Eaglethorpe Buxton Bits

I had been traveling for through the snowy forests of Brest, which of course one might associate with a nicely roasted breast of chicken, but that is not necessarily the case.  To be sure I have had one or two nicely roasted chickens during my travels in this dark, cold country, as I traveled from one little hamlet to the next.  I would say though that I’ve eaten far more mutton and beef stew than roasted
chicken breast.  I suppose this has to do with the fact that eggs are dear, though I’ve seldom found an inn that didn’t offer a fried egg of morning.  In fact,
in distant Aerithraine, where I was once privileged to spend a fortnight with the Queen, I have had some of the finest breast of chicken dinners than any man
has ever enjoyed.  But notwithstanding this, there was a pie.

“In fact, in distant Aerithraine, where I was once privileged to spend a fortnight with the Queen…”  I threw in this line as a tribute to Baron Munchausen, who was one of the inspirations for Eaglethorpe– probably the primary inspiration.  A great story-teller who is also a liar, the Baron frequently compares women to “Catherine the Great, empress of all the Russias, whose hand in marriage I once had the honor to decline.”

The Queen of Aerithraine had already been created in our old D&D game.  I knew her whole history, but I never expected her to become a pivotal character in Eaglethorpe’s story.  But she does.

Eaglethorpe Buxton Bits

I should stop and introduce myself.  I am Eaglethorpe Buxton, famed world traveler
and story-teller.  Of course you have heard of me, for my tales of the great heroes and their adventures have been repeated far and wide across the land. 
Yes, I am sad to say that many of my stories have been told without the benefit of my name being attached to them.  This is unfortunate as my appellation, which is to say the name of
Buxton and of Eaglethorpe would add a certain something to the verisimilitude of a story, which is to say the truthfulness or the believability of the
story.  But such is the jealousy of other
story-tellers that they cannot bear to have my name overshadow theirs.  In truth I am probably better known in any case as an adventurer in my own right than as a teller of the adventures of others.  But in any case, there was a pie.

I started writing Eaglethorpe Buxton in early 2009 just as a bit of fun.  I wanted a story with an unreliable narrator, set in a fantasy world, but I wasn’t to worried that the world be believable or even make sense.  I used the world that my kids and I had created to play D&D in, but played pretty fast and loose with the geography.