DaRK PaRTY ReVIEW
::Literate Blather::
Wednesday, December 03, 2008
The Toughest SOBs in Fantasy Fiction

These are the 7 Toughest Characters in High Fantasy





It's not easy finding a list of the toughest, bad-asses in Fantasy fiction -- so DaRK PaRTY created our own. These are the heroes (and anti-heroes) that know how to use a sword or utter a spell better than the rest. Any list, of course, is subjective. So if you'd like to add your own sword-swinging, spelling chanting favorite to the list -- please do.


Drizzt Do’Urden
The
Dark Elf Ranger

Creator: R.A. Salvatore

Date of Birth: 1988

First Appearance: “The Crystal Shard” Homeland” (the first book in “The Icewind Dale Trilogy”)

Description: Dri
zzt is five feet four inches tall and weighs about 130 pounds. His eyes are lavender and his hair as white as snow. His name is Drow translates to “Unyielding hunter who walks in the darkness.” Drizzt has a dark, violent side that he called “The Hunter.” He can control the hunter and sometimes calls on him in battle.

Origin: Drizzt is a Drow, a race of dark-skinned subterranean elves known for being evil. Drizzt, however, is an outcast with a strong sense of morals. While a skilled fighter, Drizzt prefers a peaceful resolution except with evil creatures such as goblins and orcs. He was the third son in his family and slated to be used as a sacrifice to the Drow god Lloth. He later escaped to the surface world and joined with a group of companions known as the Companions of the Hall.

Weapon of Choice: Drizzt fights with a pair of scimitars known as Twinkle (which radiates a blue glow) and Icingdeath, a blade that protects the bearer from fire.

Known Associates: Catti-brie, Wulfgar, and Regis Rumblebelly

Enemies: The assassin Artemis Entreri

Quote: “I knew right away that there was something special going on with Drizzt – just the way I felt about him when I first met him in the book. I could
n’t put my finger on it then, and I can’t now. I wish I could.” – R.A. Salvatore

Other Mediums: Drizzt is one of the most popular characters in the Dungeons & Dragons Forgotten Realms setting. He has appeared in more than a dozen novels, in the Baldur’s Gate, computer game series, and in graphic novels. There have also been rumors
of a Hollywood movie.

Aragorn
The Return of the King

Creator: J.R.R. Tolkien

Date of Birth: 1954

First Appearance: The Fellowship of the Ring (the first book in the tril
ogy “Lord of the Rings”)

Description: Aragorn stands six feet six inches tall. He is a dark and lean human with long, shaggy dark hair streaked with gray. His eyes are gray and set into a stern, pale face. He often experiences bouts of melancholy, but can be humorous at times.

Origin: A Ranger that often went by the nickname Strider. But Aragorn is really the heir to the throne of Gondor. His father was killed when he was a baby and the Elfin King Elrond raised him. His heritage was kept secret from him. He led the armies that ultimately defeated the Evil Lord Sauron.

Weapon of Choice: Anduril, a great sword used by his ancestors.

Known Associates: Frodo Baggins, Gandalf the Grey, Legolas, Gimli, Boromir, Merry, Pippin, and Sam

Enemies: Sauron, Saruman, Black Riders, Orcs

Quote: “This day does not belong to one man but to all. Let us togeth
er rebuild this world that we may share in the days of peace.” – Viggo Mortensen as Aragorn in “Return of the King”

Other Mediums: Aragon was featured in “The Lord of the Rings” trilogy, which has been mad
e into several movies include Peter Jackson’s blockbuster trilogy. The books have also been adapted for TV, radio, and stage. Led Zeppelin even has a few songs that reference the trilogy including “Misty Mountain Hop” and “Ramble On.” And, of course, Advanced Dungeons & Dragons owes a huge debt to the series.


Fafhrd
The Enormous Partner of Gray Mouser

Creator: Fritz Leiber

Date of Birth: 1939

First Appearance: A short story “Two Sought Adventure” in Unknown, a pulp fantasy magazine.

