It is one of the ironies of Poul Anderson’s career – which spans six decades, 66 novels, and almost as many short story collections – that his most important book might be the first he ever wrote:
The Broken Sword(1954). It is a powerful, dark, and gripping fantasy tale of heroic doom and forbidden love, a modern “romance” set within the tradition of
fornaldarsögur, medieval Norse sagas about ancient times. Ignored upon publication and never a bestseller,
The Broken Swordnevertheless found its initial audience among a small yet significant coterie of “sword and sorcery” (S&S) enthusiasts, a fantasy subgenre – also sometimes known as “heroic fantasy” – that originated in the American pulp magazines, and it emphasized adventure-style plots, morally ambiguous heroes,…
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Citation: Wise, Dennis Wilson. "The Broken Sword". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 26 June 2020 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=39304, accessed 22 November 2024.]