Monsters and Legends Hardcover – July 2, 2013 by Davide Cali (Author), Gabriella Giandelli (Illustrator)
“Legendary
lands … have only one characteristic in common: whether they depend on
ancient legends whose origins are lost in the mists of time or whether
they are an effect of a modern invention, they have created flows of
belief,” Umberto Eco wrote in his illustrated meditation on imaginary places.
But as much as fictional lands might hold enduring allure, what
captivates our shared imagination even more are the fictional and mythic
creatures of our cultural folklore, both ancient and modern. That’s
precisely what writer Davide Cali and illustrator Gabriela Giandelli explore in Monsters and Legends (public library) — a vibrant and whimsical volume from independent British children’s book press Flying Eye Books, which also gave us the illustrated chronicle of Shackleton’s historic expedition.
From mermaids and unicorns to Cyclops and giant squid to vampires and
zombies, Giandelli’s breathtaking illustrations and Cali’s illuminating
stories about the origin of each mythic creature bring to life the
beings that haunt our collective conscience, as well as those we
secretly fear — or hope — exist in some mystical corner of what we
concede is reality.
The Mapiguari
In South America, we meet the stinky Mapiguari, a giant nocturnal
animal with long arms and claws, the skin of a reptile, and bright red
hair, believed to roam the Amazon jungle. Legend has it, the creature
avoids water, which might account for its smell. Some locals and other
believers think it’s a giant sloth — a species that disappeared more
than 10,000 years ago. Skeptics, meanwhile, consider it the mistaken
mashup of a regular sloth and an armadillo, which terrified nighttime
travelers in the jungle somehow remixed in their frightful imagination.
The Dragon
But one of the most common species-mashups is the dragon, a mythic
being that appears in various incarnations in many cultures, with powers
ranging from the destructive to the divine.
In every culture, there is a creature resembling a
Dragon. It often appears as a symbol of life and power, a creative or
protective spirit closer to a god than an actual animal. That’s
certainly true in the case of Huang Long in Chinese mythology, or
Quetzalcoatl, the Aztecs’ feathered serpent.
Commonly depicted with a snake’s body, lizard’s legs, eagle’s talons,
crocodile’s jaws, lion’s teeth and bat-like wings, the Dragon is a
combination of several different animals. Among the Dragon’s many
portrayals is the Hydra of Greek mythology — a vicious sea monster with
seven heads. Two of the most famous Hydras are the Lernaean Hydra, which
was killed by Hercules, and Scylla, which was rumored to live in the
depths of the strait in Messina.
Gustave
In Africa, we find a legendary 20-foot-long Nile Crocodile that
haunted Lake Tanganyika, the world’s second-largest freshwater lake, for
years. Named Gustave by the locals and alleged to have eaten at least
300 people, the giant croc lived for sixty years and survived countless
capture attempts, until hunters managed to slay him in 2005. Once
measured, Gustave turned out to be just a regular Nile Crocodile, 13
feet long — not that unusual for a species that can grow up to 16 feet
in length.
In the same region, the dinosaur-like Mokele-mbembe awaits us:
The Mokele-Mbembe
800 kilometers north of Brazzaville, the capital of the
Republic of the Congo, is a vast, swampy area where rumors tell of a
frightening creature — the Mokele-mbembe. Described for the first time
by a French missionary in the 18th century, he claimed the Mokele-mbembe
was as big as an elephant, with a small snake-like head, a 2 to 3 meter
long neck, hippopotamus feet and a crocodile tail.
The description sounds remarkably similar to the Sauropods, a group
of animals that disappeared 65.5 million years ago! From 1913 onwards,
expeditions set out in search of the Mokele-mbembe. But they returned
with little more than a few pictures and some vague footage. According
to some theories the Mokele-mbembe might be an unknown species of
monitor lizard.
Others say it’s a softshell turtle whose long neck, small head and
aggressive attitude match the description of the monster. The softshell
turtle isn’t as big as the legendary Mokele-mbembe but skeptics still
argue that it is possible that Pygmies, terrified of an animal that they
didn’t know, got the measurements wrong. They claim that this situation
is far more likely to be the case than that a dinosaur is living
quietly in Africa without anybody ever having taken its picture.
