Masters of the Maze (novel)

Masters of the Maze

First edition cover
Author Avram Davidson
Cover artist John Schoenherr
Country United States
Language English
Genre Science Fiction
Publisher Pyramid Books
Publication date
1965
Media type Paperback
Pages 156
OCLC 4159938
813

Masters of the Maze is a 1965 science fiction novel by Avram Davidson, originally published by Pyramid Books with a cover by John Schoenherr. A Dutch translation, Wachters van het Web, appeared in 1967 in the M=SF range and a French translation, Les maîtres du labyrinthe, appeared in 1975. The first UK edition, the only hardcover to date, was issued by White Lion in 1974. An American paperback reprint followed from Manor Books in 1976. Ebook editions appeared in 2012, from both Prologue Books and SF Gateway.[1] The novel presents historical and fictional characters as "Guardians" of a maze which malignant, insect-like aliens are seeking to traverse in order to subjugate Earth.[2]

Reception

Algis Budrys praised the novel as "a very fine piece of light reading" despite having "marks of the short story writer all over it"; he declared that "no one but Davidson could have made of this wreck-save-the-world plot a thing of such polished beauty. It wafts of the incense of scholarship for its own sake . . . ".[3] Judith Merril praised "Davidson's incredible ear for dialogue, his sharp eye for detail, and his resulting deft touch with a wide range of characterizations", but noted that the story "falls apart" in its closing sections, losing its "almost Carrollian" quality.[4] P. Schuyler Miller described the novel as "rich", saying "This one has everything in it. . . . It has monsters. It has freemasonry. It has innumerable worlds. It has fully portrayed characters -- including a couple of monsters -- who pop up and vanish. It has a rather feckless hero who gets involved and blunders into all the feck he needs".[5]

John Clute, in The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, describes Masters as "an intricate Parallel-Worlds adventure with sharply characterized humans and remote Secret Masters involved in barring interdimensional transit to a remarkably vivid insectoid Alien race".[6]

References

  1. ISFDB publishing history
  2. The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and Fantasy, Gary Westfahl, ed., v.2, p.457 (Greenwood Publishing, 2005)
  3. "Galaxy Bookshelf", Galaxy, February 1966, pp.134-136
  4. "Books", F&SF, November 1965, pp.21-22
  5. "The Reference Library", Analog, July 1967, p. 162
  6. ESF Davidson entry
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