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Rambo's Back...But Where Did He Come From?

"His name was Rambo, and he was just some nothing kid for all anybody knew, standing by the pump of a gas station." -Opening sentence of the 1972 novel First Blood by David Morrell. Who is Rambo? Google reveals more than 18,000,000 hits for him. The Oxford English Dictionary cites his name. Scores of scholarly articles have been written about him. President Reagan frequently referred to him in speeches. He is one of the most iconic and popular film characters of all time, but if you know him only from the movies, you're in for a surprise.

Santa Fe, NM (PRWEB) January 29, 2008 -- Who is Rambo? Google reveals more than 18,000,000 hits for him. The Oxford English Dictionary cites his name. Scores of scholarly articles have been written about him. President Reagan frequently referred to him in speeches. He is one of the most iconic and popular film characters of all time, but if you know him only from the movies, you're in for a surprise.

Rambo is the brainchild of international bestselling author David Morrell, who first penned the character in his award-winning 1972 novel, First Blood, published when Morrell was a young professor in the English department at the University of Iowa. Until First Blood's publication, there had never been an action book of its kind. Morrell's revolutionary novel paved the way for an entirely new action-fiction style of writing, and the Rambo character went on to become one of the most famous literary characters created in the 20th Century, ranking with Sherlock Holmes, Tarzan, and James Bond.

His name was Rambo, and he was just some nothing kid for all anybody knew, standing by the pump of a gas station.
The Canadian-born Morrell wrote First Blood at the height of the Vietnam War in the late 1960s and early 1970s, while studying for his PhD at Pennsylvania State University. He loosely based the character John Rambo on Audie Murphy, the most decorated American soldier from World War Two, who had extreme difficulties adjusting to peace time. The name alludes to the Season in Hell verse of the French poet, Rimbaud, (sometimes pronounced "Rambo") but is also oddly indebted to the name of a Pennsylvania apple that Morrell's wife drew his attention to while shopping at a road-side stand.

First Blood was one of the first novels to depict the effects of post-traumatic stress disorder -- which did not have a name in 1972 -- and remains a timely book because of this theme. Taught in high schools and colleges (Stephen King used it as a text when he was a writing instructor at the University of Maine), the book has been translated into more than 20 languages and has never been out of print -- a rarity for a book which debuted 36 years ago. Signed first editions are avidly sought by book collectors.

If you think the Rambo movies are violent, you may be surprised by the novel. While First Blood was thematically groundbreaking, stylistically Morrell's novel is punctuated by a level of intensity, action, and characterization that goes far beyond what is seen in the book's movie translation, and is considered fast-paced and powerful even by today's standards of fiction writing. The novel depicts the character in a more complicated way, to the point that (warning -- major plot spoiler), Rambo dies in his original incarnation, killed by Colonel Trautman, the man who trained him.

Decades after Morrell created the character, the global impact of Rambo continues to grow. Several years ago, when Morrell was on book tour in Poland, a journalist pointedly told him that during the Solidarity demonstrations that led to the weakening of the Eastern Bloc, protestors would watch illegal tapes of Rambo movies, dress up as the character, and go out to demonstrate. In an indirect way, he said, Rambo helped bring about the fall of the Soviet Empire. Similarly, when the Berlin Wall fell, demonstrators were filmed painting Rambo on the wall before they tore it down.

Thirty-six years after "...some nothing kid for all anybody knew, standing by the pump of a gas station ..." first appeared, Morrell's Rambo has become so much more than he ever imagined -- a lasting cultural symbol. Meanwhile, the author has pursued an extensive and successful career with numerous highly regarded bestselling novels, including Brotherhood of the Rose, which became an NBC miniseries broadcast after the Super Bowl in 1989. He is a three-time recipient of the distinguished Bram Stoker Award, the latest for his novel Creepers. Prior to the publication of his graphic novel about another icon, Captain America: The Chosen, Comic-Con International gave him its prestigious Inkpot Award for his outstanding contributions to popular culture.

So what does Rambo's creator David Morrell think of the newly released installment in the film series? "I was blown away," he says. "This is the first time that the tone of my novel has been used in any of the movies. The action is deglamorized and shows the dismaying effect that combat can have on a person. Only in this latest film does Sylvester Stallone's portrayal of the character come eerily close to the despair of the character as I imagined him. Rambo can't adjust to what he's been through and to the destruction he's capable of inflicting. It's an exciting action movie, but it's also about something."

***NOTE: AUTHOR DAVID MORRELL IS AVAILABLE FOR INTERVIEWS***
Contact: Sarie Morrell, Publicist at (714) 846-0589.

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CONTACT INFORMATION
SARIE MORRELL
714-846-0589
Email us Here
Sarie Morrell, Publicist
Sarie Morrell Author & Book Promotions
714-846-0589
Email us Here
ATTACHED FILES

David Morrell Rambo 4 Press Release

David Morrell Rambo 4 Press Release

David Morrell Inkpot Award release

David Morrell Inkpot Award release

David Morrell photo with Inkpot Award

David Morrell photo with Inkpot Award

David Morrell

David Morrell

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