IN MEMORIAM: Johanna Louise Hardesty (1956-2022)

UPDATE

 I apologize for the fact that there is really nothing new to report. I'm still going over Jan's previous work, notes, outlines, etc. Her "notes" are often scenes she wrote down as they came to her. She didn't always indicate where in the saga a particular scene was intended to appear which leaves me to figure that out, a not always easy task. I have also had to deal with various events in my personal life which have taken my time and attention away from this work. And I must confess that I am still---and always will be---struggling to deal with her loss on not only the personal level, but in our writing and research.
    She was a major component of our historical research and a major project in that area had to be re-assessed with the result that as it now appears that completing the research and writing the planned book based on it is likely to not come to pass, I elected to post online some of what we have uncovered so far. I do hope to continue the research, but it will be on a much more limited basis as I cannot afford to travel as we once did. If you are curious about that historical work, feel free to drop by Spotted Cap's West and visit Charles E. Conrad and his times. Mr. Conrad was, among other achievements, the founder of Kalispell, Montana.
    My goal is to make some progress in continuing Volume 2 of The Lindensaga, The Last Giant: Retribution beginning in January, after the Holiday season is over. I'm stuck at chapter 7, but I am at least blessed with a full outline Jan left behind.
    Wish me luck!

Oh! and a MERRY CHRISTMAS to all of you.

-- Richard Hardesty, 20 Dec 2023 / updated 2/16/24

THE LINDENSAGA: AN OVERVIEW

The world of Linden was created by the High One, and the tales of its history constitute the Lindensaga. Within this world are several political entities, of which the two most important are the Kalyrian Empire and its successor nation, the Kingdom of Aridion.

Here is an overview of the series.

The Lindensaga series is comprised of several books, each of which has two or more volumes. Each book is centered on a main character and is set in its own time-frame within the greater Lindensaga and each stands on its own. The main sequence consists of three books as follows:

[1]  Book 1 - The Last Giant. This is the story of Menannon, the Giant who becomes the Grandmaster of the Harpers of Aridion. Menannon is a recurring character throughout the entire saga. While the main character in this book, he plays a role in the other books as well, for being a Giant, he has a long lifespan and is known in later centuries as The Ancient One..
        Vol. 1: Transgression (complete)
        Vol. 2:  Retribution (in progress)

[2]  Book 2 - The Gift of the High One. This tells the tale of Lindrahier, who in time becomes the High King of all the Teluri of Linden. The Teluri, an ancient race, are immortal, but not invulnerable. Lindrahier is a gifted mage and becomes, in time, a wise ruler, but his life was not an easy one and would have crushed a lesser man.
        Vol. 1:  Prince of the Teluri (complete)
        Vol. 2:  High King of the Teluri (in progress)

[3]  Book 3 -  The Harper of Rhindol Vale.  All that has gone before has but set the stage for this, the story of Siglin Lightbringer, a Teluri and ward of Menannon, but one whose life, fraught with pain and danger, is tied to a terrible fate that might well cost him his life.

        Vol. 1:  The Key of Tanguroth (complete)
        Vol. 2:  The Orb of Making (in progress)
        Vol. 3:  The White Tower  (started)
        Vol. 4;  The Frostrill Stair (started)

We had discussed the possibility of another seven volumes, but with Jans passing, I do not see that happening. 

This extension would have included a three-volume book about a new character, Seren Padafort, which we referred to as Serenssaga. We planned that it would be in three volumes (The Ghost and the Ring, Daylight and Darkness, and Forgesinger). One chapter of the first volume and a short story based on it exist, and I have a general idea of how the thing would develop, but that is all. 

This was to be followed by a third volume of The Last Giant, titled Absolution. Nothing of this book exists beyond some general concepts. 

The final book we were considering we called Scourge of the Black Sun and was to be in three volumes: Black Sun Rising, Black Sun Burning and Black Sun Extinguished: The Worlds Ending. Nothing of this exists outside of my mind. 

In all practicality, the first eight volumes listed above are all that are likely to ever get written, and, hopefully, published. It would take a miracle to see all fifteen volumes written, let alone published!

But even those remaining four won't see the light of day if I don't get off my rear end and write them. If you really want to see these books in print, let me know. It will help motivate me to finish what we started, oh, so many years ago.

--- Richard, for J. R. Hardesty
     ©2023 Richard L. Hardesty

BACK IN THE TRACES

 It's been over a year since the passing of the "J" in J R Hardesty, Jan having passed away on 2 April of '22, and I have had a hard time getting back to writing.
   She was the main creator of the Lindensaga and although we did a lot of brainstorming, she always wrote the first draft and then handed it to me for my input & editing. Writing that first draft did involve a lot of discussions between us, as she was always bouncing ideas off me, but she was the originator of things.
    Now that she is gone, I am faced with continuing on without her input, and that is no easy task. Fortunately, she left a lot of notes behind and they are proving invaluable. And her costume expertise is not readily replaced. I have the reference books she used back when she was getting her degree in theatre arts and I guess I'm going to have to educate myself!
    And, I have been re-reading the books we've already finished in order to get my brain back into the world of Linden as I was away from it for about a year, trying to adjust to life without my other half.
    The time has come, though, to get on with it and so I shall, however slowly at first. In re-reading the finished books, I am quite taken with what we have created and am determined to continue on. She put so much into the series that I owe it to her to see it finished.
    Oh, the writing is on hold for a bit as I refresh my mind and get re-acquainted with the world and the people of Linden.
    Wish me well!

