Beyond Jack Vance discussion
Heroes
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Gersen is my fav so far, he is much better than Glawen Clattuc because thats an innocent kid. Gersen is more obessive,hardcore.

Gersen is accused by one of his girlfriends as being a "monomaniac", and this is probably a correct identification, as he's driven to meet his original goal no matter what else happens - and what enemies he has to kill.
Adam Reith is also a driven man, but much nicer than Gersen in many ways.
Luke Grogatch in "Dodkin's Job" is pretty dour and disenchanted, but not really an anti-hero.'
Outside of Vance, Severian in Gene Wolfe's "The Book of The New Sun" may be an anti-hero, although Wolfe doesn't follow most literary conventions.



What a coincidence i just finished Demon Princes last week. Face is my fav in the series, the weirdest human cultures,most challenging villan for Gersen. Top 3 Vance novels/stories make its an alltime top fav book of mine.
What didnt you like about the end of Demon Princes?



The ending was a masterpiece imo, all the things Gersen did to get the Demon Princes end with him thinking his enemies has deserted him. It was a bitter,futile ending showing he didnt even get the revenge himself on the worst Demon Prince.
That family got the revenge on Treesong, it was clear who got him.


Yeah the wonderful images is something i take away from this series. The last book had it faults but it was strong ending. An anticlimax ending i thought was planned both for the reader and Gersen since its was the end of a long journey for the hero.

Vance's work often ends with short thrift. In Durdane trilogy, the protagonist is born into a superstitious religious sect which espouses enslaving woman and their children to become the leader of a disorganized nation fighting alien invaders. He manages, with some difficulties, to rise the occasion. At the end of the book, he's essential left to nothing. People die and usually that's the end of it.
And who can forget Vance's picturesque expose of a forlorn Cugel at The Eyes of the Overworld?
Logical and definitive resolutions are a Vance hallmark.


Come to think of it, Roger Zelazny wrote an awful lot of these characters. Corwin from Nine Princes in Amber comes to mind.


This is all the more impressive, considering that Vance was writing at a time when characterization was very low on the priority scale for most SF writers. But then Vance was never most SF writers.
Books mentioned in this topic
Bridge of Birds (other topics)Nine Princes in Amber (other topics)
I would be very interested in hearing of other works featuring the type of protagonist outlined above. Thanks in advance for your thoughts.