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James Branch Cabell

1879-
1958
Reviewed by Kat Hooper
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james branch cabell James Branch Cabell's work was a major influence on Robert Heinlein, Jack Vance, Fritz Leiber, and Neil Gaiman. His novel Jurgen was the subject of a famous obscenity case which only helped Cabell's career. Some of his works can be downloaded free at Project Gutenberg. Here's an interesting fan page created by Mike Keith who helpfully conferred with us while we created this page.


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The Poictesme Saga (The Life of Manuel) — (1904-1931) These are listed in order of publication. There are other works in this series that we have not listed here because they are not actually fantasies, but rather collections of poems and essays. Publisher: Today, some recognize Cabell as one of the first contemporary writers from the South. He is also noted for his unique blending of classic myths and legends with his own imagination and is considered a pioneer of fantasy writing.

James Branch Cabell THe Poictesme Saga (The Life of Manuel): The Eagle's Shadow, THe Line of Love, Gallantry, Chivalry, The Chords of Vanity A Comedy of SHirking, Domnei A Comedy of Woman WorshipJames Branch Cabell THe Poictesme Saga (The Life of Manuel): The Eagle's Shadow, THe Line of Love, Gallantry, Chivalry, The Chords of Vanity A Comedy of SHirking, Domnei A Comedy of Woman WorshipJames Branch Cabell THe Poictesme Saga (The Life of Manuel): The Eagle's Shadow, THe Line of Love, Gallantry, Chivalry, The Chords of Vanity A Comedy of SHirking, Domnei A Comedy of Woman WorshipJames Branch Cabell THe Poictesme Saga (The Life of Manuel): The Eagle's Shadow, THe Line of Love, Gallantry, Chivalry, The Chords of Vanity A Comedy of SHirking, Domnei A Comedy of Woman WorshipJames Branch Cabell THe Poictesme Saga (The Life of Manuel): The Eagle's Shadow, THe Line of Love, Gallantry, Chivalry, The Chords of Vanity A Comedy of SHirking, Domnei A Comedy of Woman Worship
James Branch Cabell THe Poictesme Saga (The Life of Manuel): The Eagle's Shadow, THe Line of Love, Gallantry, Chivalry, The Chords of Vanity A Comedy of SHirking, Domnei A Comedy of Woman WorshipThe Rivet in Grandfather's neck, The Cream of the Jest, Jurgen A Comedy of Appearances, Figures of Earth, The Jewel Merchants, THe High Place The Rivet in Grandfather's neck, The Cream of the Jest, Jurgen A Comedy of Appearances, Figures of Earth, The Jewel Merchants, THe High PlaceThe Rivet in Grandfather's neck, The Cream of the Jest, Jurgen A Comedy of Appearances, Figures of Earth, The Jewel Merchants, THe High PlaceThe Rivet in Grandfather's neck, The Cream of the Jest, Jurgen A Comedy of Appearances, Figures of Earth, The Jewel Merchants, THe High Place
The Rivet in Grandfather's neck, The Cream of the Jest, Jurgen A Comedy of Appearances, Figures of Earth, The Jewel Merchants, THe High Place The Rivet in Grandfather's neck, The Cream of the Jest, Jurgen A Comedy of Appearances, Figures of Earth, The Jewel Merchants, THe High PlaceMusic from Behind the Moon, THe Silver Stallion, Something About Eve, THe White Robe a Saint's Summary, The Way of Ecben, THe Certain HourMusic from Behind the Moon, THe Silver Stallion, Something About Eve, THe White Robe a Saint's Summary, The Way of Ecben, THe Certain HourMusic from Behind the Moon, THe Silver Stallion, Something About Eve, THe White Robe a Saint's Summary, The Way of Ecben, THe Certain Hour
Music from Behind the Moon, THe Silver Stallion, Something About Eve, THe White Robe a Saint's Summary, The Way of Ecben, THe Certain HourMusic from Behind the Moon, THe Silver Stallion, Something About Eve, THe White Robe a Saint's Summary, The Way of Ecben, THe Certain HourMusic from Behind the Moon, THe Silver Stallion, Something About Eve, THe White Robe a Saint's Summary, The Way of Ecben, THe Certain Hour

fantasy novel review James Branch Cabell JurgenJurgen: A Comedy of Justice

The Rivet in Grandfather's neck, The Cream of the Jest, Jurgen A Comedy of Appearances, Figures of Earth, The Jewel Merchants, THe High PlaceJurgen, an aging pawnbroker who considers himself a poet and a “monstrous clever fellow,” sets off to find his missing loquacious wife — not because he likes her, but rather because his family and friends say it’s the manly thing to do. While searching for Lisa, he enters a strange land and charms Mother Sereda into temporarily giving him back his youth and good looks. Then he uses his renewed vigor to lie and philander his way across a magical landscape, “dealing fairly” with all the women he meets, as he half-heartedly searches for his wife. Along the way he meets dozens of historical and mythical creatures and people (including Queen Guenevere, shown in the picture), first introducing himself as a duke, then promoting himself to prince, king, emperor, pope, and eventually, for a moment, even God.Jurgen & Guenevere

Despite being a vain and hypocritical rogue, Jurgen has a sentimental heart (though he can’t seem to be faithful). But he is never content, even when he’s married to the most beautiful woman he’s ever seen, or even when he’s sitting on God’s throne. Thus, the story of Jurgen is about man’s quest for meaning, pleasure, and purpose. Jurgen is full of human insight and amusing social satire and, for a novel written in 1919, is oh so impolite. Much of the symbolism and metaphor is crude and puerile double entendre of the “big upright lance” and “remarkable powers of penetration” type.

