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The Stone Giant  
Author James Blaylock
Cover artist Darrell K. Sweet
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Fantasy novel
Publisher Ace Books
Publication date June 1989
Media type Print (Paperback)
Pages 264
ISBN 0-441-28702-6
OCLC Number 19892130
LC Classification CPB Box no. 1752 vol. 15
Preceded by The Disappearing Dwarf

The Stone Giant (1989) is James Blaylock’s prequel to his first published book, The Elfin Ship, and thus the end (as of 2008) of a loose trilogy of comic fantasy novels including The Disappearing Dwarf.

Although written some years after the other two novels, the setting once again features a mix of fantasy and steampunk elements but unlike the others, the protagonist in The Stone Giant is the roguish Theophile Escargot. Few of the characters from the previous novels appear but the antagonist is once again the evil sorcerer Selznak (although referred to as "Uncle Abner" in the story.) The book was first published as an Ace paperback by Berkley Books.

The story, a parody of the heroic quest, is set in a world where human beings live alongside elves, goblins, witches, wizards, and other fantastic beings. There Theophile Escargot, a Rip Van Winkle -like malcontent, has series of comic misadventures while attempting both to impress a pretty barmaid and to revenge himself on an evil dwarf who cheated him out of a bag of marbles.

[edit] Plot summary

In a fit of pique Escargot eats a pie that his wife had been withholding to bribe him into attending a revival meeting. Unfortunately Stover, the revivalist, is also the local judge and has designs on Escargot's wealthy wife; Escargot winds up homeless and indigent. He becomes infatuated with Leta, Stover's barmaid, and is introduced to a dwarf he believes to be her uncle. Escargot had purchased a bag of odd marbles from a bunjo man (a kind of gypsy/hobo); the dwarf first swindles them from the hapless divorcé, then humiliates and terrifies him for laughs.

After obtaining a settlement from his ex-wife, Escargot leaves for the coastal town of Seaside where he hopes to find Leta at the annual Harvest Festival. A series of misadventures leads him to the submarine of a piratical elf; winding up in sole possession of the vessel Escargot travels through an undersea passage into the land of Balumnia, a sort of siamese-twin world. Escargot's fortunes do not seem to improve as he is rapidly cheated out of money and goods, but he has a surprise encounter with the dwarf and resolves to pursue him. The dwarf attempts to eliminate Escargot but through a combination of persistence and improvisation Escargot survives and learns the dwarf's evil plan: sacrifice Leta and use the marbles to revive the stone giants, ancient enemies of the elves. With the assistance of an eccentric crew of sky-faring elves, Escargot seeks an opportunity to rescue Leta and redeem his many foibles.[1]

[edit] Literary Precedents

The first novel Blaylock wrote to completion was The Man in the Moon, a fantasy inspired by Kenneth Graham’s Wind in the Willows,[2] Mark Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, The Brownies and the Goblins by Nathaniel Moore Banta, and illustrations by Arthur Rackham.[3] Submitted for publication circa 1978, the novel was initially rejected by editor Lester Del Rey and subsequently rewritten and published as The Elfin Ship in 1982.[4] In 1983 a sequel, The Disappearing Dwarf, reunited the characters for a second adventure. Years later Blaylock decided to revisit the scene of the previous works with a darker story to have been titled The Road to Balumnia, but changes were demanded by Judy-Lynn del Rey, his editor at the time; the result was The Stone Giant.[5]

The Man in the Moon is referred to in The Stone Giant as the first of the "White Mountain books" by "G. Smithers of Brompton Village." In Blaylock's "Balumnia" novels, Smithers is a mysterious author whose apparent fictions contain surprising truths.

[edit] Sources

  1. ^ James Blaylock, The Stone Giant, Ballantine, 1989.
  2. ^ The Internet Speculative Fiction Database
  3. ^ James Blaylock, The Man in the Moon, Subterranean Press, 2002, p. 233.
  4. ^ James Blaylock, The Man in the Moon, Subterranean Press, 2002, p. 233.
  5. ^ On the Road to Balumnia: An Interview with James P. Blaylock, Dan Knight, Strange Plasma issue #4, 1991.



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