List of authors referenced on Friends at the Table: Difference between revisions

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==Haruki Murakami==
==Haruki Murakami==
In the ''Bluff City'' season one postmortem, a number of Haruki Murakami works (''[[wikipedia:Hard-Boiled_Wonderland_and_the_End_of_the_World|Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World]]'', ''[[wikipedia:The_Wind-Up_Bird_Chronicle|The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle]]'', ''[[wikipedia:Kafka_on_the_Shore|Kafka on the Shore]]'', "[[wikipedia:The_Elephant_Vanishes|The Elephant Vanishes]]", and ''[[wikipedia:A_Wild_Sheep_Chase|A Wild Sheep Chase]]'') are brought up in response to a question about books and other influences on ''Bluff City''.<ref name=":11" /> Austin describes ''Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World'' in particular as "influential for everything I've done as a GM", and notes the [[Polyphony]] episodes of ''Twilight Mirage'' as a particular example.
In the ''Bluff City'' season one postmortem, a number of Haruki Murakami works (''[[wikipedia:Hard-Boiled_Wonderland_and_the_End_of_the_World|Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World]]'', ''[[wikipedia:The_Wind-Up_Bird_Chronicle|The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle]]'', ''[[wikipedia:Kafka_on_the_Shore|Kafka on the Shore]]'', "[[wikipedia:The_Elephant_Vanishes|The Elephant Vanishes]]", and ''[[wikipedia:A_Wild_Sheep_Chase|A Wild Sheep Chase]]'') are brought up in response to a question about books and other influences on ''Bluff City''.<ref name=":11" /> Austin describes ''Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World'' in particular as "influential for everything I've done as a GM", and notes the [[Polyphony]] episodes of ''Twilight Mirage'' as a particular example.
==Nostradamus==
{{Quote|At forty-five degrees the sky will burn,<br>
Fire to approach the great new city:<br>
In an instant a great scattered flame will leap up,<br>
When one will want to demand proof of the Normans.|author=Nostradamus (tr. Edgar Leoni)|source=''Nostradamus and his Prophecies''<ref>https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Les_Propheties</ref>}}
While discussing the [[Dim Liturgy]]'s use of ancient predictions by [[Crystal Palace]] in a ''[[PALISADE]]'' faction episode, Art compares the text they're working from to the supposedly prophetic writings of [[wikipedia:Nostradamus|Nostradamus]], prompting Austin to pull up and read some random selections of his work to get a sense for it.<ref name=":20" />


==Mervyn Peake==
==Mervyn Peake==
During the first faction episode of ''[[PALISADE]]'', Jack lists several points of inspiration for [[The Paint Shop]], a mountaintop castle and strategic point on [[Palisade (planet)|Palisade]], including Castle Gormenghast, the titular location of Mervyn Peake's [[wikipedia:Gormenghast_(series)|Gormenghast]] series.<ref name=":20">[[PALISADE 03: Today Is a Monday]]</ref>
During the first faction episode of ''PALISADE'', Jack lists several points of inspiration for the [[Paint Shop]], a mountaintop castle and strategic point on [[Palisade (planet)|Palisade]], including Castle Gormenghast, the titular location of Mervyn Peake's [[wikipedia:Gormenghast_(series)|''Gormenghast'']] series.<ref name=":20">[[PALISADE 03: Today Is a Monday]]</ref>


==Nicholas Pileggi==
== Nicholas Pileggi==
During a scene of ''Tales from the Loop'' in ''Bluff City''<nowiki/>'s second season, Keith and Austin riff about [[Agent Clark]] and [[Agent Bailey]] of The Concern arguing over their favorite Martin Scorsese movies, deciding that Clark's favorite is ''Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore'' and Bailey's is ''Casino''. Keith jokes that Clark prefers the book of ''Casino'' to the film. Casino was based on Nicholas Pileggi's nonfiction book ''Casino: Life and Honor in Las Vegas''. Pileggi also wrote ''Wiseguy: Life in a Mafia Family'', which was similarly adapted into Scorsese's earlier film ''Goodfellas'', and cowrote both screenplays with Scorsese.<ref name=":10" />
During a scene of ''Tales from the Loop'' in ''Bluff City''<nowiki/>'s second season, Keith and Austin riff about [[Agent Clark]] and [[Agent Bailey]] of The Concern arguing over their favorite Martin Scorsese movies, deciding that Clark's favorite is ''Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore'' and Bailey's is ''Casino''. Keith jokes that Clark prefers the book of ''Casino'' to the film. Casino was based on Nicholas Pileggi's nonfiction book ''Casino: Life and Honor in Las Vegas''. Pileggi also wrote ''Wiseguy: Life in a Mafia Family'', which was similarly adapted into Scorsese's earlier film ''Goodfellas'', and cowrote both screenplays with Scorsese.<ref name=":10" />


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Pynchon and ''The Crying of Lot 49'' are also mentioned as influential during the ''Bluff City'' season one postmortem.<ref name=":11" />
Pynchon and ''The Crying of Lot 49'' are also mentioned as influential during the ''Bluff City'' season one postmortem.<ref name=":11" />


==Matt Ruff==
== Matt Ruff ==
Ruff's ''Lovecraft Country'' and its TV adaptation were mentioned by Art as part of the "season seven reading list" that he went through in preparation for ''Sangfielle''.<ref name=":8" />
Ruff's ''Lovecraft Country'' and its TV adaptation were mentioned by Art as part of the "season seven reading list" that he went through in preparation for ''Sangfielle''.<ref name=":8" />