Description: A seven-foot tall northern barbarian. He is a thief and fond of drinking, eating, fighting, gambling, and most of all, stealing. He has a big heart and a lust for life.

Origin: Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser are sellswords in the mythical world of Nehwon. Th
ey are rogues who will take adventures from the highest bidder.

Weapon of Choice: The long sword named Graywand and a poignard called Heartseeker.

Known Associates: Gray Mouser

Enemies: Differs story to story.

Quote: “His interest in writing came from a long correspondence with a close college friend, Harry Fischer. Together they developed alter ego characters: Nordic Fafhrd a tall gangly limbed individual from 'the North' - based on Leiber, and the effervescent Grey Mouser - based on Fischer. Leiber first featured the characters in a story, "Adepts Gambit", which featured a cast of creations in a world of mystic magic.” – Fritz Leiber obituary in The Times of London

Other Me
diums: Fafhrd appeared with Gray Mouser in DC’s “Wonder Woman” in the early 1970s and later they appeared in their own title called “Sword of Sorcery.”


Conan the Barbarian
The Hyborian Age’s Greatest Hero

Creator: Robert E. Howard

Date of Birth: 1932

First Appearance: A fantasy story “The Phoenix on the Sword” in Weird Tal
es magazine.

Description: A black-haired, rugged barbarian from the northern tribes with dark, sulle
n eyes. Conan is six feet two inches tall and 210 pounds. He is barrel-chested with broad shoulders and heavily muscled arms. Despite being a barbarian warrior, Conan was sharp and intelligent. Honor was important to him (even though he spent part of his time as a thief). He spoke several different languages. He was also quite witty and had a big sense of humor.

Origin: Conan was born in Cimmerian, a cold snowy kingdom to the north. His father w
as a blacksmith. He was an experienced warrior by age 15 when he left home to wander the lands. He became a thief, a pirate, a mercenary, and an outlaw. When he became older he commanded armies and eventually he seized the crown from the king of Aquilona.

Weapon of Choice: Broad swords

Known Associates: There are too many to list. Conan traveled with many comrades and associates, but didn’t stick with anyone for very long.

Enemies: Wizards, monster, and the King of Aquilona

Quote: “Crom, I have never prayed to you before. I have no tongue for it. No one, not even you, will remember if we were good men or bad. Why we fought, or why we died. All that matters is that two stood against many. That's what's important! Valor pleases you, Crom... so grant me one request. Grant me revenge! And if you do not list
en, then to Hell with you!” – Arnold Schwarzenegger from “Conan the Barbarian” (1982)

Other Mediums: Conan has become one of the most recognizable fantasy heroes in the world. Arnold Schwarzenegger starred as Conan in two Hollywood blockbusters “Conan the Barbarian” and “Conan the Destroyer.” There have been animated features, comic books (including the long running series by Marvel), books, computer games, and toys.


Elric
The Albino
Anti-Hero

Creator: Mic
hael Moorcock

Date of Birth: 1961

First Appearance: The novella “The Dreaming City” in Science Fantasy magazine

Description: A thin and frail albino with skin the color of
“a bleached skull.” His eyes were slanted and glowed crimson. Elric needs to administer special herbs in order to maintain his weak constitution. Elric is moody, brooding, and full of self-hatred.

Origin: Elric is the last king of Melnibone, an island civilization that ruled earth thousands of years ago (before the rise of human civilization). His heritage gives him the ability to conjure spirits and supernatural creatures to help him in battle. He is constantly being undermined by his subjects and his family (inclu
ding his power-hungry cousin Yrkoon).

Weapon
of Choice: Stormbringer. An enchanted sword that give Elric strength, but requires that it be fed with the souls of those its slays.

Known Associates: Cymoril (Elric’s lover and cousin), Dyvim Slorm (another cousin who partners with Elric), Moonglum (a fellow adventurer)

Enemies: Yrkoon (Elric’s cousin who is his successor to the throne and plots his assassination) and Theleb K’aarna (a sorcerer)

Quote: “This sword here at my side don’t act the way it should/ Keeps calling me its mater, but I feel like its slave/ Hauling me faster and faster to an early grave/ And it howls/ It howls like hell.” – “Black Blade” by Blue Oyster Cult

Other Mediums: Elric has been featured in Advanced Dungeons & Dragons and in comic books. The song “Black Blade” by Blue Oyster Cult is about Elric. There are also rumors of a trilogy of films based on Moorcock’s Elric novels in production.


