Ten Amber novels were written by Roger Zelazny. The series of books was published over the years from 1970 to 1991. Portions of the first novel,
Nine Princes in Amber, had previously been published in
Kallikanzaros (No. 1, June 1967, and No. 3, December 1967). The novels
Sign of the Unicorn,
The Hand of Oberon, and
The Courts of Chaos first appeared in abridged, serialized versions in
Galaxy Science Fiction.
The Guns of Avalon and five later "Merlin Cycle" Amber novels were not serialized or excerpted. Several
Chronicles of Amber omnibus volumes have also been published, collecting the five novels of the original "Corwin Cycle" in one volume, the five novels of the "Merlin Cycle" in another volume, and later (in
The Great Book of Amber) all ten novels in a single volume.
The Corwin cycle The first five novels are narrated in the first person by
Corwin, a prince of Amber, as he describes his adventures and life upon re-encountering his family after a loss of memory and an absence of centuries.
Nine Princes in Amber (1970) The Guns of Avalon (1972) Sign of the Unicorn (1975) The Hand of Oberon (1976) The Courts of Chaos (1978) The Merlin Cycle The next five novels focus on
Merlin, Corwin's son. These stories are held by some fans to be less of a fantasy classic than the first five due to the difference in writing style, direction and setting. One criticism of the sequence is that it revolved around the dealing with and acquisition of ever more powerful artifacts and entities, in a kind of technological/magical arms race.
Trumps of Doom (1985) Trumps of Doom won the Locus Award for Best Fantasy Novel in 1985.
Blood of Amber (1986) Blood of Amber was nominated for the Locus Award for Best Fantasy Novel in 1987.
Sign of Chaos (1987) Sign of Chaos was nominated for the Locus Award for Best Fantasy Novel in 1988.
Knight of Shadows (1989) Prince of Chaos (1991) Short stories For the limited 1985 edition of
Trumps of Doom, Zelazny wrote a prologue that details Merlin's passage through the Logrus. After completing the Merlin Cycle, Zelazny wrote five Amber short stories, in which he began to tease the threads of the story into a new configuration. Zelazny died shortly after completing the last of these short stories, which were collected in
Manna from Heaven (2003), along with the
Trumps of Doom prologue and sixteen unrelated stories. An unfinished sixth story, "A Secret of Amber", was an informal collaboration co-written in alternating sections by Zelazny and
Ed Greenwood over a period of years. It was published in
Amberzine in 2005, then included in
The Collected Stories of Roger Zelazny, Volume 6: The Road to Amber, published by NESFA Press in 2009. Readers have speculated about the correct internal order of the stories. Zelazny has said that the correct order for the stories is the order in which they were written: • "A Secret of Amber" (
Amberzine #12–15, March 2005) • "
The Salesman's Tale" (
Amberzine No. 6, by Phage Press, February 1994 and Ten Tales, edited by John Dunning, 1994) • "
Blue Horse, Dancing Mountains" (
Wheel of Fortune, edited by Roger Zelazny, 1995) • "
The Shroudling and the Guisel" (
Realms of Fantasy, October 1994) • "
Coming to a Cord" (
Pirate Writings, Number 7, 1995) • "
Hall of Mirrors" (
Castle Fantastic, edited by John DeChancie and Martin Greenberg, March 1996) The latter five stories tell a linked tale from several viewpoints. Zelazny had planned to write more, and to eventually publish a collection of Amber short stories. and Betancourt announced in February 2006 that the series had been canceled. After a meeting with the publisher's new owner, Betancourt had brief hopes of renewed interest in the series from ibooks, but in August 2007 he announced his conclusion that the project was dead. Betancourt stated that one of his primary motivations for agreeing to write the new books was to keep Zelazny's books and stories alive and in print, and to prevent them from fading into obscurity. He cited
Robert E. Howard's
Conan,
Edgar Rice Burroughs's
Tarzan, and Sir
Arthur Conan Doyle's
Sherlock Holmes as examples of how later authors had successfully continued and extended the stories of iconic characters long after their creators had died. The decision by Zelazny's literary executor to authorize a continuation of the Amber series was criticized by several acquaintances of Zelazny, including writers
George R. R. Martin,
Walter Jon Williams, and
Neil Gaiman. They asserted that Zelazny had been quite averse to the idea of a "shared" Amber setting, and that he had clearly stated he did not want any others writing Amber stories. Gaiman wrote: The series received a critical response from some Zelazny fans, who responded negatively to Betancourt's writing style and perceived lack of characterization, and considered his work to be
fan fiction. The focus on Oberon also disappointed those who, after reading Zelazny's Merlin cycle and Amber short stories, believed that Zelazny had instead been planning another series of books to wrap up matters that he had left hanging. Zelazny's short stories, while tying up some of the loose ends, at the same time had opened doors to potential new stories going forward in the Amber universe, rather than a prequel.