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Austin compares the role of the [[Perennial Wave]] in ''PARTIZAN'' to "the way in which magic is used in certain fairy tales or in Shakespeare".<ref>[[PARTIZAN 00: The Divine Principality]]</ref> While making an analogy about [[Future]] later in the season, Austin refers to Hamlet's ability to monologue/soliloquize about grief as an example to discuss fiction being able to clarify real emotions.<ref>[[PARTIZAN 13: A Captive Audience]]</ref>
Austin compares the role of the [[Perennial Wave]] in ''PARTIZAN'' to "the way in which magic is used in certain fairy tales or in Shakespeare".<ref>[[PARTIZAN 00: The Divine Principality]]</ref> While making an analogy about [[Future]] later in the season, Austin refers to Hamlet's ability to monologue/soliloquize about grief as an example to discuss fiction being able to clarify real emotions.<ref>[[PARTIZAN 13: A Captive Audience]]</ref>


During talk at the top of a ''[[PALISADE]]'' episode, Austin refers to a line from ''[[wikipedia:Romeo_and_Juliet|Romeo and Juliet]]'' in which Juliet says "I have an ill-divining soul!"<ref name=":20" /><ref>Dowden, Edward, ed. (1900). ''Romeo and Juliet'', III.v.54. The Arden Shakespeare, first series.</ref> The last episode released on the main podcast feed prior to the debut of ''PALISADE'' was a bonus [[Pusher Media Club|Media Club]] discussion of ''Romeo + Juliet'', the play's 1996 film adaptation.
During talk at the top of a ''[[PALISADE]]'' episode, Austin refers to a line from ''[[wikipedia:Romeo_and_Juliet|Romeo and Juliet]]'' in which Juliet says "I have an ill-divining soul!"<ref name=":20" /><ref>Dowden, Edward, ed. (1900). ''Romeo and Juliet'', III.v.54. The Arden Shakespeare, first series.</ref> Later in the same episode, Jack alludes to Juliet's words "O true apothecary! Thy drugs are quick."<ref>''Romeo and Juliet'', V.iii.119-120.</ref> The last episode released on the main podcast feed prior to the debut of ''PALISADE'' was a bonus [[Pusher Media Club|Media Club]] discussion of ''Romeo + Juliet'', the play's 1996 film adaptation.


==R.L. Stine ==
==R.L. Stine ==
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''Annihilation'' is mentioned again as a touchstone in the first episode of ''Sangfielle''.<ref name=":0" /> A move that Duvall takes later on in the season is called Annihilation, presumably as a reference to the book and/or its film adaptation.<ref>[[Sangfielle 33: Passage on the Jade Moon Pt. 2]]</ref>
''Annihilation'' is mentioned again as a touchstone in the first episode of ''Sangfielle''.<ref name=":0" /> A move that Duvall takes later on in the season is called Annihilation, presumably as a reference to the book and/or its film adaptation.<ref>[[Sangfielle 33: Passage on the Jade Moon Pt. 2]]</ref>


== C.V. Wedgwood==
==C.V. Wedgwood==
While responding to a ''[[Tips at the Table]]'' question about whether media they're reading or watching affects their play, Austin mentions that he has been reading [[wikipedia:C._V._Wedgwood|C.V. Wedgwood]]'s ''The Thirty Years War'' in as research for the as-yet-unnamed ''PARTIZAN''.<ref name=":12">[[Tips at the Table]] 21: [https://www.patreon.com/posts/tips-at-table-25590332 Pet Goku]</ref>
While responding to a ''[[Tips at the Table]]'' question about whether media they're reading or watching affects their play, Austin mentions that he has been reading [[wikipedia:C._V._Wedgwood|C.V. Wedgwood]]'s ''The Thirty Years War'' in as research for the as-yet-unnamed ''PARTIZAN''.<ref name=":12">[[Tips at the Table]] 21: [https://www.patreon.com/posts/tips-at-table-25590332 Pet Goku]</ref>


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While brainstorming ideas for mystical or cursed paintings in ''Sangfielle'', Wilde's ''[[wikipedia:The_Picture_of_Dorian_Gray|The Picture of Dorian Gray]]'' is mentioned as something Austin doesn't want to replicate.<ref name=":1" /> ''Dorian Gray'' does, nevertheless, return later as a point of comparison for one of several miscellaneous exhibits in a gallery Duvall visits in [[Sapodilla]] while looking for information on his chosen painting.<ref>[[Sangfielle 22: Whispers in the City by the Sea]]</ref>
While brainstorming ideas for mystical or cursed paintings in ''Sangfielle'', Wilde's ''[[wikipedia:The_Picture_of_Dorian_Gray|The Picture of Dorian Gray]]'' is mentioned as something Austin doesn't want to replicate.<ref name=":1" /> ''Dorian Gray'' does, nevertheless, return later as a point of comparison for one of several miscellaneous exhibits in a gallery Duvall visits in [[Sapodilla]] while looking for information on his chosen painting.<ref>[[Sangfielle 22: Whispers in the City by the Sea]]</ref>