Allanon

The Mysterious Druid of Shannara


Creator: Terry Brooks
Date of Birth: 1977

First Appearance: The novel “The Sword of Shannara”

Description: Allanon is seven feet tall and fond of wearing a cloak and cowl to hide his intense looking face: shaggy eyebrows, a long flat nose, a black beard, and green penetrating eyes. He is extremely mysterious and rarely tells the truth about any situation. He’s very smart and compassionate, although he can also be ruthless to his enemies.

Origin: Allanon is a druid and has a lifespan much longer than normal humans because of his ability to sleep in suspended animation for long periods of time. He was the child apprentice of the Druid Bremen, who taught him the magic arts. At the time of his first appearance, he is the last of the Great Druids that lived in the city of Paranor.

Weapon of Choice: Magic

Known Associates: Shea Ohmsford, Wil Ohmsford, Jair Ohmsford, and Bremen

Enemies: Jachrya, a monster who killed Allanon in “The Wishsong of Shannara”

Quote: “Terry Brooks wasn't trying to imitate Tolkien's prose, just steal his story line and complete cast of characters, and [Brooks] did it with such clumsiness and so heavy-handedly, that he virtually rubbed your nose in it." – Lin Carter, fantasy editor on “The Sword of Shannara”

Other Mediums: Warner Brothers owns the film rights to “The Sword of Shannara” and there is
talk of a film in 2010 written and directed by Mike Newell.


Jaime Lannister
Kingslaye
r

Creator:
George R. R. Martin

Date of Birth: 1996

First Appearance: The novel “A Game of Thrones”

Descriptio
n: A strikingly handsome knight with golden hair and green eyes. He is arrogant and amoral (once even tossing a young child out of a window). He lost his sword hand in battle and has started in reevaluate his life.

Origin: Jaime is a member of the House of Lannister, a noble family in Westerlands,
and an elite Kingsguard. The family’s sigil is a golden lion on a field of crimson and their motto is “Hear Me Roar!” Jaime is one of the greatest knights of his generation and during the sack of King’s Landing he killed King Aerys and received the nickname “Kingslayer.” He has an incestuous relationship with his twin sister Cersei and the father of her three children.

Weapon of Choice: Sword

Known Associates: Cersei, Joffrey Baratheon (son), Tyrion (half-brother)

Enemies: The House of Stark

Quote: “There are no men like me. There’s only me” – Jaime Lannister
Other Mediums: The series “A Song of Ice and Fire” is still ongoing, but already there are games, figurines, and online communities dedicated to it.


Our Interview with R.A. Salvatore

10 Westerns That Make You Want to Saddle Up

Ha! Ha! Saturday Night Live's Funniest Comedians

The 7 Toughest Private Eyes in Fiction

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Tuesday, February 05, 2008
Life Altering Movies


(Everyone has one of those movies in their background. A film that continues to resonate with you even years after you saw it. It might not be your favorite film, but its one that had a profound effect on the way you look at cinema and at life. DaRK PaRTY was curious about these kinds of movies so we posed a simple, yet complicated question:

What film has had a lasting impact on you and why?

We sent this question out to some of our favorite people and we received some very compelling answers. Please feel free to leave your own answer to the question in our comments section).


John J. Michaelczyk, documentary film maker and co-director of the Film Studies Program at Boston College: “The Conformist" (1970) by Bernardo Bertolucci, based on Albert Moravia's book by the same name has made a significant impact upon me over the years. The content speaks to me vividly about the idea of "belonging" in an area that has a very negative atmosphere to it.

Marcello Clerici (Jean Louis Tringtignant) appears to do anything to survive in a political storm, and basically sells his soul in a Faustian sense in order to become part of the establishment. The nuances of the film and the allusions to international culture, as well as the non-linear editing, make it a very clever puzzle, very much worth deciphering.

