Cover from first publication, inKar Kaballa/Tower of the Medusa | |
| Author | Lin Carter |
|---|---|
| Cover artist | Jeff Jones |
| Language | English |
| Series | Tales of the Near Stars |
| Genre | Science fiction |
| Publisher | Ace Books |
Publication date | 1969 |
| Publication place | United States |
| Media type | Print (paperback) |
| Pages | 106 |
| ISBN | 0-441-42900-9 |
| OCLC | 1702207 |
| Preceded by | Tower at the Edge of Time |
Tower of the Medusa is asword and planetscience fiction novel by American writerLin Carter, the third in his Tales of the Near Stars series. It was first published in paperback byAce Books in November 1969 together with the unrelatedGeorge H. Smith novelKar Kaballa as the "Ace Double" anthology,Kar Kaballa/Tower of the Medusa. The first stand-alone edition was issued in trade paperback and ebook byWildside Press in February 2011. The first British edition was issued as an ebook by Gateway/Orion in November 2018.[1]
In the far future, when science has become indistinguishable from magic, Kirin, a thief dealing in precious relics, is forced to land on an alien world. After an attack by death dwarfs he finds himself involved in a quest to steal a magical gem from the Tower of the Medusa, crawling with guards and lethal traps, and reputedly impregnable. In an adventure replete with chases and battles, Kirin and his confederates must overcome the evil Witch Queen, a beautiful sorceress. Taken prisoner and held in her palace, he is aided by a captivating slave. After more fast paced action, events culminate in a battle highlighted by the intervention of ancient gods.
The Tales of the Near Stars series comprises this novel plusThe Star Magicians (1966) andTower at the Edge of Time (1968), all of which take place after the fall of in the wake of the interstellar Carina Empire. Its collapse has left the civilization of the surviving planets in ruins, with some isolated and others reduced to barbarism. Their cultural diversity has produced an odd mix of advanced technology and seeming sorcery amid the inhabited worlds.[2] Similarities in situation to Carter's History of the Great Imperium series have led criticJohn Clute to link this book andThe Star Magicians to that sequence, though the Imperium books are usually considered to consist solely of three other novels,The Man Without a Planet (1966),Star Rogue (1970), andOutworlder (1971)[3]
The book was reviewed by Anthony R. Lewis inLocus no. 44, Dec. 17, 1969, and Paul Walker inScience Fiction Review, Jan. 1971.[1]