I
get that publishing, as far as the Cthulhu Mythos is concerned, depends largely
upon what has gone before: after all this is a fascination based upon the
writings conjured by a shared reality held in common by a bunch of struggling
authors learning at the knee of HPL. I was cheered when I first heard rumours
of Chaosium publishing a source-book about African Mythos weirdness; was I
delighted by the result? I was not.
In
HPL’s oeuvre there is a whole bunch of African nastiness taking place. In the
works of Robert E. Howard there’s also a lot of African monkey-business. If
these aren’t canon Mythos authors, I’ll eat my hat (and it has quite a few
feathers). But was there a splat-book about Egypt? Or the strange goings-on of
the Congo? No. It was about Kenya. Kenya! What the...?
In
the whole body of HPL’s writings is there a reference to Kenya? No, there is
not (and I’ve checked). Howard is less specific about where his mysteries
occur, but they don’t feel like Kenya. So why go to all this effort?
Well
it seems as if it has a bunch to do with the re-release of the “Masks of
Nyarlathotep”. There’s a whole chapter devoted to the country in that work; it
seems they wanted to go the further distance and write an entire source book on
the place.
I
get it: the Mau-mau Uprisings were pretty spectacular and scary; certainly
grist for any Cthulhu enthusiast’s mill. After that, what do you have? Not a
lot. Whereas, in HPL’s scribblings, the Congo is referenced in every story,
from “Re-animator” to “Arthur Jermyn”. And let’s not even get started on
Egypt...!
What
I find surprising, is that the national boundaries of a country such as Kenya
are fairly arbitrary. Any initial glance at the nature of that part of Africa
reveals that such borders are a useless parameter when discussing the conflicts
and ethnic tensions that abound. A serious sourcebook about this part of the
world would overlook the political structures and go straight to the tribal
ranges that are the root cause of problems such as the Mau-mau Uprising, or the
ethnic-cleansing centred in Rwanda. In light of this, any publication about
‘Kenya’ is going to look like the cheesiest of tourist postcards.
And
here’s another question: Japan. How often does HPL mention Japan in his work?
Once? Twice? Try: never; at any time. And yet we have Chaosium-sanctioned
splat-books about that country. Yes, samurai and ninja are cool; but they’re
not part of the canon. Are we going to see Mythos pirates in the near future? Maybe
a Big Bang Theory splat-book? Stay tuned...
Chaosium
released a book in the ‘80s called "Terror Australis". That book was written by
Melbourne-based writers Mark Morrison and Penny Love and edited by the Chaosium
staff. Now, I know Mark and Penny (I’ve met them at least), and I know of other
writers whose work has been mashed into unrecognisability by Chaosium; "Terror
Australis" basically sucks. I know that the original authors would have given
their best to that project but editorialisation has killed it dead. How do I
know? In the same way that I would know that anyone writing about East Texas,
as an East Texan, would have certain basic information in common with any other
East Texan. As an Australian, I heartily believe "Terror Australis" was written
by Martians.
In
recent years we’ve seen a Call of Cthulhu re-vamp based in Ancient Rome (“Cthulhu
Invictus”) which is entirely reasonable – Brian Lumley and Ramsay Campbell have
both moved the Mythos’ roots well and truly into that fertile ground. But now
there’s talk on the boards of a War of (American) Independence source book for
the game. Why? To what purpose? Where is there a canon source for such a
publication (apart from a dream fragment of HPL riding a horse alongside Ben
Franklin)? And, outside of the US, who would be interested?
The
War of American Independence is a big deal for those who live there. However, putting
aside national pride, where exactly does it serve the roleplaying community
(and any other publishing efforts to do with the Mythos) to create a sourcebook
about it? As stated above, HPL didn’t set any of his stories during that time
(except for that fragment, which was the recounting of a dream and not really
‘fiction’ in the truest sense), although as we all know he tends to wax lyrical
about the architecture of the period in whatever he writes. The era just doesn’t
really jump off the page as a prime location to base the Mythos.
Fifty,
or so, years earlier, now that’s a different story. The Pilgrim Fathers, Salem,
Cotton Mather, relict Vikings, French back-woods trappers, roaming Jesuits –
what’s not to like? This is the time of the Wendigo; the era of the Croatoan
Enigma (White Wolf got an entire Werewolf sourcebook out of that!); and there
are scores of Mythos sources for this time, from Hydra, to Algernon Blackwood
to Joseph Curwen. Joe Curwen!
In
Mythos terms, comparing the First Settlement to the War of Independence is like
comparing a fruit cake with a vanilla sponge. Where is the Mythos in Washington
crossing the Delaware? Did Nyarlathotep influence John Hancock to sign his name
extra large so that the Founding Fathers could all bitch about him later at the
Declaration after-party? Ooh, spooky!
And
what about later periods of American history? The American Civil War is a
(literal) minefield of horror: uncontrolled drugs testing on the wounded; early
experiments on submarine systems; slaves with peculiar religious observances;
the madness of battle. How about the Indian Wars? Some of those guys who rode
with Custer were as crazy as it’s possible to be: who takes a party cake on
horseback to the Battle of the Little Bighorn? One of Custer's bros did. What about the rise of converts
to santeria and other creole religions in Florida during the 1990s? There were
cocaine cartels down that way using serious palo mayombe black magic to
terrorise and murder their opposition – surely there’s writing to be done
there?
But
that’s the essential element of course: no-one involved in publishing for the
Cthulhu Mythos cares about anyone outside of the US. I get it: there’s an
economic down-turn going on; best to marshal your bucks where they’re sure to
recoup a good return. America is a guaranteed market for Chaosium: print 10,000
copies of something with the stars-and-stripes on the cover and they’re sure to
get sold. But what about Germany? What about Scandinavia? What about France?
There are huge markets out there who’re pinned down by the fact that nothing is
‘real’, nothing is ‘definitive’, unless it emerges from the wombs of Chaosium,
or Arkham House, or Pagan Publishing.
Here’s
a heads up: what you guys are publishing has nothing to do with your professed
canon source material. It has more to do with your own personal networks and
past publishing efforts. I’m guessing that if HPL was on your boards as a
committee member, you would have found some way by now to pay him off and
scrape his annoying presence from your board-rooms. People say August Derleth
did terrible things to HPL; have you guys looked at yourselves lately?
Just
saying, is all.
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