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Science Fiction
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REVIEWS BY STEVEN SILVER
The Sumerian legend of Gilgamesh, a powerful king who wanted to augment his power with immortality, has a tendency to appear in fantasy every few years. He's frequently used in a straight retelling of the ancient epic, such as a Robert Silverberg's Gilgamesh the King, but in other cases, Gilgamesh is brought into modern times, most recently in Brenda Clough's How Like a God. Stephan Grundy's third novel, Gilgamesh, is a glorious and straightforward retelling of the legend. By today's standards, Grundy's Gilgamesh is anything but a hero. A young man when the novel opens, he is filled with arrogance, lust, and an unwillingness to consider that anyone else might have useful advice. Gilgamesh has bought into the idea that as part god, he has a divine right to rule the city-state of Erech. Grundy follows the epic of Gilgamesh closely, using the characters and situations to explore the traits that make a good leader.
By Stephan Grundy William Morrow, $26 ISBN 0380975742
While it might be easy to dismiss power in Hamilton's book as the ability to do magic, in reality power appears in the form of freedom of choice. Merry attempts to give her clients the freedom to make of their lives whatever they want without fear. For Norton, power is the ability to steal his partners' free will and force them to submit to his demands.
By Laurell K. Hamilton Ballantine, $24 ISBN 0345423399
Audio, $24.95
Steven Silver writes from Northbrook, Illinois.
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