Karavansara

East of Constantinople, West of Shanghai


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One hundred and fifty for Kipling

English: Kipling the British writer

English: Kipling the British writer (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I’ve been made aware – thanks to my friend’s Claire blog – of the fact that 2015 will be the Rudyard Kipling anniversary, one hundred and fifty years since his birth1.

Now Kipling is not so hot in Italy right now – I heard him recently labeled “an expression of British colonialism” and apparently the general belief hereabout is that by reading Kipling one will instantly feel the need to hunt for tigers, practice pig-sticking and kill the occasional Zulu warrior or Pathan at large. The lot, while riding on the back of an elephant2.

I’m probably weird myself, but the first stories that come to my mind thinking of Rudyard Kipling are Continue reading


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Yellow Peril

Time to start going through the pile of books – and the virtual pile of ebooks – I received as Christmas presents.

5103HNt1jfL._SY344_BO1,204,203,200_Despite my previously-vented decision to steer clear of Chinese-set stories for a while, I’m currently reading Robert J. Pearsall’s The Complete Adventures of Hazard & Partridge, a huge collection of stories that originally appeared in Adventure magazine in the ’20s.

The general setup is reminiscent of Sax Rhomer’s Fu Manchu but, as the great introductory essay by Nathan Vernon Madison points out, Pearsall was, unlike Rohmer, writing from a first-hand experience of China and the East.
The author had served overseas in the 1910s and his knowledge of China and the East makes his stories more vivid and “solid” than the Rohmer books.

As the two titular characters fight against Koshinga, a sinister Chinese mastermind hell-bent on world domination, the reader gets a nice serving of local color and historical detail.
In this sense, the Hazard & Partridge stories are a sort of “historical fiction” – because the author is well aware of real events in the past of China, and can tie them to the fictional events he’s describing.
And yet, these remain high adventure stories.
The best of both worlds, so to speak.

The stories are well-paced and fun, and the characters original enough to keep the sense of deja-vu at bay. Politically correct, they are not – but one does not read a 100-years-old adventure fiction looking for 21st century sensibilities.
I’m currently one-third through this 500+ pages colossus from Altus Press, and already I think I’d recommend it to fans of pulp stories and Oriental mysteries and adventures.


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Big Game, Short Stories

Growing old1, I find myself increasingly interested in short fiction, both as a reader and a writer.
Maybe it comes from the realization that time is running out, who knows.
Or maybe it’s because, having appreciated the challenges of writing short stories, one comes to enjoy much more the short stories out there.

w505430One of the gifts I made myself for having finished my novel was Alex Bledsoe‘s two-story ebook, Next-to-Last of the Tiger Men & Mack’s Rhino.
I read both the stories two nights ago, and I am awed by the author’s skill and sensibility.

Both Next-to-Last of the Tiger Men and Mack’s Rhino are big game hunting stories.
Is there anything more classic than hunting stories?
Hemingway and all that.
And yet, these are also stories about hauntings – very different hauntings.
Not scary, but… deep.

Both stories feature Tennessee-born professional hunters Linda Fontana and T.S. Bunch, and in the characterization of these two, and their relationship, Alex Bledsoe’s skill shines as much as it does shine in his ability to summon a whole world, a whole set of sensations, in a very short narrative space.

I’ll have to re-read this ebook again, and again – and try to learn as much as I can.


  1. Like George Carlin used to say, I’m not growing older, I have to face the fact that I’m growing old


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Wicked Women of the Raj

bf59a97080c1496fa4dd239205f58419I’ve just finished Coralie Younger’s Wicked Women of the Raj, and it was a fun, informative and inspiring read.

Younger’s essay is basically a catalog of the western women that, in the 19th and early 20th century, married Indian princes, the fabled Rahjas of India.
Each “wicked woman” gets her own chapter, maybe one photograph, and a collection of facts detailing her biography, and her “scandalous” choice. Continue reading


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Bhowani Junction

As a long time Ava Gardner fan I was familiar with Bhowani Junction, the 1956 movie.

A big melodrama featuring Stewart Granger as a gallant British officer in India in the last days of the Raj, the movie is a thick mix of politics, derring-do, racial issues and steamy romance. Good stuff.

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What I did not know was that the movie 1 was based on a very popular novel by John Masters, published in 1954 and part of a very loose cycle of stories set in India between 19th and 20th century. Continue reading


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Beyond Thirty

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Beyond was the great unknown. Even the geographies of my boyhood showed nothing beyond. We were taught of nothing beyond. Speculation was discouraged. For two hundred years the Eastern Hemisphere had been wiped from the maps and histories of Pan-America. Its mention in fiction, even, was forbidden.

Edgar Rice BurroughsThe Lost Continent, originally published as Beyond Thirty in 1916 (but written the previous year), is a slim adventure novel that I read a few years back, and is not one of the most famous of ERB’s creations. Continue reading


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Return to Zanthodon

ZNTHDNVVJN1980In May 2013 I did a post on Lin Carter’s Zanthodon novels, which I discovered when I was in high-school, back when the dinosaurs ruled the earth.

Last month, Wildside Press reprinted the five Zanthodon novels as a single, massive ebook that goes for about one buck, aptly called The Zanthodon MEGAPACK TM: The Complete 5-Book Series.

And yes, I bought a copy.
My DAW Books original paperbacks are stashed somewhere in a box, and the one-volume collection on my kindle reader is a nice, cheap replacement. Continue reading