Page 6
Behind The Armour
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Ron Lyon, Frightknight's creator, talked to Wilf about how he developed his art.
Flights
of Fantasy I must have been about eight or so when I first discovered fantasy adventure. It was a big book of the Norse myths which I lugged home from the local library and read avidly through the weekend. That was quickly followed by the Greek and Egyption myths, then by the stories of the Round Table. I was thoroughly hooked by these old tales - which had been having the same effect on youngsters for thousands of years, after all. I don't think my English teachers were too pleased; from that moment on, whenever we had to write a story in class, mine were always fantasies. My introduction to modern "sword and sorcery" came a few years later, via Michael Moorcock's Martian series and Lin Carter's excellent stories of Thongor of Lemuria along with the books of Edhar Rice Buroughs who I suppose started the whole thing. In between all this I had been working my way towards reading Physics at Oxford. Just before going up to college, in 1976, role-playing exploded on to the scene. It grabbed me at once: the idea of inventing your own characters and developing them in ongoing storylines. So began an enthusiasm which continues to this day - and a very useful one it has been, too, since I often use the ideas from my role-playing games as the basis for books. The second Knightmare novella - the Labyrinths of Fear - actually started life that way, as an episode from an Arthurian role-playing game I was playing. My preferences in fantasy are for the writers who can evoke something primordial or eerie with their work, I recommend anything by Micheal Moorcock (but particularly his second cycle of novels, beginning with The Bull and The Spear). Tanith Lee, Lin Carter or Gene Wolfe. The old favourites are still worth a look too - Beowulf, Le Mort d'Arthur, Grettir's Saga, Gawain and the Green Knight and so on. But surely the greatest Fantasy Author of all must be Jack Vancee, whose constant inventiveness leaves me amazed and envious. I'm also something of a cinema buff, but I rarely enjoy fantasy films. With all my diverse interests I probable enjoy writing the Knightmare books most of all my work. Here I can meld the strands of role-playing, fantasy and high adventure. I do plenty of other stuff, of course - Mutant Turtles, Tiny Toons and whatnot, all great fun, but Knightmare comes closest to my true love of 'wizardry and wild romance'. |