Quote:
Originally Posted by pwalker8
Yea, I really don't know what was/is going on with Moorcock. He's always been an odd bird. I stopped buying the new books by Moorcock way back in the 80's. I would have to say that Moorcock is one of those authors who hasn't really aged well. That detached ironic tone that was so popular back in the 60's just doesn't have the same appeal these days.
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He is definitely an odd one, but maybe a product of the times, as in 60s and 70s, where he indulged a little too heavily in many of the trends back then. If I was to make a guess, it was his Jerry Cornelius stories that set the tone, and in some ways has given him his radical air and somewhat overblown sense of brilliance. That's not to say he hasn't had brilliant moments, and written many grand things, but in the overall scheme of things, he is probably just an anti-establishment rebel type person who has a good way with words. And one cannot deny he is somewhat an icon in the fields of fiction he has engaged in.
As a reader and collector of his works, I have mixed feelings about him, and especially when he criticizes other writers. I've not read anything yet, story wise, that he has written in the last 2 or 3 decades, so I am mostly going by what I have read (majority) of his earlier works, and a bunch of interviews and essays he has been involved in since.
My favorite novel of his is probably Glorianna. Which of course has ties to Mervyn Peak's Gormenghast, which was absolutely brilliant.
I am also a big fan of some of the music of Hawkwind from various eras, so we do have a few things in common, including being rebel like.