Imagine a vague fantasy simulacrum of medieval China, seen through a lens of Borges's "The Analytical Language of John Wilkins", Marco Polo's accounts of his expeditions, Coleridge's "Kubla Khan", Calvino's Invisible Cities, and the legend of Prester John. Basically, picture what people in Europe of the middle-ages thought China was like, then layer on top a big slathering of romanticism, add a hefty dose of orientalism, together with a sprinkling of complete ignorance, and bake in an oven of Umberto Eco.
Then imagine that to the East there is a strange mountainous island which is permanently shrouded in mist and populated by militaristic, violent natives; innumerable ghosts and weird spirits; nature-based demigods; and dragons with underwater palaces in its seas. It is called the "Queen Country", but nobody knows why. Legend has it that in the North there resides a great Black Turtle, in the South the Vermilion Bird, in the West a White Tiger, and in the East an Azure Dragon. It's the Japan of the Nara period, but seen from the eyes of what people in our real-world China of 750 AD might have thought of it.
Now imagine what would have happened if Gary Gygax and Dave Arneson had this in mind, rather than Greyhawk, when they'd designed D&D. It's called Queen Country and it's what I'm going to publish after Yoon-Suin.
If you don't stat up the cardinal directions then you are a pussy
ReplyDeleteI will stat them up. If Cthulhu can have stats so can the Vermilion Bird.
DeleteThat sounds tremendous. When I read Eco's Baudolino way back when, I had the notion of doing a Prester John style adventure, but (like 99% of my ideas) it never came to anything. I will be very interested to see this when it's ready.
ReplyDeleteAlthough "Queen Country" sounds like it should be surrounded by the Seven Seas of Rhye.
Don't stop me now, ClawCarver.
DeleteOoooh. This echoes my own tastes perfectly (http://celestialempire.blogspot.com/2013/06/fantasy-asia.html).
ReplyDeleteNice. I'll have to read the John Mandeville stuff.
DeleteWhat struck me about some of these accounts is how Edgar Rice Burroughs like they often were, always concerned with communities of lost Romans (Liqian) or enslaved Germans or Hungarians toiling in mines. Then mix that with tales of one legged warriors or men with mouths in their bellies.
ReplyDelete