The second volume in Moorcock’s Eternal Champion series focuses on the incarnations of John Daker.
THE ETERNAL CHAMPION
The first novel in this collection sees Daker drawn into an Earth where the last remnants of Humanity fight against an alien invader called the Eldren. Now called Ereköse, Daker is summoned by King Rigenos to be Earth’s Champion and so he fights, wielding the terrible, almost living sword Kanajana. Daker finds he has martial skills he never knew he possessed. But has Rigenos told him the full truth?
Moorcock has described Daker as the least ambiguous incarnation of the Eternal Champion and this, published in the 1950s, is a fairly straightforward fantasy novel, full of battles, beautiful women and betrayal. Moorcock revised this novel much later to bring it fully into the cycle, so Daker experiences dreams of other Champions - Elric, Hawkmoon, Von Bek, Urlik and more - he is doomed to remember each incarnation he inhabits.
So after monstrous acts of genocide, Ereköse finds love and happiness, only to have it snatched away as he is pulled into a new world and a new adventure…..
PHOENIX IN OBSIDIAN
Moorcock returned to Daker in the 1970s with this novel, where he is Urlik Skarsol, Lord of the Frozen Keep. The setting is a far future dying Earth, one almost frozen over as the sun fades, with Humanity again on the brink of extinction. He comes to a decadent city and is again told half truths to gain his help by the Belphig, Lord Temporal of he city.
Betrayed and abandoned, Daker eventually discovers the truth of this world, where the Moon has crashed into the Earth and a race of aliens have been enslaved by Belphig as he holds their Queen hostage.
For me this was the weakest of the three novels contained in this omnibus. It just didn’t connect with me. It’s well written, but short and a bit one note, although it does introduce characters that appear later.
THE DRAGON IN THE SWORD
The final novel, written in the 1980s, is the best of the three and really shows off Moorcock’s Multiverse and his writing is much more developed.
Now incarnated as Prince Flamadin of the Valadek, Daker (pining for Ermizhad, his love from the first book) meets Ulrich Von Bek, a descendant of the Von Bek’s from the first volume of the Eternal Champion tales, who has wandered into the so-called Middle Marches after a failed attempt to assassinate Hitler.
This world is traversed by huge wheeled cities in the shape of vast ships and the two men are picked up by one such ship, led by the usurper Armiad, a petty tyrant. They travel to the Massing where all six realms of the Worlds of the Wheel meet. Here Daker spots a woman who is the doppelgänger of Ermizahd, also an Eldren woman and violates all kinds of laws to try and get to her., setting off a series of events that lead to a huge battle between Law and Chaos.
Flamadin’s twin sister, Sharadim, has been corrupted by Chaos and leads armies to conquer the six realms, while Daker, Von Bek and the Elren woman Alisaard, race against time to find the sword that will sway the battle and which will also be the means of the Eldren being reunited with their menfolk.
It’s a fast paced, hugely entertaining fantasy and easily the best of the Daker novels. It cements his place in the Eternal Champion pantheon and could easily be read as a standalone tale.
So, a mixed bag for this omnibus edition, hence the three stars. Moorcock’s imagination is never in doubt, but this really does show how his vision developed from the 1950s to the 1980s.