this post was submitted on 02 Mar 2025
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One of the many things I like about Zelazny is that the style of he could write in many different styles. He tends toward first person with snarky, self-aware characters, but he can also do austere and elegant (example: Dilvish the Damned), elegaic (My Name is Legion), intense and serious first person (Nine Princes in Amber), and simplified narration by a dog (A Night in the Lonesome October). It isn't just a matter of changing genres, he changes the style of his prose to suit (or sometimes to contrast) the subject. I can't think of any other writer who has shown that much range. It always felt, to me, that he was always experimenting in ways that established writers rarely do.
I certainly enjoy his classics, like the Amber series, but my favorites are "This Immortal" and "A Night in the Lonesome October".
"This Immortal" has a snarky first-person narrator who is still a very serious characters. The background of the story has a sense of melancholy and loss that turns in an unexpected direction. It manages to be entertaining, moment by moment, and also engaging and complex as a whole.
"A Night in the Lonesome October" has the background of a dark high-fantasy, but the odd choice of narrator gives it a unique flavor. It is told by the protagonist's dog, who has a sound but somewhat simplified take on the events. It turns a plot that could be formal and stylized into something that feels more like a children's story. I can't think of anything else like it.