### From Publishers Weekly In this engrossing sequel to The Dreamthief's Daughter (2001), Moorcock weaves history, myth and alternate realities into a seamless whole. In 1951, Oona, the Dreamthief's daughter, and her albino husband, Ulrik von Bek, are enjoying a much needed vacation in Nova Scotia
The Skrayling Tree: The Albino in America (toa-2)
β Scribed by Moorcock, Michael
- Book ID
- 107292046
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 194 KB
- Series
- Elric 11
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This novel follows on the heels of The DreamthiefΠ²Πβ’s Daughter , continuing the intertwined saga of Elric, his daughter Oona, her husband and ElricΠ²Πβ’s son-in-law Ulric von Bek. Moorcock brings his Eternal Champion mythos to early North America, as seen through the eyes of both the native tribes and the immigrant Vikings. The Vikings call the native peoples skraelings or skraylings - which gives the title of the novel, The Skrayling Tree . The Tree itself may well be the essence or objectification of MoorcockΠ²Πβ’s all encompassing Multiverse. The three plot strands follow Oona, daughter of Elric and the dreamthief; her husband Ulric von Bek, himself bearing strong ties to the Eternal Champion; and the most recognized of all the Champions incarnations, Elric of Melnibone. We see the story from three perspectives, Oona's, her husband Ulrich Von Bek and Elric. Three disparate threads that are gradually drawn together. The writing is beautiful, Moorcock really taking it all in his stride, taking time to create a story of wonderful complexity, yet with a paradoxical simplicity. It builds slowly, gradually gathering steam as the story reaches its climax. Each step along the way is an opportunity to stop and look around at the strange and wonderful world he has created, where mass and time and scale mean little.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
During a trip to Canada, Ulrik von Bek's wife, Oona, is abudcted by a tribe of albino Native Americans, who lead Ulrik on a perilous odyssey into a multiverse caught in the middle of the epic struggle between Law and Chaos.
The second book in "A Tale of the Albino." When his beloved wife Oona is abducted by a band of albino Native Americans, Ulrik von Bek trails the group by using the Skrayling Oak. Soon he finds himself in the multiverse, where he is reconnected with his alternate self, Elric of Melnibone.
The second book in "A Tale of the Albino." When his beloved wife Oona is abducted by a band of albino Native Americans, Ulrik von Bek trails the group by using the Skrayling Oak. Soon he finds himself in the multiverse, where he is reconnected with his alternate self, Elric of Melnibone.