For several weeks now, we’ve been hyping up the Gygaxian
Fantasy World series on various platforms, Facebook, X, Instagram, and
Twitch. It is something near and dear to most of us here in the Dens, even
though all seven books were pulled from us in 2008. The echo of them remains,
both at our tables, on our shelves, and at the outrageously high prices they
cost on sites like eBay. But the more I post about them, the more I realize
that though these world-building books might be household names here, their
content and purpose might be unknown to others.
In short, in 2001 Troll Lord Games reached out to
Gary Gygax and asked him to write adventure modules for us, he replied with a
friendly and heartfelt “no,” but countered, “I have something better. I have a
series of books I would like to publish, an encyclopedia of sorts.” In that same conversation, he spoke of Gord
the Rogue and The Lost City of Gaxmoor, but the subject dearest to
his heart in those days, as dear to him as Kings of England and Kings of
France is today, was what he called the Gygaxian Fantasy Series.
Side note for the beleaguered reader: I’m of
course paraphrasing here, as the conversation between myself and Gary happened
back in May of 2001, but as Othello says, “men are men, the best sometimes
forget.” I have a smattering of emails about the opening round of
negotiations (saved and printed by Mac Golden), but nothing beyond that from
the early days.
Once the full scope of the Gygaxian Series was
pitched it became obvious that what he intended was an open-ended series of
books, an encyclopedia of RPGs and world-building. The first of the books was
written and had been burning a hole in his noddle plate for some time. He
described The Canting Crew as a “generic book from start to finish”
which stood out as a book for the underworld. Long before Gangs of New York
was playing on the big screen, Gary had created a sourcebook of such scholarly
material that it was as close to a history book of thieves and the underworld’s
classless society in the 1600s than it was a fantasy sourcebook. From there he
wanted to publish even more, pitching titles like World Builder, another
he had written called Living Fantasy and World Builder, as well
as a Nations and Fortress book.
In the end, after several days of back and forth in legal wrangling in which
Gary insisted on TLG paying him less than offered, saying “generous as
that is Steve, such a royalty will bankrupt you,” we settled and signed a
contract for an open-ended series called Gygaxian Fantasy Worlds.
Side note for the beleaguered reader: The Gygaxian
Fantasy Worlds led to one of the few arguments between Gary and myself. I
thought the name too cumbersome; no one would remember it or be able to say it.
We were coming off of a hard sales lesson in which we learned that Malady of
Kings outsold Dzeebagd almost 3-1 (or 4-1 I can’t recall now and
have little interest in going to look up those ancient reports) because
retailers couldn’t pronounce the title of Dzeebagd, so they ordered Malady. But
Gary, calmly explained it was a must to have his name in there, and the
derivation would work perfectly. He was, as I told him later and happily admit
now, right.
We eventually published seven books for the Gygaxian
Fantasy Worlds, three more were in the works when our adventure with Gary
abruptly ended in 2008. But now, that time has slipped past, and the books
returned to the Dens, we get to reinvent them and bring them back. This series
of World Building books should never have left the shelves now returns. This
March they come to Kickstarter.
The Gygaxian Fantasy Worlds is an open-ended series of
world-building, game, and character design encyclopedias that eventually
included seven published books. There were more in the works, three nearing
completion and more in the concept phase when the license was pulled, but Gary
saw no end to the series. Troll Lord Games began publishing them in 2001 and
continued until shortly after Gary crossed the bar. The books were published in
the order they were received and Gary had no particular order in mind. The
published books, the ones that will people the Kickstarter this March, were as
follows:
· The Canting Crew
·
World Builder
·
Living Fantasy
·
The Extraordinary Book of Names
·
Insidae An Adventure Builder
·
Nation Builder
·
Cosmos Builder
But what are they? What fills these esoteric tomes of
knowledge? In the following posts we’ll take a slightly closer look at each of
these amazing books.
1 comment:
This is great news! Glad I jumped on the KS fast.
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