“The Ring of Set” first published in Swords Against Darkness #1 (Zebra Books, 1977).
“The Worm of Urakhu” first published in Weirdbook #23 (December 1988).
“The Curse of the Crocodile” first published in Crypt of Cthulhu #47 (Roodmas 1987).
“The Treasure of Horemkhu” first published in Pulse-Pounding Adventure Stories #2 (December 1987).
* “The Secret of Nephren-Ka” by Robert Price, published first in The Mighty Warriors (Ulthar Press, 2018).
“The Scroll of Thoth” first published in Swords Against Darkness #2 (Zebra Books, 1977).
“The Dragons of Mons Fractus” first published in Weirdbook #19 (Spring 1984).
* “The Wedding of Sheila-Na-Gog” by Richard L. Tierney & Glenn Rahman, first published in Crypt of Cthulhu #29 (Candlemas 1985).
“The Pillars of Melkarth Vengeance Quest” first published in Space & Time #78 (Summer 1990).
* “Vengeance Quest” poem, originally published in The Cimmerian #7 (October 2004).
More Simon of Gitta from Tierney?

Robert M. Price writes in the essay for “The Pillars of Melkarth” this context hinting at an unpublished, but already written, novel, and several other tales that likely were never finished:

Readers may notice a large time lapse between the events of “The Pillars of Melkarth” (spring equinox, A.D. 50) and those of the previous story set in A.D. 42. This is because those years were taken up with the events of the novels Path of the Dragon (forthcoming from Pickman’s Press) in A.D. 42 and The Gardens of Lucullus (Sidecar Preservation Society, 2001) in A.D. 48. Other stories were planned during this time period as well. Richard Tierney intended some German adventures in A.D. 46 – 47, as well as entertaining another collaboration with Glenn Rahman on a pair of novels set on the western Roman frontier, one centered on the Claudian invasion of Britain, the other involving the Picts in Scotland. Sadly, none of these stories were ever written — yet.

Drums of Chaos (cover art by Zach McCain) Pickman’s Press, 2021





Excerpts. Expect:

A) Lots of “Sick” Sica Melee

Simon roared and struck out; his fist cracked sharply against the face of the nearest guard, who flopped to the cobbles without a cry. Quick as a panther he crouched and whirled, barely in time to avoid a murderous blow from a second guard’s staff; his sharp-bladed sica, already in hand, shore through the guard’s neck as Simon completed his whirl, and the man went down with a dying gurgle.

and…

The door was only large enough for two abreast and Simon met the first two with steel, expertly parrying, slashing, stabbing. One collapsed mortally wounded from a sword-thrust in the guts; the other leaped back, suddenly fearful, but was pushed forward again by the surging mob — to die instantly on the point of the sica. Simon howled with mad rage, swinging and thrusting; a bludgeon glanced heavily off his left shoulder and a knife-point nicked his flank, but three more of his enemies went down with blood gushing. A pike ripped his tunic and gashed the side of his ribcage; he roared and smote in return, cleaving a snarling face with his sword. Fierce exultation suddenly filled him; if he must die, this was how he preferred it, fighting and slaying Romans to the very end —



B) Unraveling Emperor Plans to Meddle with Cosmic Sorcery

“I think I know what you learned. Tiberius’ purge of his enemies is no secret, and Carbo recently brought me another message from Senator Junius, who has been recalled from exile in Lesbos to house arrest in Rome. The senator told me about Prodikos and his daughters, and I have learned much more here in Ephesos.”

Simon stopped eating. “What have you learned of Prodikos?”

“Much, Simon, but mainly that in this city renowned for its sorcerers, he is the most powerful and feared of them all.”

A serving-girl entered with an amphora of wine, and Dositheus ceased speaking. When she had gone Simon filled his goblet. “Go on,” he said.

“Prodikos had several children by various slave women, but all were sons save Helen and Ilione. These sons he long ago sold into slavery, but his daughters he kept — for an evil purpose, as it turns out. Simon, it is no mere incestuous lust that drives Prodikos. He means to force Ilione to join with him in a monstrous ritual that shall release forces this world has not seen since it emerged from the last great darkness of the All-Night.”…

… “The rite of the Impregnation and the Slaying — an act of sympathetic magic that shall cause the seed of the Star-god to unite with the Great Mother, thereby generating a horrendous spawn that will overwhelm this world.”

Simon gripped his goblet tensely. His scalp tingled as he recalled reading of just such a black ritual in the Sapientia Magorum of the ancient Persian magus Ostanes. “Gods of Hades! How could the girl’s own father even think of such perverse madness —?”

Dositheus drew a deep breath. ‘‘He may no longer be her true father, Simon. Have you not read of Sakkuth, King of Night, and his evil Master?”

Simon felt the tingling extend down his spine. Sakkuth the King, servitor of Kaiwan the Star-god — both evil beings cursed by the ancient prophets yet still furtively worshipped by sorcerers in his own native Samaria…

“The wizards of Acheron and Stygia and even older civilization cycles knew them by other names,” Dositheus went on. “To the nations of primal Attluma they were Kossuth and Assatur. It is said that every thousand years Sakkuth attempts to destroy civilization, and that he succeeds unless powerful magic is used to stop him. It was he who plunged the world into the All-Night after the Atlantean and Hyborian cataclysms. And to initiate such times, his master Kaiwan, who dwells amid the stars near the Eye of Taurus, sends to earth his seed to unite with the Great Mother, thereby enabling her to spawn the Thousand Abominations that will overwhelm the world.”



