Friday, November 23, 2018

Forgotten Books: Casca #1 The Eternal Mercenary - Barry Sadler



The Casca series debuted in 1979, and for years I saw the paperbacks all over the place and even owned a few now and then, but I never got around to reading any of them. In my continuing effort to at least sample some of the series I’ve overlooked, I recently read the first Casca novel, THE ETERNAL MERCENARY.

Despite never having read any of the books, I was familiar with the concept of the series: one of the Roman centurions present at Jesus’ crucifixion, Casca Rufio Longinus, is cursed with immortality and spends the thousands of years since then as an undying soldier, fighting in many wars in many places, always as a mercenary. The first book opens with him in Vietnam, badly wounded but already recovering from injuries that would have killed anybody else. While he’s recovering, he tells a sympathetic doctor about his life history, focusing mostly on the first couple of hundred years after he was cursed, when he fell out of favor with his superiors in the Roman army, was sent to work in the mines as a slave, was an oarsman chained to his oar in a Roman galley, and fought as a gladiator in the arena. Interspersed with these harrowing sequences are more peaceful times, such as when he meets a wanderer from the mysterious East and learns martial arts from him and even settles down for a while as a farmer and has a wife.

The story meanders around through all these elements and maybe goes on just a tiny bit too long, but Sadler’s style is so infectious and full of life—good and bad—that it kept me turning the pages quite happily. He does a great job of capturing Casca’s personality and makes him a very likable protagonist, despite the violence that seems to haunt the character’s life.

I have to wonder about Sadler’s influences: Casca is very similar in many ways to Wolverine, who made his debut in THE INCREDIBLE HULK five years before this novel came out; and the dialogue and relationship between Casca and his Chinese mentor Shiu is very reminiscent of Remo Williams and Chiun from the Destroyer series, which was hugely popular in the decade before the Casca series began. However, I have no way of knowing if Sadler was familiar with any of that, and all writers are influenced by all sorts of things anyway, so it doesn’t really matter. What’s important is that Sadler makes it all work in this book and comes up with something very entertaining and satisfying. I really liked this one, and I’ll be reading more of the Casca novels.

5 comments:

Victorian Barbarian said...

I read one of these when it came out, probably the first one. I figured it was his take on the Wandering Jew, who in some versions is actually a Roman soldier. The mystic BS about the spear of Longinius the Hitler was fascinated with is probably part of the mux as well.

Howard said...

The same Barry Sadler who entertained us singing about "Men who mean just what they say"
in that immortal '60s hit, "The Ballad of the Green Berets."

Casca is based (rather obviously) on Cartaphilus, the Wandering Jew.

Todd Mason said...

I was reminded of L. Sprague de Camp's "The Gnarly Man" as well...

Jay said...

I too have ordered the first four of these recently. Our town has lot all used bookstores in a nearly fifty mile radius so I usually look to your blog for good reads as our interest seem to parallel pretty closely.

James Reasoner said...

I appreciate that, Jay. If I can help people find good books to read, I consider doing the blog to be very worthwhile.