Wild Cards

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Wild Cards
Author Edited by George R. R. Martin
and Melinda M. Snodgrass
Country United States
Language English
Genre Superhero anthology
Publisher Bantam Books
Baen
ibooks Inc.
Tor Books
Media type Print (hardcover and paperback), eBook

Wild Cards is a science fiction and superhero anthology series set in a shared universe. The series was created by a group of New Mexico science fiction authors, but it is mostly pulled together and edited by best-selling author George R. R. Martin with assistance by Melinda M. Snodgrass, also a contributor to the series. There were twelve initial volumes released by Bantam, those being published between 1987 and 1993, before the series switched publishers, going to Baen, which released three new volumes between 1993 and 1995; then it was on to a third, ibooks Inc., which published two new volumes and also reprinted the first six, all between 2002 and 2006; then it was on to its fourth and current publisher, Tor in 2008, that continues the series and published five new volumes as of November 2014. Another Wild Cards volume has since been completed and will be published in the spring of 2016.

While most of the volumes are made up of individual short stories, they generally focus on a central theme or event. There were also several longer story lines which run through several of the books. Every third book uses the format of the mosaic novel. This involves several writers writing individual story lines, which are then edited by blending them together into one seamless novel-length story. In addition several volumes in the series are stand-alone complete novels written by a single Wild Cards author.

Wild Cards was inspired by traditional superhero comics, and many of the authors play with the conventions of the medium, while some characters are based on existing heroes (for example, Jetboy was modeled on the Hillman Periodicals' character Airboy). Many of the original authors were also inspired by a long-running Albuquerque, New Mexico campaign of the role-playing game Superworld, gamemastered by George R. R. Martin; many modeled their characters on their in-game persona.[1]

Contributors to the series include Roger Zelazny, Lewis Shiner, Walter Jon Williams, Pat Cadigan, Howard Waldrop, Leanne C. Harper, Chris Claremont, Victor Milán, John J. Miller, and Martin himself. British writer Neil Gaiman met with Martin in 1987 and pitched the idea of a Wild Cards story about a character who lives in a world of dreams. Martin declined due to Gaiman's lack of prior credits at the time. Gaiman went on to publish his story as The Sandman, a comic-book series set in the DC Universe.[2]

Setting

The series relates an alternate history of the Earth after World War II. In 1946 an alien virus that rewrites human DNA is accidentally unleashed in the skies over New York City. It kills 90% of those who come into contact with it (referred to as 'drawing the Black Queen'). However, 9% mutate into deformed creatures (known as 'Jokers') and the remaining 1% gain superpowers (known as 'Aces'). A percentage of the Aces are referred to as 'Deuces', having acquired useless or ridiculous powers, such as the ability to levitate up to two feet, or to grow body hair at will. The airborne virus eventually spreads all over the world, infecting tens of thousands.

The Wild Cards universe is distinguished from most superhero comic book fiction by several thematic elements. Early on, the authors decided to pursue a more realistic or naturalistic approach to storytelling. Few of the Ace characters in Wild Cards have secret identities, or are traditional crime-fighting superheroes in the mold of Spider-Man or Batman. Wild Cards remained set within a recognizably real world with recognizably real people and pop culture and, because of the historical setting of many of the stories, had characters who aged realistically during the course of the series. The majority of Wild Card victims live in the run-down ghetto of Jokertown, while the fortunate Aces become glamorous celebrities. In addition Wild Cards took a more graphic approach to violence, and particularly to sex, than most traditional superhero stories ever do.

Another aspect of the series is its use of real people, such as Buddy Holly, Grace Kelly and Richard Nixon. Unlike most superhero universes, the events of Wild Cards alter history in many ways - a notable example being Fidel Castro remaining in New York to play baseball, and the lack of a Communist takeover in Cuba thereafter. As of 1986, Castro was the pitching coach for the Brooklyn Dodgers, who never moved to Los Angeles, and still play at Ebbets Field. Thus, L.A., not New York, got an expansion team called the Stars after the Giants moved to Minnesota in lieu of San Francisco. In the Wild Cards universe the Dodgers are the equivalent of the New York Mets, with their history after the 1950s coinciding with the Mets' history, including victory in the 1969 World Series over the Baltimore Orioles. The Los Angeles Stars are the equivalent of the real Dodgers.