==Gene Wolfe==
==Gene Wolfe ==
{{Quote|I pressed past the merychip's head, seized the ankle of the wagoneer who had struck her, and pulled him from his seat. By that time all the gate was ringing with bawling and swearing, and the cries of the injured, and the bellowings of frightened animals; and if the stranger continued his tale I could not hear it.|author=Gene Wolfe|source=''The Shadow of the Torturer''<ref>Wolfe, Gene. ''Shadow and Claw''. Orb, 1994. p. 209.</ref>}}
{{Quote|I pressed past the merychip's head, seized the ankle of the wagoneer who had struck her, and pulled him from his seat. By that time all the gate was ringing with bawling and swearing, and the cries of the injured, and the bellowings of frightened animals; and if the stranger continued his tale I could not hear it.|author=Gene Wolfe|source=''The Shadow of the Torturer''<ref>Wolfe, Gene. ''Shadow and Claw''. Orb, 1994. p. 209.</ref>}}
While playing ''A Visit to San Sibilia'', Austin twice refers to Wolfe's ''[[wikipedia:The_Book_of_the_New_Sun|The Book of the New Sun]]'', first mentioning its use of "alcalde" as a term for a magistrate (''Book of the New Sun'' frequently uses terms that are archaic or obscure in modern English, ostensibly as means of "translating" concepts from its far-future setting that have not been invented yet) and later referring to the final scene of ''[[wikipedia:The_Shadow_of_the_Torturer|The Shadow of the Torturer]]'', which takes place amidst the chaos of a crowd passing through the gates of a massive wall, as a comparison for a commotion outside the walls of [[Concentus]].<ref>[[Sangfielle 56: Six Travelers: Pickman]]</ref>
While playing ''A Visit to San Sibilia'', Austin twice refers to Wolfe's ''[[wikipedia:The_Book_of_the_New_Sun|The Book of the New Sun]]'', first mentioning its use of "alcalde" as a term for a magistrate (''Book of the New Sun'' frequently uses terms that are archaic or obscure in modern English, ostensibly as means of "translating" concepts from its far-future setting that have not been invented yet) and later referring to the final scene of ''[[wikipedia:The_Shadow_of_the_Torturer|The Shadow of the Torturer]]'', which takes place amidst the chaos of a crowd passing through the gates of a massive wall, as a comparison for a commotion outside the walls of [[Concentus]].<ref>[[Sangfielle 56: Six Travelers: Pickman]]</ref>

Revision as of 21:31, 25 March 2023

The following is a list of real-world authors whose works have been referred to in an episode of Friends at the Table or who have been specifically highlighted by a cast member as a touchstone/point of inspiration for the podcast.

Kevin J. Anderson

During the Road to PALISADE game of Stealing the Throne, while joking about Disney discontinuing the Star Wars Expanded Universe, Keith says he gets a cease and desist every time he tries to read one of Anderson's Jedi Academy novels.[1]

Jane Austen

In the first episode of the Good Society Live at the Table arc, Austin and Janine discuss Austen as an inspiration for character-focused storytelling, humanizing mistakes, the tension of being caught between desire and obligation, and banter that doesn't sound like Marvel Cinematic Universe banter.[2]

Austen's novel Persuasion is referenced during the Road to PALISADE game of Upstairs & Downstairs when discussing an aristocratic family being forced to relocate from their stately mansion to a modest (if only by comparison) and more cramped temporary lodging.[3]

Paul Auster

In the Bluff City season one postmortem, Paul Auster's New York Trilogy (City of Glass, Ghosts, and The Locked Room) is brought up in response to a question about books and other influences on Bluff City.[4]

Jeremy Bentham

During the Road to PALISADE game of Stealing the Throne, Austin discusses how the Divine Discernment resembles and differs from the concept of the panopticon in response to viewers of the live recording bringing it up in chat. While he draws an important distinction between Discernment and the way Foucault understands the panopticon (see below), Austin does briefly consider that it could be a "Bentham machine" as they float the idea (before discarding it) of Discernment having been used as a prison in the past.[1] As envisioned by the philosopher Jeremy Bentham along with his brother Samuel, the panopticon was a concept for a prison in which a single guard can view any inmate at any time, without prisoners knowing when they are being watched. Though Bentham did not succeed in advocating for his panopticon to be built, a series of his letters theorizing it were published as Panopticon; or the Inspection-House.

Jorge Luis Borges

It is as though my eyesight were spherical, with the Zahir in the centre. Whatever is not the Zahir comes to me fragmentarily, as if from a great distance: the arrogant image of Clementina; physical pain. Tennyson once said that if we could understand a single flower, we should know what we are and what the world is.

– Jorge Luis Borges (tr. Dudley Fitts), "The Zahir"[5]

In Twilight Mirage, the Divine Memorious is named after the short story "Funes the Memorious", whose titular character is cursed with perfect memory after an accident.[6]

Sangfielle is described as "cosmic horror by way of Borges instead of Lovecraft" at the beginning of the season.[7] Later in the season, the painting Duvall hopes to acquire is titled "Remembering the Zahir" as an homage to Borges's story "The Zahir", about an object which creates an obsession that will come to crowd out the afflicted person's experience of reality.[8] Zevunzolia and the Wrights of the Seventh Sun may be influenced by works of Borges's such as "Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius", in which he traces a series of real and fictional encyclopedia references to detail the invention by a secret society of a country that never was and subsequently, an alternate world (Tlön) with its own philosophy, languages, and culture. By the end of the story, artifacts from Tlön are appearing in the real world and influencing culture such that "The world will be Tlön."[5]

In the Bluff City season one postmortem, Borges is described as an influence throughout a bulk of Friends at the Table.[4]

Bertolt Brecht

During the live game of Scene Thieves, as Janine narrates a sequence in the play in which her character throws a ceramic prop sandwich to the floor, shattering it, Austin jokes about "Brecht clapping in the grave" as the act calls attention to the artifice of the play, referencing Brecht's dramaturgical theory and practice of rejecting emotional catharsis and highlighting the unreality and constructed nature of theatrical performances.

Gwendolyn Brooks

During the Road to PALISADE game of Wagon Wheel, Austin mentions having a breakthrough on what the PALISADE-era iteration of Twilight Mirage's New Earth Hegemony naming scheme could be while reading a short poem by Gwendolyn Brooks.[9] The poem, "We Real Cool", features a number of two-word phrases (e.g. "Strike straight", "Sing sin", "Jazz June")[10] that struck Austin as good character names, giving him the idea that as a synthesis of the NEH possessive names and the names of Excerpts in the Divine Fleet, people descended from the NEH on Palisade might "find their names from a quote in the world", meaning the players could name characters based on either quotes from real-world things (such as naming a crew member Highway Nine, a phrase from Bruce Springsteen's "Born to Run") or by implication that a phrase used as a name is a quote from something within the setting.