Aesthetically, it is an impressively designed film with its art deco feel and fascist overtones that are visually very stimulating. Vittorio Storaro's cinematography brings alive this aspect of the film. Having met Alberto Moravia who wrote the novel and having interviewed Bertolucci for my book on "Italian Political Film," I appreciated all the more the evolution from novel to film and the poetic imagination in both expressions.


Dave Zeltserman, blogger and author (“Bad Thoughts”): If I had to pick only one, I’d say “The Roaring Twenties” (1939). I saw it for the first time when I was about 13, and it is just such a well-made and powerful movie, with such a tragic and noir-ish ending, although also heroic. In my art I strive for the type of perfection that that movie achieved. I’ll never make it, but I have that goal.


R.A. Salvatore, best-selling fantasy author, co-founder 38 Studios: The Deerhunter” (1978) and “Apocalypse Now” (1979) both hit me hard. I'm the youngest in my family and was just a kid when Vietnam was raging. Our family suffered loss in that war - from PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome). I think now, with the world gone crazy again, I look back to those statements of the nature of men and the horror of war.


Laurie Foos, author (“Before Elvis There Was Nothing”): I was going to name a foreign film here but thought it important to pay tribute to our American cinema, so I could name any number of Woody Allen films that have stayed with me, but the one that I return to most often, I think, is "Manhattan" (1979). It's a beautiful tribute to a city and to unrequited love -- and Woody Allen does juxtaposition like no one else. I'm thinking in particular of Woody Allen's character calling someone's self-esteem "a notch below Kafka's," and then in the next scene, he's rescuing Diane Keaton's character from an imagined insect in her apartment. The film also renders insecurities and hopes and humor seamlessly. And, of course, it makes me laugh every time. I don't know how you don't fall in love with New York again every time you watch that film.


Gretchen Rubin, author and blogger (“The Happiness Project”): “The Piano” (1993). I love this movie but find it so intense that I’ve never been able to see it for the second time. I think that at times, we operate on a symbolic level that’s beyond the kind of symbolism that can be put into words (e.g., Billy Budd is a Christ figure, or Dumbledore is a Merlin, wise-old-man figure). It’s very rare to find that. In books, I would point to Flannery O’Connor’s “Wise Blood” or J. M. Barrie’s “Peter Pan.” I’m constantly searching for examples of this kind of work, but it’s very rare.


Billy Conway, musician and former drummer for Morphine and Treat Her Right: Citizen Kane” (1941). I got stumped on film because the question made me realize that film does not move me in the same way as some other art forms. I take snippets and life imitates art regularly, but as a whole I will have to think some more about the effect that film has on me and how it is and isn't influential.


Jessica Fox-Wilson, poet and blogger (“9 to 5 Poet”): Just as I was beginning high school, I saw the movie "Heathers" for the first time. Without seeing this movie, I don't think I would have survived the first two years of high school. Any time a "friend" was mean to me, I imagined the friend choking on Draino and saying, "Corn-nuts!" Life was easier because of that image alone.


Steve Almond, author of “(Not that You Asked) Rants, Exploits, and Obsessions”: Gotta narrow it down to one? I'll say "Midnight Cowboy" (1969). Real art in a moving picture, real suffering and doomed loyalty. Imagine.


Jess Myers, poet: As far as movies, I think I have to name “To Kill a Mockingbird” (1962). It is one of few films that truly captures the tone and charm of the book. It's just masterfully done, and Gregory Peck's performance is exactly how I imagined Atticus Finch when I read the book. He just blows me away every time.


Elizabeth Miller, scholar and Dracula expert: Perhaps the film that has made the greatest impact on me is Cry Freedom” (1987) starring Kevin Kline and Denzel Washington. I have watched it numerous times, and am always moved by it. I had read the book on which it was partially based (“Biko”) but in this case, the movie was even better.


