Popular Posts

Wednesday, July 7, 2021

'A Storyteller, Not A Prophet'

“I get up at an unholy hour in the morning my work day is completed by the time the sun rises. I have a slightly bad back which has made an enormous contribution to American literature.”  David Eddings


Eddings made that statement shortly before his death in 2009.  The writing about which he spoke is an amazing output of epic fantasy series’ created in partnership with his wife Leigh.  Born on this date in 1931, Eddings grew up in the Puget Sound area, and the idyllic and rugged region became the setting for some of his stories, including his first novel High Hunt, the story of four young men hunting deer. Like many of his later novels, it explores themes of manhood and coming of age.                             
He had only moderate success with those works, but when he moved to fantasy he quickly made his mark.  Eddings' call to the world of fantasy came from a doodled map he drew one morning before work. This doodle later became the geographical basis for a fictional world called Aloria.

A chess player, too, Eddings took the suggestion of his wife to incorporate elements of chess into his books and combine them with the new world he imagined.  He and Leigh wrote 5 best-selling series, starting in 1982.  Their last, “The Dreamers,” had characters who could use the powers of their dreams to foresee visions of the future.  While many seemed prophetic, David pooh-poohed those who held him up as a visionary.

“I'm a storyteller, not a prophet,” he once said with a laugh.  “I'm just interested in telling a good story.”
 
 

Share A Writer’s Moment with friends

Writersmoment.blogspot.com/

No comments:

Post a Comment