Octavia Butler

In Twilight Mirage, Dre references Butler's Xenogenesis books (also known as Lilith's Brood), referring to the way in which the gene-trading aliens called Oankali have an obsession or hunger toward the human capacity for cancer.[11]

Robert W. Chambers

The gate below opened and shut, and I crept shaking to my door and bolted it, but I knew no bolts, no locks, could keep that creature out who was coming for the Yellow Sign.

– Robert W. Chambers, "The Yellow Sign"[12]

Chambers's The King in Yellow (a collection featuring several short stories connected by the common element of a forbidden play called The King in Yellow that obsesses and perhaps dooms those who read it) was mentioned by Art as part of the "season seven reading list" that he went through in preparation for Sangfielle.[13] One of the motifs associated with the play is a symbol known as the Yellow Sign, which may possess some occult power, much like the Shape in Sangfielle.

CLAMP

Alise Breka presents: Among Sharks. The story of a Nidean captain escaping from an Apostolos base with the help of the very soldier who shot him down.

Sylvia Clare, "The Best Mecha Anime of 2020 is a Podcast"[14]

During the Road to PALISADE game of Last Shooting, Sylvi discusses the session's framing as an Alise Breka story (one of several Road to PALISADE games based on the cast members' responses to an interview question about PARTIZAN side stories they'd like to see) and talks about the concept as being 'what if Alise Breka was CLAMP', referring to the style & favored motifs of the collaborative group of manga creators.[15]

James S.A. Corey

While responding to a pair of Tips at the Table question about the potential for adaptations of Friends at the Table into other media, Austin briefly mentions The Expanse (a series jointly written by Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck under the Corey pen name) as an example when discussing the process and decisions involved in adapting a book series to TV.[16] Notably, though Austin does not mention it and may not have known, the first Expanse novel was loosely based on a d20 Modern game Franck and Abraham were in together, which in turn repurposed ideas from a pitch for an MMO Franck had made to a Chinese company.[17]

John Darnielle

In the Bluff City season one postmortem, John Darnielle's Wolf in White Van and Universal Harvester are brought up in response to a question about books and other influences on Bluff City.[4]

Philip K. Dick

In an episode of Sangfielle, Keith compares the shift in title between Roadside Picnic and its adaptation Stalker to the way Philip K. Dick's Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? was given the title Blade Runner when adapted to film.[18]

Charles Dickens

Hector Hu mentions Dickens along with William Shakespeare and Abraham Lincoln in a Bluff City episode introduction.[19]

Dickens is mentioned during the Drawing Maps episode in which Austin and Jack discuss character and setting concepts related to Pickman and the Shape in preparation for Sangfielle.[20]

Umberto Eco

While describing the appearance of the spy Marlon Styx in a PALISADE faction game episode, Jack describes him as someone who could easily be cast in an adaptation of Umberto Eco's The Name of the Rose, a murder mystery set in a medieval Italian monastery, with a pious and stern appearance.[21]

Dave Eggers

In the COUNTER/Weight world generation episode, the players discuss the idea of a fully networked society with "voting being as casual and popular as Buzzfeed quizzes", which reminds Dre of Dave Eggers' The Circle.[22]

Michel Foucault

In the Twilight Mirage postmortem, Austin discusses Michel Foucault's concept of biopolitics & biopower (an idea which Foucault introduces in the final chapter of The History of Sexuality Vol. 1: An Introduction).[23]

Austin mentions getting sidetracked thinking about Foucault while discussing time zones and the imposition of standardized clocks during the intro of an episode of Sangfielle.[24]

He who is subjected to a field of visibility, and who knows it, assumes responsibility for the constraints of power; he makes them play spontaneously upon himself; he inscribes in himself the power relation in which he simultaneously plays both roles; he becomes the principle of his own subjection.

– Michel Foucault (tr. Alan Sheridan), Discipline & Punish[25]

During the Road to PALISADE game of Stealing the Throne, Austin discusses how the Divine Discernment resembles and differs from the concept of the panopticon in response to viewers of the live recording bringing it up in chat, emphasizing that it has not been established that people in the setting are aware and afraid of being seen by Discernment, and thus that cannot perform the same disciplinary function that Foucault illustrates through the panopticon, "that it doesn't discipline you—you discipline you."[1]

Robert Frost

We are in a—how’s that poem go? We are in the woods. And there are paths. And you two are two of my rising stars. You know the poem. The stars in the woods? The paths? The inverted paths in the woods. We have some choices to make.

– Austin Walker (as Simeon Shaw), "The Grapplers Down at Promenade Arena Pt. 3"

During Bluff City's World Wide Wrestling game, the wrestling promoter Simeon Shaw, played by Austin, tells his performers Aqua Illusion and Charlie Cupid about the situation they find themselves in by obliquely referencing Robert Frost's famed poem "The Road Not Taken", but cannot properly recall how the poem goes.[26]

William Gibson

In the COUNTER/Weight world generation episode, Austin refers to the fact that cyberpunk author William Gibson dislikes Shadowrun for featuring magic. Later on, when transferring characters to The Sprawl, the character Molly Millions from Gibson's Sprawl trilogy is referred to as an archetypal character emblematic of the Killer, the playbook for a character who "uses bleeding edge technology to commit violence".[27]

During a scene of the Tales from the Loop in Bluff City's second season, Austin describes an overcast wintry sky as having "taken on the character of static—not to bite William Gibson too much here".[28] This refers to the opening sentence of Gibson's novel Neuromancer: "The sky above the port was the color of television, tuned to a dead channel."[29]

Frank Herbert

In the COUNTER/Weight world generation episode, Nick mentions Dune as an example of a science fiction story where characters have superhuman abilities akin to magic but explained through concepts such as advanced genetic technology.[22] Art also rolls up a planet that several of the cast compare to Dune's Arrakis, and Austin reminisces about a Dune hack of Burning Wheel that they never ran together.

