The Riftwar Cycle

The Riftwar Cycle is the name given to the series of books authored or co-authored by Raymond E. Feist that revolve around the fantasy worlds of Midkemia and Kelewan.

The Riftwar Universe

The majority of Feist's works are part of The Riftwar Universe, and feature the worlds of Midkemia and Kelewan.[1] Human magicians and other creatures on the two planets are able to create rifts through dimensionless space that can connect planets in different solar systems. The novels and short stories of The Riftwar Universe record the adventures of various people on these worlds.

Midkemia was originally created as an alternative to the Dungeons and Dragons (D&D) role-playing game. When Feist studied at the University of California, San Diego, he and his friends created a new role-playing game based on their own original world of Midkemia. They called themselves the Thursday Nighters, because they played the Midkemia role-playing game every Thursday evening. After some time, when the group changed and began meeting on Fridays, they became known as the Friday Nighters. The original group have since formed a company called Midkemia Press, which has continued publishing campaigns set in that universe.[2]

Feist acknowledges that the Tekumel setting from M. A. R. Barker's Empire of the Petal Throne was the source for much of Kelewan. The original D&D campaign which he based his books on had an invasion of the Midkemia world by Tekumel. As a result, much of the background of Kelewan - the Tsurani Empire, the lack of metals and horses, the Cho'ja, the pantheons of 10 major and 10 minor gods - comes from Tekumel. Feist claims to have been unaware of this origin when he wrote Magician.[3][4]

Works

Several books of the Riftwar Cycle.

Most Riftwar novels' stories occur in chronological order following the publishing order, with a few exceptions. The Empire Trilogy starts during Magician and concludes after A Darkness at Sethanon. The Riftwar Legacy occurs between the Riftwar Saga and Krondor's Sons. The Legends of the Riftwar novels occur between Magician and Silverthorn.

Novels are grouped into their respective series, with series ordered by the publishing date of the first novel in the series.

The Riftwar Saga

  1. Magician (1982), later republished in two parts in the United States as Magician: Apprentice (1986) and Magician: Master (1986)
  2. Silverthorn (1985)
  3. A Darkness at Sethanon (1986)

The Empire Trilogy

  1. Daughter of the Empire (1987) with Janny Wurts
  2. Servant of the Empire (1990) with Janny Wurts
  3. Mistress of the Empire (1992) with Janny Wurts

Krondor's Sons

  1. Prince of the Blood (1989)
  2. The King's Buccaneer (1992)

The Serpentwar Saga

  1. Shadow of a Dark Queen (1994)
  2. Rise of a Merchant Prince (1995)
  3. Rage of a Demon King (1997)
  4. Shards of a Broken Crown (1998)

The Riftwar Legacy

  1. Krondor: The Betrayal (1998)
  2. Krondor: The Assassins (1999)
  3. Krondor: Tear of the Gods (2000)
  4. Jimmy and the Crawler (2013) - a novella replacing the cancelled novels Krondor: The Crawler and Krondor: The Dark Mage.

Legends of the Riftwar

  1. Honoured Enemy (2001) with William R. Forstchen
  2. Murder in LaMut (2002) with Joel Rosenberg
  3. Jimmy the Hand (2003) with S. M. Stirling

Conclave of Shadows

  1. Talon of the Silver Hawk (2002)
  2. King of Foxes (2003)
  3. Exile's Return (2004)

The Darkwar Saga

  1. Flight of the Nighthawks (2005)
  2. Into a Dark Realm (2006)
  3. Wrath of a Mad God (2008)

The Demonwar Saga

  1. Rides a Dread Legion (2009)
  2. At the Gates of Darkness (2010)

The Chaoswar Saga

  1. A Kingdom Besieged (2011)
  2. A Crown Imperiled (2012)
  3. Magician's End (2013)

Short stories

  • Profit and the Grey Assassin (1982) in Fantasy Book (Journal)
  • The Wood Boy (1998) in Legends
  • The Messenger (2003) in Legends II

Midkemia

Midkemia is a fictional world created by a fantasy role-playing group and popularized by Raymond E. Feist, and where most of his Riftwar books take place. Only the Empire Trilogy, which was co-written with Janny Wurts, takes place entirely on Kelewan, another world connected to Midkemia by magically created rifts in space.

