Top Tens – Heroes & Villains: Top 10 Villains of Mythology (Special Mention) (10) Tiamat

Chaos Monster and Sun God – a drawing of a Mesopotamian bas-relief, often associated with the battle of Marduk and Tiamat (but variously interpreted) – ‘Monuments of Nineveh, Second Series’ plate 5, London, J. Murray, 1853, ditor Austen Henry Layard , drawing by L. Gruner

 

 

(10) TIAMAT

 

Like my special mention for Orcus and Demogorgon, Tiamat is a mythological villain raised in profile by her adaptation in Dungeons and Dragons.

In fairness, Tiamat started with a higher – and more defined – profile in mythology than Orcus or Demogorgon. She was the primordial sea in Mesopotamian mythology – essentially that recurring mythic archetype of chaos monster.

And yes, I said she – Tiamat was very much a female figure, indeed a maternal one, as mother of monsters as well as the first deities and creation itself, albeit that last was not by giving birth but by her bodily dismemberment by the god Marduk.

“It was once thought that the myth of Tiamat was one of the earliest recorded versions of a Chaoskampf, a mythological motif that generally involves the battle between a culture hero and a chthonic or aquatic monster, serpent, or dragon.”

Tiamat was reborn as an arch-villain of Dungeons and Dragons – distinctively as a multi-headed dragon.

 

RATING:

A-TIER (TOP TIER)

Top Tens – Fantasy & SF: Top 10 Children’s Fantasy Books (Special Mention) (3) Dungeons & Dragons

 

Yes – it’s the ur-text of (Advanced) Dungeons and Dragons, the iconic cover of the Player’s Handbook for the first edition of the game, featuring its classic art stealing the stones from the eyes of a demonic idol (by artist D.A. Trampier), as featured in the book profile in the Forgotten Realms Wiki

 

 

(3) DUNGEONS & DRAGONS (1974 – PRESENT)

 

Although I do have a special mention entry for an actual Encyclopedia of Fantasy, Dungeons & Dragons remains the best de facto encyclopedic treatment of fantasy themes and tropes- which is not surprising for something that strives to systematically codify the genre of fantasy for obsessive-compulsive rules-lawyering geeks to play as a game.

Hence it was the third special mention entry for my Top 10 Fantasy Books, but what people may forget is its popularity as a game among children or teenagers – something of which the TV Series Stranger Things reminded us. Accordingly, it earns the third special mention entry here.

 

RATING: 5 STARS*****
(S-TIER: GOD TIER)

Top Tens – Fantasy & SF: Top 10 Children’s Fantasy Books (Special Mention) (2) C.S. Lewis – Narnia Chronicles

 

Prince Caspian movie poster art

 

 

(2) C.S. LEWIS –
NARNIA CHRONICLES (1950-1956)

 

It’s a rare child in Anglophone culture that doesn’t know about Narnia, and the Narnia Chronicles are arguably more definitive as children’s fantasy than Tolkien, particularly when it comes to children’s fantasy involving secondary worlds. Hence the Narnia Chronicles are not only second top spot after Tolkien in my Top 10 Fantasy Books, but also second place special mention after Tolkien here.

It also features child protagonists, who find themselves drawn from our world (specifically England) to Narnia through magic portals – hence the description of the Narnia Chronicles in Wikipedia as portal fantasy.

However, if one character both embodies Narnia and rises above the others, albeit not so much as protagonist but as the moving force behind the world – from singing it into being in the beginning to literally closing the door on it in the end – it’s Aslan.

And Aslan embodies the spirit of Lewis’ Narnia Chronicles, those seven fantasy books that continue to inspire readers and remain among the most popular fantasy books or series, strikingly so for children’s fantasy books and explicitly Christian ones at that, although many readers remain unaware of the Christian themes.

Narnia might lack the same grandeur as Middle-Earth but for me it will always have a charm and place close to my heart, with these books as something of a recurring source of familiar comfort even as an adult. And so enchanting that after reading its Chronicles, what young reader doesn’t search wardrobes for other worlds? (Or hot White Witches with Turkish delight? Except I’ll pass on the Turkish delight). I know I still do…

 

RATING: 5 STARS****
S-TIER (GOD TIER)