Other notable changes: Mick Jagger is a lycanthropic ace. Frank Zappa has a son, Frank Zappa, Jr., who becomes a general in the U.S. Army and eventually Vice President. Buddy Holly does not die in a plane crash but instead winds up covering Prince and Billy Idol in dingy venues before discovering his ace super powers during a come-back concert. The House Un-American Activities Committee blacklists aces instead of entertainment industry workers. Thomas Marion Douglas (an analogue of Jim Morrison), lead singer for the rock group Destiny, was an ace called the Lizard King and dies not of a drug overdose in France but rather from a dose of the experimental trump virus which cures him and removes his immunity to many years of drug abuse. The botched Iranian hostage rescue of the Jimmy Carter administration is bungled by a team of aces (including Popinjay and Carnifex) rather than the U.S. military (and was later proven to be part of a conspiracy to prevent Carter's re-election due to his pro-wild card stance). President George H. W. Bush promises "no new exotics (a politically correct term for wild carders) laws" rather than "no new taxes," but still goes back on his word.

Main characters

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The series features a large and ever-changing cast of characters. A minor character in one story can become a major, or even the viewpoint, character in another, or vice versa.

Classifications in Wild Cards

There are certain broad classes of characters in the Wild Cards universe of superhero novels started by George R. R. Martin.

Aces

To be classified as an Ace, the person must still be basically human in appearance and generally be able to "pass" in society as normal person—as opposed to the physical mutations affecting those known as Jokers, resulting in various physical deformities or debilitating conditions. Certain individuals with both powers and physical alterations are still considered Aces, such as the celebrity Ace known as Peregrine, who despite having a pair of feathered wings growing from her shoulder blades is otherwise physically attractive in appearance.

Ace powers range from the trivial (for example, the ability to turn water into wine) to the fantastic abilities that the general public would actually consider to be "superpowers" (flying, teleporting, mind-reading, shape-shifting, etc.). Those Aces with powers that are so minor or specific as to be considered "parlor tricks" are sub-classified Deuces.

Jokers

A Joker is a person that was infected by the Wild Card virus and got one or more deformities or crippling physical conditions as a result. The mutations can be slight (like Father Squid's nose, which turned into a mass of tentacles) or grotesque (like Snotman, who exudes a foul-smelling secretion through every pore of his body). Some alterations that would be classified as a Joker are only obvious if one was aware of the infected individual's original appearance (such as Gimili, who appeared to simply be a dwarf, but was in fact mutated into that form by the virus, or Succubus, who appeared to be an elderly woman, whose physical aging had been accelerated by her mutation). Those who gained superhuman powers were instead classified as Aces, though there were some with both powers and deformities who were referred to as Ace/Jokers, such as Bloat. There were even a very fortunate few whose deformities were considered attractive by many, such as Peregrine, an Ace with flight-capable angelic wings who eventually became a TV star with her own talk show, Peregrine's Perch. Jokers often refer to those not affected by the Wild card virus as Nats.

Dr. Tachyon has theorized that the forms taken by Jokers are influenced by the subconscious mind through a form of micro-telekinesis during the initial stage of the disease. This could explain why some joker forms are similar to those of animals or fantasy creatures, or often reflect the personal fears or desires of the individuals.

The largest and oldest Joker community in the world is the New York City neighborhood known as Jokertown.

Deuces

A Deuce is a person that was infected by the Wild Card virus and gained a useless or trivial ability, like the power to levitate pennies, the ability to turn into a puddle of water, the ability to grow bodily hair at will, or the ability to levitate two feet off the ground. Those with more significant powers are known as Aces.

Nats

Some Wild Carders, particularly Jokers, use the term "Nat", short for natural, as a sometimes derogatory way of referring to those who are not infected by the Wild Card.

