A ship of legend sails toward the very edge of the world in this fantasy saga.
Many on Gor do not believe the great ship of Tersites, the lame, scorned, half-blind, half-mad shipwright, originally of Port Kar, exists. Surely it is a matter of no more than legend. In the previous book, however, Swordsmen of Gor , we learned that the great ship, commissioned by unusual warriors for a mysterious mission, was secretly built in the northern forests and brought down the Alexandra to Thassa, the sea, beginning her voyage to the “World’s End,” hazarding waters beyond the “farther islands” from which no ship had returned.
Rediscover this brilliantly imagined world where men are masters and women live to serve their every desire.
Mariners of Gor is the 30th book in the Gorean Saga, but you may enjoy reading the series in any order.
John Norman, real name John Lange, was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1931. His best known works, the Gor series, currently span 36 books written 1966 (Tarnsman of Gor) to 2021 (Avengers of Gor). Three installments of the Telnarian Histories, plus three other fiction works and a non-fiction paperback. Mr. Norman is married and has three children.
I just wanted to note again, that this is 3.5 stars for a Gor book, which has its own scale.... Also, for all the supposed dislike of women that he is alleged to spew in his books, the more I read, the more I find John Norman to be the biggest romantic I have ever read! When he decides that two charterers are in love, boy does he beat it to the ground!!! And all of them always get a happily ever after! Sometimes it gets down-right sugary and sappy! So, after 30 books of brain-washing and propaganda, I have come to think that only slave-girls find their true love and get to be loved and beaten at the same time by perfect, dreamy, macho males! So, where are those men and where is my collar? :) On Gor, ooo, shucks! I do not know how to get there.... I guess, I will keep on dreaming.... :)
Can't believe this is book 30! I liked that it was not told from Tarl's perspective and that it moves along the same timelines as the whole series wrapping up some old questions back from the Fall of Ar and Talena's betrayal of her home stone. Looking forward to the rest....
The continuation of Tarl Cabot's saga, and we journey to the World's End aboard the great ship of Tersites, to a rather familiar culture. Only two more books to go - the next being a 'prequel' to the voyage - and I'll miss the strange and unsettling work of Gor when this saga's done.