The title of the post should speak for itself, but a little context.
Heard on the intranets recently... "Gary Gygax ripped off Dave Arneson! Dave is D&D's true creator!"
My response: Horse shit.
Ideas are like a@#$holes. We've all got one, and most stink. I can sit here in the calm quiet of my living room and fire off a dozen. "Weight loss app." "Online mentoring program for pediatricians." "Telehealth scheduling interface." "Dying Earth role-playing game."
They mean (almost) nothing. What matters is the execution.
You've got an amazing idea for the next 7 volume epic fantasy series? Great. It means nothing ... unless you write it. And it's good.
That awesome weight loss app idea? Great. Now program it. Market it. Sell it. Until then, your idea is so much vapor.
Back to Gygax-Anderson. The idea of taking tabletop military wargames and altering the scale to make a tin soldier representing a unit of 1,000 men a single hero you control and imbue with personality, is a pretty cool one. Whoever conceived that idea, whether Gygax or Anderson (or some other unnamed wargamer), remains up for debate, though Arneson was definitely part of the conversation. His fictional game world of Blackmoor inspired Gygax, and together the two men went on to co-develop the original D&D game rules.
But Gygax took the idea and created TSR, turning an idea into an industry. Without Gygax, there would be no D&D.
That's the power of execution vs. ideas.
"Wonder had gone away, and he had forgotten that all life is only a set of pictures in the brain, among which there is no difference betwixt those born of real things and those born of inward dreamings, and no cause to value the one above the other." --H.P. Lovecraft, The Silver Key
Friday, July 24, 2020
Home work (outs)
Heavy metal. |
In addition to weights and a bar I bought a Rogue R-3 power rack. It's been worth every penny. It actually has adjustable safety pins (imagine that), an item which my prior semi-shitty box gym did not possess. Near criminal for a business that ostensibly exists to get people strong.
The result of this equipment and the knowledge that if I fail a heavy lift I'll be fine, plus having no one waiting on me or interrupting my routine with inane babble, has been a small PR. Today using a below parallel/hips below the crease of the knee squat, I hit 455 x 2, followed by 405 x 7. Not bad for a 47 year old dad and desk jockey.
I'm into sword-and-sorcery and heavy metal, so lifting heavy goes hand-in-hand. I was raised on Arnold Schwartzenegger films and Frank Frazetta barbarian physiques and wanted to look like that. For the record I don't, but I believe in exercise and the physical fueling the mental.
Monday, July 20, 2020
Some recent arrivals
Thanks Amazon! |
Happy to support DMR with this purchase of Heroes of Atlantis and Lemuria. I've been slowly adding to my collection of CAS and The End of the Story is a welcome volume.
Finally, The Conan Companion is at first glance and one cursory thumb-through a beautiful book and a detailed publishing history of Conan.
More to come on these later.
Thursday, July 9, 2020
Halls of Valhalla, Judas Priest
This one is worth a listen (he says, in understated fashion):
From the north sea
We drink and rejoice from the chalice
Holding the course
Through long nights and days
The ice and the hail bear no malice
Tow the line
Keep it fine
Every man seeks this end
Valhalla - you are calling
I had forgotten how good this one was, until I hit upon it during a Youtube search while getting under the bench press today. I was able to hit another rep on my top set at 320 (x8 reps), right as the intro kicks into high gear at around the 40 second mark. See if it won't do the same for you.
Redeemer of Souls (2014) seems relatively forgotten after the more smashing success of Firepower (2018). While I do admit the latter is a better all-around album, Redeemer has a few monster tracks, including "Dragonaut," "Redeemer of Souls," "Sword of Damocles," "Battle Cry" and of course, "Valhalla." It was Priest's first album without the great K.K. Downing, who decided to retire and get into the business of opening a country club, but Richie Faulkner (The Falcon!) reinvigorated the band, and Halford proved he still had a lot left on the fastball. See the 4:28 mark.