Geography

Midkemia is very similar to Earth in climate, and its flora and fauna. It has three continents: Triagia, Novindus and Wiñet. It has two oceans, though there are various names for them depending on the continent or nation. The Endless Sea is west of Triagia and is east of Novindus where it is called the Blue Sea. The Sea of Tears is east of Triagia and west of Novindus where it is called the Green Sea.

Triagia

Triagia is the largest continent on Midkemia. Humans constitute the vast majority of the population of this continent, with other races contributing almost negligibly to the total. The extreme north is mostly sparsely inhabited wilderness with few enduring settlements. The continent surrounds, but does not completely enclose, two large seas, the Bitter Sea to the west and the Sea of Kingdoms to the east, which together form a moderately-sized isthmus in the middle of Triaga located about one-third of the length of the continent from south to north. The northern portion is heavily forested, but the south has few forests and is described in ways that would suggest a more equatorial latitude. The Jal-Pur desert is the most notable desert on the continent and occupies most of the central expanse of the southern landmass. The two largest nations on this continent are, from south to north, the Empire of Great Kesh and the Kingdom of the Isles.

The northern parts of Triagia seem to be based on European culture – for example, Bas-Tyra is based on France, and Rodez on Spain – while the south is based on Africa and the Middle East – for example, the women of the Jal-Pur desert in Kesh wear head coverings similar to the hijab worn by women in Islamic cultures.

The vast majority of Feist's work which feature Midkemia occur at least in part on Triagia, and most take place there in their entirety.

Novindus

Novindus is the second largest continent on Midkemia with a variety of landscapes. It is to the west of the Triagia across the Endless Sea and to the east across the Sea of Tears, and it is not immediately clear from the literature which is the closer distance, suggesting that it is probably close to halfway around the globe in either direction. Politically, it has a collection of largely independent city-states which are spread out across the continent but form no overarching political system.

It is first seen (called simply "The Southern Continent") in A Darkness at Sethanon where Pug and Tomas arrive there on a quest to the Halls of the Dead, to which there is an entrance from this continent (though living people usually do not venture there) and where the goddess Lims-Kragma judges the dead. Inhabitants mentioned are the sinister Pantathians (snake-men) who live in the continent's southern part and their sworn enemies the tiger-men – both races being creations of the ancient Valheru. There is also mention of both goblins and dwarves living on this continent.

The continent also featured highly in Feist's Serpent War saga, in which the continent was largely laid to waste.

Macros the Black owns at least one map of this continent, and when Pug inherits this chart it is the first mention of another continent on Midkemia. Before learning of this map, the Endless Sea was believed to be infinite. The first novel to describe the continent and have part of its story set there is The King's Buccaneer, in which the youngest Son of Prince Arutha travels there to rescue two young noblewomen who were captured during a raid on Crydee, on the west coast. Although few characters have any knowledge of the continent before actually going there, the gambler Nakor claims to have been there before, but did not know the continent's name.

This continent seems to be based on India, evident in its shape, name, customs and the fact that the tallest mountain in the world is on this continent.

Wiñet

The third continent on Midkemia. Sometime ages ago, part of the continent rose up some 600 feet creating an isolated plateau. In later books it is disclosed that the lower portion of the continent was settled by refugees from Triagia, during the purging of the Ishapian Temple of the Heretics of Al-maral. The upper portion (The Ethel-Duath) was populated by the Saaur lizard-men, a race of nomadic warriors also created by Alma-Lodaka but who were left on the world of Shila, rather than Midkemia, and who were brought to serve the Emerald Queen during the Serpentwar Saga. After the war was concluded, they were relocated by the magician Pug, who sought to remove them from the Kingdom without fighting.

