His work is frequently praised as being complex and multilayered. Central to many of his fantasy novels is the concept of an "
Eternal Champion," who has potentially multiple identities across multiple dimensions of reality and alternative universes. This
cosmology is called the "
Multiverse" within his novels. The "Eternal Champion" is engaged in a constant struggle with not only conventional notions of good and evil, but also in the struggle for balance between
Law and Chaos.
In the USA Moorcock's most popular works by far have been the
Elric novels, starring the character Elric of Melniboné. Moorcock wrote the first Elric stories as a deliberate reversal of the clichés common in the fantasy adventure novels inspired by the works of
J.R.R. Tolkien as well as the work of Robert E. Howard. The popularity of Elric has overshadowed his many other works, though he has worked a number of the themes of the Elric stories into his other works (the "Hawkmoon" and "Corum" novels, for example). His Eternal Champion sequence has been collected in two different editions of omnibus volumes comprising fifteen books containing several books per volume, by Victor Gollancz in the UK and by
White Wolf Publishing in the US. In 2003, Universal optioned the rights to the Elric series to be produced by the Weitz brothers.
One of Moorcock's popular creations is
Jerry Cornelius (another JC), a kind of hip secret agent of
ambiguous sexuality; the same characters featured in each of several Cornelius books. These books were most obviously satirical of modern times, including the Vietnam War, and continue to feature as another variation of the Multiverse theme. The first Jerry Cornelius book,
The Final Programme (1968) was made into a
feature film. The Condition of Muzak, the fourth book in the quartet, won the
Guardian Fiction Award in 1977. Since 1998, Moorcock has returned to Cornelius in a series of new stories: 'The Spencer Inheritance', 'The Camus Connection', 'Cheering for the Rockets', and 'Firing the Cathedral', which was concerned with 9/11. All four novellas were included in the 2003 edition of
The Lives and Times of Jerry Cornelius. Moorcock's most recent Cornelius story appeared in the journal
Nature in May 2006 and was called 'The Visible Men'.
Most of Moorcock's earlier work consisted of short stories and relatively brief novels: he has mentioned that "I could write 15,000 words a day and gave myself three days a volume. That's how, for instance, the Hawkmoon books were written." Since the
1980s, Moorcock has tended to write longer, more literary 'mainstream' novels, such as
Mother London and
Byzantium Endures, which have had positive reviews, but he continues to revisit characters from his earlier works, such as Elric, with books like
The Dreamthief's Daughter or
The Skrayling Tree. With the publication of the third and last book in this series,
The White Wolf's Son, he announced that he was 'retiring' from writing heroic fantasy fiction, though he continues to write Elric's adventures as graphic novels with his long-time collaborator
Walter Simonson. Together, they produced the graphic novel, Elric: the Making of a Sorcerer, published by DC Comics in 2007. He has also completed his 'Colonel Pyat' sequence, dealing with the Nazi Holocaust, which began in 1981 with
Byzantium Endures, continued through
The Laughter of Carthage (1984) and
Jerusalem Commands (1992), and now culminates with
The Vengeance of Rome (2006).
Although Moorcock is mostly known for the books mentioned above, he also wrote several novels and novellas that are set on Earth millions of years in the future; the best known in
The Dancers at the End of Time. His award-winning
Gloriana, or The Unfulfill'd Queen, while set in an alternate Earth history, is not strictly a fantasy novel.
Moorcock is prone to revising his existing work, with the result that different editions of a given book may contain significant variations. The changes range from simple retitlings (
e.g., the Elric story
The Flame Bringers becoming
The Caravan of Forgotten Dreams in the 1990s
Gollancz/White Wolf omnibus editions) to character name changes (
e.g., scout leader "Egan" becoming "Reagan" in the omnibus edition of
The War Lord of the Air), major textual alterations (
e.g., the addition of several new chapters to
The Steel Tsar in the omnibus editions), and even complete restructurings (
e.g., the seminal 1966 novella
Behold the Man being expanded to full novel length for republication in 1969).