Tony Carrillo, cartoonist (F-Minus): The two movies that influenced me the most are “The Jerk” (1979) by Steve Martin, and “Monty Python and the Holy Grail” (1975). I watched these movies over and over growing up, and even though I can probably quote both line for line, I still see something new every time. I still laugh every time I think of Martin screaming "He hates these cans!" These movies prove that something can be completely stupid and absolutely brilliant at the same time.


Nigel Patterson, president of the Elvis Information Network (EIN): High Noon” (1952) with Gary Cooper. As a young child growing up in Northern Ireland in the 1950s, I vividly remember watching this film three times in three weeks. They were the days of TV in its infancy and when the normal Saturday afternoon sporting programs couldn’t be shown the station repeated High Noon. What affected me about the narrative was the amazing inner strength and resolution of Cooper’s character; his awareness of knowing what was wrong from right and the need to personally stand up and do right. It is a message which is arguably even more important in today’s complex, corporate run world. Inspirational stuff!


The Horror! The Horror -- 5 Really Scary Films




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Thursday, January 24, 2008
Knock Your Socks Off Books -- Part 1
(DaRK PaRTY is a book junkie – a quiet, but ferocious jones for paper cuts and that damn smell when you open a brand-new book. We’ve got problems – we’ve come to terms with it. We wanted to know what other readers read, but mostly we wanted an answer to this question: “What book changed your perspective on life and why?” So we asked some of our favorite people and these are the answers they came back with. Read Part 2 here.)

R.A. Salvatore, best-selling fantasy author, co-founder 38 Studios: If we're talking about the work of other authors, it would have to be “The Hobbit” (by J.R.R. Tolkien). I read it during a blizzard in 1978 and it was the first time since my childhood that I actually read a book for enjoyment. School had all but beaten the love of reading out of me by that point, but Tolkien gave it back. That book made me want to read again, and eventually led me to write.

For my own work, “Mortalis,” the fourth book of my DemonWars series, changed my perspective, or rather, I was writing it while I was going through a great change of perspective. My brother, my best friend in the world, was dying of cancer while I was at work on that book, which happens to be about grief. It was very cathartic, for sure, but the truth is, I haven't even had the guts t
o go back and read it, these eight years later.

The story gets even more compelling for me, more introspective. With that book, I finally got to work with my dead friend, Keith Parkinson. I consider him to be one of the greatest artists the fantasy genre has ever known. The work he did on “Mortalis” touched me deeply, because I saw within Brother Francis, my brother, and the woman, Jilseponie, standing behind him very much resembles both my sister-in-law and my wife. The painting hangs in my office at 38 Studios and I can't look at it without thinking of my brother, about what he went through, about our discussions, knowing what was coming. Also, we lost Keith to cancer, way too young (he was around the same age as my brother when my brother died).

I can't look at that painting without being reminded of making the most of every day, because you just never know what's coming.


Elizabeth Miller, scholar and Dracula expert: I would have to say Dracula” by Bram Stoker, published in 1897. It opened up for me an entirely new field of study and research. During the course of those activities, I have traveled widely, lectured at many universities and other venues, and met some fascinating people.


Nigel Patterson, president of the Elvis Information Network (EIN):The Magic of Thinking Big” by David Schwartz. In my early 20’s I just couldn’t get enough of this book. I read it and re-read it several times. Its message of positive thinking and not limiting one’s self was just what I needed at the time and helped shape my thinking into something more balanced and forward focused.


Harry Bliss, cartoonist (Bliss): “Raise High the Roof Beams” by J.D. Salinger (more of a long short story). This story is simply perfect. The innocence and wonder of the main character really connected to me as did most of the characters in Salinger's work. It's funny and very dark and after reading this story, the world got a hell of a lot more complicated for me.

Steve Almond, author of “(Not that You Asked) Rants, Exploits, and Obsessions”: “Slaughterhouse Five” (by Kurt Vonnegut). Good God, there's not a more seditious book you could read in this age of pointless, feelingless violence. It was like someone blew up some love dynamite in my skull.