Yet, James Branch Cabell (rhymes with “rabble”) writes in a sardonic voice which is beautiful and genuinely clever and funny, especially when Jurgen talks about women:

  • I am looking for my wife, whom I suspect to have been carried off by a devil, poor fellow!
  • Love’s sowing is more agreeable than love’s harvest.
  • You talk and talk: no woman breathing equals you at mere volume and continuity of speech: but you say nothing that I have not heard seven hundred and eighty times if not oftener.
  • “You have a wife, then!” says Jurgen, who was always interested in such matters. “Why, but to be sure! Either as a Christian or as a married man, I should have comprehended this was Satan’s due. And how do you get on with her?”
    “Pretty well,” says Grandfather Satan: “but she does not understand me.”
    “Et tu, Brute!” says Jurgen.
    “And what does that mean?”
  • For the devils, he found, esteemed polygamy, and ranked it above mere skill at torturing the damned, through a literal interpretation of the saying that it is better to marry than to burn.
  • When Jurgen asks if it’s possible to get divorced in Hell, the devils say no because “we trafficked in them for a while, but we found that all persons who obtained divorces through our industry promptly thanked Heaven…”

I also found it amusing that Jurgen, a pawnbroker with a paunch, backs up his arguments with fake scholarly citations and uses the study of mathematics to seduce intelligent women.

Even a well-educated reader will miss most of the allusions in Jurgen unless armed with a source such as David Rolfe’s Notes on Jurgen. These notes also point out references to Cabell’s previous novels about his fabricated world of Poictesme. Fortunately, understanding of all of these allusions isn’t required for enjoyment of the story, but they elicit chuckles when discovered and could be a source of much diversion for those who like to spend time studying these kinds of things.

Back in its day, Jurgen was deemed offensive by the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice, which tried to get it banned. This, of course, only increased Jurgen’s popularity. The Vice squad lost their case because, superficially, Jurgen seems harmless enough and, according to Cabell and his publisher, complaints about the recurrent references to Jurgen’s big staff, majestic scepter, upright lance, and amazing sword (which seem to meet a lot of veils, sheaths, clefts, and other dark places along the way) prove only that Cabell's detractors have dirty minds.

Perhaps the real issue behind the outcry against Jurgen, however, is its disrespect of Christianity and, in particular, the Roman Catholic Church. For, when Jurgen is sent to Hell, he meets Grandfather Satan and learns that Hell is merely a construct developed by men who think so highly of themselves that they feel that their bad deeds were so influential that they cannot be forgotten and must be punished for eternity. The devils that Jurgen meets are hard-pressed to keep up with people’s demands for torture, lament that Hell’s population is increasing, and look for ways to stop the influx. When Jurgen gets bored of Hell, he talks his way into Heaven and finds that it’s just a figment of his grandmother’s imagination. His discussions with St. Peter cast an ill light on Catholic bishops and popes.

Jurgen is in the public domain and can be downloaded for free at Project Gutenberg. I downloaded the mobipocket version and stuck it right on my Kindle. Besides being free, Jurgen is an interesting and thoughtful novel which is worth reading not just for entertainment, but as part of the history of fantasy literature. —Kat Hooper

 

The Nightmare has Triplets — (1934-1937) Publisher: "[Cabell's] most substantial post-Biography fantasy was "The Nightmare Has Triplets," a sequence comprising Smirt: An Urban Nightmare, Smith: A Sylvan Interlude, and Smire: An Acceptance in the Third Person. This explicitly emulates the logic and geography of dreams... successfully mistly and dreamlike..." ~The Encyclopedia of Fantasy

THe Nightmare has Triplets: Smirt, Smith, SmireTHe Nightmare has Triplets: Smirt, Smith, SmireTHe Nightmare has Triplets: Smirt, Smith, Smire

Stand-Alone Fantasies:

James Branch Cabell THere Were Two PiratesThere Were Two Pirates — (1946) Publisher: His name was Jose Gasparilla, and he was the self-proclaimed King of Pirates. He terrorized the waters around Florida, demanding tribute from every merchant ship he encountered. Riches flowed into his tiny island kingdom... and yet he longed for a life he could never have, for he had left his beloved Isabel behind in Spain. One day he would return to claim her for his bride, he knew, and she had vowed to wait for him. When he captures a ship and discovers Isabel and her elderly husband aboard, he strikes a deal with the man who stole his bride. For Jose Gasparilla, it means a chance to regain the lost years of his life... to live his childhood again and pick a new path, in the Land Without Shadows...


THe Devil's Own Dear Son James Branch CabellThe Devil's Own Dear Son — (1949) Publisher: The Devil's Own Dear Son is Cabell's final philsophical comedy, about a man who discovers that his father was a demon and goes to Hell for a disquieting family reunion. James Branch Cabell (1879-1958) wrote many of the Twentieth Century's finest fantasies, including the controversial Jurgen, which was famously banned by the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice. It was only after the furor died down that readers and critics were fully able to appreciate that the author was no mere sensationalist, but a literary artist of very high calibre. Cabell was above all else, an elegant stylist, whose gently caustic, beautifully fantasic comedies struck a chord in the Jazz Age and still resonate today. He was an important influence on subsequent writers as diverse as Fritz Leiber and Neil Gaiman.


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