Monday, May 2, 2011

Geography of Allansia


Revised climate map of Titan by Steve Luxton

Althought the title says 'Geography of Allansia'  I wanted to briefly talk about Steve Luxton's revised climate map of the Fighting Fantasy world of Titan, as shown above. Are there any more changes we need to make to this? Off hand, I can think of only three small alterations:
  • The X that marks the sunken ruins of the city of Atlantis needs to be moved down to perhaps just above the Warm Temperate dotted line.
  • Below this, the Bird Islands, Fish Island, Skull Island and the Blood Islands need to resemble their counterparts on the original Titan map.
  • As Simon Osborne mentioned previously in the comments, where is Bone Island from Bloodbones? Does anybody have any idea?

Rough map of Allansia by Steve Luxton


Moving on to the classic Fighting Fantasy continent of Allansia, Steve has created and kindly shared this map based on the original from Titan. How can we improve it and what needs to be added to or changed?

A few of my suggestions:
  • Do we need to include the northern portion of the continent, which is quite large and basically frozen wasteland?
  • Do we include details for Bjorngrim's Sea based on Simon Osborne's revised map for Jonathan Green's unpublished Saga of the Stormchaser?
  • I think the Flatlands label needs to be spread out over the grasslands that stretch to the Sea of Pearls coastline, to better indicate the extent of this vast steppes region.
  • Agra, the top city on the left-hand coast of the Glimmering Sea, needs to be moved downwards in line with the map from The Riddling Reaver, which was published first and has precedence.
  • We could probably add detail from Battleblade Warrior, as that is a relatively blank area of the above map.
  • Likewise, we could add some of the settlements from Night Dragon to the Dragon Reaches region.
There you have it! What does everybody else think?

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Pomp and Ceremony


The royal coach of Lord Azzur
by Iain McCaig (from Livingstone, 1983)
 We were given Friday afternoon off early at my workplace, so we could all go home and witness The Wedding. As a result I spent Friday afternoon sitting on the sofa watching the TV with my daughter, fielding a variety of questions concerning royalty and ceremony. Although a 'small r' republican from the Antipodes, I found myself rather guiltily enjoying the whole spectacle, and was struck by two things.

Firstly, horse-drawn carriages and coaches! How cool do they look? (Especially compared to the fleet of tacky sponsored minivans that followed them into the palace grounds.) This brought to mind the royal coach of Lord Azzur that attempts to run you down as you wander the streets of Port Blacksand in City of Thieves (Livingstone, 1983). Iain McCaig's picture of the ornate golden vehicle inspired four further thoughts:
  • Being covered and enclosed means surely it's a coach and not a carriage, which is what it is described as in the text.
  • The two horses are either mutants with extra pairs of legs, or Iain McCaig was drawing them (a bit unconvincingly I feel) in motion.
  • If you are foolish and unlucky enough to be trampled by the horses, the book tells you "the carriage races out of view and you set off west again, hoping that you will have another opportunity to meet the infamous Lord Azzur" (Livingstone, 1983, ref#155), which is a premise that sadly was never acted upon.
  • If Lord Azzur ever married anybody, it would have to be the Serpent Queen!


Secondly, all the glittering pageantry brought to mind Iain Banks' (1998) excellent Culture science-fiction novel Inversions. Inversions contains the two intertwined yet separate narratives of a bodyguard and a doctor (both alien Special Circumstances agents) who have infiltrated a medieval-tech world recovering from a recent cataclysmic disaster. The alien doctor's tale is especially interesting as she presents herself as an antipodean exile from the distant (but still in-planet) land of Drezen, engaged in the service of King Quience of Haspide. Drezen, we learn from no less an authority than Quience himself, is "where their brains seem to suffer from being upside-down all the time. Obviously all is topsy-turvy there, and the women think it fit to tell their lords and masters what is what" (Banks, 1998, p. 162).

The quote I wanted to mention however, is the following one, and it is something I always try to keep in mind when forced to endure or enjoy spectacles such as The Wedding:

Our return to Haspide was accomplished with all the usual pomp and ceremony. There were feasts and ceremonies and investitures and triumphal parades through newly built gates and dignified processions under specially commissioned arches and long speeches by self-important officials and elaborate gift-givings and formal conferments of old and new awards and titles and decorations and any manner of other business, all of it wearying but all of it, I was assured by the Doctor, (somewhat to my surprise), necessary in the sense that this sort of participatory ritual and use of shared symbols helped to cement our society together. If anything, the Doctor said, Drezen could have done with more of this sort of thing. 

(Banks, 1998, p.302, bold emphasis by me)

References

Banks, I. (1998). Inversions. London: Orbit.

Livingstone, I. (1983). City of Thieves. London: Puffin Books.