Suicide Kings

A Suicide King is a child of two Wild Card Positive parents who has inherited the virus. A Suicide King is likely to express their Wild Card virus when reaching puberty, and has the same 90% chance of death as another person that caught the Wild Cards virus normally. Causing undue mental distress to a Suicide King is punishable by law, as this could cause the virus to express itself.

Locations

Most of the stories in the Wild Cards novels are set in or around Manhattan. As the original point of release for the Wild Card virus, Manhattan contains the largest and oldest community of those infected. In particular, many stories deal with the neighborhood known as Jokertown. This is based on the real world neighborhood of The Bowery and is populated mainly by Jokers. In the years after the release of the virus, the neighborhood had provided cheap housing to those who had found their lives disrupted by their mutations. The neighborhood has a rough reputation through most of the series, due to the economic marginality and physically imposing nature of many of the residents. The economic enterprises of the neighborhood tend to run towards night clubs and strip clubs with some catering to those who seek unusual performances by Jokers. For much of the twentieth century, slumming in Jokertown was a popular activity among more adventuresome Nats. The neighborhood, however, also has more legitimate landmarks such as the Jokertown Clinic, a museum to Wild Card history, and the Church of Jesus Christ Joker, a Catholic splinter sect which worships a hermaphroditic Joker version of Jesus. Many of the residents of Jokertown have eschewed their birth names and instead are known by nicknames related to their deformity. A notable exception was Xavier Desmond, a local club owner and civic leader known as the "Mayor of Jokertown." For a long time many neighborhood residents opted to wear masks, ostensibly to cover up deformities, but also to allow a greater degree of anonymity for each of them.

Another prominent Manhattan location in the early books was the restaurant "Aces High." Catering to the trend in "Wild Card Chic" that began in the 1970s, Aces High was run by the gravity controlling ace Hiram Worchester, known as "Fatman". From the 1970s through the late 1980s the restaurant, located in the Empire State Building, was a popular destination for the more publicity conscious aces. The Empire State Building would be the occasional target of a giant ape who would escape from the Central Park Zoo every few years and climb the building aka King Kong. The ape, who had first appeared in the wake of the Northeast Blackout of 1965, was revealed in the 1980s to be a movie obsessed shape shifter who had suffered a nervous breakdown.

In the early 1990s a group of politically radical Jokers, dissatisfied with the culture of Jokertown, set up their own society on Ellis Island, which had remained abandoned in the Wild Cards timeline. Renaming the island The Rox, the community was led by a massively overweight and massively powerful teenage Joker named Bloat. They welcomed outcast Wild Carders to the island and ultimately drew the ire of the government through their alliance with a group of body swapping criminals known as the Jumpers, and through their attempts to expand to other islands in New York Harbor (which included at one point a vulgar defacing of the Statue of Liberty).

While the novels mainly focus on the New York Metropolitan Area they did occasionally journey outside the U.S. In particular the late 1980s saw an official congressional fact finding mission made up of various politicians and notable Wild Carders who traveled to various other countries to observe the treatment of Wild Carders there. Most notable were perhaps Egypt, where several Jokers who took the form of ancient Egyptian Gods had begun to bring back the ancient religion, and Central America, where two ace brothers were leading a Wild Card revolution.

In the mid-1990s a revolution overthrew the government of Vietnam with the help of the American ace Mark Meadows. The new revolutionary government welcomed Wild Carders, particularly Jokers, to their country and elected one of Meadow's multiple identities as President.

The 21st century has seen the rise of a renewed Caliphate in the Middle East, ruled by an ace called The Nur. Simultaneously, a Marxist nation, the People's Paradise of Africa, has come to control much of Central and Western Africa.

Books

Original series (Bantam Books)

Double Solitaire and Turn of the Cards were actually full-length novels rather than anthologies, written by Snodgrass and Milán, respectively.

"New Cycle" (Baen Books)

ibooks Inc.

Death Draws Five is another solo novel, this time by John J. Miller. Only 600 hardcover copies were known to be released before the accidental death of Byron Preiss and, as a result, the sudden demise of the ibooks imprint. Miller's novel has since been reprinted in trade paperback by Brick Tower Press.[3] iBooks also reprinted the first six volumes of the first series.

