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Book Details

Kajira of Gor

78.6% complete
Copyright ©, 1983, by John Norman
1983
Fantasy; Science Fiction
162,573
Unknown
Never (or unknown...)
See 37
1 - The Studio
2 - The Crate
3 - Corcyrus
4 - A Night in Corcyrus
5 - Miles of Argentum; Drusus Rencius Speculates on What I Might Bring as a Slave; I Have Obtained Greater Freedoms
6 - The Sirik
7 - Bracelets
8 - I Have Been in the House of Kliomenes; The Room in the Inn of Lysias; War
9 - I Determine to Take Cognizance in the City
10 - I Have Taken Cognizance in Corcyrus; We Are Returning to the Palace
11 - Susan Has Been Beaten; Ligurious Speaks With Me; There Is Nothing to Fear; I Am Safe in the Palace
12 - I Sit Upon the Throne; I Wait in the Hall
13 - The Golden Cage; Miles of Argentum Speaks With Me
14 - The Camp of Miles of Argentum; Two Men
15 - Alarm Bars
16 - I Am on the Viktel Aria, In the Vicinity of Venna
17 - The Cement Platform
18 - The Leash
19 - The Trunk
20 - The Stream; The Stone
21 - The Road
22 - The Wagon; Caught!
23 - The Chain
24 - The Mill
25 - I Leave the Mill
26 - I Must Get Up Early for School
27 - School
28 - School; I Have Graduated
29 - Hassan, The Slave Hunter
30 - Sheila, The Tatrix of Corcyrus
31 - Argentum
32 - The Throne Room
33 - The Inquiry; The Outcome of the Inquiry; I Am the Slave of Miles of Argentum
34 - Ligurious Is Served by Two Slaves
35 - I Am Proven a Natural Slave Before Drusus Rencius, Whom I Love; The Silver Tarsk
36 - In the Quarters of My Master
37 - Afterword
Book Cover
Has a genre Has an extract In my library In a series 
3153
 Gorean Series*
#19 of 25
Gorean Series*     See series as if on a bookshelf
A series of science fiction/fantasy books written by John Norman.  Also called the Counter-Earth series as they all take place on Gor, a world on the opposite side of the sun from the Earth.

1) Tarnsman of Gor
2) Outlaw of Gor
3) Priest-Kings of Gor
4) Nomads of Gor
5) Assassin of Gor
6) Raiders of Gor
7) Captive of Gor
8) Hunters of Gor
9) Marauders of Gor
10) Tribesmen of Gor
11) Slave Girl of Gor
12) Beasts of Gor
13) Explorers of Gor
14) Fighting Slave of Gor
15) Rogue of Gor
16) Guardsman of Gor
17) Savages of Gor
18) Blood Brothers of Gor
19) Kajira of Gor
20) Players of Gor
No dedication.
"Do you not see it?" asked the man.
May contain spoilers
Who knows what knives are lifted, what secret, stealthy marches may be afoot?
No comments on file
Extract (may contain spoilers)
I awakened, sometime late at night.  I had been dreaming in Gorean, the language spoken in Corcyrus, and, I had learned, in much of this world.

Several weeks had passed since I had been brought here.  In this time I had been immersed, for hours, for Ahn, a day in studies and trainings pertinent to my new environment.  I was still muchly imperfect in many things, but there was little doubt in my mind, nor I think in that of my numerous teachers, that I had made considerable progress.

I lay nude, late at night, on the great couch.  The night was warm.

Supposedly I was Sheila, the Tatrix of this city, Corcyrus.

I could still feel the effects of the wine I had had for supper.  I do not think that it was an ordinary wine.  I think that it was an unusual wine in some respects, or, perhaps, that it had been drugged.

I had had a strange dream, mixed in with other dreams.  It was difficult to sort these things out.

In the past few days, gradually, I had been entered into the public life of Corcyrus, primarily in small things such as granting audiences, usually with foreigners, and making brief public appearances.  Always, in these things, Ligurious, happily, unobtrusively, was at my side.  Often, had it not been for his suggestions, I would not have known what to do or say.  I had even, the day before yesterday, held court, though, to be sure, the cases were minor.

"Let the churl be stripped," I had said, imperiously, "and a sign be put about his neck, proclaiming him a fraud.  Then let him be marched naked, before the spears of guards through the great gate of Corcyrus, not to be permitted to return before the second passage hand!"

This was the one case which I remembered the most clearly.