I saw Priest play in support of this album in 2014 at the Tsongas Arena in Lowell MA, and got to meet three of the band members back stage. That story is too long and too good to be told here so shall wait for another day.
I have a confirmed fetish for anything Viking and this song definitely gets me ... aroused. I think Poul Anderson would have approved of it. Hell I think Ragnar Lodbrok would have drank mead from the skulls of his enemies with this one as the soundtrack.
Tuesday, July 7, 2020
Some notes on Swords Against Darkness and the Appendix N Book Club Podcast
Not a volume of Robert E. Howard stories, despite the large "Robert E. Howard" |
This past Sunday I had the honor of joining hosts Jeff Goad
and Ngo Vinh-Hoi for an episode of the Appendix N Book Club podcast. This is
one of my very favorite podcasts, and a must-listen if you’re interested in
pulp fantasy, sword-and-sorcery, or exploring the literary roots and inspirations
of Advanced Dungeons and Dragons. Subscribe today.
We reviewed a classic, Swords
Against Darkness, the first in a series of five S&S anthologies edited
by Andrew Offutt. It had been a few years since I last read SAD and upon re-read I found it even
better than I remembered.
What follows are some rough notes I made for the show, not a
polished essay. I hope the guys from Appendix N don’t mind the preview. This is
just a taste of what we covered.
The episode is supposed to drop on July 27. My computer
audio gave out at least 2x during the program which was a source of
considerable frustration (and likely some annoying post-production). Jeff and
Ngo, thanks again for the opportunity.
General commentary
This is quintessential sword-and-sorcery. Quite the
roll-call of S&S heroes—Kardios of Atlantis, Simon of Gitta, Ryre, Vettius,
etc.
Editor Andrew Offutt is perhaps best known these days as the
subject of My Father, the Pornographer: A
Memoir. But he wrote many credible S&S stories for the likes of Thieves’
World, three Conan novels, Cormac Mac Art stories including a couple with Keith
Taylor (When Death Birds Fly and Tower of Death, which I have on my bookshelf),
and of course served as the editor of Swords Against Darkness.
Swords Against Darkness II has a helpful introductory essay
by Offutt, “Call it what you Will,” which was among the many essays I referenced
in Flame and Crimson. A relevant quote from that essay, “As to ‘sword &
sorcery’—sometimes the tale contains no sword—or no sorcery! Or, more rarely,
neither. (Sword and supernatural might come closer, if we’re to discuss,
haggle, or bicker”)
This collection is perhaps more accurately heroic fantasy,
due to historical nature of some of the stories. But I’m not going to bicker or
get pedantic. Much.
Cover is noteworthy for the blurb, “Heroic Fantasy in the
tradition of Robert E. Howard”—very common to namedrop Howard on S&S
covers, which is indicative of general popularity of REH /Lancers/Conan in general.
Zebra for example had a line of REH reprints—Tigers of the Sea, Worms of the
Earth, A Gent from Bear Creek, etc. Zebra later adopted “swords and sorcery” on
its spine. And it’s got Frazetta cover art of course, though I’m not as fond of
this piece as most of his other work.
Tuesday, June 30, 2020
On the passing of classic D&D artist Jim Holloway
Will you dare his tomb? You will, because Jim Holloway pointed the way. |
A big name in fantasy role-playing/Dungeons and Dragons art
passed away yesterday—Jim Holloway.
Jim was not my favorite D&D artist of all time—I might
have to go with Bill Willingham or Erol Otus—but he was one of the 5-6 most
iconic and prolific of the silver or “commercial” age of TSR, circa 1981 and on.
It’s hard to pick my favorite Holloway illustration but I
might have to go with the cover for I3, Pharaoh
(1982). It’s not typical of Holloway’s work—there isn’t the glorious confusion
of twisted faces and tangled bodies fighting on some underground battlefield or
tavern floor, or any hint of the humor that defined so much of his illustration
for the likes of Dragon magazine. But
there is in it a deep call to adventure, a mystery and a majesty in the figure
of Amun-Re that caused me to play this module over and over in my youth, along
with the rest of the Desert of Desolation series.