Jessica Fox-Wilson, poet and blogger (“9 to 5 Poet”): The book that has changed my perspective the most was “The Invisible Man” by Ralph Ellison. I was 16 when I read it, when my English teacher assigned it to me because I had already read the assigned "African American Literature" in our class at my last high school. This was the first book that really opened my eyes to the racial politics in the U.S. After reading it, I knew I would never be able to look at racism or living with difference in the same way again.


Jeff Belanger, author and founder of GhostVillage: Boy” by Roald Dahl -- the autobiography of his childhood. Roald Dahl is my literary hero. “Boy” taught me that there is a good story around every corner, under every rock, and certainly within every chocolate bar -- sometimes you just have to stand on your head to see it.


Dave H. Schleicher, blogger and author of “The Thief Maker”: I was required to read Toni Morrison's Jazz” for an African American Literature course during my second year of college. It was the first bit of serious literary fiction that I took to task reading seriously. It opened my eyes to the fact that I didn't need to write just genre fiction. I could attempt something more artistic, more stylish, and more ambitious with my own writing. The book had a profoundly haunting effect on me because of the style in which it was written, and it opened my imagination to possibilities I hadn't previously considered.


Paul Sinclair, lead singer of Get the Led Out: It's an interesting question because until a few years ago I don't believe ANY book had ever changed my perspective on life.

This one truly fits the bill though, “The Power of Intention” by Dr. Wayne W. Dyer. I've always had an interest in self improvement and spirituality. I've also always been a real logic-driven person. My more science-minded approach to things has always prevented me from going too far down the religious path. In “The Power of Intention” Dr. Dyer sort of melds the two. With stories, humor and science (sometimes basic quantum physics, but don't be scared) he describes what I've come to believe are concrete laws in our universe. The way I view the world and go after achieving my goals has changed so dramatically for the positive I can't begin to explain. Some of the concepts in this book are fairly obvious, others not so. Maybe it's Dr. Dyer's humor? Maybe it's the balance of science and god? Or maybe it was just the right time in my life for me to hear it, but something clicked.

I'll just give one example of the kind of thing that really drew me in to this book. Dr. Dyer tells a story about a young woman driving on her way to work and approaches a toll booth. The toll taker says “Go on through, the man ahead of you paid your toll.” “There must be some mistake; I don't know that man," said the young woman very confused. The toll taker explained, “The man said to tell the next person that came through to have a nice day.” The woman was so moved by this random act of kindness that she decided she would do this same thing every day on her way to work, “after all it's only 25 cents.”

Dr. Dyer goes on to explain how acts of kindness raise endorphin levels in the body and in turn strengthen your immune system. Also, not only does this benefit the person receiving the act of kindness, but the person performing it and those observing it as well. You can see how far reaching this can be from one thoughtful, random act.

It's this kind of thinking where the age old “do unto others” mantra is proven to have real, quantifiable health benefits that had me wanting to delve even further. It's hard for me to write this without feeling like I'm coming off too new age. I'm a guy who's always looking for a witty, sarcastic punch line in every conversation. Life to me can seem at times like a series of SNL skits; particularly where religion and spirituality are concerned.

So, no, I haven't “found god.” No, I won't be taking flying lessons with no interest in learning to land... and no, I won't be found naked in a field preparing for the mother ship anytime soon. However, “The Power of Intention” is a good read and if you approach it with an open mind... who knows?


Knock Your Socks Off Books - Part 2

How to fix "Our" Reading Problem

Books as a Time Machine


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Tuesday, September 26, 2006
5 Questions About: Drizzt Do'Urden
An Interview with New York Times Bestselling Fantasy Author R.A. Salvatore About his Greatest Creation

(Bestselling author R.A. Salvatore unleashed a storm in 1988 when he created the character of Drizzt Do’Urden – a dark elf known in fantasy circles as Drow. Drizzt has turned into a cultural icon among the Dungeons & Dragons crowd by starring in dozens of fantasy adventure novels (The Icewind Dale trilogy, The Dark Elf trilogy, the Legacy of the Drow series, the Paths of Darkness series, and The Hunter's Blades trilogy), many of which have been on the New York Times bestseller list. Drizzt is now one of the most popular characters – if not the most popular – in modern fantasy literature. DaRK PaRTY wanted to get the inside scoop on Drizzt – and who better than R.A. Salvatore himself?