Technology and magic

During the period in which Feist's current books are set, Midkemia is on a technological par with 14th to 15th century Europe, with a few anachronisms. For example, shipbuilding seems to be as advanced as 17th-century Europe, with three-masted square-riggers in evidence but no gunpowder or cannons, though naphtha and Quegan fire oil is known. Generally, the world seems to be in a mostly pre-industrial agrarian state.

Magic in Midkemia is practiced by very few people. To the eyes of any nonmagician, anything that a person can do that cannot be explained is labeled magical. In the more superstitious rural areas, magic-users are usually shunned, or worse, captured and killed. Duke Borric of Crydee, with his foresight, bequeathed an island to Pug to start an academy devoted to magical studies, where magicians can gather without fear of discrimination and prejudice.

With Pug's education on Kelewan, it is revealed that these Midkemian arts are considered the Lesser Path of Magic, and the Kelewan magic is the so-called Greater Path. The Lesser Arts were seen as rudimentary talents, more focused to the very nature of magic, while the Greater Arts were seen as having greater effectiveness and practicality such as teleportation, conjuring energy from nothing, and so on; it is later realised that this is a misconception brought about because there are very few Lesser Path magicians on Kelewan, and those that are have little power and training, and as a result the Lesser Path has not developed to the same level as the Greater, as it has on Midkemia (though there are few Greater Path magicians on Midkemia and it is not widely known of). Under extreme duress (being tortured on Kelewan), Pug discovered that he could use Lesser Path magic even though at the time his mind was more attuned to Greater Path magic, an unprecedented feat. The Paths are normally mutually exclusive – a Greater Path magician would not be able to invoke Lesser Path powers and skills.

There are several great magicians on Midkemia whose powers do not fit this dual-path model; Macros the Black, Pug conDoin (in his later years), Nakor the Isalani, Miranda, and Magnus, son of Pug and Miranda (and Robert De Lyse a student of Pug). Macros possessed abilities transcending the traditional Greater and Lesser Paths of magic; it is inconclusive whether this ability is a part of his gift upon becoming the agent for Sarig the "Lost" God of Magic (in truth it is Ban-ath, the God of thieves and gambler), or if Macros was simply born with the ability like Pug. Similarly, Macros's protégé Pug, his daughter Miranda, and his grandson Magnus also possessed the ability to invoke Lesser or Greater path powers at will. Nakor also wielded magic not confined to the classical definition of Lesser and Greater paths, though he insists upon the idea that "there is no magic", but merely "tricks" in manipulating some elemental forces of the world. As the books progress, Pug comes to the realisation that Nakor is correct, and the limits of magic are merely a result of a lack of understanding among magicians.

Clerics are also known to have their own forms of magic, which vary depending on the order they belong to.

Rifts

These are instantaneous links between two places, often on entirely different planets or levels of reality. The Riftwar Saga involved the rift between Midkemia and the world of the Tsurani. They can be created (with difficulty) by proficient users of the Greater Magic, but the Tsurani maintained one using a machine. They are sometimes created by accident and fluke. Most rifts are unstable, and so move about in space. The Tsurani's machine was one of the first known devices to stabilise a rift and to make it fixed in one position. Rifts, whilst a powerful device for travelling, are a risky device as they attract the attention of the Enemy, an evil being of immense power and the foe behind the events in the books Silverthorn and A Darkness At Sethanon.

Throughout the rest of Midkemia's history various other rifts have appeared that are different from the norm. At the end of the SerpentWar Saga Pug, Nakor, Tomas and Miranda encounter a rift that is connected to Nalar. They fight Zaltais who is a being from Nalar's thoughts and force him into the rift.

During Kaspar's exile on Novindus he encounters some strange creatures and also 'wrong' armour. After his visit to the Pavilion of the Gods he learns that these creatures are coming from magnet driven rifts. The magnets being the 'wrong' armour, which is known as Talnoy who come from a dark planet on a separate plane of reality known as Kosridi.

