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Roger Zelazny Discussion forum on the works and writings of Roger Zelazny, not least the Amber series, Changing Land, Madwand, and standalone works.


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Old 14th November 2007, 03:07 PM   #1 (permalink)
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Damnation Alley

What do you think of this book?

Like it?


Its my first of RZ and i enjoy it. The world,Hell Tanner and everything is very interesting.
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Old 14th November 2007, 03:21 PM   #2 (permalink)
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Re: Damnation Alley

It was my first too, I like it a lot. Haven't read it for about twenty years though, shame on me.
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Old 14th November 2007, 03:44 PM   #3 (permalink)
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Re: Damnation Alley

You remember what you liked or was it too long to remember?


I wonder how its possible for me to like Hell. He isnt the most likeable guy if you look to his actions and history of bad/horrible deeds. I havent finished the story yet so who knows if it changes how i feel about him.
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Old 15th November 2007, 03:42 AM   #4 (permalink)
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Re: Damnation Alley

Although I've read a lot of Zelazny (not much lately), I didn't read this one until after I'd seen the movie. And that too was a long time ago. the movie was so-so and I felt the book was marginally better. At one time, one of the vehicles from the film was parked beside one of the Los Angeles freeways. Can't remember exactly where. Haven't spotted it in years.
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Old 15th November 2007, 10:10 PM   #5 (permalink)
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Re: Damnation Alley

I found it to be a very solid post OP story. I liked Hell Tanner alot, his personal journey of going from fleeing f his task to risking everything for people he didnt know or cared about. Specially when the hollier than thou Greg chickened out after he called Hell horrible for not caring about the job at first.

It was written well, a nice touch seeing people dying slow in Boston and Hell fighting to survive The Alley at the same time. My fav part of the book was that when he met that farmer family that helped him and took care of Greg. It was nice seeing normal decent people after everything and everyone else wanting to kill him.

It reminded me of Mad Max alot specially the second movie where he helps that band of people surviving the gangs. Of course Mad Max wasnt as interesting as Tanner Max was hollywood type hero, i cant ever seeing a guy like Hell Tanner being a hero of a movie like that.



A very good first book and cant wait to read more of RZ.

Waiting for my ordered This Immortal
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Old 16th November 2007, 12:17 PM   #6 (permalink)
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Re: Damnation Alley

i liked the story, but i found it a little dated, what to say, very sixties-seventies in its themes, i don't know how to explain...

This "dated" feeling was not so apparent in his other novels.

perhaps a fan who has lived in the sixties can confirm my impression (or not)
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Old 16th November 2007, 01:04 PM   #7 (permalink)
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Re: Damnation Alley

What did you find dated?

It didnt seem dated to me at all. People usually go back tech wise in post apocalyptic stories. Farming old west style to survive.
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Old 18th November 2007, 08:57 PM   #8 (permalink)
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Re: Damnation Alley

Dated? Perhaps the dated thing is the archetype of the lone hero (especially when he encounter a damsel, if I remember well; it's been a long time)

I mean, an archetype is an archetype, but I once read a SF novel in which there was this astronef wandering about, and the women weren't allowed to disembark on the newly found planets... too dangerous.

But I don't know what our friend Strife meant exactly.
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Old 18th November 2007, 10:19 PM   #9 (permalink)
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Re: Damnation Alley

I didnt see Corny as a damsel atleast not the usual ones you see in stories like this.

I mean she was a member of a bike gang who tried to kill him and only came with him cause he provided good chances for survivle. It wasnt so romantic, that they fell in love or something at first sight and he took her with him cause of that.

Some Archetype never get dated which is why they are used. Tanner as the dangerous,criminal ,anti-hero i have seen in many modern stories in many genres.
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Old 19th November 2007, 11:30 AM   #10 (permalink)
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Re: Damnation Alley

You might be right, Connavar.

I just remember our hero's protective attitude.

But I had forgotten the heroine's name.