C) An Abundance of R.E. Howard Hyborian Age References

Instantly the sword hilt in his hands shrilled with a supernatural energy, and a blade of golden light sprang forth — a blade that must, Simon somehow knew, be equal in length to the sword blade when it was first wielded ages ago by the Aquilonian King!

“The Phoenix!” gasped Nephere, falling to his knees. “The soul of civilization — the hope of mankind…”

The great bird — if bird it was — had wheeled about and was now settling down, flapping its wide and glittering pinions, coming to rest atop the ancient pyramidal stone behind the flaming altar. It perched there and folded its wings, gazing down upon the flames where — so Nephere had said — its parent had just been cremated.

Simon could only stare in awe. He suddenly realized that he had never known true beauty before. He had seen vast mountain landscapes that had taken his breath away, and many fire-emblazoned sunsets, and had known a number of beautiful women — even one that had shared with him and the fallen gods his own soul-nature. But never, until now, had he felt the presence of the very Soul of Beauty.

Yet, despite the mood that was upon him, despite the lingering chords of celestial music in his heart, he could still see actual, objective features of the being. It was about the size and shape of a large eagle, and this fact had doubtless formed the basis of the legends that had surrounded it. But it was no bird, Simon knew — nor any creature of earth or its environs. Those scales or feathers, gleaming like a thousand luminous gems, only slightly resembled the scales or feathers of earthly creatures; that gently curved bill, glowing like translucent pearl, only resembled something between the beaks of ibis and eagle; the golden spray of filaments about its head and throat only resembled the inferior crowns and gorgets of earthly kings and queens. And the great eyes, round and limpid and swirling with obscure colors, bright with transcendent life and supermundane intelligence — these resembled nothing he had ever seen…
Profile Image for J.W. Wright.
Author 5 books11 followers
December 3, 2021
Alot of people who have heard or read of Simon of Gitta or “Simon Magus” as he is more popularly known, know the Simon from the Bible, who is portrayed as a cunning, evil sorcerer and misanthrope. But what if there is another side to Simon we haven’t seen? A side that shows he was misunderstood? A side of the story that shows that the judgmental, sanctimonious fanatics of Judeo-Christianity were wrong about him? The collected stories of Simon of Gitta by Richard L. Tierney explores just such a scenario.
This collection of tales is top-notch sword and sorcery that has been laboriously and excellently historically researched. It follows Simon from his early days as imprisonment as a Roman gladiator to his tutelage in the magic arts to his quest of vengeance against the Roman Empire itself. What impressed me most about this collection was the incorporation of H.P. Lovecraft’s Cthulhu Mythos, and the continuing/echoes of the events that happened in Robert E. Howard’s Hyborian Age and also Clark Ashton Smith Hyperborean and Averoigne Mythos and weaving them together into a grand, epic historical sweep. It’s quite breathtaking. As every good sword and sorcery saga should have, this has battles and brawls and swashbuckling aplenty, as well as magic, monsters, intrigue, espionage, and even a special appearance by Karl Edward Wagner’s Kane. If you are a fan of sword and sorcery fantasy, and haven’t read this, I suggest you remedy that asap. The stories held within are as follows:

-“The Sword of Spartacus”: The Samaritan gladiatorial prisoner of Rome known as Simon finds a way out of his bonds when he meets a powerful sorcerer and his mysterious, ancient master.

-“The Fire of Mazda”: Simon, being under the tutelage of the sorcerer Dositheus, the one who saved him, learns about his soulmate, Helen, and seeks vengeance on the Roman Empire. But when he learns of Dositheus’ plan to have him participate in a grisly dark ritual in order to punish Rome, he must rethink his strategies.

-“The Seed of the Star-God”: When Simon learns with horror and grief that his soulmate has been slain, he must infiltrate a demonic interdimensional ceremony to seek vengeance on her murderer.

-“The Blade of the Slayer”: While fleeing from bandits, Simon happens across a member of an order of ancient Persian mages that harbors a disturbing and powerful secret.

-“The Throne of Achamoth”: Simon seeks to contact the spirit of his soulmate on the astral plane, but is he willing to give up his sanity and possibly his soul to do so?

-“The Emerald Tablet”: Armed with the Emerald Tablet of Thoth, Simon goes millions of years into the past to witness Ubbo Sathla, the seething primordial god that spawned all in the multiverse, but grave danger awaits those who would dare to cross into its domain.

-“The Soul of Kephri”: As the mad Emperor Tiberius makes a murderous pact with dark gods to gain even more power, and an undead, inhuman evil rises from the tomb, Simon must quest for the ancient sword of a legendary Aquilonian king.

-“The Ring of Set”: When Tiberius gets his hands on a diabolical artifact that has been stolen, Simon swears to restore it to its rightful place, but can he bear the mind-melting maleficent powers that are unleashed under the mad Emperor of Rome’s meddling?

