MythAdventures

MythAdventures

Contents

MythAdventures or Myth Adventures is a fantasy series by Robert Lynn Asprin and Jody Lynn Nye. After twelve novels by Asprin, published 1978 to 2002, he and Nye continued the series with seven more books. After his death in May 2008,[1] she intended to complete their plans.[2]

The Myth Adventures are noted for and popular for their whimsical nature, myriad characters, and liberal use of puns. After the first book, every title turns on the similarity between the word "myth" and the prefix "mis-" or the word "miss". The inaugural title Another Fine Myth puns on the phrase "another fine mess". Chapters are usually headed by made-up quotes by famous or semi-famous persons.[3]

Indeed, the first book was advertised under that title, Another Fine Mess, from Oliver Hardy's often-used catchphrase directed towards his film comedy partner Stan Laurel, supposedly "This is another fine mess you've gotten me into." (The actual catchphrase referred to "another nice mess".) After it was too late to change the catalog, Asprin decided that using "Myth" would be much better if the book would become a series. They changed the title and claimed a typo in the catalog.[4]

According to Asprin, the original inspiration for the Myth Adventures was the "Road to..." comedy movie series, which stars Bing Crosby and Bob Hope as wandering con-artists/adventurers.[4]

Characters

The stories mostly revolve around the adventures of a few central characters:

  • Skeeve, a youngish journeyman magician from the backwater dimension of Klah.
  • Aahz, a green, scaly "demon" (short for "dimension traveler") from the dimension of Perv, a world known for its foul-tempered reptilian humanoid inhabitants . Aahz (short for Aahzmandius) takes Skeeve on as his apprentice, despite having lost his powers through a prank pulled by Skeeve's now-deceased mentor, Garkin, at the beginning of the first novel. Later on, he and Skeeve dissolve their mentor/apprentice relationship and become partners in a magician-for-hire enterprise called M.Y.T.H. Inc.
  • Gleep, Skeeve's excitable pet, a baby dragon with a one-word eponymous vocabulary ("Gleep!") that belies his incredible intellect.
  • Massha, a woman of truly monumental girth with bright orange hair and a gaudy fashion sense; she begins the series as "only" an expert user of magical weapons and tools, but eventually apprentices herself to Skeeve.
  • Guido and Nunzio, a pair of hulking and highly capable bodyguards attached to Skeeve as a favor from the interdimensional Mafia's light-in-the-loafers Fairy Godfather, Don Bruce. Nunzio seldom talks, while Guido speaks in a Runyonesque dialect, which is explained as being an aftereffect of having been in a production of Guys and Dolls. Both are much more intelligent than their stereotype suggests.
  • Chumley, an enormous but quite gentle and erudite Troll whose professional persona is a monosyllabic muscle-for-hire called Big Crunch.
  • Tananda, a.k.a. Tanda, a professional assassin and Chumley's nymphish Trollop sister.
  • Bunny, Don Bruce's beautiful niece and Skeeve's assigned moll; she is an accomplished and intelligent accountant and is in love with Skeeve (though he does not know it).

The Phil Foglio comics based on the books also involve The Winslow: A small fuzzy alligator which happens to be utterly indestructible and presumably immortal, and figures prominently one way or another into fully three-fourths of the galaxy's known religions.