It’s hard to overestimate the importance and impact of
fantasy art in the 1970s-80s. In this pre-internet era, when computer games
were fun and beginning to get immersive but limited by crude green-screen
graphics, artists like Jim Holloway were gateways to wonder. They provided the visual
representation of the words of Gary Gygax, Tom Moldvay, Frank Mentzer, David Cook,
Tracy and Laura Hickman, and others. Holloway’s detailed style was such that
you could look at one of his illustrations and conceive an entire adventure
around it, or at least a pivotal boss-battle. His artwork was, as this nice post on Black Gate demonstrates, how D&D was actually played at the game table—with laughs, and fumbles, and
great ideas like tripping stone giants with a 50 foot rope. The look of
characters whose players used charisma as a “dump stat”—mighty of frame but with
buck teeth and bad breath.
This old school era of weirdness and unbridled creativity is
slipping into the past, day by day. Gary Gygax, Dave Arneson, Tom Moldvay,
David Trampier, David Sutherland III, and others, have all passed away. Add
Holloway to that roll call of heroes of the imagination. RIP.
Sunday, June 28, 2020
News and notes
Some interesting happenings and ramblings...
Another podcast appearance. This coming Sunday, July 5, I'll be recording an episode of the Appendix N Book Club Podcast. The topic of the show is the Andrew J. Offutt-edited Swords Against Darkness (vol. 1). This follows hard on the heels of my appearance on the Literary Wonder & Adventure podcast. Apparently if you want to get on a show, the best way to do it is to write a book. I am a subscriber and fan of the Appendix N podcast, which as its name indicates is about the literary inspirations for Dungeons and Dragons. I'm re-reading Swords Against Darkness for the occasion and am finding it as awesome as the last time I read it, at least through the first two stories. Not that I needed a reminder but Poul Anderson's "The Tale of Hauk" is one of the better sword-and-sorcery tales ever written. And the incomplete REH tale "Nekht Semerkeht," finished by Offutt, was better than I remembered.
A worthwhile post about fantasy art over on Black Gate. Head on over to read Robert Zoltan's "The Importance of Good Fantasy Art." This is a nice piece, well-written, and with lots of great accompanying art that aptly demonstrates Zoltan's thesis. I know I've picked up more than one sword-and-sorcery/pulp fantasy paperback based on cover art alone. Zoltan stirs things up a bit by referencing the age-old debate about why Robert E. Howard's paperbacks sold so well in the 1960s: Was it Howard's meteoric writing talent, or Frank Frazetta's genius? Or both?
Speaking of Flame and Crimson, I recently received a couple of very nice five-star reviews, one each on Amazon and Goodreads. I loved this bit from the Amazon review, which speaks well of my writing style, but perhaps not so much of skill as a researcher: He is not an academic so we are spared the typical turgid prose that comes from University presses. Highly recommended. The Goodreads review contains my favorite blurb to date: I enjoyed, very much, the chapter on the influence of S&S on Heavy Metal music. If Mr Murphy wrote another book about that subject, I would pre-order it! I'm thrilled, beyond belief, that this book seems to be well-received, and that I've been able to provide folks with some entertaining reading hours. If you read and enjoyed Flame and Crimson but have not yet left a review on Amazon or elsewhere, please do take a moment to do so. Apparently more reviews helps with search rankings and the likes, and they bring a smile to my face.
This podcast thing is going to happen (eventually). I don't have a start date in mind, or a title, and still I need to figure out how I'm going to pull it off from a platform/technical perspective. But besides those not-inconsiderable obstacles, I'm going to give this podcast hosting-thing a try.
