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The First Kothar the Barbarian MEGAPACK® by Gardner F. Fox
The First Kothar the Barbarian MEGAPACK® by Gardner F. Fox





The First Kothar the Barbarian MEGAPACK® by Gardner F. Fox

surety that won him a legion of fans and readers worldwide. He wrote adventure novels, spy novels, romances, historical novels, fantasy and science fiction, comic books (more than 4,000 of them!) - everything imaginable, in fact, and with a skill and. Fox (1911-1986) enjoyed a long and successful career writing in many genres. But I have to admit it scratched the sword & sorcery itch but didn't quite fully satisfy.The Second Kothar the Barbarian MEGAPACK(R): 2 Sword and Sorcery Novels (Trade Paperback / Paperback) I cannot really recommend this book to anyone new to the Sword & Sorcery genre but a clean slate and an immature mind might be required to really and thoroughly enjoy this. There is also the misogyny present in a few collar-tugging incidents and the sexual focus on the female form got to be a bit weird pretty quick, not in some places mind you, but in most. His strength was off the charts and in the last third he leaped from the top of a tower to the slanting stakes at the edge of the spiked moat below, sliding on the soles of his "war boots" down along them at landing.

The First Kothar the Barbarian MEGAPACK® by Gardner F. Fox

This book is an okay diversion if you're starving for some sword & sorcery but its barbarian swordsman, the titular Kothar, seemed a bit too invincible for all of it. Although, the giant worm-god-thing was pretty cool. There is plenty of monsters and demons but most are kind of cliched at this point (lizard-beasts, tentacled horrors, a yeti). However, for the most part, this book completely lacks atmosphere.

The First Kothar the Barbarian MEGAPACK® by Gardner F. Fox

The writing was slightly better here and a semblance of an atmosphere seemed to seep in. The second third was not very memorable and the last third did pick up the pace a little. Inside the tomb of Afgorkon when Kothar gets his cursed sword and the flayed sorcerer hovering above the land tortured by the whipping winds screaming. The first third of the book had two interesting scenes. Howard's Conan but that is an impossibly high standard. It's not as bad as Brak the Barbarian but it's not as good as Karl Edward Wagner's Kane books. It seemed rather thin then and after sitting down and actually reading through it cover to cover, it still has some lack as compared to some other barbarian swordsmen stories. I first had skimmed this volume and its companion a while ago as research for an article.







The First Kothar the Barbarian MEGAPACK® by Gardner F. Fox