Saturday, October 3, 2009
On Getting Current in Heroic Fantasy, Pt. II
I was commenting the other day on the surplus number of wonderful S&S anthologies I've stumbled on since a friend and I began a collaborative shared world writing project a few weeks ago, both writing stories set in a fantasy/medieval city with a history and a river and neighborhoods and taverns and all the usual trappings. His background in world building (via D&D or whatever) is less than mine, and mine is quite scant, so our efforts have grown in odd bits and pieces: first the tavern, then the name of the city, then a mountain backed up against it, and so on.
And while writing and inventing and noting what I was writing and inventing, I've kept reading new (to me) material, noting those books and writers people clamor about and ordering their books and waiting impatiently by the mailbox every afternoon to see what's arrived – David Gemmell's first novel, or George R. R. Martin's A GAME OF THRONES, or MATHIAS THULMANN: WITCH HUNTER or, just yesterday, James Enge's BLOOD OF AMBROSE – I read and very much enjoyed his “The Red Worm's Way” in RETURN OF THE SWORD and want to read further about his hero Morlock Ambrosius...
I am writing this on the front porch of my cabin in the woods, drinking cheap beer and eating liverwurst and onion sandwiches and listening to Bob Dylan, in a perfect mood to tackle my ongoing story, involving an old knight who comes home to die and gets entangled in one last adventure … a bit stuck in the middle, but hopefully once I type it up – I typically write longhand first draft – the scales will fall from my eyes and I can figure out how to head it toward the end. There is something invigorating about this kind of writing, 10 times moreso than any workshop story I ever attempted (I never was very good at those – I kept wanting to throw weirdness into everything I wrote, and neither workshop profs nor fellow MFA writing students deal particularly well with weirdness of the sort I am drawn to). I always wanted to write a fantasy story based on Dylan's “All Along The Watchtower” – don't know if that's ever been attempted.
Right now re-reading Tim Powers' THE DRAWING OF THE DARK and then BLOOD OF AMBROSE and who knows what else. (Solomon Kane, whom I've neglected unjustly for decades, and discovering Henry Kuttner wrote some amazing S&S, e.g. Elak of Atlantis.)
Feels like a race against time to catch up. At this point nobody's reading this but me and maybe one other person, but it's good to vent in this fashion, even a little...
Those anthologies are great. I am glad sword & sorcery (heroic fantasy, whatever) is still alive and thriving. For years I have ignored, too, books written/published that I foolishly regarded as useless crap spinoffs from gaming systems – Warhammer, Forgotten Realms, etc. – but I suspect I have been an exclusionary fool about these things, as usual. I've never read a book by R.A. Salvatore. How can someone claim to love this kinda fantasy and ever read R.A. Salvatore?
I am correcting the situation very quickly. Am going to send out info on this blog in hopes I can get some feedback. Help a brother out!
7 comments:
I'm reading it now, too!
Welcome back to the fold -- hope you enjoy the new crop of anthos you mentioned in your last post, as well as the novels you've gotten ahold of. I know what you mean about playing catch up -- with so much new S&S and heroic fantasy coming out I feel the same way, and I never took a break!
If you are looking for even more ideas on books to try, a pair of good forums to check out would be SFReader and the Robert E. Howard forums.
I'd also recommend Charles Saunders if you haven't read him before. His first three books came out in the eighties, but the series was dropped -- but now he's back and publishing them through a new publisher. I can't recommend him highly enough, he's truly an unheralded master of sword & sorcery -- http://billwardwriter.com/imaro-imaro-2-the-quest-for-cush-review/
Bill Ward
I know what you mean abou tthe race against time...time and the writer...
damn I'm tired.
Keep up this blog it's helping sustain me in the cultural wasteland of New Smyrna
Hey Bill,
On your recommendation, I ordered the first volume of Imaro this afternoon, so thanks!
Don
Glad to hear it, let me know how you like it.
I have thought about writing an S+S story from "All Along the Watchtower" so if you put one together I'd love to read it.
My favorite rock songs have actually been background inspiration for a lot of my writings already and I seem to recall reading that was the same with Karl Edward Wagner.
I, too, am catching up on old and trying to keep up with new. At least used books are cheaper!
I'm going to recommend Joe Abercrombie. He's writing some of the hardest edged heroic fantasy around these days. Bloody and brutal and in your face.