- CARTER, Lin
- Working name of US writer and editor Linwood Vrooman Carter (1930-1988), most of whose work of any significance was done in the field of HEROIC FANTASY, an area of concentration he went some way to define in his critical study of relevant texts and techniques, Imaginary Worlds (1973). Much of his own heroic fantasy derives, sometimes too mechanically, from the precepts about its writing which he aired in this book. As an editor, he was most active about 1969-72, when as consultant for BALLANTINE BOOKS he conceived their adult FANTASY list and presented many titles under that aegis, bringing to the contemporary paperback market writers such as James Branch CABELL, Lord DUNSANY and Clark Ashton SMITH. With Cabell, he merely reprinted some titles; but with H.P. LOVECRAFT, Dunsany and Smith he reassembled material under his own titles (for details see their entries). Most of his criticism has been closely linked to his strong interest in fantasy of this sort; it includes Tolkien: A Look Behind "The Lord of the Rings" (1969) and Lovecraft: A Look Behind the "Cthulhu Mythos" (1972). LC began publishing sf with "Masters of the Metropolis" for FSF in 1957 with Randall GARRETT; and with L. Sprague de Camp he adapted and expanded many stories, especially Conan infills, like Conan the Swordsman * (1978) and Conan the Liberator * (1979), which Robert E. Howard had left unpublished or unrealized, and created others (for further details L. Sprague DE CAMP; Robert E. HOWARD).As an author in his own right, LC tended to concentrate on pastiches of the kind of heroic fantasy to which he was devoted. His first novel, The Wizard of Lemuria (1965; rev vt Thongor and the Wizard of Lemuria 1969), begins a long and (as it turned out) typical series of fantasies about the exploits of Thongor in various venues, continuing with Thongor of Lemuria (1966; rev vt Thongor and the Dragon City 1970), Thongor Against the Gods (1967), Thongor in the City of Magicians (1968), Thongor at the End of Time (1968) and Thongor Fights the Pirates of Tarakus (1970). Like succeeding series (see listing below), the Thongor tales represent a swift though somewhat exiguous fantasizing of routine pulp protocols. Though these fantasies were often set (like Edgar Rice BURROUGHS's) on various florid worlds, and could be thought of as PLANETARY ROMANCES, they were not in any committed sense sf in tone; LC's output of sf proper is relatively scant. The Great Imperium sequence - The Star Magicians (1966 dos), The Man without a Planet (1966 dos), Tower of the Medusa (1969), Star Rogue (1970) and Outworlder (1971) - comes attractively closer; and the Mars series - The Man who Loved Mars (1973), The Valley where Time Stood Still (1974), The City Outside the World (1977) and Down to a Sunless Sea (1984) - has moments of poignance where sf and SCIENCE FANTASY grant perspectives by overlapping. Overproduction blurred LC's image (though illness slowed him down considerably in later years), giving weight to the feeling that he sometimes paid inadequate attention to the quality of his products or to assuring their individuality. His work as an editor eclipses his own writings in importance.JCOther works: Series: The Thoth sequence, comprising The Thief of Thoth (1968 chap) and The Purloined Planet (1969 chap dos), which is sf; the Chronicles of Kylix, comprising The Quest of Kadji (1971) and The Wizard of Zao (1978); the Gondwana Epic, comprising The Warrior of World's End, (1974), The Enchantress of World's End (1975), The Immortal of World's End (1976), The Barbarian of World's End (1977), The Pirate of World's End (1978) and, first published but the concluding volume, Giant of World's End (1969); the Callisto sequence, comprising Jandar of Callisto (1972), Black Legion of Callisto (1972), Sky Pirates of Callisto (1973), Mad Empress of Callisto (1975), Mind Wizards of Callisto (1975), Lankar of Callisto (1975), Ylana of Callisto (1977) and Renegade of Callisto (1978); the Green Star Rises sequence, comprising Under the Green Star (1972), When the Green Star Calls (1973), By the Light of the Green Star (1974), As the Green Star Rises (1975), In the Green Star's Glow (1976) and As the Green Star Rises (1983); the DOC SAVAGE-like Zarkon sequence, comprising Zarkon, Lord of the Unknown, in The Nemesis of Evil (1975; vt The Nemesis of Evil 1978), Zarkon, Lord of the Unknown, in Invisible Death (1975; vt Zarkon, Lord of the Unknown and his Omega Crew: Invisible Death 1978), Zarkon, Lord of the Unknown, in The Volcano Ogre (1976; vt Zarkon, Lord of the Unknown and his Omega Crew: The Volcano Ogre 1978), Zarkon, Lord of the Unknown, in The Earth-Shaker (1982) and Horror Wears Blue (1987); the Zanthodon sequence, comprising Journey to the Underground World (1979), Zanthodon (1980), Hurok of the Stone Age (1981), Darya of the Stone Age (1981) and Eric of Zanthodon (1982); the Terra Magica sequence, comprising Kesrick (1982), Dragonrouge (1984), Mandricardo (1986) and Callipygia (1988).Singletons: Destination Saturn (1967) with David Grinnell (Donald A. WOLLHEIM); The Flame of Iridar (1967 chap dos); Tower at the Edge of Time (1968); Beyond the Gates of Dream (coll 1969); Lost World of Time (1969); Outworlder (1971); The Black Star (1973); Time War (1974); Dreams from R'lyeh (coll 1975 chap), poetry; Tara of the Twilight (1979); Lost Worlds (coll 1980); Kellory the Warlock (1984); Found Wanting (1985).As Editor: Dragons, Elves and Heroes (anth 1969); The Young Magicians (anth 1969); The Magic of Atlantis (anth 1970); Golden Cities, Far (anth 1970); The Spawn of Cthulhu (anth 1971); New Worlds for Old (anth 1971); Discoveries in Fantasy (anth 1972); Great Short Novels of Adult Fantasy (anth 1972) and Great Short Novels of Adult Fantasy II (anth 1973); the Flashing Swords series, comprising Flashing Swords 1 (anth 1973), \#2 (anth 1973), \#3: Warriors and Wizards (anth 1976), \#4: Barbarians and Black Magicians (anth 1977) and \#5: Demons and Daggers (anth 1981); the Year's Best Fantasy series, comprising The Year's Best Fantasy Stories 1 (anth 1975), \#2 (anth 1976), \#3 (anth 1977), \#4 (anth 1978), \#5 (anth 1980) and \#6 (anth 1980); Kingdoms of Sorcery (anth 1976); Realms of Wizardry (anth 1976); the Weird Tales series, comprising Weird Tales 1 (anth 1980), \#2 (anth 1980), \#3 (anth 1981) and \#4 (anth 1983).Nonfiction: Royal Armies of the Hyborean Age: A Wargamer's Guide to the Age of Conan (1975 chap) both with Scott Bizar; Middle-Earth: The World of Tolkien (1977) with David Wenzel (1950-), pictures with captions.
Science Fiction and Fantasy Encyclopedia. Academic. 2011.