Posted June 27, 2022
Brak the Barbarian by John Jakes. A collection of a few short stories with Jakes's Conan rip-off, Brak, published according to story chronology, so there are newer stories surrounding the older ones. Jakes has a brief intro in which he's very honest that he wrote the Brak stories because he liked Conan and just wanted to have more of it, so he tried writing his own.
Brak is actually a little more chilled out than Conan, although he's still a tough barbarian guy. What little we know about him is that he was exiled from his northern tribe, so he's travelling far (very far, it seems) south to find his fortune in the city of Khurdisan. Along the way he runs into all sorts of weird stuff. He's blond and keeps his hair very long and tied in a braid, and he wears a lion-skin loincloth. He wields a simple broadsword. He's a classic "doesn't officially join any faiths but keeps an open mind" agnostic. That's about it.
It's really not bad for a simple Conan knockoff. Jakes has a smooth, readable style and Brak is a likable hero. Some of Jakes's fantasy ideas are interesting, like the creepy demon kids that shoot "darts" out of their fingertips. Some, like his Lovecraftian elements, are less interesting. He likes to put Brak up against giant monsters and one of his go-to moves is to give the monsters lots of extra pairs of legs, which makes me imagine them as being awkward and ungainly instead of scary. I don't know much about Jakes as a person but he seems at some point in his life to have found Jesus because there are Christian themes implicit in some of the stories, particularly in the use of temptation as a conflict.
The one story in the book that I would say is an outright dud is the last one, which involves Brak falling afoul of a country with idiotic religious practices, a confusing fight scene on a giant funeral barge, and Brak getting into a hilariously goofy tussle with a dead queen's ghost. That's one of the newer stories, IIRC. The others are at least tolerable, the older 1960s ones being best, and the book generally lives up to its humble promise of providing more of the same (although not as good) if you get an itch to read more sword-and-sorcery fiction after exhausting the classics.
Brak is actually a little more chilled out than Conan, although he's still a tough barbarian guy. What little we know about him is that he was exiled from his northern tribe, so he's travelling far (very far, it seems) south to find his fortune in the city of Khurdisan. Along the way he runs into all sorts of weird stuff. He's blond and keeps his hair very long and tied in a braid, and he wears a lion-skin loincloth. He wields a simple broadsword. He's a classic "doesn't officially join any faiths but keeps an open mind" agnostic. That's about it.
It's really not bad for a simple Conan knockoff. Jakes has a smooth, readable style and Brak is a likable hero. Some of Jakes's fantasy ideas are interesting, like the creepy demon kids that shoot "darts" out of their fingertips. Some, like his Lovecraftian elements, are less interesting. He likes to put Brak up against giant monsters and one of his go-to moves is to give the monsters lots of extra pairs of legs, which makes me imagine them as being awkward and ungainly instead of scary. I don't know much about Jakes as a person but he seems at some point in his life to have found Jesus because there are Christian themes implicit in some of the stories, particularly in the use of temptation as a conflict.
The one story in the book that I would say is an outright dud is the last one, which involves Brak falling afoul of a country with idiotic religious practices, a confusing fight scene on a giant funeral barge, and Brak getting into a hilariously goofy tussle with a dead queen's ghost. That's one of the newer stories, IIRC. The others are at least tolerable, the older 1960s ones being best, and the book generally lives up to its humble promise of providing more of the same (although not as good) if you get an itch to read more sword-and-sorcery fiction after exhausting the classics.