Christia Sylf's novels were pure heroic fantasy. Kobor Tigan't and its sequel, Le Règne de Ta , take place thirty thousand years ago, during the reign of the Giants, a mythical pre-Atlantean race which preceded ours. The novel tells of the conflict between the sorcerous Queen-Mother, Abim, and her daughters Opak, who rules Kobor Tigan’t, the five-levelled City of the Giants, and her sister, Ta. The world of Kobor Tigan’t is inhabited by a race of reptilian bisexual humanoids, the T’los, who are used as sex slaves by the Giants. The novels also features the crystal-like Elohim, messengers of occult alien powers from beyond, dragons and a host of other fantastic creatures. The Kobor Tigan’t novels are clearly heroic fantasy, yet would be hard to compare to anything published in England or America. They contain numerous erotic scenes as well as esoteric elements that one rarely finds in the more literary worlds of J. R. R. Tolkien or Robert E. Howard. They are written in a rich, colorful prose, and even include a glossary of the language of the Giants. Sylf continued her saga with Markosamo le Sage , this time with a story featuring the reincarnations of all her principal characters, but taking place twenty thousand years ago, during the Age of Atlantis. A fourth volume, La Reine au Coeur Puissant , carried on with a tale taking place in Ancient China, two thousand years ago. Sylf had announced the publication of five more volumes in her series: La Geste d’Amoïnen , taking place in Nordic Finland; Amiona la Courtisane , taking place in Renaissance Venice; Ertulie de Fons l’Abîme , taking place during the reign of the French King Louis XIV; and the two-volume L’Apocalypse de Kébélé , featuring her immortal narrator and taking place in the far future. Unfortunately, these works were never published because Sylf died in the early 1980s, soon after the publication of La Reine au Coeur Puissant . Reportedly, she was working on an additional novel, taking place in Ancient Egypt, which was left uncompleted. Her companion was her illustrator, Kerlam.