Known dimensions

  • Klah: Backwater dimension from which Skeeve hails. General populace (Klahds) are afraid of demons and magik. Kingdom of Possiltum and Twixt are the only places worth mentioning.
  • Deva: Merchant capital of the dimensions. Inhabited by the Deveels, traders supreme. As Aahz puts it, "if you think you've gotten a good deal from a Deveel, first count your fingers, then your limbs, then your relatives". The Bazaar on Deva is the only place of interest, a dimension-wide round-the-clock flea market which sells every conceivable magikal device and artifact.
  • Perv: High-tech dimension where Magik and technology are equal. Pervish cooking is one of the worst smells in all the dimensions (besides Gleep's breath). Pervects are short-tempered and disquieting rumors circulate about them, which Pervects encourage so that people do not visit. Do not ever call them "Perverts".
  • Limbo: Dark dimension filled with vampires and were-things, such as werewolves, werebears, weresnakes, and weretigers[5]. Chief city is Blut, notable people are Vilhelm the Dispatcher, and Drahcir and Idnew: the Woof Writers, a husband and wife team of werewolves (homages to Wendi and Richard Pini). The low amount of force-lines limit magik here, and offworlders are viewed as terrifying monsters by the older vampires. Skeeve's house in the Bazaar has a back door which opens into Limbo.
  • Jahk: Humanoid dimension where the average inhabitants are either short and obese or extremely thin. Every year, the Big Game is played to determine whether Veygus or Ta-Hoe is the capital of the dimension. Players are practically another species, extremely muscled and large. The winner of the Big Game used to claim the Trophy, but the hideous thing is now in the possession of Aahz, after the Skeeve-founded team "The Demons" won it in a three-way brawl. Following their victory and subsequent confiscation of the Trophy (and with it Jahk's method of selecting their capital) a Common Council was put together to rule the dimension.
  • Avis: Dimension full of sentient birds. No areas of interest. Do not visit Avis unless you can fly and you like foods of the crawly variety.
  • Gastropo: A dimension full of snail-like inhabitants. The preferred mode of transport is walking, although that takes hours just to move a block. Unadvisable to visit. As Tananda would put it, they have no cargo but plenty of es-cargo(t).
  • Arcadia: A pleasant dimension "controlled" by a hard-working philanthropist named Hoos.
  • Kow-Tow: An extremely remote dimension that superficially resembles the American "Wild West", but is actually a breeding ground for humans so that the vampire cows can suck their blood. Contains a huge nexus of magic force-lines.
  • Scamaroni: A dimension with a smell-oriented race that has a reputation for being made up of suckers.
  • Kobol: A dimension of technology enthusiasts.
  • Ronko: A dimension filled with televisions and advertising.
  • Wuh: Rural dimension that is home to cowardly, sheep-like shopaholics called Wuhses.
  • Sear: A bleak desert dimension inhabited by tiny soil-dwelling critters.
  • Ori: A dimension whose inhabitants resemble house cats.
  • Walt: The natives look a bit like a mix between storks and ostriches, and are famous for their dancing prowess.
  • Febrile: Coolest Temperature is over one hundred and twenty.
  • Molder: A dark, damp place where everything always seems to be changing. Even the ground seems to grow and move under your feet.
  • Etc: One long, straight road with identical buildings on both sides. Inhabited by creatures that look and dress identical. Gray suits, gray hair, gray face, two arms. All move at the same identical time and in the same direction.
  • Bumppp: Wide meadow filled with thick plants and orange flowers. blue sky and pink mountains. Inhabited by large snake creatures that appear to be hostile.


Dimensions that have been mentioned but not explicitly depicted:

  • Imper: Not much is known about Imper except that it is close to Deva and the Imps were wiped out financially by the Deveels. The Imps have since tried to mimic the Deveels (whom they physically resemble) with only marginal success. The kindest thing anyone has said about Imps is that they are snappy dressers.
  • Trollia: Chumley and Tanda's home dimension. The males are Trolls, and the females are Trollops.
  • Rinasp: A dimension that suffered a ghastly fate when Tanda was hired to go there on a collection job.
  • Archiah: The dimension that "invented archery".
  • Zoorik: Home of the Gnomes, who are implied to be financial wizards.
  • Ratislava: Whose inhabitants created an extremely powerful magical device that was then stolen and taken off-dimension.
  • Mantico: Home of the formidable Manticore race.
  • Djinger: Home and base of operations for the Djinns. The Djinns, like the Imps, were hit hard by the cut-throat tactics of the Deveels, so they started providing emigrant magickal labor in bottles and lamps. Males are Djinns, females are Djeanies.[6]
  • Trofi: A dimension that has no businessmen, instead, everything is won in contests. It is also the dimension known for matchmaking. Many dimension travelers want a Trofi wife.

