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Showing posts with label Khlit the Cossack. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Khlit the Cossack. Show all posts

Thursday, March 13, 2025

The Winged Rider

 

cover art by A.L. Ripley

Read/Watch 'em in Order #178

Our journey through the January 10, 1926 issue of Adventure brings us to a prime example of why this particular pulp was one of the best ever sources of great fiction in the history of the entire universe.

Harold Lamb was a regular contributer to Adventure. 19 of his short stories and novellas, published between 1917 and 1926 inclusive, featured Khlit the Cossack.


And, gee whiz, Khlit was awesome. When we meet him in the late 16th Century, he's already old, but he refuses to retire to a monestary and begins to wander the world, running into trouble AND finding friends in the Ukraine, Mongolia, China and Afghanistan.


Khlit is still good in a fight, but he's also learned to use his brains. In fact, he's more likely to simply outwit an enemy than beat him in a straight fight.


"The Winged Rider" is the next to last Khlit tale. At this time, he's traveling with his young nephew Kirdy and a big guy named Ayub. 


By this time, Khlit had stepped aside as the main protagonist in Lamb's Cossack tales while he mentors Kirdy into eventually being as awesome as Khlit himself.  As this particular tale opens, Khlit is happy with Kirdy's swordsmanship, courage and tactical leadership, but is worried that the younger man still hasn't learned how to deal with treachery.

Well, it's not surprising that the opportunity to spot treachery soon turns up. The three Cossacks encounter soldiers working for Erlik Khan, a man rumored to be a powerful wizard or demon who has a stronghold near the Don River.  Erlik is also married to a beautiful woman named Ivga.


The three men end up as guests in Erlik's fortified outpost. They learn that a pirate named Skal is leading a force of pirates and outlaws against the outpost, pulling a couple of ship's cannon on sledges to bring down the walls. Ivga, who claims to be speaking for Erlik Khan, makes goo-goo eyes at Kirdy and asks him to lead Erlik's men. A couple of mercenaries from Europe don't care for this, but Kirdy does end up agreeing to take command.


But he also learns that not all is as it seems in Erlik's territory. Erlik might not be who Ivga says he is. In fact, Ivga might not be who Ivga claims to be.


Khlit gives no advice to his nephew, but keeps an eye on the younger man. Kirdy, though, does well. He does lead Erlik's force out of the outpost to fight Skal's men, using intelligent tactics to make up for the fact that he's outnumbered. And he learns not to blindly trust pretty girls. 

It's a great story, which is typical of any fiction written by Lamb. The enviroment and tense atmosphere are brought to vivid life. The characterizations are strong and the action is intense. The novella ends with the attack on Skal's forces, which includes a one-on-one fight between the large pirate and the large Cossack Ayub--followed by a wicked sword duel between Kirdy and another character. Lamb's Cossack stories are available in a four-volume set I have on my Kindle and re-reading "The Winged Rider" makes me want to revisit the entire Cossack saga.



Thursday, July 1, 2010

The Best Team-up that Never Happened.

It’s not often that you find in Western literature a Cossack warrior as a hero. But in a series of superb adventure stories by pulp writer Harold Lamb (recently reprinted in four volumes, we do get to follow along with a Cossack as he gets caught up in one wild adventure after another.


Set in the last 16th Century, Lamb’s stories introduce us to Khlit, an aging warrior whose wits are as sharp (and often as deadly) as his sword. "His ability to think clearly into the future," we're told in one story, "had kept Khlit alive until his hair was gray, when few Cossacks lived to middle age."


Khlit gets around. In the first few stories, he’s hanging out with his fellow Cossacks. But despite constantly proving himself to be smarter than everyone else (and still a master swordsman), they think he’s getting too old to fight. So he wanders off on his own. At this point, his adventures really kick into high gear. He gets involved in finding the hidden tomb of Genghis Khan. He sneaks into a city of Assassins and finishes them off from the inside out. He gets accused of assassinating the emperor of China (who has really only been kidnapped by traitors). He gets hunted as prey by the Tartars. He has myriad single combats and fights in huge battles involving tens of thousands of soldiers. He fights and thinks his way out of prisons and certain death on a regular basis.


Lamb gave his stories consistently fun finales. There's be a twist--or we'd get to see the culmination of Khlit's plan in dealing with his current situation--then there would often be another bigger twist on top of that, highlighting just how clever the Cossask is.


These stories were printed in Adventure magazine between 1917 and 1926. Adventure was a unique pulp, taking pride in printing high quality stories that combined excitement with historical accuracy. Lamb’s stories were standouts even among works by Rafael Sabatini and Talbot Mundy. Khlit is one super-cool guy and Lamb’s prose is animated and lively.


Reading these stories (most of which have never been reprinted before) reminded me of the one other Cossack pulp hero that I’m aware of. Here we have to turn to a writer who admired and was highly influenced by Lamb’s stories—Robert E. Howard.


“The Shadow of the Vulture” is a novella published in the January 1934 issue of Magic Carpet Magazine. Here we first meet Red Sonya, a red-haired warrior woman who is helping to defend the city of Vienna against the Turks during the siege of 1529.


She also spends a lot of time defending Gottfried von Kalmbach, a knight who has a price on his head. Some years earlier, Gottfried had personally wounded the emperor Suleyman on the battlefield. Now Suleyman has sent his most ruthless soldier, Mikhal Oglu, to bring him Gottfried’s head. So the knight has not only survive a series of regular battles, but also watch his back for treachery.


Sonya is at first contemptuous of Gottfried, but she gradually warms up to him and they become companions on the battlefield (how far their companionship might eventually go is never made clear). And if you need someone to watch over you on the battlefield, you can’t do better than Sonya, whose “blade is a blur of white fire, and men went like ripe grain before the reaper.” She saves Gottfried—who is no slouch himself in a fight—at least three times; once after he’s kidnapped by double agents inside Vienna’s damaged walls. There is an absolutely wonderful shock at the story's climax.


The novella is yet another exciting example of Howard’s own storytelling skills. It’s sad that he never got around to writing any more stories about Gottfried and Sonya. In the 1970s Conan comic book published by Marvel, Red Sonya (now Red Sonja) was moved back to the Hyborian Age to team up with Conan. She’s been in sword-and-sorcery land ever since, both in comics and in a series of paperback novels published at some point in the 1970s. There was also what is reputed to be a very bad movie (I haven’t seen it) made in the 1980s.


So the original 16th Century Red Sonya is limited to her one appearance. It really is sad.


But while reading the Khlit stories, I got to thinking. It’s not impossible that Sonya—a few decades after the siege of Vienna—could have met a young Khlit. Maybe she returns to her homeland after adventuring around Europe and the Middle East for a couple of decades with Gottfried. Khlit might have been a youthful warrior, just getting started in the business of warfare. Maybe Sonya is the person who taught him his swordsmanship. Maybe they even had an adventure or two together.


It’s a nice thought. But, sadly, we'll never know for sure.
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