Poseidonis (collection)

Poseidonis is a collection of fantasy short stories by Clark Ashton Smith, edited by Lin Carter. It was first published in paperback by Ballantine Books as the fifty-ninth volume of its Ballantine Adult Fantasy series in July 1973. It was the fourth collection of Smith's works assembled by Carter for the series. The stories were originally published in various fantasy magazines in the 1930s and 1940s, notably Weird Tales.[1]

Poseidonis
Cover of Poseidonis
EditorLin Carter
AuthorClark Ashton Smith
Cover artistGervasio Gallardo
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SeriesBallantine Adult Fantasy series
GenreFantasy
PublisherBallantine Books
Publication date
1973
Media typePrint (paperback)
Pages210
ISBN0-345-03353-1
OCLC3371683
Preceded byXiccarph 

Summary

The book collects several prose poems, poems and tales, including stories from the author's Poseidonis cycle, set on a remnant of the lost continent of Atlantis, and others set in Lemuria or other realms.

Contents

  • "The Magic of Atlantis: An Introduction", by Lin Carter
  • Poseidonis
  • "Editor's Note"
  • "The Muse of Atlantis" (prose poem)
  • "The Last Incantation"
  • "The Death of Malygris"
  • "Tolometh" (poem)
  • "The Double Shadow"
  • "A Voyage to Sfanomoë"
  • "A Vintage from Atlantis"
  • "Atlantis: a poem" (poem)
  • Lemuria
  • "Editor's Note"
  • "In Lemuria" (poem)
  • "An Offering to the Moon"
  • "The Uncharted Isle"
  • "Lemurienne" (poem)
  • Ptolemides
  • "Editor's Note"
  • "The Epiphany of Death"
  • Other Realms
  • "Editor's Note"
  • "In Cocaigne" (prose poem)
  • "Symposium of the Gorgon"
  • "The Venus of Azombeii"
  • "The Isle of Saturn" (poem)
  • "The Root of Ampoi"
  • "The Invisible City"
  • "Amithaine" (poem)
  • "The Willow Landscape"
  • "The Shadows" (prose poem)

Reception

The collection was reviewed (in French) by Daniel Walther in Fiction no, 322, 1981.[1]

Notes

gollark: And they do predicted grades for university applications (the timing is stupid).
gollark: Also, teachers have incentives to try and increase grades.
gollark: Instead of setting questions posing problems to solve, a past exam paper I looked at literally had a question asking you to match up "procedural abstraction" and "problem decomposition" and such with definitions.
gollark: Someone writing the A level CS spec decided at some point that people needed to be able to solve problems of some kind, which is reasonable.
gollark: School systems force focus on stuff which is easy to test and teach, so I fear it would inevitably degenerate.
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