Audio editions and other adaptations Audiobooks Sunset Productions did audio versions of Roger Zelazny reading the novels (except where noted), and produced them with sound effects. Sunset was bought out by Americana Publishing in 2002. •
Nine Princes in Amber (abridged February 1992, unabridged April 1998) •
The Guns of Avalon (abridged February 1992, unabridged November 1998) •
Sign of the Unicorn (abridged September 1992, unabridged December 1998) •
The Hand of Oberon (abridged October 1992, unabridged 1999) (last portion of the unabridged version read by Bruce Watson) •
The Courts of Chaos (abridged only January 1993, unsure of unabridged date) •
Trumps of Doom (abridged April 1993, unsure of unabridged date) •
Blood of Amber (abridged July 1993, unsure of unabridged date) •
Sign of Chaos (abridged November 1994, unabridged 2002) •
Knight of Shadows (abridged only) (October 1996) •
Prince of Chaos (abridged only) (read by Bruce Watson) (December 1998) The
National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped also created unabridged recorded versions of
The Chronicles of Amber novels, including a 1979 recording of
Nine Princes in Amber, read by Michael Moodie, and a later recording of
Prince of Chaos, read by John Stratton. Unabridged recordings created for the
Canadian National Institute for the Blind included a 2001 recording of
Nine Princes in Amber read by Richard Nazarewich. In 2012,
Audible released brand new recordings of
The Chronicles of Amber, with
Alessandro Juliani reading the first five books (the Corwin cycle) and
Wil Wheaton reading the last five books (the Merlin cycle).
Graphic novel adaptations The first two Amber books,
Nine Princes in Amber and
The Guns of Avalon, were adapted by writer
Terry Bisson and various illustrators into
comic books. Produced by
Byron Priess Visual Productions, they were published by
DC Comics in 1996, each in three parts.
Reference works There are two published guides to Amber: • ''Roger Zelazny's Visual Guide to Castle Amber'' by Roger Zelazny and Neil Randall (1988) •
The Complete Amber Sourcebook by Theodore Krulik (Avon Books, New York, 1996)
Games Authorized games In 1985,
Telarium published the
interactive fiction computer game Nine Princes in Amber, based on the first two books of the series. Two authorized adventure books based on Amber, similar in concept to the
Choose Your Own Adventure series, were written by Neil Randall and published in 1988: •
Seven No-Trump (1988), subtitled "A Crossroads Adventure" •
The Black Road War (1988), subtitled "Combat Command"
Erick Wujcik created the
Amber Diceless Roleplaying Game, with two authorized publications: •
Amber Diceless Role-playing (1991) •
Shadow Knight (1995)
Other games The online multiplayer
role-playing game '''' was based in the Amber universe.
Lost Souls is a multiplayer
medieval fantasy MUD in which Amber is the center of the cosmos and the Courts of Chaos is the outermost of the outer planes; Amberite and Chaosborn are among the playable races.
Zangband is a single-player
roguelike computer game with a setting, magic system, and race options that are loosely derived from Zelazny's Amber multiverse, with the Serpent of Chaos as its final adversary. == World ==