
Myths and Legends

My imagination loves to run wild through the fields of
fantasy. As far as I can remember, the first movie I saw was Walt
Disney's Peter Pan (when it first came out, and I was six years old).

I saw this little boy flying around
in the air, accompanied by a beautiful fairy (modeled on Marilyn
Monroe), fighting pure evil (Captain Hook) and play-fighting
Indians, flirting with unclad mermaids in a tropical lagoon, rescuing
girls on Skull Rock, and living in a secret place underground
which was accessed through a hollow tree and a tunnel that went
under water (so you could look up into the water). Ever since then, I have wanted to be a Peter Pan and
to never grow up out of such a wonderful world.


My imagination was deflected for a while. Walt Disney's Davy
Crocket (and his coon-skin cap) did it. The frontier captured the
imagination of me and of everyone else. All of my heroes were
cowboys. When I wasn't playing cowboy, I was watching cowboy
shows on TV. There was Matt Dillon on Gunsmoke, Paladin
on Have Gun Will Travel, Bret (and Bart) Maverick, Wild
Bill Hickock (with Jingles), Wyatt Earp, Bat Masterson, Yancy
Derringer, the Rifleman, the Rebel, Zorro, the Cartwrights of Bonanza,
and others in the evenings, and then Saturday was filled with Roy
Rogers, Hopalong Cassidy, the Lone Ranger and old cowboy movies.
These were all true heroes, good through and through. But that ended when the anti-hero
arrived. He was 'the man with no name' in A Fistful of
Dollars, A Few Dollars More, and The Good, the
Bad, and the Ugly. Another anti-hero who caught my
imagination (I read all the books by Ian Fleming) was James Bond
as played by Sean Connery. I did not go the next step into the
policeman genre (though I did like Rockford Files, and Humphrey
Bogart detective movies).
Even during the cowboy years, fantasy kept its grip on me.
Every year Mary Martin played Peter Pan on TV, and I watched it. Twilight Zone presented odd and wonderful stories every Saturday
night. And I, like many others, watched the Wizard of Oz every
Spring when it came on TV, and had my taste for fantasy satisfied
for a short time at least.

What finally captured me completely for fantasy were the
writings of J.R.R. Tolkien. C.S. Lewis (my spiritual father)
recommended him, and I read him. As is true of many others, my
imagination was stimulated and inspired greatly by The Hobbit
and The Lord of the Rings. The majestic Gandalf, the
friendly hobbits, the great and strange and hard struggle against
terrible evil were all enchanting. Here is Gandalf sacrificing
himself in the battle with the balrog deep under the mountains.

I learned that behind Tolkien's dreams lay the Norse and
Celtic myths, and he even used many names from those myths
(Gandalf is one of the names of Odin). I began a tremendous
research into the Norse myths, and finally wrote an epic poem on
the Norse gods. Here's a picture of Thor with his
hammer, Mjolnir, and behind him his eternal enemy, Jormungandr,
the Midgard Serpent who lies in the ocean ring and circles the
flat world of men called Middle Earth (Midgard). .

Since Tolkien, I have enjoyed reading fantasy (not science fiction), and have read
many fine authors. L. Sprague De Camp is one of favorites, and
Fritz Lieber, and Robert E. Howard, as well as others.
Naturally,
anyone interested in fantasy must get into the legends of King
Arthur, so I did. I researched the legends, reading Malory, of
course, and the Mabinogian, and the Grail Cycle, and other odds
and ends. I wrote a book of those stories. It was
so much fun that I went on to the Robin Hood legends, and wrote a
book of those stories based largely on the original ballads.

One Halloween, I decided to write a book on the hunting
of a vampire. I had wanted to do something like it for a long time
(thinking about it in comic book form, because I like to draw). The vampire is such an amazing symbol of decadence
(the undead, blood-sucking, sexually repressed images). So I
wrote the book between Halloween and New Years.

After I had seen an episode of the Hercules TV show, I got interested in
doing Hercules--or more properly, Herakles, as in the Greek originals. So
I read lots about the mighty hero (mostly by Robert Graves). There is a
lot more to him than the kiddy shows tell. He was part of the voyage of
Jason and the Argonauts. I decided also to have him meet Samson, who also
lived in the same time period.

Then I became very interested in
Sindbad the sailor, and read the Arabian Nights by Burton (the best
version). I wrote the first four chapters / adventures, but then more or
less faded on it. That's the first time that's happened, but I am sure I
will get back to the book someday.
Instead, what I got interested in was
the ancient Mesopotamian hero, Gilgamesh, of all things. At first, I did
not much like the stories, except for the wondrous fact that he ventured far to
find and speak with Noah. Obviously, he had lived within a few centuries
after the Flood. For a very long time, I had been interested in writing a
fantasy that took place in the world before the Flood, and then ended with the
Tower of Babel. Soon, the story of the hero Gilgamesh combined with Babel,
and fascinating things came out of my pen. I have not really polished any
of my other stories, but I did polish the story of Gilgamesh.
I have written quite a number of
poems, and have put the best into a book. I like vivid images. I like the poetry of
T.S.Elliot, and the musical poems of Bob Dylan.

My books will probably never be
published, to be honest. They are too
Christian for secular publishers and they contain too much sex
and violence for Christian publishers. As usual, I do not fit
in any popular slot.
[All of the pictures on this page (except for the Arthurian
one, the beginning postcard, and the poster of Peter Pan) are by Greg Hildebrandt;
with the Lord
of the Rings one being by Greg with his brother Tim. The music is from
Enya, my very favorite musical artist.]