-“The Worm of Urakhu”: Chased down by imperial legions at the order of the newly risen Emperor Gaius, Simon wanders into the deserts of Libya, and finds there an ancient mysterious temple dedicated to a titanic offworld horror.

-“The Curse of the Crocodile”: Simon is still being pursued by agents of the Empire across Egypt, when he learns of a plot from the nefarious Nomarch of Thebes to resurrect the blasphemous and monstrous rites of the dark god Sebek.

-“The Treasure of Horemkhu”: The Roman governor of Egypt seeks a horrid ancient treasure in the nighted vaults beneath the Sphinx, and Simon is forced to uncover the mystery surrounding it.

-“The Secret of Nephren-Ka”: Simon is led to a strange and undiscovered land by the spirit of the infamous and cruel Black Pharaoh.

-“The Scroll of Thoth”: When the insane Emperor Gaius gains and employs the use of the demonic Scroll of Thoth to amass power to himself, Simon swears to not idly stand by.

-“The Dragons of Mons Fractus”: While searching for Pontius Pilate in the far frontiers and hinterlands of the Roman Empire to seek vengeance upon him, Simon learns of a dark and gruesome undead horror prowling the wilds.

-“The Wedding of Sheila-Na-Gog”: Simon encounters the mysterious and sinister Black Goat Druids while further traveling the untamed Roman frontier, and is confronted by their grotesque primal patron goddess.

-“The Pillars of Melkarth”: Learning of the kidnapping of children by a dark cult in Tyre, Simon plunges into the shadowy heart of the mystery.

I give “Sorcery Against Caesar” by Richard L. Tierney a 5 out of 5, and can’t recommend it enough! It is superb!
Profile Image for Gregory Mele.
Author 11 books32 followers
July 10, 2022
All the Simon of Gitta short stories together at last.

It is impossible for me to understate how much I loved Tierney's not-nearly-well-enough-known stories of Simon of Gitta, which are the closest heir to heroic adventure-meets-Lovecraftian horror since Robert E. Howard's death. Lots of authors get that sort of tagline, but Tierney is the real deal.

When August Derleth coined the term Cthulhu Mythos, he radically changed Lovecraft's vision to a good vs evil cosmic war between the "good" Elder Gods and the "evil" Great Old Ones. Tierney, in his Simon Magus (the magician from the Acts of the Apostles who fights a magical duel with Peter), fixed and "reconciled" this problem through the lens of Christian Gnosticism. Simon of Gitta is not based on the historical Simon, but rather his portrayal by Jack Palance in the Silver Chalice (he even looks like Palance) a Samaritan gladiator slowly turned magician who find himself thrust in the Mythos in which there are Primal Gods or Archons, who defend sentient life because they feed off of the pain of its suffering and the Old Ones, who exist in such an alien, extra-dimensional relationship to it, that they wish the world cleared of life for their own, alien purposes.

Set during the time of Christ (literally), the stories are great sword and sandals adventures and also have periodic winks and nods to every thing from Karl Edward Wagner's stories of Kane (aka Cain), to Dune to...the Empire Strikes Back. The fusing of Gnosticism and the Mythos works seamlessly, and Tierney's setting is vivid, along with a lead character who is both heroic yet far from flawless.

While it is wonderful having Tierney's prose, poetic and two collaborative stories included, the two contributions solely-authored by Robert M. Price show why his contribution to Weird fiction will be as anthologist and essayist, not fiction author. Neither story really reads well, is rushed in pacing, tells more than shows, and does not fit the Simon character Tierney carefully developed.
Profile Image for Gerard Van Der Waal.
32 reviews
April 7, 2024
I enjoyed most of the stories in this collection. I particularly loved all the research Tierney did into gnosticism and Zoroastrianism. As a piece of Sword and Sorcery/Sword and Sandal literature, I found these stories to be overall above average compared to most of the Dungeons and Dragons fantasy novels I have read. What makes this stand out is the historical research that is woven into these stories which combine Roman and biblical history with parts of the Cthulhu mythos. The foreword to each story spells this research out which was a real joy for me.
694 reviews7 followers
October 22, 2023
Good stuff

If you like Sword and Sorcery action, cool Howard world history, and lots of Lovecraftian monster madness, this is for you. There is really not much more to say. Check it out.
Profile Image for Carlsagansghost.
59 reviews
October 1, 2024
Many of these stories are great, a few are merely good, a few of the others are superb. In totality this is an excellent collection of S&S tales mixing elements of the Cthulhu mythos and biblical mythology. Tierney continued to impress the hell out of me.
1 review7 followers
November 21, 2024
Sword, sorcery and the Roman empire

If you're into H. P. Lovecraft Mythos, if you're into adventurous sword and sorcery stories, if you're into good historical fiction set in antiquity - you should definitely give this book a chance.
Profile Image for Bill Ramsell.
476 reviews1 follower
November 1, 2021
Historical fantasy (biblical era) guest-starring HP Lovecraft and Karl Edward Wagner, to name only two.

Highly recommended.
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