[This is the first post in a new series. Like all my series, it is not necessarily contiguou
[This series is about my discovery of and (occasionally stormy) love affair with D&D. You may wish to think of it as an alternative to 23andMe, since D&D is embedded far deeper in my DNA than any silly “chromosomes.” Or think of it as a complement to my series on the Other Blog “Perl and Me.” This will probably be a bit shorter than most of my series. Probably.]
I’ve had an on-again-off-again relationship with Dungeons & Dragons
Because I never met a tangent I didn’t like, I have to start with the pre-D&D stuff. There were lots of interests that came before I even heard about D&D, and lots of intersecting interests and interests that grew out of it. Any story about a thing is always about more than just that thing. For me, as a very young child, the two most important pieces were no doubt fantasy and horror. And for that we need to talk about books.
I was an only child for the first 11 years of my life, and, while I loved games, I rarely had anyone to play with. I didn’t make friends very easily, and I was a very short kid, and quite sensitive about it. So I spent a lot of time by myself, and most of that time I spent reading books. In my house, movies were awesome, and we went to see quite a few, and television was awesome, and we watched quite a lot of it, and music was intensely importan
Probably around the same time, I started getting into comics. However, I always had a very weird approach to buying comic books: if the cover featured anyone even remotely recognizabl
It’s worth asking why I was only interested in the weird, unknown heroes, and I’m not entirely sure I have a good answer. But I have a theory. See, as a kid, I was a little OC
I always loved animals, so I started reading this set of wildlife encyclopedias we had lying around. But trying to come up with a list of all the animals in the world isn’t like coming up with a list of all the presidents: we don’t even know all the species of animals at any given tim
I fared no better trying to learn the countries of the world. Surely this was an area where one could come up with a clear list. And yet ... was Estonia a country? They had an embassy in the US, but the UN didn’t recognize them. What about the Bantustans of South Africa? The opinion of my brand-spanking-new World Book Encyclopedias was that two of them (Lesotho and Swaziland6) were countries, but the remainder (such as Bophuthatswana and Transkei) weren’t. Plus South Africa had two capital cities: how was that supposed to fit into my nice listing of countries and their capitals? And it continued to get worse: every year they would send us “year books” with updated and entirely new articles, and they actually came with little sheets of stickers you were supposed to stick in the margins of the main encyclopedias, alerting you to an updated section for this article or a whole new article between these other two articles. I very diligently applied all these stickers for many years, and I distincly remember when the update for 1979 came in and there was a whole new article for St. Vincent and the Grenadines, which was apparently an entirely new country ... one year, no country; next year: country. Mind. Blown.
Somehow I didn’t melt down and throw a tantrum when I discovered this. I just began to chase the lists even harder. I think I somehow (probably subconsciously) believed I could eventually find all the members and learn all the classification controversies and make my own decisions and then I
Surely even you, dear reade
My parents loved horror. They enjoyed fantasy, and sci-fi probably even more so, but horror was their true calling. I started reading Stephen King and Peter Straub and Dean R. Koontz7 at a very young age, and we would go see horror movies like crazy. I saw The Exorcist in the theater, at a time when I must have just barely turned 7, and The Legend of Hell House, and Jaws, and Burnt Offerings, and Prophecy, and Grizzly, and Day of the Animals, and It’s Alive (in roughly decreasing order of quality) ... all in the theater. At home on the small screen, we watched even more: I remember Twilight Zone reruns, and I remember Night Gallery, and most of all I remember Kolchak: The Night Stalker, in which a Chicago reporter for a tiny newspaper managed to encounter a different supernatural threat every single week. His editor (who was properly grumpy and talked primarily out of the side of his mouth, as all good Chicago news editors should) would yell at him about his “cockamamie stories”8 and how “ya got no proof!” The problem with a monster-of-the-week show that you’re supposed to be taking seriously, though, is that unless your protagonist is actually some sort of professional monster hunter (see also: Buffy), or perhaps even is one of the monsters themselves (see also: Dark Shadows9), it starts to strain credulity after a while. Of course, as a kid, that was not an issue for me. The bigger problem was that you eventually start to run out of monsters ... or at least out of monsters anyone’s ever heard of. Partially they solved this problem by occasionally making up monster
Because now, you see, I had a new list to make: a list of all possible monsters.
Next week, we’ll see how that pretty inexorably leads to my discovery of Dungeons and Dragons.
1 Most likely we’ll get into why it took me so lon
2 I can’t remember whether Thunderbird considered himself American or not, but at most 2 out of 8. Still nearly 90% male, of course, but it was still the seventies: “progressive” hadn’t yet progressed all that far.
3 My grandfather was stationed in Malaysia during WWII and taught her when she was little. It’s the only one of the four languages I can’t remember today, as it happens: I don’t remember much, but I do remember that the words for numbers were multisyllabic, and that always seemed really weird to me.
4 Honestly, there were similar problems with some of my other list
5 Nowadays, biologists have all but abandoned this amount of orderliness for a much more flexible system: clades. While it’s a much better system for trying to organize the multiplicity of life, which is by its nature chaotic, it would have been anathema to my OCD mind at that age. Luckily, while the book that would eventuallyt inspire cladistics had apparently already been written, it didn’t start to gain traction until I was out of college and could no longer be offended by its conceptually infinite branchings.
6 Note that modern-day Wikipedia tells us that these two countries were never Bantustans; perhaps my memory is faulty, but I don’t recall the World Book making this fine distinction.
7 A.k.a. the first 3 of what would ultimately become my pentagram of literary idols.
8 Note: not necessarily an actual quote. My memory does not really extend back that far, although I have rewatched a few episodes for nostalgia’s sake.
9 Which I also remember watching, at least a bit.