Throwback SF Thursday: Changa’s Safari by Milton Davis

Teen boys get a bad rap.  David Hartwell sneered that “the Golden Age of Science Fiction is 12.”  John Rogers gibed that “There are two novels that can change a bookish fourteen-year old’s life: The Lord of the Rings and Atlas Shrugged.  One is a childish fantasy that often engenders a lifelong obsession with its unbelievable heroes, leading to an emotionally stunted, socially crippled adulthood, unable to deal with the real world.  The other, of course, involves orcs.”  And this while 22% of 13-year-olds say they “never” or “hardly ever” read for pleasure, versus 8% a few decades ago.  And while 30% of girls read daily, only 18% of boys do.

I don’t get why we denigrate books as written for 12-year-old boys.  If a book can get a boy excited about reading, that’s a magical book!

The problem is even worse for African-Americans.  23% of white Americans say they haven’t read a book in the past year.  That’s a shame.  29% of African-Americans said the same.  That’s a travesty.  And where do you see all of the conversation around diverse voices focused?  Octavia Butler, Sam Delaney, and N.J. Jemisin aren’t going to get black boys reading.  But Changa’s Safari?  This is a book you can hand a kid and light a fire for reading that will never burn out.  And you will enjoy it too.

I saw Davis speak on a panel at JordanCon and walked away so impressed I swung by his author’s table the next day.  I asked about a certain pulpy sound to Changa for the obvious reasons, and Davis described him to me as “Conan with a job.”  Sold.

The job being merchant on the 15th century, pre-Portuguese Swahili coast of Africa.  Captaining your dhows personally can make for some adventures, and Changa goes armed with sword, throwing knives, and wrist knife.  He is accompanied by a sorceress, Panya, and a silent Tuareg who fights with takouba and scimitar.  The adventures in volume 1 (Davis has a 2nd and 3rd volume out, with a fourth to come) start on the east African coast but range all the way to Mongolia.  There was a rich trading economy at the time from stretched from the Swahili coast to the Middle Kingdom, all facilitated by Arabic merchants.

Changa’s Safari is novel-length but is really three novellas.  The first, The Jade Obelisk, is a rather standard sword and sorcery yarn involving an evil sorceress, a demigod for an ally, and hyena-men mooks in Zimbabwe.  A Certain Spice sees Changa embarking for Asia after an emissary from the Chinese emperor lands in Sofala.  The third novella, The Emperor’s Ransom, continues the story from the second, with Changa getting roped into recovering the Chinese emperor from Mongol captivity, with Davis filling a gap in the real history.  The structure keeps things punchy, and the stories get better as they go along.  There are also advantages to writing the stories together versus the patchwork publication by pulp magazine.  Pretty much my only complaint about the Silver John stories was the limited continuity.

Davis edited the Griots sword and soul anthology, reviewed here by Morgan, with Charles Saunders.  Saunders has his own sword and soul hero, Imaro.  Changa is a welcome addition to the niche sub-genre.  Changa’s Safari stands up well against Robert E. Howard’s better imitators and is the better for the African influence (the “soul” in the “sword and soul”).  Africa is vastly underappreciated in fantasy.  The locales and source mythos keep what might otherwise seem a by-the-numbers sword and sorcery tale fresh.  The stories are peppered with just enough Swahili to give them a flair of authenticity without leaving the reader confused.  Davis adds distinct weapons like wrist knives (basically, big bracelets with sharpened edges that were used like a parrying dagger).  Men fight on foot because the tsetse fly makes keeping herds of horses infeasible.  Leaving Africa, Changa encounters pirates and komodo dragons and eunuchs and Mongols, not to mention sorcerers and demons and fire-mages.  Mongols, in particular, deserve more faithful representation in fantasy.

It was interesting to read Changa’s Safari after reading Rick Stump’s analysis of the first Conan movie.  Like Kull, and movie-Conan, Changa is a former slave and pit fighter.  Like movie-Conan, Changa is motivated by avenging his father (but saving his mother and sister).  Like movie-Conan, Changa spends a lot of time doing a lot of other things.  But he will need money and power if he is to defeat the sorcerer who ruined his life.  Davis keeps the backstory and motivation very light and subtle though.  There is craft in that.  Hollywood would dump an hour and a half of backstory on us.  But these are universal themes.  Davis knows we don’t need much to grasp what they mean to Changa.  And like Howard’s Conan, Changa is “not just fierce and strong, [but] intelligent, insightful, and charismatic.”

The story lives and dies by the reader’s connection with Changa, and Changa is real in every way.  The way nothing stirs his heart like a commercial proposition (he could be an honorary Scot).  A corresponding gruff affectation that melts when it comes time to save someone.  His relationship with Panya.  His quieter relationship of mutual respect with the Tuareg.  His discomfort with politics, even as his rising fortunes force him into a political role.  The ambition that causes him to continually push farther and risk more.  I feel like I know Changa.  He’s that friend you stand in awe of and watch vicariously.

I have print copies of the first two volumes.  There are some pretty annoying copyediting issues, but the covers are quite a bit better than the average self-published book, and they even contain black-and-white interior illustrations.

Volumes One, Two, and Three are all available in paperback and kindle at Amazon.  I understand that a fourth and final volume is on the way.

 

4 of 5 Stars.

 

Joe Bonadonna on Changa’s Safari vols. 1-3 at Black Gate.

C. Michael Forsyth on Changa’s Safari vol. 1 at Best and Worst of Horror.

 

Throwback SF Thursday: Changa’s Safari by Milton Davis was originally published at the Castalia House Blog.

About H.P.

Blogs on books at Every Day Should Be Tuesday (speculative fiction) and Hillbilly Highways (country noir and nonfiction). https://everydayshouldbetuesday.wordpress.com/ https://hillbillyhighways.wordpress.com/
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