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This article is about the fantasy series. For a discussion of similar works, see Dying Earth subgenre.
The Dying Earth is a series of fantasy fixups (novels created from older short stories) by American author Jack Vance.
[edit] WorksThe series consists of the following works:
Tales of the Dying Earth collects the entire series. Author Michael Shea has written a book set in the same fictional world: A Quest of Simbilis (novel, 1974), which is an authorised sequel to Eyes of the Overworld. This book was published nine years before Vance's own sequel. Nifft the Lean by Shea, also owes much debt to Vance's creation, since the protagonist of the story is a petty thief (not unlike Cugel the Clever), who travels and struggles in an exotic world. 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:
[edit] SettingThe stories of the Dying Earth series are set in the distant future, at a point when the sun is almost exhausted and magic has reasserted itself as a dominant force. The various civilizations of the Earth have collapsed for the large part into decadence. The Earth itself is mostly barren and cold, and has become infested with various predatory monsters (possibly created by a magician in a former age). The Moon has disappeared and the Sun is in danger of burning out at any time. A certain fatalism characterizes many of the inhabitants as a consequence. Almery is the center of the region where most of the series characters originate. Although the city is just the pale shadow of its once great self, suffering from marginal desolation, it plays a determinative role in the life of the southern areas. The series shows the influence of the picaresque tale, applied to a science fiction/fantasy setting. [edit] Influence
The series has lent its name to a whole sub-genre of science fiction that uses an entropically dying earth as the setting. The magic system used in Dungeons & Dragons (in which a wizard is limited in the number of spells that can be simultaneously remembered and forgets them once they are cast) 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 prismatic spray. Similarly, magic items from the Dying Earth stories such as ioun stones also made their way into Dungeons & Dragons. One of the deities of magic in Dungeons & Dragons is named Vecna (an anagram of Vance). Many other role-playing settings pay homage to Vance's series by including fantasy elements he invented such as the (in)famous darkness-dwelling Grues, in addition there is an official Dying Earth role-playing game, published by Pelgrane Press which places players into Vance's ancient world populated by desperately extravagant people. [edit] See also
[edit] External links
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