CoastConFan
For the more esoteric minded person interested in New Years:
Coptic Orthodox Church New Year,
A fannish blog dedicated to Science Fiction and Fantasy conventions, movies, games, game design, costuming, prop making, blogs, horror, steampunk, RPGs, Tintin, H. P. Lovecraft, Cthulhu, books, videos, and to CoastCon itself. CoastCon is a SF & F convention that has been held annually in Biloxi, Mississippi each Spring for nearly 40 years.
“Silence is the only safe answer to Silence,” is a quote
from Talbot Mundy’s Om the Secret of Ahbor Valley but sometimes you just can’t
be safe with silence. A couple of years
ago I posted about a writer not often read these days, Peter Saxon and I had
intended to follow up with a post about Talbot Mundy, another influential
writer of the 20s and 30s. Well good
intentions pave the road to Blogger Hell and although the notes were made for
the post, it was not finished until now:
Peter Saxon: Guardian, Author, and Figment (9 Aug 2011).
Talbot Mundy is one of those writers that seemed to
encompass the old British Empire, but interestingly lacking in the Jingoism and
Orientalism of writers of that period that irritates the post-colonial,
postmodern lit-crit crowd, who tend to condemn out of hand such works. In fact, Mundy had a great sensitivity and
sympathy about the cultures he wrote.
Some of his works are on par with Robert E. Howard’s works such as the
Conan the Barbarian series with his Tros of Samothrace series, almost in the
vein of H. Rider Haggard’s King Solomon’s Mines/She series. His influence extended to such writers as
Fritz Leiber, Andre Norton, Daniel Easterman, Leigh Brackett, and James
Hilton’s Lost Horizon was inspired by Mundy’s works. So you can see how influential his stories were and continue to
be on writers past and present.
The Jimgrim/Ramsden stories are particularly
interesting. This short bibliography
below just touches the surface and just for
clarity I won’t go into the variant titles used in
different countries and at different times, nor the serializations. I have undoubtedly made
errors, omissions and multiple listings while trying to graft together a
rudimentary listing for the beginning Talbot Mundy reader. I am gratified to find there is still strong
interest in Talbot Mundy’s works. See
also http://www.talbotmundy.com/ and http://talbotmundy.blogspot.com/2012/03/bibliography-of-talbot-mundy.html
. For a great hard copy, bibliography see also Winds from the East, a
Talbot Mundy Reader by Donald L. Hassler (2007).
Wikipedia bibliography of Talbot Mundy works which covers his Jimgrim/Ramsden, Tros of Samothrace, and other stories http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talbot_Mundy
Lola Montez, A Life by Bruce Seymour (1996) an absolutely
perfectly and meticulously researched biography from original sources of one of
the Victorian Era’s most outrageous rogue women. Fans of Victorian history and Steampunks need to read this book!
Love In the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
(1985), and The General in his Labyrinth (1989). Marquez one of the masters of South American magical realism (but
with more violence than Borges). Try
reading Marquez’s Love in the Time of Cholera and comparing it to Joseph
Conrad’s Nostromo (1904) for a bit of fun.
Teach Us to Outgrow Our Madness by (1969) and The Day He
Himself Shall Wipe My Tears Away
(1972) Kenzaburo Oe with disturbing stories from modern Japan. OK, so that is two books – I cheat at lists,
so what.
Skunk Works by Ben Rich (1994) about the mythic secret Skunk
Works by one of the top engineers there.
The Skunk Works in Burbank produced the U-2, SR-71, and the F-117
stealth fighter among others. It puts a
human face on the people who made science fiction into reality.
The Hearing Trumpet by Leonora Carrington (1974) a
masterpiece of surrealism and fantasy by a famous surreal artist. I read this in the middle 70s and has been
out of print for years but is back in print again.
Armageddon 2049 A.D. (1928) and Airlords of Han (1929) by
Philip Francis Nowland two novels about
Buck Rogers transported to the dim future.
Now wait, this has little to do with the B movies serials and the comic
strip characters. These two novellas
often published together as a single book.
It is very advanced for the late 1920s and worth the read when taken in
context of the era.
