Howdy...<br>Actually its a couple of questions:<br><br>First, is the e-mail listed for Richard Snider still his real, active e-mail? Over the past year, I've tried several times to ask him a question, but he is either unwilling or unable to respond. After so long a time, I am quite disappointed, for whatever the reason. A couple of weeks ago, I again tried, and here is the text:<br>
<br>['Hello. I belong to the P&P Players List, and I tried to contact you
a couple times over the past year regarding personal research on a term
that I encountered in The Creature Book. This term is very elusive, and
in the course of hunting down its meaning I have encountered nothing
but scarcity and contention as to its origin or even its validity as an
actual word.<br>
The word is akhkharu. I tried to contact the University Of PA's program
that is compiling a Sumerian dictionary, but their funding was cut off
and I have received no response. Some bloggers insist that the word is
a fake entry in some concocted pseudo-mythology that tries to depict
Lovecraft's Necronomicon as an actual historical grimoire. There is an
Akhkhazu entry in Wikipedia, but it is vague and apparently off the
mark (although it does make me wonder if the term akhkharu is
technically more Akkadic than Sumeric).<br>
Now, I have encountered the term in a book entitled Lectures On The
Origin And Growth Of Religion, which dates from the later 1800s, but it
doesnt seem to offer any description or etymology.<br>I
was wondering if you could help me with this. Could you tell me your
sources for the term? I read that you studied archaeology for a time,
and have a background in folklore & myth (unless I am mistaken).<br>
<br>Please help me with this question. The elusiveness of this word is very odd to me.']<br><br>Well, thats it. Nobody, I mean NOBODY knows about this word, even though it is used by many people. At least, I'm having a bitch of a time researching it. You guys are probably wondering WHY I am so determined to research this thing. Its because, simply, thats what I do. I'm involved with fantasy on the world-building level, and I'm an aspiring writer. I research history/mythology/religion/the occult, as time and accessibility of the 'deeper sources' permits. <br>
<br>Usually, I can break the defenses of a reluctant term apart. One example of Mr. Snider's usage that was a little difficult briefly was the deity Choronzon (the source of that was in an occult document penned by the Elizabethan court mage/philosopher Dr. John Dee, and it was appropriated later by Aleister Crowley). <br>
<br>I have a fellow fantasist-enthusiast, and we go on for hours and hours about the minutiae of the 'deep' fantasy tradition. (We assume made up nicknames, styled after classic-era authors, in the manner that the members of SAGA did; that explains the 'Phineas Cromwell' thing).<br>
<br>To sum up, I have a deeper angle of interest in these things. And thats basically why P&P is one of my FRPGs of choice. I just wish Mr. Snider was responsive to that.<br><br>I hope, if there's a chance, that a response (if any) to this post will yield some help. I figure my next step is to try to contact as many Professors of the Sumerian/Akkadian language/mythology as I can.<br>
<br>Any help (or response) would be GREATLY appreciated.<br><br><br><br><br>