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Creatures of Light and Darkness Hardcover – May 13, 2021

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 393 ratings

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In the House of the Dead he has been given a name. That name is Wakim, but Wakim knows that this name is not his true name not the name that he carried with him in life. Wakim has been commanded by his master Anubus to find and destroy The Prince Who Was A Thousand. Wakim leaves the House of the Dead intent on carrying out his mission to destroy The Prince Who Was A Thousand, but he has a second, personal mission...to find his true name. And if he does Wakim cannot even imagine how that will change everything...



Roger Zelazny was a science fiction and fantasy writer, a six time Hugo Award winner, and a three time Nebula Award Winner. He published more than forty novels in his lifetime. His first novel This Immortal, serialized in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction under the title "...And Call Me Conrad," won the Hugo Award for best novel. Lord of Light, his third novel, also won the Hugo award and was nominated for the Nebula award. He died at age 58 from cancer. Zelazny was posthumously inducted into the Science Fiction Hall of Fame in 2010.


"A storyteller without peer. He created worlds as colorful and exotic and memorable as any our genre has ever seen." -George R.R. Martin


". . . his performance was never anything other than dazzling." -Robert Silverberg


"Roger Zelazny's work excited me. It was intoxicating and delightful and unique. And it was smart." -Neil Gaiman

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Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Amber Ltd (May 13, 2021)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 176 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1515451232
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1515451235
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 15.2 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6 x 0.56 x 9 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 393 ratings

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Roger Zelazny
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Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
4.5 out of 5
393 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on August 24, 2023
I remember my first encounter with Creatures of Light and Darkness vividly. I was browsing the Science Fiction shelves in a bookstore. I had already by that time acquired the habit of heading to the far end where the Z's were shelved to see what was new from Roger Zelazny. I opened Creatures of Light and Darkness to a random page in the middle to see what it was like. I saw lines of something resembling poetry about characters called Set and the Steel General, spoken by someone called "The Prince Who Was A Thousand". As story, it did not make a lot of sense. I shuddered a bit and put it back on the shelf. It was not what I wanted at that moment -- a simple story, simply told. But I did later read it -- it's a wonderful book, and more narratively straightforward than my brief dip into the middle of it had suggested.

Zelazny did not initially intend to publish Creatures of Light and Darkness. He wrote it as an experiment for his own satisfaction. Some of his author friends, among them Samuel R. Delany, became aware that this manuscript was lying on his desk. Delany told his editors at Doubleday about this unpublished Zelazny MS. Zelazny was, at that point, becoming a hot author in Science Fiction (after his first novel This Immortal in 1966 and his second Lord of Light in 1967), so Doubleday contacted him to say, "We hear you've been holding out on us." Thus Creatures of Light and Darkness was published by Doubleday.

Zelazny learned his lesson. He later wrote

"There comes a point -- and I don't know precisely where it occurs -- when you've been around long enough and are sufficiently well-known that you sell everything you write. If I want to try something experimental, I do it in confidence that it will appear somewhere. I no longer even think of something not selling"

Effectively he had already reached the point of complete marketability by 1969.

It reads like what it is -- an experiment, or a series of experiments. But that framing makes it seems more organized than it really is. It's a bunch of throwing stuff at the wall to see what sticks. That doesn't sound appealing, but this is Roger Zelazny! When he throws stuff at the wall to see what sticks, most of it does! There's actually a plot of sorts, based on the conflicts of ancient Egyptian mythology.

