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About ogresan

Richard Parks' stories have have appeared in Asimov's SF, Realms of Fantasy, Fantasy Magazine, Weird Tales, and numerous anthologies, including several Year's Bests. His first story collection, THE OGRE'S WIFE, was a finalist for the World Fantasy Award. He is the author of the Yamada Monogatari series from Prime Books.

Homo Sum: Humani Nil a Me Alienum Puto

“I am human, and nothing human is strange(meaning: irrelevant) to me (puto = I consider).”

The quote’s been attributed to everyone from Martial to Maya Angelou, but Terentius probably said it first, in the context of a play where a character uses it as justification to butt in where he really doesn’t belong. So much for the clarity of context. Anything that survives in a proverbial form outside of its original context is no longer bound by it and takes on its own shades of interpretation. Today the proverb means just what it says: “I am human, and nothing human is alien to me.”

Anyone who writes books and stories set in cultures not their own (practically anyone who writes sf or fantasy) is eventually going to get this, and whether it’s from someone “well-meaning” or an internet troll, it amounts to the same thing: “How dare you?” As in: “How dare you write from a NA viewpoint or use NA mythology as a springboard because you’re not NA, or Japanese, or Chinese, or Thai, or Mayan, or Spanish, or Basque, or Masai…” That includes the legendary or mythological past and any syncretions and accretions thereunto. Sometimes they will grant that it’s okay for a Westerner to write about ancient Greece even though most of us 1) Are Not Greek and 2) Don’t know any more about the REAL ancient Greece than anyone else does.

It doesn’t matter who it comes from, it’s pure rubbish from start to finish. We’re all human, which is one thing we all share and why we’re more alike than different even when we’re very different indeed. Which is absolutely not the same thing as saying “people are all alike.” They are most emphatically not all alike. Anyone who’s done even basic reading for historical and cultural context can figure that out, and if that doesn’t work then all they have to do is take a good look around. If that simple fact still doesn’t sink in, then they need to take up a different avocation. Continue reading

Stories So Nice, We Published Them Twice! (Or More)

I’ve had recent news of a couple of reprint sales, so I thought I’d pass those along. “The Ghost of Shinoda Forest” will be reprinted in Best of Beneath Ceaseless Skies, Year 3. Should be out in a few months. Also, “Sanji’s Demon,” likewise first published in BCS, is going to be reprinted in The Mammoth Book of Angels and Demons (edited By Paula Guran. Sanji comes down on the demon side) in the UK, probably sometime next year. I’ll give out some firm dates once I have any.

I like reprints. It’s like being published the first time, only without having to write the story again. It also gives readers who missed the story the first time another chance to find it, so it’s all good.

While I’m here I probably should mention that The Heavenly Fox, which I believed out of print at the beginning of the month, is apprently back in print, or at least for a little while. Amazon had four at the original price this morning…though now they only have one. Regardless, the publisher found a few more somewhere. No idea how many or how long these will last.

Yamada Monogatari: Demon Hunter

Now that everything’s more or less settled, I’m officially announcing—very loudly, in fact—that my fourth print collection will be a compilation of the Lord Yamada series, Yamada Monogatari: Demon Hunter, and is scheduled to be published by Prime Books in February. That’s not too far away. I’ll try to put up a cover image once that’s been sorted, but in the meantime here’s a list of the planned contents along with a reference to the story’s original appearance, if any:

 “Fox Tails”                                Realms of Fantasy, June © 2005

“Moon Viewing at Shijo Bridge” Realms of Fantasy, April © 2006

“A Touch of Hell”                     Realms of Fantasy, April © 2007

“Hot Water”                              Realms of Fantasy, December © 2007

“The River of Three Crossings”          Realms of Fantasy, February © 2009

“The Bride Doll”                       © 2013 Richard Parks. First Publication

“The Mansion of Bones”          Beneath Ceaseless Skies #19, © 2009

“Sanji’s Demon”                       Beneath Ceaseless Skies #38-39, © 2010

“Lady of the Ghost Willow”      Beneath Ceaseless Skies #53, © 2010

“The Ghost of Shinoda Forest” Beneath Ceaseless Skies #63, © 2011

This material covers the first story arc of Yamada’s career. I’m not done with him yet, but there is a progression and resolution to these stories. What isn’t here will be in the Yamada novel, To Break the Demon Gate, from PS Publishing, also scheduled for February. Next winter promises to be a fairly busy time.

Wedding Bell Totally Non-Blues

My wife and I spent a good deal of the weekend helping a friend’s adopted son get married. It was a rather-old fashioned sort of wedding—the groom’s family and friends handled most of the food, set-up, and decorating. Another friend baked the cake, and yet another volunteered her lovely home and yard for the actual ceremony. The groom, best man, and I along with the groom’s mother and friends set up two pavilions on Saturday in case it rained, which was a good idea because it actually did rain on Sunday, the day of the ceremony. I will say in the weather’s defense that it cleared up long enough for the lovely wedding itself, then started to really come down afterwards, which was fine since by then we’d gone inside for the reception.

 

The wedding, as I said, was rather old-fashioned in that it was put on for the most part without professional help. Even the wedding singer was a friend of the family. In another way it was completely modern, or at least 20th century. The groom was multi-racial, the bride was a white girl with deep country roots. Bear in mind that this is Mississippi. I love my state, but there was a time in my living memory when merely attempting a wedding of this sort would get a cross burned on your lawn, or worse. So what happened when the neighbors of the friend who had donated her house for the ceremony found out what was going on?

 

They turned out to help.

 

Despite so many people and politicians working so hard to prevent it, sometimes things really can get better. I do try to keep that in mind, but it’s so much easier with a little reminder now and then.

Letting the Dark Side Out to Play

In the words of the immortal George Carlin, “Sometimes I have Evil Thoughts.”

It’s the Dark Side, and it’s been called that long before George Lucas. Nothing to be ashamed of; we all have one. You think Ghandi, on a bad day, didn’t think about forgetting all that non-violence long enough to kick some colonialist butt? Doubt that and you’re kidding yourself. That’s what we do, day in and out. We kid ourselves that we’re not like that. Those other people (pick a target: Democrats, Republicans, Junior Leaguers, NRA, Liberals, Conservatives, Congress), they’re like that. Not me, boy.
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