Alfred Jarry

During character building for the Road to PALISADE game of Orbital, while discussing the idea of a contraband fashion magazine that's politically or physiologically dangerous to see, Austin refers to Igor Stravinsky's ballet The Rite of Spring to which Jack mentions Ubu, likely referring to Alfred Jarry's play Ubu Roi; both works had famously chaotic and controversial premiere performances that supposedly provoked riots.[30]

Robert Jordan

Early in Sangfielle, Austin mentions learning the word "balefire" for a type of signal fire but not wanting to use it in anything because it had already been used in the popular Wheel of Time series.[7]

James Joyce

In the opening episode of Autumn in Hieron, as Austin starts by introducing the 'love letter' mechanic, Keith jokes "Is this gonna get all James Joyce?", referring to the notoriously explicit letters written by Joyce to his wife Nora Barnacle.[31]

Franz Kafka

In Winter in Hieron, the New Archives are described as "a Kafkaesque bureaucratic nightmare".[32]

A scene of the protagonist Josef K. leading two men through town at the end of The Trial is referenced in Spring in Hieron.[33]

In the Bluff City season one postmortem, Kafka is described as an influence throughout Friends at the Table.[4]

Stephen King

During the game of Dialect in Road to PARTIZAN, Austin tries to remember the name of King's book The Shining and its titular concept, while thinking about names for a similar idea, and Janine lists off his other books IT and Christine in the process of getting there.[34]

During Sangfielle's game of The Ground Itself, King is referenced when the players discuss the idea of a group of young people getting together to recognize and fight a curse that the older generation cannot discuss.[35] Keith also twice references King's book Duma Key when discussing examples of mystical or cursed paintings.[8][36]

During a scene of Tales from the Loop in Bluff City's second season, as Austin discusses euphemisms for how travel between realities via the Tunnel Project can go wrong, Jack references King's science fiction short story "The Jaunt", in which a technology allowing for teleportation has become ubiquitous in spite of a severe drawback—going through the Jaunt while awake causes unbearable mental trauma, as despite seeming instantaneous, "it's eternity in there".[37]

During the Road to PALISADE game of Last Shooting, while discussing her idea of the work of Alise Breka, Sylvi says that she's a "genre writer" who "puts out a lot of shit [...] she's Stephen King and CLAMP, at the same time".[15] Later in the season, while playing Orbital, Keith narrates his character, stunned after receiving a vision, having a mundane thought rather than fully processing the weight of what he's experienced, which Jack describes as "such a Stephen King maneuver".[38]

Ryoko Kui

During the "Sliced" minigame in their first live session of Stewpot, in which a player cooks a meal with monster parts, Keith remarks on ending up with a "bucket of produce" after drawing their random ingredients, to which Austin responds, "Produce can be monsters; I've read Dungeon Meshi."[39] Much like "Sliced", Ryoko Kui's manga Dungeon Meshi (also known as Delicious in Dungeon) features fantasy adventurers cooking meals made with monster parts, including ones from dangerous plant monsters.

Victor LaValle

LaValle's The Ballad of Black Tom (a reworking of H.P. Lovecraft's "The Horror at Red Hook" from the perspective of a black protagonist) was mentioned by Art as part of the "season seven reading list" that he went through in preparation for Sangfielle.[40] Austin previously discussed this novella at length on an episode of Waypoints.[41]

John le Carré

As Jack describes the unremarkable appearance and demeanor of Connadine, the new BIS commander on Palisade, giving an introductory meeting at The Paint Shop, Austin likens the character to George Smiley, a character who appears in a number of novels by John le Carré, to which Jack agrees.[21] Smiley is a British intelligence officer with "The Circus" described as having an inconspicuous and ordinary appearance and demeanor. Gary Oldman, one of three actors who Jack describes Connadine's appearance as being the average point between, played Smiley in the 2011 film adaptation of le Carré's novel Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy.

Ursula K. Le Guin

We live in capitalism, its power seems inescapable — but then, so did the divine right of kings.

– Ursula K. Le Guin, 2014 National Book Awards speech[42]

Le Guin was an inspiration for some of the questions of utopianism in Twilight Mirage, with Austin tweeting one interview quote about decentering conflict in storytelling from her beforehand (while TM was still being referred to as 'Season 6')[43] and quoting her National Book Awards speech during its premiere episode.[6]

It is possible, though perhaps coincidental, that the planet & society Kesh in COUNTER/Weight were named after the Kesh people from Le Guin's book Always Coming Home. The Kesh in the novel are a post-post-apocalyptic society in far-future California with a low population density who reject industrial manufacturing and other aspects of contemporary society. COUNTER/Weight's Kesh is a planet with tens of thousands of inhabitants and 19th century-level technology, a result of the interference of the Rapid Evening actively preventing the development of more complex technology.[6][44]

Ann Leckie

During the Road to PARTIZAN's game of For the Queen, Austin mentions that he has been reading Leckie's Imperial Radch series and says it is good at having tense scenes before fights. Austin also recommends PARTIZAN for fans of the series during the Sports are Just Numerology bonus episode.[45]

H.P. Lovecraft

Sangfielle is described as "cosmic horror by way of Borges instead of Lovecraft" at the beginning of the season.[7] Keith also describes the Junk Mage class in Heart as coming "out of nowhere" with Lovecraft-style cosmic horror aspects in a number of its major abilities, which he often had to reflavor to fit with Lyke and Sangfielle.[46]

George R.R. Martin

Austin mentions Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire series during a bit about the game Deadly Premonition in an episode of Autumn in Hieron.[47]

Arkady Martine

Austin recommends PARTIZAN for fans of Martine's A Memory Called Empire in the Sports are Just Numerology bonus episode.[45]

Karl Marx

Capital is dead labour, that, vampire-like, only lives by sucking living labour, and lives the more, the more labour it sucks. The time during which the labourer works, is the time during which the capitalist consumes the labour-power he has purchased of him.

