To be clearer: the novella "Dreaming City," when I first read the Elric books, was collected in The Weird of the White Wolf, at that time the third "novel" (actually a fix-up, like many of them) in the series, and now I think fourth. There have been remixed editions of the series since, so it also sits in different books with "Elric" in their titles.
I suppose the important thing to note about this adaptation is that it is the third in the recent Titan unified-covers reprinting of all things Moorcockian and Eternally Championing, Elric sub-series - third by internal chronology - but that it was first in the sense that Thomas wrote it first, P. Craig Russell drew it first, and it came out into the world four years before the adaptation of the first novel in the series, Elric of Melniboné.
(Also see my posts for the first two books in this Titan series: Elric of Melniboné and The Sailor on the Seas of Fate. Though both the original Moorcock stories and the vicissitudes of publishing adaptation series makes the timeline and details too convoluted to easily follow.)
I should also note that the next volume in this Titan series reprints the Thomas-scripted adaptation of The Weird of the White Wolf, which I expect - I haven't read it since about 1986 - also includes an adaptation of "The Dreaming City," in the context of that fix-up. So I have that to look forward to.
"Dreaming City" was one of the very earliest Elric stories, and, as many have noted repeatedly since then, Moorcock started out with the most dramatic, central story of his doomed albino hero, and has spent six decades since filling in smaller, lesser stories around them. What that means is: if you only read one Elric adaptation, it should be this one: it's early enough to be unfussy, it has some of Russell's most energetic artwork, and it's early-80s full-of-captions style captures the feel of Moorcock's prose well.
So this is shorter than the other Elric adaptations, tells a story of tighter scope - originally a novella, not a fix-up of short-fiction like the "novels" - and is one of the major events of this doomy, gloomy albino's life.
In Dreaming City, for good and sufficient reasons which are not provided here, Elric leads a large force of Sea Lords - pirates, basically - from the Young Kingdoms to plunder his homeland, sack its capital city Imrryr, slaughter basically all of his people, and depose his evil cousin Yyrkoon. He does succeed in those things, though he also intended to save his cousin and lover Cymoril, who does not survive this story.
He also does not succeed in getting more than a tiny fraction of his human forces back from Imrryr alive, in keeping with Elric's usual results to his actions: pretty much everybody but him dies, usually in horrible ways that make him sad. But that's the deal with Elric, and this was one of the first stories to codify that. Thomas and Russell turn Moorcock's often-purple prose into equally grand and exciting pages here; I'll repeat that, if you're interested in either Elric in general or the comics adaptations thereof, this is a great place to start.

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