Tor Books revival

According to George R. R. Martin's website,[4] Tor Books picked up the contract to produce a new series of three new Wild Cards books after iBooks ceased operations. Tor released the first of their series, Inside Straight, in January 2008; the second, Busted Flush, was published in December 2008; and the third volume, Suicide Kings, in December 2009. This new "The Committee" trilogy featured the next generation of Wild Cards, although there were familiar faces along the way from previous volumes. Each was released initially in hardcover, followed later by mass-market paperback editions. Tor later announced that a new trilogy would follow. The first volume, Fort Freak, concerns the police and detectives of the Jokertown police district; it was published in hardcover in June 2011, later followed by a mass-market paperback edition. The second volume of the trilogy, Low Ball, followed in hardcover in November 2015. The third volume, High Stakes, a full mosaic novel, has been completed and will be published in hardcover in spring of 2016.

Tor has also re-released the first five Wild Cards volumes from the 1980s, with the first book Wild Cards being published in trade paperback, mass-market and ebook editions, and containing three all-new, previously unpublished short stories that expand the scope of the original first volume.

In late 2011 the first two books, Wild Cards and Wild Cards II, were released in an unabridged audiobook format by Brilliance Audio.

  • Inside Straight (2008)
  • Busted Flush (2008)
  • Suicide Kings (2009)
  • Fort Freak (2011)[5]
  • Lowball (2014)
  • High Stakes (forthcoming, spring 2016)

Wild Cards in other media

Comics

Portions of the book series have been adapted into the comic book format. Marvel Comics' Epic imprint [6] published a four-issue miniseries in 1990 and later collected and published the series as a single volume graphic novel; these Wild Card stories (among other, non-Wild Cards stories) were then reprinted two years later as part of the four-issue anthology-format comic book Epic Comics: An Anthology, published in 1992. A second limited Wild Card series was planned but was never realized after the Epic imprint was dissolved by Marvel.

Some years later, author Daniel Abraham penned a 2008 six-issue Wild Cards comics limited series, that was published by Dabel Brothers Productions; the first issue of the series was issued simultaneously with two variant covers, while the sixth and final issue was later published by Dynamite Comics. Dynamic then collected the miniseries as a single hardcover graphic novel in early 2011; this second series was called George R. R. Martin's Wild Cards: The Hard Call.[7][8]

Role-playing

The setting was also adapted into role-playing game format twice.

The first was in the form of two GURPS sourcebooks that made use of the GURPS Supers rules.[9] GURPS Wild Cards, the first of the GURPS sourcebooks was published between the publications of Down and Dirty and Ace in the Hole, in 1989. It has since become outdated, providing a snapshot of the universe at that time, but does contain biographical and power data on about 60 characters from the first five books along with details on then-current storylines and organizations. It was written by John J. Miller.

The second is by Green Ronin Publishing, based on their Mutants & Masterminds product line. The first of this line, the Wild Cards Campaign Setting, was written by series author John J. Miller, and debuted at Origins in 2008. Two supplements have been published, All-in, an adventure, and Aces & Jokers, a character book.[10]

Films

A Wild Cards feature film was announced as forthcoming from Universal Pictures, but as of summer of 2015, nothing more has been released on the project.[11]

Notes

  1. Wild Cards Comes to Roleplaying Playing With a Full Deck, Roleplayer Magazine article by John J. Miller, about the Superworld and GURPS roleplaying games
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Wild Cards Online (retrieved 9/3/11)
  4. George R. R. Martin's Official Website
  5. Back To Jokertown post on George R.R. Martin's blog. May 12, 2009
  6. Wild Cards (Marvel Comics) at the Comic Book DB
  7. Dabel Brother's announcement of details about the comic series
  8. Wild Cards (Dabel Brothers) at the Comic Book DB
  9. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  10. Wild Cards Returns to Roleplaying
  11. "Wild Cards" superhero anthology to get movie treatment

External links