K.R. Gastreich's Blog, page 31
October 21, 2013
Fall Festivities

There are so many exciting things afoot right now, I don't know where to begin.
Tomorrow, October 22, as part of DelSheree Gladden's month-long Meet the Character Blog Fest, you will get to see the most detailed preview yet of the cover for High Maga. I have a post that compares images of Eolyn, past and present, and I talk about how the cover art for my novels reflects Eolyn's development as a character.
I also invite you to visit last week's Meet the Character post on Adiana of Selkynsen, a musician and close friend of Eolyn's. Adiana is a minor character in both Eolyn and High Maga. While she does not command magic like Eolyn, her music confers a special power of its own. Adiana has been one of my favorite characters since she appeared in my first novel, and I look forward to sharing more of her story in the second one.
If you visit DelSheree's blog, don't forget to register to win the grand prize of over forty free books. There are lots of opportunities to enter, including free entry for fans of Eolyn on Facebook and followers of Eolyn on Twitter.
We are working hard on a new web site for Hadley Rille Books. I love the new format; it gives a much better idea of the dynamic strength of this small but very busy press. It's also designed to make it easier for visitors to browse HRB titles and meet HRB authors. The new site may be up as early as next week, but (hopefully) no later than the first week of November.
I'll close with another vagancia. For some reason, lately I've taken to making videos about my courses at Avila. I shared the first video, about Ecology through the Writers Lens, a couple weeks back. Now here's a video about my introductory course on Environmental Science. Enjoy, and stay tuned because there is much more news to come. . .
Published on October 21, 2013 15:26
October 11, 2013
La Reina Católica

This couldn't have been more perfect timing. With all the emotion and drama of the novel still fresh in my mind, I was so ready to see it in action on screen. My husband and I watched the first two episodes of season one last night, and I couldn't be more pleased. The acting is superb, as is the recreation of the brutal, passionate, and complex culture of 15th century Spain.
The STARZ original series The White Queen comes off as insipid by comparison (despite the fact that I've enjoyed the series, and look forward to watching the final episode this weekend). As for HBO's rendition of Game of Thrones. . .I'm sorry. Even with its intrigues and dragons and zombie-beings from the frozen north, Westeros doesn't hold a candle to the real world of 15th century Spain.

Well, for one I'm a sucker for historical fiction of any sort. Even poorly done historical fiction keeps me happy; well-done historical fiction makes me ecstatic.
Then, there is the extraordinary character of Isabella, as portrayed in both the novel and the series. After nine episodes of watching Elizabeth Woodville wring her hands and cast spells to ensure her fortune in The White Queen, it is wonderfully refreshing to have the Princess of Asturias take on the dangers of the Spanish court with intelligence, wisdom, and most especially action.

only a matter of beauty, love, and a touch of magic?Gortner's rendition of Isabella's life appeals for all the same reasons. In his novel, he gives us a queen whose world does not revolve around the love of her king (though by most accounts, Isabella did love her Ferdinand); a woman whose powers extend far beyond looking longingly out the window as her husband goes to war.
Isabella does not sit by idly while others defend her will and prepare to fight her battles. She is the key player in forging the alliances and securing the conditions that made possible the victorious campaign to unify Spain.
Not that Isabella's record is spotless. There is the small matter of the Spanish Inquisition, and the continuing controversy as to whether her sponsorship of Columbus' quest was, in the end, a good thing or a bad.
But whether or not you admire all the faces of Isabella, to see her portrayed as a real woman -- forthright, determined, taking command of her own fate despite the odds -- feels like a unique and special event.
Why is it so difficult for us to bring the remarkable women of history to life on screen?

