Conan the Free Lance
cover of Conan the Free Lance | |
Author | Steve Perry |
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Cover artist | Kirk Reinert |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Series | Conan the Barbarian |
Genre | Sword and sorcery Fantasy |
Publisher | Tor Books |
Publication date | 1990 |
Media type | Print (Paperback) |
Pages | 279 pp |
ISBN | 0-8125-0690-1 |
Conan the Free Lance is a fantasy novel written by Steve Perry featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in February 1990. It was reprinted by Tor in December 1997.[1]
Plot
The evil wizard Dimma the Mist Mage suffers from a curse that has rendered his body insubstantial. As a mystical "Seed" held by the Tree Folk might restore him, he directs his enslaved selkies to steal it for him. Meanwhile, the young Conan, en route to Shadizar, had fallen in with the Tree Folk after rescuing their medicine woman, Cheen. He helps them fend off the selkies' attack, but not before one of them makes off with the Seed and takes Cheen's brother Hok hostage. Conan undertakes to aid the Tree Folk in recovering Hok and the Seed.
Reception
Reviewer Ryan Harvey considered Perry's Conan novels "goofy", noting that the author "has a reputation among Conan fandom for overkill and general silliness"—and Conan the Free Lance "won’t change anyone’s mind about Perry’s style." He rates it well below the author's previous novels Conan the Fearless and Conan the Defiant and feels the "one arena" in which it excels is in its brevity.[2]
Lagomorph Rex finds the novel "suffers from the same problems [of] the other Steve Perry [Conan] books, too many creatures which some how can talk, not to mention another obscenely large cast, at least a dozen characters and four story lines were running concurrently by chapter 3. It's simply too busy for such a short novel." He also observes that it "roughly follows the same storyline as the [previous] two [P]erry books," Conan the Defiant and Conan the Indomitable, "[m]agical object on the lo[o]se, multitude of different interested parties, huge cluster of competing story lines which all comes to a frothing spitting boil-over in the last 2 chapters." He also has problems with the depiction of the title character: "I don't really want to use the word Naive to describe Perry's Conan, but he does come across as being very much like a 15 year old ... game for just about whatever comes his way and ... not yet cynical enough to not want to help those who ask it of him." He finds a scene in which Conan is drugged and raped by the villainess Thayla "extremely revolting." On the positive side he notes "extensive references to the previous two Steve Perry books and "The Thing in the Crypt" which makes for a nice bit of continuity," that it "seems to serve a purpose," unlike its immediate predecessor Indomitable, and that it "has an especially ironic ending."[3]
Notes
References
Preceded by Conan the Indomitable |
Tor Conan series (publication order) |
Succeeded by Conan the Formidable |
Preceded by Conan the Indomitable |
Complete Conan Saga (William Galen Gray chronology) |
Succeeded by Conan the Formidable |