Nakor is also found to have the ability to create what are thought to be controllable rifts of a diminutive size which are undetectable to the Enemy (possibly due to their size).Though when questioned by Pug he is unsure if referring to them as rifts is adequate but he suggests that they are foldings in space but is quite sure they are not rifts but different. Much the same as anything else to do with Nakor his bag is a mystery still to be revealed. These "rifts" are placed in the lining of his travel bag allowing access to a cave, where Nakor stores items he may need, and a warehouse containing oranges (one of Nakor's most well-known traits is the seemingly never-ending supply of oranges he carries with him).

Races

Humans

Humans fled to Midkemia through rifts in space-time when the Dragon Lords rose up to challenge the gods and have become the dominant race on the planet. Humanity on Midkemia is as diverse as it is on Earth, with many clear analogues to real-world cultures, from Asia, Africa, Europe and the Americas.

Elves

Known in their own language as Edhel (The People), and as Elves by humans, this ancient race was created by the Valheru to serve them as slaves. Over time they have evolved into several distinct groups:

  • Eldar: the wise ones; originally librarians and the keepers of lore and of plundered artefacts for their Valheru masters these elves were scattered across worlds during the chaos wars; some would remain trapped on the world of Kelewan for millennia before returning to Midkemia and Elvandar, while others would eventually evolve into the Taredhel.
  • Eledhel: People of Light; originally the tenders of fields and forests under the Valheru the Eledhel now inhabit an ancient forest within the Western Realm of the Kingdom, where they have built the 'City of Lights' Elvandar; the Eledhel have long been led by a monarchy, even before the Valheru finally left Midkemia.
  • Moredhel: People of Darkness; originally the slaves that tended directly to their Valheru masters and their dwellings the Moredhel were twisted by their proximity to the Dragon Lords and sought to claim the power of the Valheru for themselves, once they were gone, seeing themselves as the rightful heirs to Midkemia; this attempt to claim Valheru power is known as 'The Dark Path' and as such the Moredhel are known to humans as 'The Brotherhood of the Dark Path'.
  • Glamredhel: People of Madness; these elves went mad during, or shortly after, the upheavals of the chaos wars; they eventually regained their sanity and went on to found their own city based, warlike civilisation, before being almost completely destroyed by the Moredhel; for a time they dwelled among the Eledhel in Elvandar but were never fully at home there.
  • Ocedhel: People of the Sea; these are the elves from the continent of Novindus; separated from other elves they lost most of the knowledge and language of their people and were almost destroyed by the army of the Emerald Queen during the Serpent War; the survivors were rescued and brought to live in Elvandar.
  • Anoredhel: People of the Sun; known by the Valheru as the Tirithedhel (Guardian Elves) the Anoredhel guard the Sven'gar'ri and their tenders the Quor, an ancient mission given to them by the Valheru; they reside in Baranor in the Peaks of the Quor.
  • Taredhel: People of the Stars; once Eldar, these elves evolved after their abandonment by the Valheru in to a powerful and arrogant race with an empire that spanned several worlds until they were forced to retreat to Midkemia by an invasion of Demons; many share the Moredhel vision of succeeding the Valheru.

The elves were originally the servants of the Valheru, until Ashen-Shugar released them when the other Valheru went to fight the chaos wars. The Anoredhel, or Tirithedhel (Guardian Elves) in the Valheru language, were freed, but Ashen-Shugar requested that they remained in the position as guardians of the Quor.

Many years before the Riftwar, a moredhel chieftain Murmandamus once united the moredhel clans of the north in a Great Uprising to conquer the glamredhel. When Murmandamus was killed, the moredhel clans scattered and fled back to the Northlands, never again uniting under a single true leader.

