Post
October 21st, 2020, 7:08 pm
I mentioned prior in the thread, the works of Fred Saberhagen, specifically his Empire of the East trilogy. I started reading the first book earlier this week, I'm roughly 50 pages into it. The three books together top out around 450 so it's a bit of a read.
As of right now, though, I have to give this story thumbs up. I was not familiar with these works until the GG kickstarter came out, but I'm glad I know about them now. There is most definitely that Bakshi Wizards feel going on, melding magic and technology together. One of the coolest scenes I've read to date had to do with a small group of Free People fleeing by canoe into a small river, from a group of oncoming enemy soldiers.
One of the characters happens to be a magic-user/wizard of sorts and summons up an elemental from the muck and mud of the river bottom. As the canoe moves off, the elemental drags itself from the water and onto land where it fights against the enemy soldiers, allowing the fleeing group a chance to get away. The coolest part though, was that the summoner tells the group to paddle faster, and it's soon mentioned that the reasoning is because the elemental, now finished with the soldiers, has turned and is trailing the group in an attempt to reach the one who summoned it. Magic in this world is useful and can be somewhat powerful but isn't always as kind as "vancian" magic in that it's just there for casters to use without repercussion.
I really enjoyed the follow-up where Saberhagen describes the elemental gaining on the group, all the while, the caster is slowly moving his arms and hands, causing the magic that summoned the elemental to dissipate so that by the time the elemental gets to them, it is nothing more than a small ebb and flow of the water pushing around sides of the canoe, the magic finally gone and the elemental settled back down. It was just a really cool scene and interesting perspective on magic to read, compared to so much bog standard magic.
Really glad I went in on the kickstarter for the DCC supplement, I hope GG continues to produce cool settings based on the works from Appendix N.
“He found himself wondering at times, especially in the autumn, about the wild lands, and strange visions of mountains that he had never seen came into his dreams.” - Fellowship of the Ring, J.R.R. Tolkien