The Clocks of Iraz
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''The Clocks of Iraz'' is a fantasy novel by American writer L. Sprague de Camp, the second book of both his Novarian series and the "The Reluctant King, Reluctant King" trilogy featuring King Jorian of Xylar. It was first published as a paperback by Pyramid Books in 1971. It was reprinted by Del Rey Books in December 1983, March 1984, and July 1989. It was later gathered together with the other books in the trilogy, ''The Goblin Tower'' (1968) and ''The Unbeheaded King'' (1983), into the omnibus collection ''The Reluctant King'' (Nelson Doubleday/SFBC, February 1985). An E-book edition was published by Victor Gollancz Ltd, Gollancz's SF Gateway imprint on September 29, 2011, as part of a general release of de Camp's works in electronic form.Amazon.com entry for e-book edition
/ref> The novel has been translated into Portuguese language, Portuguese, Italian language, Italian, French language, French, German language, German and Dutch language, Dutch.


Plot summary

In this sequel to ''The Goblin Tower'', ex-king Jorian of Xylar and Dr. Karadur renew their alliance, with the latter offering to help the former recover his favorite wife Estrildis in return for a new service. Jorian is commissioned to repair the clocks in the Tower of Kumashar, the great lighthouse of Iraz, capital city of the empire of Penembei to the south of Novaria. The timepieces had originally been installed by Jorian's father Evor the Clockmaker, a renowned practitioner of that trade. Complications consist of a pair of competing prophecies regarding the fate of the city, Iraz's cut-throat politics and xenophobic racing factions (clearly based on those of the Chariot racing#Byzantine chariot racing, Byzantine Empire), and a perfect storm of enemies approaching the city, including the pirates of Algarth, a mercenary company from Novaria, the desert hordes of Fedirun, and a revolutionary peasant army. Topping these is the Emperor Ishbahar himself, who seems to think Jorian might make a good heir to dump the whole mess on. Jorian hardly needs to hear a new prophecy relating to ''himself''—"beware the second crown"—to tread cautiously. It will take luck as well as cunning just to get out alive, let alone save the city and seize the forlorn hope of regaining Estrildis with the aid of Karadur's flying bathtub. The riots which dominate the last chapters of the book are evidently modeled on the Nika riots, a major event in the reign of the Byzantine Emperor Justinian.


Setting

As in ''The Goblin Tower'', the political constraints under which the protagonist labors are at least as important as the fantastic element. Just as Novaria echoes Ancient Greece, Classical Greece, the city of Iraz with its convoluted infighting is grounded on earthly models, particularly the Bronze Age city-states of Sumeria, Hellenistic Alexandria, and Late Antiquity, Late Antique Constantinople, a setting de Camp had been familiar with at least since his researches for his early novel ''Lest Darkness Fall''.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Clocks Of Iraz, The 1971 American novels 1971 fantasy novels American fantasy novels Novels by L. Sprague de Camp Pyramid Books books