After the war between Kelewan and Midkemia, the Moredhel, Goblins, and several bands of renegade humans again united for a couple years to wage war against the Kingdom (chronicled in Silverthorn and Darkness at Sethanon), under the false prophet Murmandamus, who was actually just a powerful Pantathian (serpent man, servant of the Dragon Host) priest in a magical disguise. Under his leadership and magic powered by death, the Valheru were briefly freed again upon Midkemia, only to be immediately imprisoned within the Lifestone due to the combined efforts of Milamber (as Pug is also known), Arutha, Tomas/Ashen-Shugar, Macros, Hochopepa, Elhagar, Dolgan (and his armies), Black Guy (and his Hadati refugees), Amos Trask, Squires Jimmy and Locklear, Duke Martin, the hadati Baru (who killed Murmandamus' general in Silverthorn), Duke Laurie, Galain (and his small elven host), the Sethanon Garrison, a greater dragon Ryath, and several other prominent characters.

In recent history the Glamhedrel joined the court of the Eledhel and they uneasily became one people.

Moredhel that have a philosophical awakening and choose to become one with the Eledhel are known as 'returned'.

Dwarves

Dwarves are a long-lived race, reaching hundreds of years in age. The main Dwarves found in Feist's works are the dwarves of the West, most often the Grey Tower dwarves led by Dolgan, of Tholin's line, at village Caldara. There is another dwarven kingdom in the West: the Stone Mountain dwarves, led by Harthorn, of Hogar's line, at village Delmoria. In the east, the dwarves make their home at Dorgin, under the banner of King Halfdan. There is also mention of a dwarven city, Sarakan, across the sea on the continent of Novindus, found in the Ratn'gary Mountains.

Valheru

Valheru, also called The Dragon Lords, were the first race on Midkemia, and among the most powerful in the known universe. They rode on the backs of great dragons, travelling throughout the cosmos in search of plunder, and proved superior to all other races and cultures which they met and destroyed – some of these being themselves highly technological interstellar empires. Arrogantly presuming themselves to be gods, they also created lesser races to serve as slaves.

As a result of their wanton acts of destruction throughout the universe, energy was released from what were once mighty civilizations. Reaching a critical point, these energies formed a new pantheon of gods. While the new gods strove among themselves, the Valheru, exhorted by Draken-Korin, attempted to overthrow the new order of gods.

Ashen-Shugar was the only Dragon Lord to disapprove of his son's plan, but he did nothing but watch as the other Dragon Lords rose to battle the gods. Ashen-Shugar, the most powerful of the Valheru, felt something "alien" to his kind, a desire to protect the world, and the presence of Tomas via the magics of Macros the Black. With the coming of the new gods Ashen Shugar felt himself become alien to the new order, as if reality rejected his nature and he fell into a torpor, sleeping in his mountain on his throne many ages after the rest of the Valheru had gone away. Upon his death his essence became infused in his armor so that Tomas could replace him as guardian of Midkemia.

Space and time became warped as the Valheru battled the gods in the time known as the Chaos Wars. Of one hundred gods, only sixteen survived, but the Valheru were defeated. With the exception of Ashen-Shugar, the Valheru were cast away into another dimension to prevent them from returning to their homeworld, Midkemia.

In A Darkness at Sethanon the Valheru briefly returned to Midkemia at the end of the book, Draken-Koren and Tomas/Ashen-Shugar fought and Tomas impaled Draken-Korin to the Lifestone, and the Lifestone sealed the Valheru in it and prevented the end of Midkemia. Tomas's blade was left in the Lifestone for 50 years until Rage of a Demon King.

In Rage of a Demon King, Pug, Miranda, Nakor, Tomas and Calis, along with Brother Dominic of the Priesthood of Ishap and Sho Pi (a former Monk of Dala and, until near the end of Shards of a Broken Crown, Nakor's disciple), went to Sethanon to the Lifestone. Calis, being human, elven and Valheru, managed to undo the Lifestone over a period of many hours and amidst a battle with Jakan, a demon who sought the Lifestone for his own selfish gain. After defeating Jakan, the Lifestone (Which had the Valheru trapped inside) was destroyed forever, and with it the Valheru. Calis and Tomas/Ashen-Shugar suffer a painful transformation as this occurs, as their Valheru parts are "returned to the world", but being "more than Valheru", they survive.