---Richard, 6/9/23

Stumbling Through Fantasyland

Hands on hips, brows lowering, Emerson stood gazing fixedly at the recumbent ruminant. A sympathetic friend (if camels have such, which is doubtful) might have taken comfort in the fact that scarcely a ripple of agitated sand surrounded the place of its demise. Like the others in the caravan, of which it was the last, it had simply stopped, sunk to its knees, and passed on, peacefully and quietly. (Conditions, I might add, that are uncharacteristic of camels alive or moribund.)  — Elizabeth Peters. 

    You may well ask what this quote, the first paragraph Elizabeth Peters’ delightful book The Last Camel Died at Noon, has to do with fantasy, as she is a well-known mystery writer. 
    To answer that, we must first mention Allan Quartermain, and in so doing we find ourselves in the realm of Henry Rider Haggard, a writer of adventure tales, many set in Africa. Of the many books he wrote, he is most widely known for two: King Solomon’s Mines (1885), with Allan Quartermain and set in Africa and She, A History of Adventure (1887) with Horace Holly & Leo Vincey also set in Africa, both of which had fantasy elements in them. She is considered a foundational work of the fantasy genre and, I think, deservedly so. 
    Quartermain went on to star in many other African novels by Haggard, including his own encounter with Ayesha (She-who-must-be-obeyed) in She and Allan (1921). Mr. Holly has a further adventure with She in the sequel, Ayesha, the Return of She (1905), which is set in Tibet.
    These are lost world/lost race novels and King Solomon’s Mines is regarded as having started that particular genre and both are fun reading. As it happens, Elizabeth Peters shares with us an enthusiasm for H. Rider Haggard. Her novel, The Last Camel Died at Noon, one of her books about Amelia Peabody and her husband Radcliffe Emerson, is an entertaining tribute to Haggard’s books and involves—you guessed it—a lost race and city. Since her Peabody books are all set primarily in Egypt (Peabody & Emerson are Egyptologists), the lost race is tied to the civilization and culture of ancient Egypt as exemplified in the 25th Egyptian dynasty & its successor kingdoms of Napata and Meroë. We loved it and its sequel, Guardian of the Horizon, which takes place ten years later. Peters’ nods to Haggard don’t stop there, however. In her novel The Snake, the Crocodile and the Dog, a major character is one Leopold Vincey, who, as mentioned above, was one of the main characters in Haggard's novel She. I have no doubt there are other such tributes to Haggard scattered throughout her Peabody series.
    We strongly urge you to investigate not only Elizabeth Peters (particularly if you also like mysteries which most of her Peabody books are), but most especially H. Rider Haggard.
    Stumbling along off the beaten track, we find an interesting book which is only nominally fantasy, the adventure novel-with-a-spin, The Sunbird (1972) by Wilbur Smith. It’s a lost city tale of sorts. The first half of the book is set in modern times and details the trials and tribulations of the search for the lost city of Opet and involves a rich mining executive, his archaeologist friend and the archaeologist’s lovely assistant/girl friend who, not surprisingly, create a problem for themselves in that the rich guy steals the assistant away from the potboy (yeah, I know — bad cheap pun). The twist:  the second half of the book is set a couple of thousand years ago in the ancient city of Opet and concerns a strangely familiar cast of characters. Are they the previous lives of the book’s three-some? Or...?? It’s a bit violent, as Smith’s books tend to be, but it is a romp, certain. Give it a go and see for yourself.
    Tripping further along the periphery of Fantasyland, we stumble over some books by Arthur O. Friel. He made a six-month exploratory journey up the Orinoco River in Venezuela back in 1922 and used his knowledge of that area to write some fun adventure novels with fantasy elements thrown in for good measure: The Pathless Trail (1922), Tiger River (1923), King of No Man’s Land (1924) and Mountains of Mystery (1925). Of these, I have read only the first two and thoroughly enjoyed them. Jungle adventure, green men, lost races, man/ape hybrids...oh, yeah! They were reprinted in mass market paperback with cover art by Jeff Jones in 1972 by Centaur Press (a small paperback company established by Donald M. Grant and Charles M. Collins. see Wikipedia). All of Friel’s books can be found in the used market, with Pathless Trail and Tiger River being readily available at a decent price.
    Friel also wrote about his journey up the Orinoco in The River of Seven Stars (Harper, 1924), which is also fun reading. Unfortunately, this book is not so easily found. I was fortunate some years ago to find a copy in a local used book shop and still have it, although it suffered some water damage a couple of years ago. It is still readable, however. The book was never, to my knowledge, published in paperback and the used market has copies of the first (and only) edition priced at $75.00 and up. If you can find a copy, it would be worth the money, but unless you are bent on having a hardcover, a library would be your best bet for this title. WorldCat shows 70 copies in libraries in the U. S., copies in the National Library of Scotland, Trinity College Library of Dublin, Oxford, St. Pancras, Cambridge University and the University of Essex. Copies can also be found in Germany, France and Australia.
    Maintaining the lost race theme, I must direct your attention to The Bowl of Baal by Robert Ames Bennett. Bennett was a prolific writer of adventure stories and much of it was published in the old pulps in the mid-1900s. This particular story has an adventurous aviator blown off course in a sand storm in Arabia only to find himself in a lost land with two races at war with one another and a relic water dwelling critter which looks very much like a plesiosaur or something very similar. Not high literature, but a fun read nonetheless. 
    As you may guess, I am rather a fan of the lost world/race genre and have collected or read more than one, often rather obscure or forgotten in themselves. One such is J. Allen Dunn’s The Treasure of Atlantis. The book involves the discovery of a remnant population of Atlanteans located in the wilderness of Brazil, prompted by an orchid hunter's discovery which results in an expedition to the trackless Amazon basin.
    Originally published in 1916, the edition I have was published in hardcover by Grandon in 1971. Grandon was another early imprint of Donald M. Grant, who later went on to published many fantasy & SF books under his own name. The 1971 Grandon edition includes an introduction by noted Atlantis scholar Henry M. (Hank) Eisner. Grant and his partner Charles Collins had already reprinted this novel in 1970 as a paperback under the Centaur Press imprint as part of their Time Lost series, a series which I strongly recommend you track down and read.
    OK, we’ve stumbled along enough. I think next time I’ll discuss mysteries that have had an influence on us one way or another and some we just read for the love of a good story.