what it will take to secure her throne.I suspect Elizabeth Woodville had her own cunning, as well as a real capacity to contribute to the security of her husband's reign, in ways The White Queen refuses to acknowledge. Instead, the series chooses to focus on her great beauty as the reason for her rise to power, and resorts to magic as an explanation for her ability to remain on the throne.
Isabella of Castile was beautiful, too. And while she did not practice magic, she had absolute confidence in the power of her prayers and her faith.
Yet beauty and prayers were not what won Isabella the throne; nor did she ever seek to rely solely on these gifts. What secured the crown of Castile was young Isabella's ingenuity and her capacity to take action in key moments that transformed her people's history.
Isabella is not the only woman in history to claim such gifts. There have been extraordinary women like her throughout the centuries.
Maybe some day having their stories rendered in novels and on TV in the way that Gortner and RTVE reconstructed the life of Isabella will, while never ceasing to be delightful, at least feel somewhat less unique.
Published on October 11, 2013 17:40
October 1, 2013
Meet the Characters Blog Fest

Welcome to the Meet the Characters Blogfest!Readers, get ready for a whole month of some of the most interesting, hottest, attention grabbing characters in today's YA, NA, Romance, Horror, and Paranormal fiction!
Meet the Characters will be hosted at author DelSheree Gladden's blog. All month long we'll be introducing readers to amazing characters through character bios, artwork, interviews, and contests. Check out the schedule below from what you'll find each day this month.
That's Not All...We'll be having some fabulous contests, each of which has it's own giveaway. Readers will get to vote on the characters, and one lucky voter in each contest will win a copy of the book the Winning Character comes from. The character giveaways will include:
Hottest Guy Contest (10/4)Feistiest Girl Contest (10/11)Cutest Couple Contest (10/18)Steamiest Couple Contest (10/25)
There will also be one MAIN GIVEAWAY starting today where 1 LUCKY WINNER will win a prize pack of 40 books from some of today's hottest new authors. Additional winners will be chosen to receive runner-up prize packs as well. Scroll down and enter below!
SO, WHAT CAN YOU FIND EACH DAY?10/2 -- Character interviews with Zadie Stonebrook (My Sister's Reaper - Dorothy Dreyer), Tizzy Donovan (Laid out and Candle Lit - Ann Everett), Kristi Becker (A Plain Wish - Cyndi Lord), Zander Roth (Wicked Hunger - DelSheree Gladden)10/3 -- Character Bios from Kristi Becker (A Plain Wish - Cyndi Lord), Bryan Sullivan (Arcadia's Gift - Jesi Lea Ryan), Brandon James (Love and Other Games - Aria Kane10/4 -- Hottest Guy Contest (Stop by and vote for your favorite!)
10/7 -- Character Surprise Posts from authors RH Ramsey and DelSheree Gladden10/8 -- Character Artwork from The Other F Word (Susan Stec) and Wicked Hunger (DelSheree Gladden) 10/9 -- Character interviews with Kate Everett (A Slight Change of Plan - Dee Ernst), Jean (In Polester Pajamas - Catherine Dougherty), Ben (Twenty-Five - Rachel Hamm), Vanessa Roth (Wicked Hunger - DelSheree Gladden)10/10 -- Character Bios from Kassia (Ice Magic), Maze (The Ballerina and the Fighter - Ursula Sinclair), Lucien (Smoke, Wings, and Stone - Marijon Bradley)10/11 -- Feistiest Girl Contest (Stop by and vote for your favorite!)
10/14 -- Character Surprise Posts from authors Kara Leigh Miller, Sharon Kleve, Linda Budzinski 10/15 -- Character Artwork from On a Wing and a Dare (Linda Ulleseit), Invisible (DelSheree Gladden)10/16 -- Character interviews with David Corbin and Jon Reyes (Sign of the Throne - Melissa Eskue Ousley), Rosie (In Polyester Pajamas - Catherine Dougherty), Ketchup (Wicked Hunger - DelSheree Gladden)10/17 -- Character Bios from Nadia (love and Other Games - Melinda Dozier), Karin Rita
Gastreich (Adiana of Selkynsen, from Eolyn and High Maga), (HL Carpenter)10/18 -- Cutest Couple Contest (Stop by and vote for your favorite!)
10/21 -- Character Surprise Posts from authors Stephanie Wardrop, Lucy Crowe, Ana Blaze10/22 -- Character Artwork from Haunting Joy (Lena Goldfinch), The Destroyer Trilogy (DelSheree Gladden), Eolyn and High Maga (Karin Rita Gastreich)10/23 -- Character interviews with Rachel Blackstone (The Relcutant Medium - GG Collins), Nell (The King Series - Tawdra Kandle), Arcadia ( Arcadia's Gift - Jesi Lea Ryan), Olivia & Mason (Invisible - DelSheree Gladden)10/24 -- Character Bios from Karin Rita Gastreich (Mage Corey from Eolyn and High
