Hardcover, 348 pages
English language
Published April 1978 by Allison & Busby.
Hardcover, 348 pages
English language
Published April 1978 by Allison & Busby.
Gloriana rules an Albion whose empire embraces America and most of Asia — and which is experiencing a Golden Age of peace, enlightenment, prosperity. As the symbol of all the world's idealism, Gloriana has a huge responsibility to her peoples. She is Albion, and Albion is Gloriana: and no hint of cynicism or tyranny must be allowed or the whole chivalric structure will fall, precipitating a return to an age of iron symbolized by Gloriana's own cruel father, King Hern. Borne down by this responsibility, Gloriana takes lover after lover, indulges in every debauchery, but remains untouched — incapable of orgasm.
Meanwhile in the vast palace, so ancient as to contain thousands of miles of hidden and forgotten passageways, conspiracies are designed to maintain the facade. Lord Montfallcon, Gloriana's Chancellor, controls a web of spies and assassins whose business is to practice the old, ruthless diplomacy which maintains the state. …
Gloriana rules an Albion whose empire embraces America and most of Asia — and which is experiencing a Golden Age of peace, enlightenment, prosperity. As the symbol of all the world's idealism, Gloriana has a huge responsibility to her peoples. She is Albion, and Albion is Gloriana: and no hint of cynicism or tyranny must be allowed or the whole chivalric structure will fall, precipitating a return to an age of iron symbolized by Gloriana's own cruel father, King Hern. Borne down by this responsibility, Gloriana takes lover after lover, indulges in every debauchery, but remains untouched — incapable of orgasm.
Meanwhile in the vast palace, so ancient as to contain thousands of miles of hidden and forgotten passageways, conspiracies are designed to maintain the facade. Lord Montfallcon, Gloriana's Chancellor, controls a web of spies and assassins whose business is to practice the old, ruthless diplomacy which maintains the state. Chief of these spies is the cold-hearted Captain Quire, seducer of virtue, murderer of innocence, who is Montfallcon's greatest weapon. However, when the two fall out and Arabia conceives a plan to ruin Gloriana, a huge intrigue is hatched, threatening to destroy Albion, the Empire, the Golden Age itself, in a love affair between the Queen of Virtue and the King of Vice.
This is Michael Moorcock's most audacious fantasy. Both elaborate and serious, it is a richly written fable, full of marvelous characters and unexpected turns of plot — a tapestry of brilliant inventive skill and unrivaled imagination.