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This article is about a fantasy series. For a discussion of similar works, see Dying Earth subgenre.

The Dying Earth is a series of fantasy fixups by American author Jack Vance which has inspired much pastiche, imitation and admiration.

The series consists of the following works:

Tales of the Dying Earth collects the entire series.

Author Michael Shea has also written a book set in the same fictional world: A Quest of Simbilis (novel, 1974). Gene Wolfe's The Book of the New Sun is set in a somewhat similar world and has been written under Vance's influence. (Wolfe suggested in The Castle of the Otter, a collection of essays, that he inserted "The Dying Earth" into his fictional world under the title The Book of Gold.)

Three of the Dying Earth books had their titles changed by editors or publishers. In the Vance Integral Edition of Vance's complete oeuvre, these books have had Vance's original titles restored. They are as follows:

  • The Dying Earth is retitled as Mazirian the Magician.
  • The Eyes of the Overworld is retitled as Cugel the Clever.
  • Cugel's Saga is retitled as Cugel: the Skybreak Spatterlight.

Influence on role playing games


The magic system of Dungeons & Dragons (in which a spellcaster memorizes spells out of a spellbook, their number limited by their power, and forgets them upon casting them) was based on the magic of Dying Earth. Some of the spells from D&D are based on spells mentioned in the Dying Earth series, notably The Excellent Prismatic Spray. The D&D magic item Ioun stones appear in Rhialto the Marvelous, though with slightly different properties.

There is also an official Dying Earth role-playing game, published by Pelgrane Press which throws players into Vance's ancient world populated by desperately extravagant people.

The Eyes of the Overworld is a quest artifact in NetHack. Their role is different from that in the Dying Earth series, so this may be coincidence.

External links


Jack Vance novels | Series of fantasy books

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Dying Earth series".

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