-- Richard for J. R. Hardesty
    ©2015, 2023 Richard L. Hardesty. All Rights Reserved.

[Revised & expanded from the version previously published on the old site 6 Dec 2015.]

WHAT I SAID PREVIOUSLY

Previously, on the old site, I gave a quick summary of what to expect in vol. 2 of The Lindensaga:

Volume 2 of the Last Giant (Retribution) is still in the works, unfortunately. Menannon gets put through the wringer, of course. He matures quite a bit, as you no doubt have surmised. We learn a great deal about him as he comes to know himself and the part the High One has set for him to play. This book will bring his story to a pause as it sets the stage for the next two books which take up the tale of the Teluri, Lindrahier and in which our Giant plays a major supporting rôle. Actually, he plays a part in most of the rest of the series which is why we are telling his story first. His story has another book yet to appear which will bring it to a close, but that is several volumes down the pike.

That hasn't changed. The third book in the series has been completed for some time, as has the fifth. The fourth is well underway, and I will turn my attention to that one after finishing volume 2, Retribution.

After all that, well, I don't have a crystal ball, but I hope to persuade an agent to take us on. There's more to self-publishing than meets the eye.

-- Richard for J. R. Hardesty

AND SO IT BEGINS ANEW

After many months, I have at last begun Chapter 7 of The Last Giant: Retribution (Book 2 of the Lindensaga). It has been a struggle. I have had to deal with many things, chief among them the loss of the other half of my being. That particular burden will always be with me, but I am learning to bear it. And the book beckons....

As we were working on another project as well, that one progresses also. It has been easier to continue, as on this one, Jan functioned as my research assistant while I did the writing. We were researching the life and times of one Charles Edward Conrad, the founder of Kalispell, Montana. The results of our research are being published in another blog, Spotted Caps West. The Blackfeet (Piikuni) called Charley Spotted Cap, and  I have so titled the blog.

I will be posting here as well, but not on a regular schedule.

Menannon is alive!

—Richard, for J. R. Hardesty



SAD NEWS IN LINDEN...AND MONTANA

Having been locked out of the original blog for reasons unknown, I have been forced to create a new one. Thus, this new--and not necessarily improved--blog. The old one remains up and active, I just cannot access it as owner, so can't make changes, update it, etc. A royal pain, I assure you, but at least newcomers to the Lindensaga blog can read what has gone before there. 

UNFORTUNATELY, the first actual post is a very sad one. My wife and I have been working together on the Lindensaga for many years, but now I must forge on alone. It is with a heavy heart that I tell you that my dear wife of 34 years, Johanna Louise, passed away unexpectedly on the 2nd of April of this year.

This leaves me to finish what we started those many years ago without her contribution, which was major, as she provided the rough draft which I then edited—often with major re-writes.

However, as we talked about the world of Linden, its peoples and its history constantly—you might say we lived there in our spare time—and as she left copious notes and outlines as well as completed chapters and partial books, I will be able to complete the series at least up to volume 8 which will be the last volume of Siglin's story. "Who's Siglin?", you ask. You haven't met him yet, and he won't show up until volume 5.

At present, I have finished editing the first six chapters of the second volume in the Lindensaga, The Last Giant: Retribution and will start on chapter 7 as soon as I can, but only after I have thoroughly reviewed her notes and outline.


But I will continue, so watch this space!