Salvatore was born and raised in Leominster, Massachusetts, and got bitten by the fantasy bug after reading J.R.R. Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings. He wrote his first book, "Echoes of the Fourth Magic," in 1982 while working as a bouncer at a local bar. Since then, Salvatore has written dozens of fantasy books,
many starring Drizzt, but also two Star Wars novels is and one featuring Tarzan (he told me the toughest part of that gig was trying to figure out how to spell Tarzan’s famous cry). You can find out more about Salvatore at his Web site.)


DaRK PaRTY: You have created one of the most popular and influential characters in fantasy fiction with Drizzt Do'Urden. He's the star of dozens of your bestselling books, featured in computer games and has fan sites dedicated to him. When you created him as a supporting character in "The Crystal Shard" in 1988 did you have any idea of his impact on fantasy literature?

R.A. Salvatore: Of course not. Drizzt was an afterthought, as I’ve often said. He was put into the book because another character (from a previous novel by another author I had planned on using as a sidekick to introduce my hero wasn’t available to me. I knew right away that there was something special going on with Drizzt – just the way I felt about him when I first met him in the book. I couldn’t put my finger on it then, and I can’t now. I wish I could.

It’s amazing to me that Drizzt is taking off now, some 19 years later. I saw Drizzt miniatures on eBay for $130. I see Drizzt posters on unrelated sites – as far as I know, unlicensed posters, which makes it all the more flattering to me. I’m just enjoying the ride. What choice do I have? This type of mainstreaming of a fictional character is completely beyond my control.

So I just laugh my ass off at the Drizzt knock-off in the hilarious “Order of the Stick.” Brilliant stuff there.

DP: Despite Drizzt's popularity (or maybe because of it) some hardcore Forgotten Realms fans have attacked him repeatedly. They seem annoyed by the plethora of Drizzt copycats in D&D games and by fact that you changed the setting of the campaign. There were also a handful of fans that reacted negatively to Drizzt's inability to ro
mance his human female companion, Cattie-Brie. How have you responded to these complaints?

R.A.: How do I respond to them? I don’t and why would I? I write my books for people who like them, not for people who don’t. Anybody who takes a chance and puts himself out there creatively, athletically or in any other way, is going to get meat-chopped on the internet. Welcome to the world. I’ve also noticed the paradox that as the complaining on the message boards increases in volume, so too do the sales. Each Drizzt book outsells the previous, and after 19 years and more than 20 books, I have to beli
eve that means I’m doing something right.

The copycats are the highest form of flattery. I love logging into
an MMORPG (Massively-Multiplayer Online Role-Playing Game) and seeing a “Drizzzzzzt” or a “Drz’zt” run by. Very cool. Sure it annoys some people, particularly people running D&D games, so they should just do what my own group does: no Drow characters. How’s that for irony?

Similarly, the idea that there are hundreds of Drizzt fanfics out there is
a great feeling. The whole point of writing is to touch people, and people won’t do fan fiction about characters who don’t achieve that. With that comes the anger, of course. With Drizzt, Catti-brie and Wulfgar, I wrote myself into a situation where, no matter what I did, some people were going to get angry. But understand that it’s not a conscious choice for me to make. I’m following the story where it tells me to go, and so I go.

Oh, and one last point: I did not change the landscape of the Forgotten Realms. That is an unfair and hurtful meme, shouted loudly by some people who have no idea of what they’re talking about. I have done nothing in that world that hasn’t been approved by the people in control of the setting, and have done little without the express blessing of Ed Greenwood (and though Wizards of the Coast owns the setting, I still think of it as Ed’s playground). Are there contradictions between my work
and other “canon” coming out? Yes, and they frustrate me (and other authors who experience similar situations) no end. This is one of the inevitabilities of working in a massively shared world. It is also a necessity, at times, in differentiating between the media: games versus books.

