Reviews

Jirel of Joiry by C.L. Moore

detective_megaton's review

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adventurous dark mysterious medium-paced

3.75

lleullawgyffes's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.0

codalion's review

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3.0

A weird, fun cross between trashy narmy oldschool sword & sorcery (*how* many men want to tame the unconquerable Jirel already?) and HPL-ish weird fiction. I liked "Black God's Kiss" and "Hellsgarde" the most; "The Black Land" wasn't bad either; "Black God's Shadow" was a tad repetitive, and "Jirel Meets Magic" bizarre and meandering but kind of fun (and gay). Definitely read it for the imaginative imagery and weirdness, not depth of plot.

alexanderpaez's review against another edition

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4.0

A sabiendas de que son relatos escritos en la década de los años 30, que son relatos pulp, y que están gestados en una época concreta, no he podido quitarme de encima la sensación de que las aventuras se hacían algo repetitivas y que me faltaba contexto y visión de conjunto. Da la sensación de meterte en un capítulo cualquiera de una novela, y no en una historia por primera vez. Pasado ese bautismo de fuego inicial son relatos muy disfrutables e interesantes a nivel histórico. Voy a repetir con Moore, seguramente con Judgement Night.

hevs's review against another edition

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5.0

Jirel is honorable, cruel, quick in her anger and so, so human. Brilliant, very vivid writing.


Wielka szkoda, że te opowiadania nie ukazały się nigdy po polsku. Kawał doskonałej fantastyki z lat 30., z tych czasów, kiedy gatunki dopiero się formowały, kiedy nic nikogo nie ograniczało i kiedy można było napisać książkę tak pulpową i tak piękną jednocześnie. Jirel porównywana jest często do Conana i... i tak i nie. Obie te postacie są bohaterami podobnego rodzaju fantastyki jeśli chodzi o kreację świata (to wciąż ta granica między fantastyką tradycyjną a nowoczesną), ale jakkolwiek opowiadania Howarda nie są napisane brzydko, daleko im do onirycznej poetyckości opowieści o Jirel. Literacko te teksty zdecydowanie wybijają się ponad średnią tak swoich czasów jak i współcześnie.
Sama tytułowa bohaterka jest wspaniała i nie przypadkiem pozostała w naszej pamięci i w naszych księgozbiorach przez tyle lat. Prosta, zdecydowana i odważna, nie przestaje być wrażliwa i honorowa. Będąc bezczelna nie przestaje być szlachetna. I chyba właśnie ta szlachetność jej charakteru pozwala jej błyszczeć we wszystkich okolicznościach, czy to w piekle, czy w szponach boga ciemności lub gnieździe wampirów - Jirel nie musi rozumieć sytuacji w której się znalazła, by postąpić odważnie i godnie. I nie musi być przy tym grzeczna :D

f18's review

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adventurous challenging dark emotional mysterious reflective tense

4.5

4.6 average 

5 - Black God's Kiss
5 - Black God's Shadow
4 - Jirel Meets Magic
4.5 - The Dark Land
4.5 - Hellsgarde

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gothlithoe's review

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5.0

I picked this up because I was watching the new She-Ra and wanted to find a book similar. This did not disappoint, this definitely has me wanting to read more sword and sorcery type books. It helps that this author was being published in Weird Tales at the same time as some of my other favorites authors so the writing is very much the type that I am into. Dense descriptive prose with some beautiful imagery.

projectmayhem7's review

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4.0

I want to say it's closer to a 3.5 stars. The first story in this collection is 4.5 stars, only missing 5 because the writing style is really not my thing, but the rest of the stories in this collection weren't as special. Considering this was written in the 1930s, I have to give it credit for the awesome weirdness and girl power. The first story, "The Black God's Kiss", was terrifying. I'm not religious but I was raised Catholic, which is Jirel's religion and kind of the vibe throughout. The hell described in this story was just the right kind of unsettling for me. It reminded me of how I felt while reading Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer. I search for that unsettled feeling in books and usually don't find it in fantasy. I'd read "The Black God's Kiss" again, for sure, but unfortunately I don't think the rest of the stories will stay with me. The horror element wasn't as strong in them, and the plots didn't interest me as much. (Also, the second story is like a continuation of the first, and it spent a long time rehashing details I'd just read. Then the plot felt like an eye-roll after what happened in the first story. It just didn't make sense. Be prepared to suspend your disbelief and just roll with it if you want to enjoy it fully, because there is merit in there if you can).

If you're looking for a weird sword and sorcery book with a strong female lead (although she doesn't feel super dimensional honestly), check it out. I wanted to read one of the first fantasy books written by a woman/featuring a female hero, and I think I chose the right one. I love the weirdness and the strange worlds. I just don't think I can rate it higher because most of the stories here ended up being 3 stars. Definitely read "The Black God's Kiss" and then see how you feel.

Overall, love the world building, weirdness, and unsettling horror elements; not as crazy about the characters, writing style, and plots.

kastelpls's review

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medium-paced

1.5

popestig's review

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3.0


Sword and Sorcery from the 1930s, inspired by Howard's work. Sold to me as a female Conan, I went into this hoping for a heroine that would prove better than the Cimmerian himself.

But no.

Moore can craft a sentence, but the story-telling is not that great and the world building is rather poor. This has not stood the test of time.