Showing posts with label Robert E. Howard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert E. Howard. Show all posts

Friday, March 2, 2018

Fantasy Friday: Imaro by Charles Saunders


A couple weeks ago, my wife and I took a short vacation to Silver City, NM to get away from it all. We saw the Gila Cliff Dwellings and drove through the Black Mountains but we weren't able to do a ton of hiking as both of us were still getting over a sickness that had been dogging us for some time. Lucky for us, the theater just down the street from out AirBnB, was playing a movie that we were both excited for, Black Panther. I am a Marvel nut, I have seen all the movies and have loved all of them in their own right so naturally I was down to watch this one. My wife, not being the same kind of nerd that I am, was interested in it because of all the social justice praise that was surrounding it (also because she has seen all the movies too). While this is important to me as well, I was going to be seeing it anyway for fanboy reasons. Like so many others, I loved the movie. It was fun (see my post "Writing Novels, Raiding Tombs" for my thoughts on fun) and still managed to have some important themes and messages without feeling preachy. Most all, I really appreciated that it was different  from so much of what we see in entertainment. The setting was unique and interesting, the characters were well crafted, you felt for the bad guy, you felt for the good guys, it had a lot going for it. I'm just going to come out and say it, it was refreshing to see Africans get the spotlight, as they should more often. 

"Imaro follows in the footsteps of Conan."
As an aspiring genre writer, I can admit that the sci-fi and fantasy field does not always represent the diversity of the real world. This was the plight that inspired Charles Saunders to create his character Imaro. I am a huge fan of Robert E. Howard and his creation of Conan. Man do I love that stuff. The adventure and the heroics and thrills! I can't get enough. So in my search to do just that, I was led to the Kindle e-book, Imaro: Volume 1. Imaro is a character chiseled from the same stone as Conan, there are many differences between the two, but the core concept of a bad ass warrior walking a prehistoric fantasy world, remains the same. As the story was told to me, Charles Saunders loved the same kind of fiction that I do, but he struggled by the lack of representation and often racist undertones of authors like Howard. This drove him to craft his Afrocentric world of Nyumbani. 

The world of Nyumbani
Nyumbani is much like Robert E. Howard's Hyborian Age. While centered on an Africa that never was, there is still a ton of diversity present. Saunders takes aspects from all sorts of African cultures (and a few others) and it creates a colorful and interesting world to visit. There are occasional visits by people from what I presume is India and there is a really cool Chinese monk in a story as well. Saunders takes the classic Sword and Sorcery trope of Atlantis and uses them as a sort of representation of the colonization of Africa with some chilling results. Imaro and his friends are thrust into a world of violence and sorcery that is often dark but has it's lighter touches as well. Any reader of Conan will find something here to love. 

Before going on, I want to stress that I really do appreciate those deep, world view altering pieces of fiction that details the struggles of life through a fictional lens. In my daily l face the realities of a low income school, so when I unwind I was to escape into something less taxing on mental state. In that respect, Imaro is much like Black Panther. There are messages of social value, things to make you think, but there is just as much, if not more, all out action and adventure. You can tell that Saunders has both a passion for the genre and a passion for African history and culture through how he writes and treats his characters. This is doubled by his continual dedication to create African inspired fantasy fiction. 

The biggest downside to Saunder's Imaro series, is that they are out of print! Gah! His novels, the first and second anyway, have gone through some revisions from their paperback state and the revisions are also out of print. Amazon.com has the first and second books available for moderate prices, but the third and fourth are not affordable on a teacher's salary. Luckily the revised first book is on Kindle and the revised first and second are available on Audible. The third and fourth books are available on Lulu.com as print on demand for $20. Not a bad price compared to the hundreds the paperbacks go for. With the revisions, there are two stories that are effected most. A story call "Slaves of the Giant Kings", which was changed to another story as it mirrored events of the Rwandan Genocide, and "City of Madness". CoM was once the end of book one but was moved to the beginning of book two (a better place for it). Unfortunately, the Kindle version of book one doesn't have it and the affordable print version book two doesn't either. This makes the transition between book one and two jarring and weird, or hard to get. Mr. Saunders, if you are out there, PLEASE PUT IMARO 2 ON KINDLE!!
Wakanda Forever!
Just as Black Panther brought African superheros to the big screen, Imaro brought the Sword and Sorcery tale/hero to Africa. For fans of action, horror, fantasy, and adventure, this is a must read. If anyone knows how to get a hold of the director of Black Panther, he needs to get a hold of these books and make these movies! 



Sunday, May 26, 2013

An Age Undreamed of....

 


     "Know, O Prince, that between the years when the oceans drank Atlantis and the gleaming cities, and the rise of the Sons of Aryas, there was an Age undreamed of, when shining kingdoms lay spread across the world like blue mantles beneath the stars..."
-Robert E. Howard

    About 5 years or so ago, I found myself far away from the home that I had known since my birth. I was lost, no friends, no job, living in my parents house in the desert. I did not like the person that I was and needed a change. One night, I was browsing through movie titles at the local rental place and came across the 1982 version of Conan the Barbarian. From my delving into pulp era literature I knew that the creator of Conan had been dear friends with my favorite author H. P. Lovecraft. I was not huge into fantasy but I picked it up, popped it in the DVD player and then my life had changed. A lot of people will laugh and wonder how a shirtless Arnold Schwarzenegger from the 80's change how I viewed the world, and isn't this a blog about exploration? I am getting to that, so hold your horses.
     Many people write off this film as testosterone driven fantasy, however they are sorely mistaken. This movie tells the story of how a boy becomes a man, how a man becomes a hero, and how, in the end pain and failure are learning tools. The film starts with a quote from Nietzsche, "That which does not kill us makes us stronger...". This is the film's major theme. Director John Milius (who also made Jeremiah Johnson),  uses the character and back drop of Robert E. Howard's pulp era fantasy to tell a Nietschean parable about becoming the best man you can be. It was simply me being in the right frame of mind, and willing to accept the lesson that the story was trying to tell. Along with the brilliant cast and masterwork score by Basil Poledouris, the movie is a cinematic masterpiece that many write off as cheesy and pure fluff without ever taking the time to think about what is on the screen.
    The movie drove me to seek adventure and meaning in the world, to push my limits and discover who I am. After all, isn't that one of the main reasons we explore our universe? To discover who we are, where we came from and what we are meant to be, as a species as well as an individual. This film also led me to the actual writings of Robert E. Howard, another facet in how a barbarian from a lost age changed my life for the better. I bought the Del Rey edition of "The Conquering Sword of Conan" shortly after I had watched the film. For any who have both seen the movie and read the short stories, you already know the difference. For those of you who haven't, the 1982 Conan is the barbarian in name only. Robert E. Howard wrote of a man of the wilds, head strong, intelligent, intellectual and daring. He roved seas, traversed mountains and jungles, was a thief, a pirate, a general and the best king to have ever taken the Aquilonian throne.
     These were stories of adventure, something I so desperately needed in my life. Conan saw places and things that those of the civilized world only dreamed of. That is what I yearned to do. This is how my love for adventure and exploration was born. It is kind of funny how some things can be so meaningful to some. There are many lessons to take from both the movie and the stories and I highly suggest to any who love adventure to seek these out and find out for yourself the greatness of Robert E. Howard and Conan. Perhaps they will inspire you to seek out the dark corners of the Earth and
unseen places like it has myself.

Pict Attack, for the book The Conquering Sword of Conan, 2004, oil on linen, 20 x 16.
http://www.amazon.com/Coming-Conan-Cimmerian-Original-Adventures/dp/0345461517
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0082198/?ref_=sr_3
www.conan.com