Corny? Did you say "corny"?

My friend the Merriam-Webster open dictionary says:

1archaic : tasting strongly of malt
2: of or relating to corn
3: mawkishly old-fashioned: tiresomely simple and sentimental <told corny jokes>


Well, if RZ didn't pick the name on purpose, this could demonstrate that the subconscious mind pops out things that the mind owner thinks somewhere, deep inside...

And what do you think--generally speaking-- of female characters in RZ's novels?

Let's take the Amber cycle, for instance, because it is his most famous work (which--as much as I love Amber--is a pity).

Apart from Dara and--less so--Fiona, there are no strong heroines in Amber.

I haven't read all Zelazny, though, and I could be mistaken.
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Old 19th November 2007, 02:51 PM   #11 (permalink)
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Re: Damnation Alley

The rebel on a motocycle was a very strong motif in America when this book was written - think Easy Rider, think Jack Kerouac, and his travels across America, who had such an influence on late 60s US counter-culture, and who died the year the book was published - I think perhaps the book may seem dated because we all have such a strong sense of time and place for this kind of character, bolstered by all those 60s road movies.

I've no idea if RZ was influenced by any of those things but the rebel, in numerous forms, is a recurring theme in much of his writing.
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Old 19th November 2007, 06:22 PM   #12 (permalink)
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Re: Damnation Alley

Quote:
Originally Posted by Giovanna Clairval View Post
You might be right, Connavar.

I just remember our hero's protective attitude.

But I had forgotten the heroine's name.

Corny? Did you say "corny"?

My friend the Merriam-Webster open dictionary says:

1archaic : tasting strongly of malt
2: of or relating to corn
3: mawkishly old-fashioned: tiresomely simple and sentimental <told corny jokes>


Well, if RZ didn't pick the name on purpose, this could demonstrate that the subconscious mind pops out things that the mind owner thinks somewhere, deep inside...

And what do you think--generally speaking-- of female characters in RZ's novels?

Let's take the Amber cycle, for instance, because it is his most famous work (which--as much as I love Amber--is a pity).

Apart from Dara and--less so--Fiona, there are no strong heroines in Amber.

I haven't read all Zelazny, though, and I could be mistaken.

Tanner called her Corny as short for Cornelia.


I dont think her character had much to do with her name might be mean. Specially the third option.

Sure she was simple in a way that she wanted to survive with any means.

But thats true of everyone in DA in that post apocalyptic world. Survivle was all they cared about.

I found her to be strong of mind and body. She could take her of herself, she didnt even think twice about tagging along with Tanner to survive. She didnt beg him for help or anything.

Shame she died so close to the goal.


So going only by Corny i liked the way he wrote her. Not she wasnt "ooh save me my shining knight" that is too common.
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Old 19th November 2007, 08:31 PM   #13 (permalink)
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Re: Damnation Alley

All, right, Connavar (I admitted that I had read the book a long time ago). It's better.

Well, I wa trying to think of what could have triggered the impression Strife has expressed.

And that must be it, Snowdog: long rides as Steppenwolf howls...

But I'm unconvinced about "Corny". A native can't fail to make the connection, can he?
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Old 20th November 2007, 12:23 AM   #14 (permalink)
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Re: Damnation Alley

What connection? What the word means?
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Old 20th November 2007, 01:44 PM   #15 (permalink)
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Re: Damnation Alley

I haven't read the books, but certainly the first thing I think of when I hear/read 'corny' is the first (and only) meaning in the OED, which is an informal term meaning 'trite or mawkishly sentimental'. In an earlier sense it meant 'rustic, appealing to country folk'.

Hence the archaic first meaning listed in the MW, I imagine. And the second. But that makes me laugh, to think of it. 'The sauce tasted corny.'

If it's a name, something someone calls another, then I suppose it's an open question as to whether the reference is intentional, if it's never stated explicitly or implied. Same goes for the author's intention, I suppose?
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