Synopses & Reviews
Phil Masters is a roleplaying gamer and writer (and occasional editor) of long standing. He started submitting material to White Dwarf in the 1980s and currently works in that field, mostly - though not solely - on material for Steve Jackson Games' GURPS line. That work includes The Discworld Roleplaying Game with Terry Pratchett and a number of historical supplements, including GURPS Arabian Nights, GURPS Atlantis and GURPS Dragons. The author lives in Royston, UK.
About the Author
IntroductionThe 1,001 Nights
Arrivals in Europe
The Seven Voyages of Sinbad
Sinbad the Porter and Sinbad the Sailor
The First Voyage: Living Islands and Sea Horses
The Second Voyage: The Flight of the Roc
The Third Voyage: Evil Apes and Man-Eating Giants
The Fourth Voyage: Cannibals and Caves of Terror
The Fifth Voyage: Rocs, Again, and the Old Man of the Sea
The Sixth Voyage: The River of Gems
The Seventh Voyage: The Land of Winged Men
The Arabian Nights World
Haroun al-Rashid and the Abbasid Period
Medieval Baghdad
Seafarers on the Indian Ocean
Ships and Sailors
Trade-Goods
Sinbad in Later Times
Sinbad the Legend
Sinbad Movies
Bibliography
Table of Contents
Sinbad the Sailor presents a retelling of the stories of the most famous adventurer from One Thousand and One Arabian Nights, with added information covering the history of the stories and the age in which they are set.
Stories say that in the age of the Caliph Haroun al-Rashid, in the port city of Basra, there lived a wealthy man named Sinbad the Sailor. Sinbad had great tales to tell, of the seven voyages on which he acquired his fortune, of the strangeness and terror he encountered along the way, of huge monsters and strange people, and of storms at sea and lands beyond the horizon.
This book retells the tales of those voyages and places them in context. It discusses not only the greater collection of stories known as One Thousand and One Arabian Nights within which Sinbad appears, but medieval Cairo where these tales were told, the historical Abbasid Dynasty which ruled Sinbad's home city, and the great Arabian voyages of exploration and trade which inspired these stories. It also looks at the modern incarnations of Sinbad that have appeared since his tales reached the West - including Sinbad as the swashbuckling hero of stage plays, stop-motion movies, and television fantasy.