– Karl Marx (tr. Samuel Moore & Edward Aveling), Capital Vol. I[48]

In the COUNTER/Weight postmortem, Austin responds to the question "Was Marx’s analysis of capital as dead labor an inspiration for Rigour?" by saying, "It's fundamental."[49]

Austin also brings up Marx's writings during an episode of Twilight Mirage, discussing the idea of full communism as a future state of society that people aren't ready to emerge directly into after living under capitalism, likely referring to Marx's discussion of phases of communist society in Critique of the Gotha Programme.[50]

Gregory Mcdonald

In the Bluff City season one postmortem, when a question is asked about books and other influences on Bluff City, Keith somewhat jokingly mentions "the novelization of the movie Fletch" (which was an adaptation of a book by Mcdonald) as a callback to an earlier discussion of the film.[4]

Herman Melville

Melville's novel Moby-Dick is mentioned during the Drawing Maps episode in which Austin and Jack discuss character and setting concepts related to Pickman and the Shape in preparation for Sangfielle.[20]

Austin also alludes to Moby-Dick during the Road to PALISADE, while playing as the whaler Narmine Te'ketch in Lancer. Having previously described the AI assistant in his whaling mech The Captain's as a Microsoft Clippy-esque cartoon whale, Austin describes the whale as turning white and growing sharp teeth to resemble Moby Dick when Narmine inserts a contraband data disk.[51]

China Miéville

During the Road to PALISADE game of Lancer, while discussing ways in which a Pact-aligned character might come to act for revolution, Jack refers to a passage from China Miéville's October: The Story of the Russian Revolution in which cavalry guards stood without attacking, allowing revolutionaries to crawl beneath their horses and enter the palace.[52]

Mike Mignola

Mignola's Hellboy and Batman: The Doom That Came to Gotham were mentioned by Art as part of the "season seven reading list" that he went through in preparation for Sangfielle.[40]

Alan Moore

Art mentioned starting some Alan Moore comics based on the work of H.P. Lovecraft in preparation for Sangfielle but bouncing off them.[13]

Kaoru Mori

The Road to PALISADE game of Upstairs & Downstairs adapts Janine's PARTIZAN spinoff idea of "a story about Kesh housekeepers in the vein of Kaoru Mori's Emma: A Victorian Romance" from the cast's 2020 Crunchyroll interview.[14][53]

Haruki Murakami

In the Bluff City season one postmortem, a number of Haruki Murakami works (Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World, The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle, Kafka on the Shore, "The Elephant Vanishes", and A Wild Sheep Chase) are brought up in response to a question about books and other influences on Bluff City.[4] Austin describes Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World in particular as "influential for everything I've done as a GM", and notes the Polyphony episodes of Twilight Mirage as a particular example.

Nostradamus

At forty-five degrees the sky will burn,
Fire to approach the great new city:
In an instant a great scattered flame will leap up,
When one will want to demand proof of the Normans.

– Nostradamus (tr. Edgar Leoni), Nostradamus and his Prophecies[54]

While discussing the Dim Liturgy's use of ancient predictions by Crystal Palace in a PALISADE faction episode, Art compares the text they're working from to the supposedly prophetic writings of Nostradamus, prompting Austin to pull up and read some random selections of his work to get a sense for it.[21]

Mervyn Peake

During the first faction episode of PALISADE, Jack lists several points of inspiration for the Paint Shop, a mountaintop castle and strategic point on Palisade, including Castle Gormenghast, the titular location of Mervyn Peake's Gormenghast series.[21]

Nicholas Pileggi

During a scene of Tales from the Loop in Bluff City's second season, Keith and Austin riff about Agent Clark and Agent Bailey of The Concern arguing over their favorite Martin Scorsese movies, deciding that Clark's favorite is Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore and Bailey's is Casino. Keith jokes that Clark prefers the book of Casino to the film. Casino was based on Nicholas Pileggi's nonfiction book Casino: Life and Honor in Las Vegas. Pileggi also wrote Wiseguy: Life in a Mafia Family, which was similarly adapted into Scorsese's earlier film Goodfellas, and cowrote both screenplays with Scorsese.[37]

Edgar Allan Poe

During the Road to PALISADE game of Upstairs & Downstairs, Austin references the house crumbling in on itself in the climax of Poe's short story "The Fall of the House of Usher", which fulfills its title in both senses – the fall of the familial legacy and the structure itself – with the mansion collapsing into a lake along with the death of the final living members of the family.[3]

Terry Pratchett

In an episode of Autumn in Hieron, while discussing how Lem's musical pattern magic may change depending on the environment it is being performed in, Jack contrasts it to Pratchett's more absurd style of fantasy, saying "It still sounds like a violin [...] this isn't like a Terry Pratchett thing where all of a sudden you're on a airplane."[55] Later in the same season, Austin compares a story Nick tells about a previous D&D campaign he ran to Pratchett, to which Nick agrees, "all of my fantasy stuff is basically just really just Discworld."[47]

Thomas Pynchon

The name of Tristero from Autumn in Hieron was chosen by Austin as a self-described "unintentional/unconscious" allusion to Thomas Pynchon's novella The Crying of Lot 49.[56] In Pynchon's story, the protagonist finds herself unraveling a possible conspiracy around the existence of Tristero (also spelled Trystero), a centuries-old underground postal service and secret society.