I loaned a friend of mine, age 49, the first two Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser paperbacks. Despite having read no sword-and-sorcery in his lifetime and having no real interest in the subject this guy actually plowed through Flame and Crimson, merely because he's a good friend of mine and wanted to be able to talk and ask questions about this project that consumed most of my free time over the past 5 years. The section on Leiber interested him enough to prompt him to ask me if he could borrow my old copies, so I loaned him Swords and Deviltry and Swords Against Death. I post this here not to brag, nor (just) as a reminder that he has them on loan, but to note that I am very curious to see how someone approaching F&GM and sword-and-sorcery for the first time, later in life, enjoys the stories. I almost pushed him away from Leiber and in the direction of Howard and the likes of "The Tower of the Elephant" but opted not to. I'll report back here with his impressions once I get some feedback.
Another podcast appearance. This coming Sunday, July 5, I'll be recording an episode of the Appendix N Book Club Podcast. The topic of the show is the Andrew J. Offutt-edited Swords Against Darkness (vol. 1). This follows hard on the heels of my appearance on the Literary Wonder & Adventure podcast. Apparently if you want to get on a show, the best way to do it is to write a book. I am a subscriber and fan of the Appendix N podcast, which as its name indicates is about the literary inspirations for Dungeons and Dragons. I'm re-reading Swords Against Darkness for the occasion and am finding it as awesome as the last time I read it, at least through the first two stories. Not that I needed a reminder but Poul Anderson's "The Tale of Hauk" is one of the better sword-and-sorcery tales ever written. And the incomplete REH tale "Nekht Semerkeht," finished by Offutt, was better than I remembered.
A worthwhile post about fantasy art over on Black Gate. Head on over to read Robert Zoltan's "The Importance of Good Fantasy Art." This is a nice piece, well-written, and with lots of great accompanying art that aptly demonstrates Zoltan's thesis. I know I've picked up more than one sword-and-sorcery/pulp fantasy paperback based on cover art alone. Zoltan stirs things up a bit by referencing the age-old debate about why Robert E. Howard's paperbacks sold so well in the 1960s: Was it Howard's meteoric writing talent, or Frank Frazetta's genius? Or both?
Speaking of Flame and Crimson, I recently received a couple of very nice five-star reviews, one each on Amazon and Goodreads. I loved this bit from the Amazon review, which speaks well of my writing style, but perhaps not so much of skill as a researcher: He is not an academic so we are spared the typical turgid prose that comes from University presses. Highly recommended. The Goodreads review contains my favorite blurb to date: I enjoyed, very much, the chapter on the influence of S&S on Heavy Metal music. If Mr Murphy wrote another book about that subject, I would pre-order it! I'm thrilled, beyond belief, that this book seems to be well-received, and that I've been able to provide folks with some entertaining reading hours. If you read and enjoyed Flame and Crimson but have not yet left a review on Amazon or elsewhere, please do take a moment to do so. Apparently more reviews helps with search rankings and the likes, and they bring a smile to my face.
This podcast thing is going to happen (eventually). I don't have a start date in mind, or a title, and still I need to figure out how I'm going to pull it off from a platform/technical perspective. But besides those not-inconsiderable obstacles, I'm going to give this podcast hosting-thing a try.
I loaned a friend of mine, age 49, the first two Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser paperbacks. Despite having read no sword-and-sorcery in his lifetime and having no real interest in the subject this guy actually plowed through Flame and Crimson, merely because he's a good friend of mine and wanted to be able to talk and ask questions about this project that consumed most of my free time over the past 5 years. The section on Leiber interested him enough to prompt him to ask me if he could borrow my old copies, so I loaned him Swords and Deviltry and Swords Against Death. I post this here not to brag, nor (just) as a reminder that he has them on loan, but to note that I am very curious to see how someone approaching F&GM and sword-and-sorcery for the first time, later in life, enjoys the stories. I almost pushed him away from Leiber and in the direction of Howard and the likes of "The Tower of the Elephant" but opted not to. I'll report back here with his impressions once I get some feedback.
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