Then comes a mythic creature that has enjoyed a resurgence as a visual meme of the social-web era:
The Kraken
The Kraken is a gigantic legendary sea monster. Its name comes from the Norwegian word krake,
meaning “a twisted or crooked animal.” The origin of the Kraken myth
goes back to the 13th century, but it’s not until the 18th and 19th
centuries that sailor stories about the Kraken really start multiplying!
Stories were told of ships being attacked and destroyed by a creature
with tentacles over a kilometer long. Carl Linnaeus … mentioned the
Kraken in his first book in 1735, under the scientific name of Microcosmus marinus, but it doesn’t appear in his following books, as he couldn’t prove its existence.
Roald Dahl’s Gremlins
One of the most charming entries highlights a tiny mischievous
creature from Irish folklore, the Gremlin, brought back into the popular
imagination by beloved children’s book author Roald Dahl. In 1942, long
before he made a name for himself with this children’s stories, Dahl
was a pilot in the Royal Air Force, flying a B-25 Mitchell bomber. A
mechanical malfunction on one of his flights resulted in a forced
landing, after which Dahl took it upon himself to inform the
unsuspecting public that Gremlins had been terrorizing the Royal Air
Force for months — pilots had created their own folklore, blaming the
legendary creatures for the high rate of breakdowns. The myth, of
course, was just a sandbox for Dahl’s imagination as a storyteller — the
following year, he published The Gremlins, his first children’s book.
The Chupacabra
As we move closer to the present day, we meet the Chupacabra, a
creature that preys on chickens and goats, named after the Spanish for
“goat sucker.” Witness accounts from Latin America and Florida describe
it as a hairless kangaroo with the head of a dog, which acts like a
vampire coyote that sucks its prey dry of blood. Some suspect it was the
progeny of genetic experiments, while others abandon all attempts at
plausibility and say it came from outer space. The Chupacabra is also
believed to possess several paranormal superpowers, such as the ability
to change color and hypnotize its prey via telepathy.
Mythic as this sounds, certain species of real animals have recently been found to employ a kind of “mind control” over their prey — perhaps proof that all myth, including religion, for that matter, is a tapestry woven of our greatest immaterial fears and hopes, with a few threats of material reality.
Indeed, Cali takes care to balance the mythology with a healthy dose of myth-busting that would make Carl Sagan proud. Each myth is followed by a “What We Know” section that grounds us with reality-based evidence:
The videos of the Chupacabra, often blurry and hard to
follow, and the pictures, usually faked, don’t help much with
identifying the creature. But if you trust the descriptions, the
Chupacabra looks a lot like a rare species of Mexican hairless dog
called Xoloitzcuintle.
DNA tests on dead specimens have proven that it is an ordinary dog with nothing extraterrestrial about it at all.
And of course no taxonomy of modern folklore would be complete without everyone’s favorite pop culture meme:
The Zombie
Zombies, or Walking Dead, [are] regular actors in horror
movies… But Zombie stories, like Werewolf stories or Vampire stories,
have their roots in reality. Well, almost… In Haiti people practice a
religion called Voodoo that holds magic and superstition in high regard.
It is thought that a Bokor — a Voodoo sorcerer — can steal someone’s
soul, wake him or her from the death and turn them into a slave — a
Zombie.
Cali once again contrasts the myth with the empirical evidence:
A study conducted in the 1980s found that the Bokor
probably controlled people using a neurotoxin created from the poison of
the fugu, a type of pufferfish. The neurotoxin causes a state of
apparent death and the supposed complete obedience of the “exhumed
corpse.” In reality, Zombies are just drugged slaves forced to work in
sugar plantations. Obedient workers that never go on strike!
Monsters and Legends
is bound to tickle the imagination and poke a friendly stick at
superstition, all while enchanting us with irresistibly gorgeous
illustrations. For a different octave of the siren song of the mythic,
complement it with Eco’s The Book of Legendary Lands and Codex Seraphinianus, history’s most bizarre and beautiful encyclopedia of the imaginary.
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