Pynchon and The Crying of Lot 49 are also mentioned as influential during the Bluff City season one postmortem.[4]

Matt Ruff

Ruff's Lovecraft Country and its TV adaptation were mentioned by Art as part of the "season seven reading list" that he went through in preparation for Sangfielle.[40]

William Shakespeare

When discussing the title and dramatic question of the play the characters will be performing as part of their game of Scene Thieves, Jack refers to Shakespeare using the device of a play-within-a-play (such as Hamlet's The Murder of Gonzago) to reflect the dramatic question of the broader story.[57]

Hector Hu mentions Shakespeare along with Charles Dickens and Abraham Lincoln in a Bluff City episode introduction.[19] Janine, when discussing her take on Action Movie World's playbook of The Thespian as Mason Lowry, refers to "the prototypical actor who’s really antsy because he hasn’t played Hamlet yet".[58] During the Bluff City season one postmortem, the cast jokes about being better than Shakespeare for having "a show within a show within a show within a show" with Aliens in the Outfield.[4]

Austin compares the role of the Perennial Wave in PARTIZAN to "the way in which magic is used in certain fairy tales or in Shakespeare".[59] While making an analogy about Future later in the season, Austin refers to Hamlet's ability to monologue/soliloquize about grief as an example to discuss fiction being able to clarify real emotions.[60]

During talk at the top of a PALISADE episode, Austin refers to a line from Romeo and Juliet in which Juliet says "I have an ill-divining soul!"[21][61] Later in the same episode, Jack alludes to Juliet's words "O true apothecary! Thy drugs are quick."[62] The last episode released on the main podcast feed prior to the debut of PALISADE was a bonus Media Club discussion of Romeo + Juliet, the play's 1996 film adaptation.

R.L. Stine

In an episode of Twilight Mirage, Art asks, "What's the name of that author who does those books?" and Keith suggests Goosebumps author R.L. Stine. He was not the one Art was thinking of.[63]

Arkady and Boris Strugatsky

The Strugatsky brothers' book Roadside Picnic is mentioned several times as a touchstone near the beginning of Sangfielle.[7][18]

Chuck Tingle

After seeing an emotional connection between Gig and an alien horse with a prehensile mane during an episode of Twilight Mirage, Art asks, "What's the name of that author who does those books?" and then clarifies that he means "the Amazon guy", at which point several others figure out he's thinking of Chuck Tingle, known for writing erotica about romantic encounters with fantasy creatures such as unicorns, as well as anthropomorphized objects or concepts. After Austin declares that they're not naming the horse after Chuck Tingle, Keith jokes about naming it Duck Pringle, before deciding to simply name it Duck.[63]

J.R.R. Tolkien

During Autumn in Hieron worldbuilding, it was established that pre-Erasure Hieron once resembled Tolkien-style traditional fantasy.[64] Tolkien continues to show up as a reference for fantasy tropes which the podcast tries to complicate, subvert, or move through in search of what parts are salvageable.[65] Players also discuss pipeweed[66] and joke about getting sued by the Tolkien estate for saying "hobbit".[67]

Jeff VanderMeer

During an episode of Twilight Mirage, Austin mentions that VanderMeer's book Annihilation has been an influence both on The Wound from that season as well as The Buoy and the strata and laminae in Winter in Hieron.[68]

Annihilation is mentioned again as a touchstone in the first episode of Sangfielle.[7] A move that Duvall takes later on in the season is called Annihilation, presumably as a reference to the book and/or its film adaptation.[69]

C.V. Wedgwood

While responding to a Tips at the Table question about whether media they're reading or watching affects their play, Austin mentions that he has been reading C.V. Wedgwood's The Thirty Years War in as research for the as-yet-unnamed PARTIZAN.[16]

Oscar Wilde

While brainstorming ideas for mystical or cursed paintings in Sangfielle, Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray is mentioned as something Austin doesn't want to replicate.[8] Dorian Gray does, nevertheless, return later as a point of comparison for one of several miscellaneous exhibits in a gallery Duvall visits in Sapodilla while looking for information on his chosen painting.[70]

Gene Wolfe

I pressed past the merychip's head, seized the ankle of the wagoneer who had struck her, and pulled him from his seat. By that time all the gate was ringing with bawling and swearing, and the cries of the injured, and the bellowings of frightened animals; and if the stranger continued his tale I could not hear it.

– Gene Wolfe, The Shadow of the Torturer[71]

While playing A Visit to San Sibilia, Austin twice refers to Wolfe's The Book of the New Sun, first mentioning its use of "alcalde" as a term for a magistrate (Book of the New Sun frequently uses terms that are archaic or obscure in modern English, ostensibly as means of "translating" concepts from its far-future setting that have not been invented yet) and later referring to the final scene of The Shadow of the Torturer, which takes place amidst the chaos of a crowd passing through the gates of a massive wall, as a comparison for a commotion outside the walls of Concentus.[72]

Dave Wolverton

In the COUNTER/Weight world generation episode, Keith mentions a book (Wolverton's Jedi Apprentice: The Rising Force) he read as a child from a prequel series to the Star Wars prequel films, in which Obi-Wan Kenobi is kicked out of the Jedi academy and effectively exiled because no one wanted him as an apprentice, as a point of inspiration for his own character, who he wanted to have been kicked out of a university for psionics.[22]