Creatures of Light and Darkness is mainly a book for Zelazny-lovers. If you are not already one of those, it's not the place to start.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 26, 2020
This book feels like something out of 1960/70s Marvel comics. Basically, its about "ancient Egyptian Gods," doing battle in a sci-fi future. These Gods are presumably not really mythological Gods, but humans who have evolved into something almost God-like: half man/half animal/half machine and who sort out the politics of who-rules-where-and-which-kingdom on an interplanetary scale. The writing is poetic and kind of Shakespearean and the Roger Zelazny weirdness is so much fun. Read this book to young kids too, sure they won't get some of it, but the ideas will excite their imagination. There is a character made of pure emptiness and void that takes the shape of a horse that can change in size; a woman who is transformed into a computational machine that only gives output to questions based on the amount of sexual pleasure that can be given to her and a Millenia-old war-torn General whose human body has been entirely replaced by metal parts. Like I said, this book is pure fun, psychedelic weirdness. In terms of character development, there really is not much. The Jackal-headed Anubis, ruler of the "House of Dead" and the bird-headed Orisis, ruler of the "House of Life," appear to be something of bad guys, but their background story is not fleshed out enough to really make them any more bad or evil than any of the other protagonists of the book. However, Orisis does seem like a bit of a jerk when he jumps up and down on his carpet: a rug woven out of the nervous system of a still living person. The "Prince With No Name," is closest we have to a the hero of the story, but there is not enough development of the character to really make him a heroic figure, or even a figure we can identify with. Having said that, I guess there never really is any real good guys and bad guys in war? My favourite scene in the book is where an unfortunate seer is disemboweled for the purposes of divination. The unfortunate seer has his own entrails read by another seer who chose him to be disemboweled out of pure resentment toward him. In a darkly humorous moment, the disemboweled seer does a much more accurate job of reading his own entrails than the intended seer. I have read Zelazny's "Lord of Light" which is considered by most to be a better book, and perhaps maybe, his best book, yet I personally found "Creatures" to be a far more entertaining read, although both books have very similar ideas.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 9, 2021
It was enjoyable. A simple and effective writing style with an original take on myth as other reviews point out. Leaves you wanting more.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 5, 2022
I first read this in my twenties. I didn't understand it completely, but it's the book that introduced me to science fiction, from which I moved on to Robert Heinlein and other incredible stories. I decided to read it again, decades later, and I'm really glad I did.

In essence, this is an epic account of a war waged between gods Anubis, Osiris, Set, and others. It's perhaps one of the most insane books I've ever read.; my mind at times reeling - what the hell does that mean and what drugs did Zelazny take when he conjured this up? Weaving the myriad worlds of his magnificent imagination with bits of humorous commentary on modern life, I laughed out loud more times than I can count. And in the end, this masterful author somehow tied all the crazy loose ends together.

Creatures of Light and Darkness is wild, weird, and wonderful. It's a classic, and it's genius.
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Top reviews from other countries

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Chris Valley
5.0 out of 5 stars Buen libro
Reviewed in Mexico on April 30, 2023
Llevaba años buscandolo en fisico. Buena historia
Alex Hartman
5.0 out of 5 stars Fabulous story
Reviewed in Canada on September 27, 2020
Fabulous yarn, by a gifted storyteller. Incredible imagery by Zelazny.
Kyau
4.0 out of 5 stars おもしろかった
Reviewed in Japan on June 5, 2022
闇の館でアヌビスに復活させられた男が名前を取り戻す。オシリス、イシスといったエジプト神話の神々がでてくる。視点がちょくちょくの変わるのでわかりづらいけどおもしろい
Bibliophil
5.0 out of 5 stars Lesenswerter typischer Zelazny
Reviewed in Germany on December 12, 2016
Moving house seems to have robbed me of nearly all books (or at least parts of them) that were precious to me. I remembered this book as a typical Zelazny and have bought it again. On reading it for the 2nd time I found out that I was not mistaken: It is a typical Zelazny - creative, full of action, his unique irony, in short it swows all the markmanship of a born storyteller. As usual it does not hurt to know something about the back ground he uses: This time it is Egytian mythology which is a bit complicated.esp. regarding family history. Find out for yourself - it is worth trying
60thenew40
5.0 out of 5 stars Zelazny is compulsory reading for all mortals.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 16, 2015
It's a Zelazny, go and read it.
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