FIRST, A RATHER OVERLENGTHY FORWARD For this Veteran’s Day I thought I would cover the short career
of a veteran that is known to every American although his military career was
short and obscure. I would also like to
mention another, more recent veteran, who was also an artillerist. West Point
attendee, and connected to writing, specifically about Poe, but I’d like mention that portion at the end of the article. Let me say am no
Poe scholar by any means, but I have cobbled together as many facts as possible
from reliable sources about this forgotten period of Edgar Allan Poe. I am not going to recap Poe’s whole life as
there are plenty of sources available.
Frankly, if you are unfamiliar with the basics of Poe’s biography, you
are probably reading the wrong blog.
AND NOW ON WITH THE SHOW In addition to being a writer, well-known poet, literary critic, editor,
and early SF writer as well as the creator of the modern detective story, Edgar
Allan Poe also had a military career.
His influence on Jules Verne, H. P. Lovecraft, Baudelaire as well as
detective writers and poetry in this century and in the previous ones. His contribution to the literary world is
well known, but his military career outside of his dismissal from West Point is
obscure and seldom mentioned. In fact,
few people know that he had a promising military career. The scope of this article is very narrow,
following just his military career and its impact on him personally and his
subsequent writing career. There are
plenty of Poe biographies good, bad, and fantastically incorrect and I have
found the later the biography of Poe, the more scholarship and less folklore
was involved.
Anyone familiar with the typical Poe biography knows that
Poe’s parents were actors and died when he was a child. But Poe’s grandfather had a profound
influence on him even after his grandfather’s death. David Poe Sr. was a renowned Revolutionary War hero who was a
Major involved with logistics and procurement. For his efforts was made a Brigadier General and very highly
regarded. Edgar Poe seemed destined for
a career in the military himself. As a
youth, Poe was the Lieutenant in charge of the honor guard of the Richmond
Junior Volunteers for the visit of the Marquis de Lafayette when he visited
Richmond in October of 1824. Young Poe
would have been 15 at the time.
Lafayette visited David Poe Senior’s grave on grave in Baltimore and
exclaimed, “Ici repose coeur noble!”
The practice of the time was to rotate individual batteries
of artillery regiments to different posts around the nation and Battery H was
ordered to Fort Moultrie on Sullivan’s Island, South Carolina part of the
important coastal fortifications of historic Charlestown harbor on 31 October
1827.
The fortifications on Sullivan’s Island included Fort
Moultrie, which had a long career as a battleground during the Revolutionary
War, the War of 1812, and would again be the focus of combat in the Civil War
much later. In fact the opening shots
of the Civil War would be fired from Charlestown harbor defenses on a ship
attempting to relieve the consolidated Union garrison on another fort in the
harbor, Fort Sumter some of which had been evacuated from Fort Moultrie, but
that’s over thirty years in the future.
By the way, the town library on Sullivan’s Island is part of a
post-Civil War fortification, Battery Gadsden, a Spanish American War
construct, which has Poe section and several streets on Sullivan’s Island are
named in honor of Poe.
In March of 1830 he received his formal acceptance to attend
West Point Military Academy and began attending in June of the same year. Poe may have thought having some practical years
as a soldier would help him as a cadet but the Academy proved to be far
different than he had expected. Many
previously enlisted members attending the Academy can attest to this, even at
this late date. Discouraged, Poe
regretted his decision to make the military a career and began to look for a way out.
He was well liked by children, a joker, prankster, and
humorist. He also had visits from his
West Point comrades from his military days.
Due to being cut out of David Allen’s will, Poe was left with little
resource later in life outside of this ability to write. Who knows as a military officer with a large
inherited fortune, he might have later gone into politics after the
military. But it was not to be.
I remember his career backwards, like in some character in
an avant-garde film, since I generally saw his last roles first. As a kid, I remember him first as the
sneering Nazi officer Major Strasser in Casablanca. Conrad Veidt was a strident anti-Nazi took pains to get roles to
show how vile the Nazis were to a pre-war audience. I also remember him as Jaffar, the evil vizier in The Thief of
Bagdad with those powerful hypnotic eyes.
From there my remembrance jumps to Veidt as the somnolent
puppet of the Doctor in The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, although the first few
times I saw the movie, I didn’t know him.
Well that is somewhat out of backwards sequence, but who said memory was
linear or for that matter, of time but made up of associations. Heaven knows free association has led me
down some interesting path. Much of my
blog posts are an amalgamation of memory, associations, and serendipity.