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	<title>Distractions &#187; vlad taltos</title>
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		<title>Steven Brust and AD&amp;D characters in Jhereg</title>
		<link>http://corky.net/dotan/log/2008/11/steven-brust-and-add-characters-in-jhereg.html</link>
		<comments>http://corky.net/dotan/log/2008/11/steven-brust-and-add-characters-in-jhereg.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 15 Nov 2008 23:49:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Dotan Dimet</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Roleplaying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Science Fiction and Fantasy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[AD&D]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[jhereg]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[steven brust]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[teckla]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tell you about my character]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[vlad taltos]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://corky.net/dotan/log/?p=1893</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[One of the nice things about ICon in recent years is how one of the book sellers (Tzomet Sfarim?) arranges a big display of all of the author guest of honor&#8217;s books. I think I first noticed this when Neil Gaiman was the GoH, but it persisted when Carol Berg was here, and I noticed [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One of the nice things about <a href="http://icon.org.il/">ICon</a> in recent years is how one of the book sellers (Tzomet Sfarim?) arranges a big display of all of the author guest of honor&#8217;s books. I think I first noticed this when Neil Gaiman was the GoH, but it persisted when Carol Berg was here, and I noticed it this year with Steven Brust, when I picked up 3 volumes collecting the first seven <em>Vlad Taltos</em> novels. Of course, by the time I got the books it was the end of the con, Mr. Brust had already <a href="http://dreamcafe.com/words/2008/10/19/back-home-2/">flown home</a> and I&#8217;d missed all his events (although here&#8217;s <a href="http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8600522981667758218">video</a> from his writing workshop).</p>
<p>I hadn&#8217;t read any Brust before the con (I&#8217;ve owned <em>To Reign in Hell</em> for many years, but haven&#8217;t read it), and I seem to think there might have been some missed opportunity or something here, although perhaps not. However, after reading <em>The Book of Jhereg</em> (collecting the first 3 novels &#8211; <em>Jhereg</em>, <em>Yendi</em> and <em>Teckla</em>), I&#8217;m thinking that every roleplayer of my generation will instantly recognize himself or people he knows in these books.</p>
<p>The countess introduced me to analyzing books through the perspective of roleplaying (I may be repeating myself on this point). She&#8217;d look at Tim Powers&#8217; <em>Last Call</em> or Phillip Pullman&#8217;s <em>Subtle Knife</em> and identify which character is a PC whose player joined the game in later sessions, or the witch queen who had a player who only showed up for one session, and is therefore fascinating and active in one scene early in the book and just a parrot for some plot point when she reappears later (obviously controlled by the GM). Once you consider this outlook, plenty of other examples in popular literature appear.</p>
<p>But darn, Vlad Taltos lives in a world defined, on an ontological level, by First Edition Advanced Dungeons and Dragons.</p>
<p>See, he&#8217;s an assassin, in a highly magical world, also a bit of a sorcerer and a master of witchcraft, and he&#8217;s got a familiar (a small, venomous flying reptile called a Jhereg that&#8217;s also intelligent and telepathic). He lives in an empire of what are, basically, D&amp;D Elves (tall, thin, extremely long-lived) and when he&#8217;s not assassinating or running his criminal operations, he&#8217;s hanging out at the floating castle of his best friend, Morrolan the dragonlord (high-ranking noble, sorcerer and warrior), with Morrolan&#8217;s cousin Aliera, a sorceress with a soul-destroying sword taller than herself who apparently got sucked through time from the distant past. What&#8217;s Vlad&#8217;s association with these noble types? Well, he works as Morrolan&#8217;s &#8220;security consultant&#8221;, and all three also have a history of adventuring together in assorted dungeons&#8230;</p>
<p>This goes without mentioning Vlad&#8217;s wife (also an assassin &#8211; they met when she got hired to kill him, as detailed in <em>Yendi</em>) and his pal Kiera the thief, or how everyone he meets who isn&#8217;t an undead sorceress (and ally &#8211; by this time, I&#8217;m already reasoning that being an assassin makes Vlad of evil alignment, and therefore allowed to hang out with Necromancers) has at least some level in some class; and yes, it feels very obvious that nobody in <em>Jhereg</em> has a job or a profession &#8211; they have character classes, and they do what they have to do not to earn a living but to gain XP.</p>
<p>Now, I shouldn&#8217;t be surprised by this really, because I recall reading an interview with Brust in <em>Dragon</em> magazine many years ago, and he did say there that Vlad started out as a character in a D&amp;D campaign, but it&#8217;s pretty shocking to see how artificial it all feels when presented as a world, and how clear it feels that Vlad is played by the guy who wants character development and gives his dude neat little quirks for a personality, while his buddies go all-out munchkin trying to create Elric (but a cheerful sort of Elric!) or an Anime princess.</p>
<p>And you also understand that the only reason Vlad and other humans (or &#8220;Easterners&#8221;) can match the far more long-lived and experienced Dragaerans (=elfs) is that they&#8217;ve got level limits.</p>
<p>I will note that with that reading (this is fic about a high-level AD&amp;D campaign character) to explain the artificiality, I could get on with enjoying the story, which is enjoyably brisk-paced and delivered in a sarcastic Zelazneyesque first person narration (now Zelazney &#8211; there&#8217;s someone who writes like a roleplayer&#8230; which he was).</p>
<p>Vlad&#8217;s story does take an interesting twist in the third book &#8211; <em>Teckla</em> &#8211; which eschews the use of all his high-level buddies and focuses on domestic and social troubles as Vlad&#8217;s wife gets involved with a bunch of revolutionaries and he spends a lot of time angsting and struggling against having his political awareness expanded, between dodging assassination attempts &#8211; it&#8217;s as if Brust decided to suddenly inject <em>Real People</em> into Vlad&#8217;s world. While a very intriguing development, I suspect it will be back to high fantasy and dungeoneering in later books: Vlad&#8217;s cool assassin character type comes perilously close to crumpling like a soggy cardboard cutout when taken too far out of his AD&amp;D milieu.</p>
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