Known Valheru
  • Ashen-Shugar – Ruler of the Eagles Reaches; the most powerful Valheru; son of Hali-Marmora; father and husband to Alma-Lodaka; father of Draken-Korin; the last of the Valheru; reincarnated in the body of Tomas Megarson, son of Megar and Magya of Crydee, Prince Consort of Queen Aglaranna and Warleader of Elvandar, father of Calis.
  • Draken-Korin – Lord of Tigers, son of Ashen-Shugar and Alma-Lodaka, slain by Ashen-Shugar at the end of the Chaos Wars; returned briefly to activate the Lifestone but was slain again by Tomas/Ashen-Shugar. Returns a second time at the end in Book 1 of the Chaoswar Saga, by reincarnating in the body of a mercenary warrior.
  • Alma-Lodaka – the Emerald Queen of Serpents; daughter and wife of Ashen-Shugar; mother of Draken-Korin; nearly reincarnated in a body of Lady Clovis, also known as Jorna, wife of Nakor then of Macros, mother of Miranda by Macros.
  • Algon-Kokoon – Tyrant of Wind Valley, slain by Ashen-Shugar
  • Alrin-Stolda – Monarch of the Black Lake
  • Hali-Marmora – Mother of Ashen-Shugar; slain by Ashen-Shugar
  • Lowris-Tanaka – King of Bats; Ashen-Shugar's first Dragon Lord kill
  • Lyron-Baktos – Lord of the Dragons; whose talisman was used to incapacitate the Oracle of Aal
  • Kindo-Raber – Master of Serpents; torn apart by the Dasati

Tomas

Tomas Megarson was born a kitchen boy in Castle Crydee. Due to the manipulations of the sorcerer Macros the Black, he received a gift of white and gold armor and a golden sword from the dragon Rhuagh and merged with the essence of the long-dead Dragon Lord, Ashen-Shugar, to be a weapon against the outworld invaders.

For a while, the newly melded being was consumed by the battle-madness of the Valheru, before the compassion of a human boy won through, and Tomas, the human, mastered the powers of a Dragon Lord. While the elves, whom he sought refuge with, feared dominion from the Dragon Lord, Tomas assuaged their fears, becoming merely the prince consort of their Queen Aglaranna. While Tomas gained the full might of Ashen-Shugar, he eventually lost much of this power during the events of the Serpentwar. Tomas still stands as one of the most powerful people in Midkemia, with few able to match him.

Due to some unforeseen circumstances, the human-turned-Valheru and the Elf Queen conceived a child possessing the heritage of all three races. Calis, son of Tomas and Aglaranna, would be unique throughout the world, neither human nor elf. He would also be instrumental during the Serpentwar invasion, first by creating the Crimson Eagles military commandos, then later dismantling a powerful artifact capable of draining all life in the world.

Finally accepting his lot in fate, Calis settled down in Elvandar with a widowed elf, also adopting twins who were refugees from the recent war.

Other creatures

Midkemia is a deeply magical place, though predominantly populated by humans. Elves, trolls, dwarves, giants, goblins, dragons, and other, more exotic forms of intelligent life can be found, representing most usual species in fantasy literature.

Also, Feist has made his own more unusual additions, including the Pantathians, a race of serpent-men bent on returning their evil goddess to this plane of existence; the Valheru, an ancient race of godlike warriors and dragon-riders who plundered the universe for millions of years before being banished by the gods; and the gwali, a shy forest species.

Dragons are the most ancient race in Midkemia after the Dragon Lords. They served the Valheru as mounts. Since the fall of the Dragon Lords, the dragons have generally isolated themselves from contact with any other race. A notable character, Rhuagh, was an ancient gold dragon who lived in the Mac Mordain Cadal mines. He befriended Macros the Black. Many years later, Tomas and the dwarf chieftain Dolgan would stand on his deathwatch as he told them of his life. His daughter, Ryath, aided Pug and Tomas in their search for Macros the Black. She perished in battle with a Dreadlord, though her body lived on as a vessel for the Oracle of Aal. In return for her sacrifice, Pug took in her daughter Ryana, to his island where she would be cared for until she could survive on her own.