DP: The thirst for Drizzt, Drizzt, Drizzt must be a challenge for a writer. You have penned more than 50 novels -- including many other fantasy books, a Tarzan novel and two Star Wars books. As an artist do you ever get tired of Drizzt?

R.A.: Surprisingly, no, I’m not tired of Drizzt. The challenge is to continually surround him with new situations, like what’s going on in the more recent books. I’ve always said that as long as I’m having fun with him, and as long as people want to read about him, I’ll keep writing. So far, so good.

It does get a little frustrating when that call for Drizzt smothers some of my other work, though. I wish more of my Drizzt readers would take a chance on DemonWars and The Highwayman or Crimson Shadow, for example, and it’s surprising to me to find that my characters Entreri and Jarlaxle can’t command anything near Drizzt numbers. A little frustrating, I say, but then again, how lucky am I to have Drizzt?

DP: Will there ever be a Drizzt movie? And if you were in charge of casting who would you choose for the roles of Drizzt, Cattie-brie, Wulfgar, Bruenor Battlehammer, Regis and Artemis Entreri? And who would make a damn fine Orc?

R.A.: Oh boy, the movie question… Will it ever be made? Yes, I think it will, though I don’t know when. Drizzt has been too popular for too long for Hollywood to ignore him. And they aren’t. All of a sudden I’m hearing from actors, directors, CEOs and other celebrities who are Drizzt fans. I had no idea. My audience is growing up, and some are growing into positions to get things like a movie done. It will happen; I just hope I’m alive to see it!

Who would I cast? I have no idea. I watched a Zorro movie a few years ago and thought Antonio Bandaras would have made a great Drizzt. Someone suggested to me that Edward Norton would be an amazing Artemis Entreri, and after seeing “American History X,” how could I disagree with that assessment? Then again, Edward Norton could be great in any role. Vin Diesel gets it, certainly. He understands the audience, the work, and shares my love of adventure fantasy. Also, after the introduction Wil Wheaton wrote for one of the Legend of Drizzt books, I’d love to see him be involved.

But it’s all a moot point, because other than readers and interviewers, I doubt anyone’s going to ask my opinion. And hey, I just want to chor
eograph the fight scenes – hopefully with someone like Jackie Chan! Now how cool would that be?

DP: You recently announced a partnership with Red Sox pitching ace Curt Schilling and comic book genius Todd McFarlane called Green Monster Games. First, what is Schilling like in person and, second, can you give DaRK PaRTY readers some idea of what the mission of Green Monster Games will be?

R.A.: Yikes! What is he like in person? I’ll only say two things on this, because it’s really not my place to gossip. First, if I didn’t like and respect him, I wouldn’t have agreed to be a part of Green Monster Games. We’re going to have to put up with each other for several years on this project. Second, anybody with the guts to fashion a huge incentive of his contract predicated on winning a World Series with the Boston Red Sox (for crying out loud!) is well worth following into battle. The motto of the company is: if you don’t plan on doing it better than it’s ever been done, go work for someone else.

Hey, I’m willing to chase that goal. I’ve seen the competition and they are magnificent. The great work of companies like Blizzard, Sony, Mythic and so many others in the evolution of computer gaming inspires me to climb on their shoulders and try my best to reach a little higher.

Our mission is simple: make a game that people want to play.

On a creative level, my mission is to continue to explore this scary new world that’s opening up before us. I truly believe that computer gaming is the next great medium, a place where novels and movies collide and morph into something more fabulous still. I’m not going to “write” a story for people in a computer game, as I do in my novels. To think that is a complete misunderstanding of the purpose of the game itself. In a computer game, as in life, every player writes his or her own story.

My job is to give the players a thematic basis for letting their imaginations fly, to work with the designers to fashion a world worth exploring. This is a new and exciting form of communication. It is not a passive medium like television, and in fact is more active than novels. A computer game community is as real and vibrant as the real world; it is the ultimate interactive experience, and the ultimate opportunity for artistic self-expression. Everybody who joins an MMO (a massive multiplayer online game) is a writer.

That’s the joy of it.


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