Timothy Zahn

During the Road to PALISADE game of Stealing the Throne, while discussing the discontinuation of the Star Wars Expanded Universe, Dre jokes that Disney won't even let them touch a book by Timothy Zahn, an author known for his extensive work in the EU.[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 The Road to PALISADE 03: Stealing the Throne
  2. Live at the Table: Good Society Pt. 1
  3. 3.0 3.1 The Road to PALISADE 19: Upstairs & Downstairs Pt. 2
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 Bluff City Season 1 Post Mortem
  5. 5.0 5.1 Borges, Jorge Luis. Labyrinths. New Directions, 1962.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Twilight Mirage 00: The Final Eight Divines
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 Sangfielle 01: The Curse of Eastern Folly Pt. 1
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 Sangfielle 13: Market Day in Blackwick
  9. The Road to PALISADE 07: Wagon Wheel Pt. 3
  10. https://poets.org/poem/we-real-cool
  11. Twilight Mirage 13: An Instinct Without A Word
  12. https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_King_in_Yellow/The_Yellow_Sign
  13. 13.0 13.1 https://twitter.com/atebbel/status/1367679214070108162
  14. 14.0 14.1 Wescott, Adam. (2020-09-30). "The Best Mecha Anime of 2020 is a Podcast". Crunchyroll. Retrieved 2023-02-23.
  15. 15.0 15.1 The Road to PALISADE 04: Last Shooting
  16. 16.0 16.1 Tips at the Table 21: Pet Goku
  17. Charlie Hall (2018-08-07). "The Expanse, once a homebrew tabletop RPG, is going legit". Polygon. Retrieved 2022-09-10.
  18. 18.0 18.1 Sangfielle 04: The Blackwick Group
  19. 19.0 19.1 Bluff City 04: The Cost of Greed Pt. 2
  20. 20.0 20.1 Drawing Maps - December 2020 - Sangfielle Characters #7: Pickman
  21. 21.0 21.1 21.2 21.3 21.4 PALISADE 03: Today Is a Monday
  22. 22.0 22.1 22.2 COUNTER/Weight -01: Secret World Gen Episode
  23. Twilight Mirage 68: The Twilight Mirage Post Mortem
  24. Sangfielle 39: Just Returns Pt. 3
  25. Foucault, Michel. Discipline & Punish. Vintage, May 1995. p. 202-203.
  26. Bluff City 11: The Grapplers Down at Promenade Arena Pt. 3
  27. COUNTER/Weight 10: Drawing Clocks
  28. Bluff City 32: To Be Young Near the Shore Pt. 1
  29. Gibson, William. Neuromancer. Ace, July 1984. p. 3.
  30. The Road to PALISADE 11: Orbital Pt. 1
  31. Autumn in Hieron 01: We Have Not Yet Begun To Be Pompous
  32. Winter in Hieron 19: Make The Spring Last Forever
  33. Spring in Hieron 27: A Place and a Time
  34. The Road to PARTIZAN 01: Dialect Pt. 1
  35. Sangfielle 02: The Curse of Eastern Folly Pt. 2
  36. Sangfielle 25: The Perpetual Oratorio of Davia Pledge Pt. 3
  37. 37.0 37.1 Bluff City 35: To Be Young Near the Shore Pt. 4
  38. The Road to PALISADE 14: Orbital Pt. 4
  39. Live at the Table: Stewpot Pt. 1
  40. 40.0 40.1 40.2 https://twitter.com/atebbel/status/1367679212597907461
  41. https://play.acast.com/s/vicegamingsnewpodcast/waypoints09-thesleepingkingdoesnthonorsmallrequests
  42. https://www.ursulakleguin.com/nbf-medal
  43. https://twitter.com/austin_walker/status/846179453436903425
  44. COUNTER/Weight 15: A Candle in the Sun
  45. 45.0 45.1 Bonus Episode: Sports Are Just Numerology
  46. Sangfielle 18: What Happened at Bell Metal Station Pt. 2
  47. 47.0 47.1 Autumn in Hieron 28: A Choice About What You Believe
  48. https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1867-c1/ch10.htm
  49. COUNTER/Weight 44: Live Post-Mortem
  50. Twilight Mirage 47: Uncontrolled Fires
  51. The Road to PALISADE 10: Lancer Pt. 3
  52. The Road to PALISADE 09: Lancer Pt. 2
  53. The Road to PALISADE 18: Upstairs & Downstairs Pt. 1
  54. https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Les_Propheties
  55. Autumn in Hieron 15: Have You Ever Swung A Sword At A Ghost Before?
  56. https://twitter.com/austin_walker/status/770680407880822785
  57. Bonus Episode: Marielda NNAF Fundraiser Livestream
  58. Bluff City 07: The Eighty Six Pt. 1
  59. PARTIZAN 00: The Divine Principality
  60. PARTIZAN 13: A Captive Audience
  61. Dowden, Edward, ed. (1900). Romeo and Juliet, III.v.54. The Arden Shakespeare, first series.
  62. Romeo and Juliet, V.iii.119-120.
  63. 63.0 63.1 Twilight Mirage 12: The Promise of Presence
  64. Autumn in Hieron 00: We’re Not Calling It Duckberg
  65. Autumn in Hieron 29: Live Post Mortem
  66. Autumn in Hieron Holiday Special 01: I Don’t Know What’s in That Box
  67. Winter in Hieron 17: Undelivered Resignations
  68. Twilight Mirage 46: Every Time We Leave, It Changes
  69. Sangfielle 33: Passage on the Jade Moon Pt. 2
  70. Sangfielle 22: Whispers in the City by the Sea
  71. Wolfe, Gene. Shadow and Claw. Orb, 1994. p. 209.
  72. Sangfielle 56: Six Travelers: Pickman