Books

The "first" Myth Adventures series was written by Asprin alone for the now-defunct publishing house The Donning Company under their Starblaze Graphics imprint (with the last two published by Meisha Merlin, who picked up the contract from Donning). All twelve are collected in Robert Asprin's Myth Adventures Volume 1 and Volume 2 (Meisha Merlin, 2006/2007).[7]

The "new" Myth Adventures series was co-authored with Jody Lynn Nye. As of 2010 it includes one collection and six novels.

  • Myth-Told Tales (2003)
  • Myth Alliances (2003)
  • Myth-Taken Identity (2004)
  • Class Dis-Mythed (2005)
  • Myth-Gotten Gains (2006)
  • Myth-Chief (2008)
  • Myth-Fortunes (2008)

After Myth-Gotten Gains, Meisha Merlin went out of business and publication of hardcover/trade editions changed hands again, this time to Wildside Press.[2] Robert Asprin died in May 2008, but Nye intended that year to write the books which she and Asprin had planned ("We had big plans").[2] According to the series website, the publisher of mass market editions Ace Books has commissioned two.[8]

In 2010, Baen Books published a collection of Asprin's short myth-stories under the title Myth-Interpretations. ISBN 1-4391-3390-5

Illustrated novels

The first novel was adapted into an 12-part WaRP Graphics comic book series in the mid-1980s. Illustrated and heavily rewritten by Phil Foglio, the series was later collected into two full-color graphic novels published by Starblaze Graphics, and in 2007 Airship Entertainment (the Foglios' publishing concern) reprinted the material in a single volume. Four more issues followed, featuring an original story by Asprin and artist Jim Valentino which attempts to bridge the action between the first and second novels in the series. (Apple Comics took over the second series halfway through.) In 2010, Airship Entertainment began re-releasing the story as a web comic. [1]

The second novel was later adapted into another eight-part comic series by Ken and Beth Mitchroney and published by Apple from 1987 through 1989. Neither of these two later series enjoyed a graphic novel collection.

Foglio has also done the cover art and accompanying illustrations for the first editions of most of the novels. Before he started the cover illustrations, Kelly Freas did the covers of the first editions of the earliest books of the series.

Film and theater

Short-lived rumors circulated in the 1980s that Wendy and Richard Pini, owners of WaRP Graphics, were considering turning their adaptation of Another Fine Myth into a feature-length movie after doing so with their own property, ElfQuest, though the latter has yet to even make it past concept to this day.

Myth Adventures is the name of a 1997 play by Eric Coble, but it appears to be a retelling of some ancient Greek myths, and has nothing to do with Mr. Asprin's work.

The Board Game

A board game called "Myth Fortunes" was developed by Mayfair Games. [2]

Featuring more of Foglio's artwork, the game assigns each player an identity from the series, which they attempt to keep hidden from the other players as they work their way around the board. It includes a "subgame" which offers the opportunity to play the infinitely complicated card game "Dragon Poker", from the series entry Little Myth Marker.

Designers included: Micki Niebling, John Danovich, Matt Forbeck and Bryan Winter.

References

  1. ^ Robert Asprin at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database. Retrieved 2011-07-29.
  2. ^ a b c Frequently Asked Questions (2008 inferred). by Jody Lynn Nye. Confirmed 2011-07-29.
  3. ^ Asprin, Robert (1978). Another Fine Myth. 
  4. ^ a b Author's Introduction from "M.Y.T.H. INC. LINK" by Robert Asprin. (unconfirmed)
  5. ^ Robert Asprin (1995). Sweet Myth-tery of Life. Ace. p. 100. ISBN 0441001947. 
  6. ^ Robert Asprin (1995). Sweet Myth-tery of Life. Ace. p. 158. ISBN 0441001947. 
  7. ^ MythAdventures publication history at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database. Retrieved 2011-07-29.
  8. ^ News (no date). Myth Adventures.net. Retrieved 2011-07-29.

External links


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