The culprit was a small, vile man with a twisted body.  He was an itinerant peddler, Speusippus of Turia.  I had found him inutterably detestable.  A Corcyran merchant had brought charges against him.  He had received a bowl from Speusippus which was purportedly silver, a bowl seemingly stamped with the appropriate seal of Ar.  The bowl upon inspection, the merchant becoming suspicious as to the weights involved, had turned out to be merely plated.  Further, since the smithies of Ar, those authorized to use the various stamps of Ar, will not plate objects without using relevant variations on the seal of Ar to indicate this, the object was not only being misrepresented but was, in effect, a forged artifact.  This had led to a seizure and search of the stores and records of Speusippus.  Various other discrepancies were found.  He had two sets of weights, one true and one false.  Too, documents were found recording the purchase of quantities of slave hair, at suitable prices, some even within the city of Corcyrus itself.  This hair, as was attested to by witnesses, had been represented to the public as that of free women, with appropriate prices being expected.  Hair, incidentally, is a common trade item in Gorean markets.  It is used for various purposes, for example, for insect whisks, for dusters, for cleaning and polishing pads, for cushionings, decorations and ropes, particularly catapult ropes, for which it is highly prized.  It is not unusual, incidentally, for slave girls, particularly for those who may not have proved superbly pleasing, as yet, to discover that their hair, even while it is still on them, is expected, like themselves, to serve various lowly, domestic purposes.  For example, when a girl, serving at a banquet, hears the command, "Hair," she knows she is to go to the guest and kneel, and lower her head, that her hair may be used as a napkin or wiping cloth, by means of which the free person, either male or female, may remove stains, crumbs or grease from his hands.  Similarly a girl's hair, if sufficiently long, may be used for the washing and cleaning of floors.  In this she is usually on her hands and knees, and naked and chained.  The hair is used in conjunction with the soap and water, in the appropriate buckes, being dipped in, and wrung out, and rinsed, and so on.  Hair, incidentally, is not used for the application of such things as waxes or varnishes, because of the difficulty of removing such substances from the hair.  Such a mistake could necessitate a shearing and a lowering of the market value of a girl for months.  For similar reasons, a girl's hair, even within a cloth, if it is still on her, is seldom used for such purposes as buffing and polishing.  Hair is common, of course, as a stuffing for pads used for such purposes, for example, for the purposes of cleaning, buffing and polishing.

I was pleased to see the odious Speusippus turned about by guards and dragged from my presence.  How pleased I was, too, to see the awesome strength of men serving my purposes.

I lay on my back, on the great couch, in the hot Corcyran night.

Some things I did not understand.  Even Susan, who knew much more of Gor than I, did not understand them.

Characters
Tiffany Collins - (No Group)

 

Added: 17-Jun-2022
Last Updated: 24-Sep-2024

Publications

 01-Mar-1983
DAW Books
Mass Market Paperback
In my libraryOrder from amazon.comHas a cover imageBook Edition Cover
Date Issued:
Cir 01-Mar-1983
Format:
Mass Market Paperback
Cover Price:
$3.50
Pages*:
445
Catalog ID:
UE1807
Pub Series #:
520
Internal ID:
43756
Publisher:
ISBN:
0-879-97807-4
ISBN-13:
978-0-879-97807-5
Printing:
1
Country:
United States
Language:
English
Credits:
Ken W Kelly  - Cover Artist
KAJIRA OF GOR


Kaiira means slave-girl in Gorean.  But when Tiffany Collins was kidnapped from Earth and brought to that orbital counter-world, she found herself on the throne of a mighty city as its "queen."  Power seemingly was hers, and she did not realize that her true role was that of a slave puppet of a conniving woman agent of the monstrous Kurii.

But a chained slave she was destined to be, and in the course of the complex, visible and invisible, struggles between warriors and cities, between Kurii and Priest-Kings, she would play a pivotal role.

KAJIRA OF GOR is one of the most excitingly vivid novels John Norman has written.  Here is all the color and terror of Gor.  Here, between crown and fetters, between adulation and total submission, is the full-scale panorama of that wonderful, barbaric world as only Tarl Cabot knew it.

- A DAW BOOKS ORIGINAL -
Cover:
Book CoverBook Back CoverBook Spine
Notes and Comments:
First Printing, March 1983
First printing based on the number line
Image File
01-Mar-1983
DAW Books
Mass Market Paperback

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*
  • I try to maintain page numbers for audiobooks even though obviously there aren't any. I do this to keep track of pages read and I try to use the Kindle version page numbers for this.
  • Synopses marked with an asterisk (*) were generated by an AI. There aren't a lot since this is an iffy way to do it - AI seems to make stuff up.
  • When specific publication dates are unknown (ie prefixed with a "Cir"), I try to get the publication date that is closest to the specific printing that I can.
  • When listing chapters, I only list chapters relevant to the story. I will usually leave off Author Notes, Indices, Acknowledgements, etc unless they are relevant to the story or the book is non-fiction.
  • Page numbers on this site are for the end of the main story. I normally do not include appendices, extra material, and other miscellaneous stuff at the end of the book in the page count.






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