Giants, standing at an average of twelve feet tall, form no civilized society, living as little more than wild animals in the Northlands. The moredhel were known to recruit giants into their army.

Gods

In the beginning, there were only two gods. Rythar, Goddess of Order, took the 'threads of power' and weaved them together, forming the fabric of space-time. Mythar, God of Chaos, took this fabric and tore them asunder. The remains are then gathered back by Rythar and the cycle begins again. Eventually however some threads were unseen by Rythar and fell not to be rewoven, forming the race that would come to be known as the Valheru .

The two Blind Gods of the Beginning were deposed when the universe reordered itself. Without Rythar to knit together the strings of power, they became the new order of gods, a hundred in total. There were the seven Greater Gods and the other 93 are Lesser Gods. Ishap is the most important of the Greater Gods being the one who created all of the lesser Gods and Goddess, being the Balancer. Slightly less in power and authority are Arch-Indar, Goddess of Good, and Nalar, God of Evil. The other four Greater Gods are called the Builders, composed of the four traits within all mortal races.

During the Chaos Wars, when the Valheru rose up to challenge the new order of gods, the gods were unprepared while they still contended against each other for control of various domains. As a result, most of the gods were slain, including Ishap, Arch-Indar, Wodar-Hospur, and many others. The remaining gods worked in concert, and cast the Valheru into another dimension, but the damage was done. Without the Goddess of Good to offset the God of Evil, and without the Balancer to balance all actions, the four Builder Gods exiled the God of Evil to a distant universe. Nalar is to remain imprisoned until the continual worship from the mortal races could revive the 'dead' Ishap and Arch-Indar.

Many important Lesser Gods also perished, with great consequences. Tith and Onanka combined their essences to form a new being, the two faced god of war. Killian, Goddess of Nature, took over the domain of Eortis, God of the Sea. Sarig, God of Magic, sought to return by appointing an avatar to work for the betterment of magic, to eventually ascend as the new god of magic.

Nakor the Isalini also theorized that the universe itself is another, ultimate god, having become reality as mortals perceive it in an attempt to understand itself.

Greater gods

The first gods.

  • Rythar – the Goddess of Order
  • Mythar – the God of Chaos

After the falling of the first gods

  • Ishap – the Matrix; God of Balance (order); He who is Above All (currently dead, but returning).
  • Arch-Indar – the Selfless; Goddess of good; She who is perfection (currently dead, but returning).
  • Nalar (the Nameless one) – the Selfish; God of Evil; The Mad God (currently sealed away).
  • Abrem-Sev – Forger of Action; the Giver of Laws.
  • Ev-Dem – Worker from Within; Calculator of Odds.
  • Graff – Weaver of Desire
  • Helbinor – the Abstainer

Lesser gods

  • Astalon – The Just; the Builder; Who Brought Order.
  • Banath (Kalkin) – The Artful Dodger; the Prankster; the Nightwalker; God of Hopeless Quests and Misadventures.
  • Dala – Shield of the Weak; Goddess of Passive Strength; the Protector
  • Guis-wan (Fimbulstran) – The Bayer after Moons; the Red-jawed Hunter; the Wanter of All Things.
  • Ka-hooli – The Howler After Fugitives; the Unraveller of Mysteries of Truth; God of Justice/Vengeance.
  • Killian – The Singer of Green Silences; the Gatherer of Quiet Pleasures; the Goddess of Love; Goddess of Nature.
  • Lims- Kragma (Zandros) (Khali-shi) – The Drawer of Nets, She who Waits; the Mistress of Death; Judger of Souls.
  • Prandur (Jehan-suz) (Agni) – The Burner of Cities; the Light Bringer; God of Fire.
  • Ruthia – The Dancer through Men's Hearts; the Goddess of Love Scorned; Lady of Luck.
  • Silban – The Earthmother, the Bringer of the Harvests; Sleeper without Dreams.
  • Sung (LaTimsa) – The White; the Pure; the Follower of one Path.
  • Tith-Onanka – The War God; the Tactician (Planner of Battles); the Joyful Warrior.

Dead gods

The dead gods might some day return to power.

  • Drusala – Goddess of Healing. (Sung reigns in her sister's place)
  • Eortis – God of the Sea. (Killian reigns in his place)
  • Isanda – Goddess of dance
  • Onanka-Tith – the dead half of Tith-Onanka
  • Sarig – "Lost" God of Magic.
  • Wodar-Hospur – God of Knowledge; the Lorekeeper. (Banath is custodian in his place)

Inspiration

Though all fantasy works published after Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings are usually acknowledged as indebted to him to some extent, Feist has fairly directly borrowed elements amounting to entire cultures. The elves are described using Tolkien's own words, including borrowings from his Elvish languages (for example, moredhel, Feist's name for his "dark elves", is found in Tolkien and comes from the Sindarin elements mor 'dark' and edhel 'elf'). The Elven city of Elvandar is heavily borrowed from Lothlórien, and the Mac Mordain Cadal is certainly influenced by Moria. However, Feist's Elves - unlike Tolkien's – do age and eventually die, though they are very long-lived. Feist's Dwarves are also distinctly Tolkienesque. Feist himself is forthcoming about the influence, calling his use of Sindar an "homage". Readers have noted that the influences are less pronounced in later books.

Also Feist has borrowed and used cultures throughout history to base his nations, countries and people in, such as Roman influences in the Quegan culture, Arabian influences in Keshian culture, and Asian influences in the Tsurani culture (one of several influences from M. A. R. Barker's Tékumel). From references, it can also be inferred that Kinnoch is influenced by Ireland, Krondor by London, Darkmoor by Germany, Bas-Tyra by France, Novindus by India and Australia, and Rodez by Spain.

Midkemia is the world setting from Feist's college role-playing group, also known as the Thursday Nighters (until they became the Friday Nighters due to late games and early morning classes), which had begun as an outgrowth of the Triton Wargaming Society at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD). Dungeons and Dragons (D&D), published by TSR, Inc., formed the root of the Midkemian game, but like many groups playing D&D at that time, the Thursday Nighters modified and evolved the rules wholesale, until they were barely recognizable as having any relationship to D&D. Feist came into this group after the original campaign had been developed by fellow students at UCSD, and played for three years before he began writing his stories, the first of which were humorous short stories set in the game realm. None of those stories were ever published. Later Feist decided to try his hand at serious fantasy, and asked if anyone objected to his using Midkemia, as it saved him the trouble of world-building from scratch. Feist has mentioned on many occasions that many of the constraints of that world created dramatic issues he would never have dreamed up on his own, and for which he was grateful. Several of the novels are dedicated to other members of that group from college. None of his books are based on campaigns, as the game takes place roughly 500 years after the novel Magician. Feist has likened himself more to historical novelists rather than fantasy writers, stating that he writes "historical novels about a place that doesn't exist". None of his characters are "player characters" from these Friday Nighter sessions, save two, Praji and Vaja, introduced in the novel The King's Buccaneer, characters created for Feist's campaign, by his college friend, Richard Spahl.

gollark: Okay, post it here then.
gollark: Go simulate one, then.
gollark: Well this is rather uncool.
gollark: Are we including air resistance here?
gollark: Are we talking just going from velocities before to velocities after or what?

References

  1. "Writer: Raymond E. Feist (1945 - , United States)". www.scifan.com. Archived from the original on 2008-05-09. Retrieved 2008-06-14.
  2. Claire E. White (2000-03-01). "A Conversation With Raymond Feist". WritersWrite.com. Retrieved 2008-06-14.
  3. Shannon Appelcline (2012-02-05). "Designers & Dragons: The Column #13: Midkemia Press, 1979-1983". RPG.net. Retrieved 2012-07-21.
  4. Arthur B (2007-07-06). "The Reading Canary On: The Riftwar Saga". FerretBrain.com. Retrieved 2012-07-21.
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