Maga), Sam and Cole (Fate War: Alliance - EM Havens)10/25 -- Steamiest Couple Contest (Stop by and vote for your favorite!)
10/28 -- Character Surprise Posts from authors Susan Stec, Shauna Roberts, Lisa Cresswell10/29 -- Character Artwork from My Sister's Reaper (Dorothy Dreyer), Twin Souls (DelSheree Gladden)10/30 -- Character interviews with Nathan Shaw (Reflection - Kim Cresswell), Nia (In the Winds of Danger - Linda Ulleseit), Jayden or Merch (dark Night of the Soul - EM Havens)10/31 -- Winner's Announcements!!!
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Published on October 01, 2013 06:04
September 20, 2013
Eolyn's Fall Equinox Sale
The Kindle and Nook editions of Eolyn will be on sale for $0.99 this weekend only. If you don't have your copy yet, now is your chance. If you have your copy, please spread the word, so your friends can enjoy the magic, too!
Speaking of Kindle, the Kindle Book Review recently posted a very nice review of Eolyn, describing the novel as "masterfully written". You can read the full review here.
I have a new author interview up on the Reading Cat this week. Find out how I started writing, what my favorite food is, and what I really think about love. My Orangeberry Book Tour continues Monday, September 23, with a guest post at Just My Opinion.
If I haven't given you enough virtual places to visit yet, don't forget Heroines of Fantasy. Mark Nelson is back with us for the autumn season with a fun post on how to define productivity. On Monday, guest author Louise Turner will join us. Louise is just a week away from launching her debut historical fiction novel set in 15th century Scotland, entitled Fire and Sword. I cannot wait to read it!
And if you want a real place to visit, come join us in Blue Springs Missouri this Saturday for the Wordstock Poetry and Book Festival. Organized and sponsored by Prospero's Parkside Books.
Enjoy the harvest moon this weekend, and whatever you do, celebrate fall equinox in style. I'll be back with more news and updates next week.
Speaking of Kindle, the Kindle Book Review recently posted a very nice review of Eolyn, describing the novel as "masterfully written". You can read the full review here.
I have a new author interview up on the Reading Cat this week. Find out how I started writing, what my favorite food is, and what I really think about love. My Orangeberry Book Tour continues Monday, September 23, with a guest post at Just My Opinion.
If I haven't given you enough virtual places to visit yet, don't forget Heroines of Fantasy. Mark Nelson is back with us for the autumn season with a fun post on how to define productivity. On Monday, guest author Louise Turner will join us. Louise is just a week away from launching her debut historical fiction novel set in 15th century Scotland, entitled Fire and Sword. I cannot wait to read it!
And if you want a real place to visit, come join us in Blue Springs Missouri this Saturday for the Wordstock Poetry and Book Festival. Organized and sponsored by Prospero's Parkside Books.
Enjoy the harvest moon this weekend, and whatever you do, celebrate fall equinox in style. I'll be back with more news and updates next week.
Published on September 20, 2013 06:03
September 12, 2013
Vagancias
"Vagancias" is the word in Costa Rican Spanish for the little things we do out of sheer self-indulgence.
You know you enjoy your job when the best parts of your work feel like vagancias. Here are two vagancias I indulged in this week:
Cover Design for HIGH MAGA
For me, the biggest act of self-indulgence on the way to publication is cover design.
Friends and followers of Eolyn, we are sooooo very close to having the cover art finished! I wish I could share with you every delightful piece that Thomas Vandenberg has sent my way over the past several days, but we're just going to have to wait a little longer. Because no matter how fantastic the images so far, Tom still wants to do more.
On Heroines of Fantasy this week, Terri-Lynne DeFino posted a wonderful reflection about the face of women in fantasy. Quite coincidentally, just before this post went live, Tom sent me his rendition of Eolyn. The cover for High Maga will allow us to see her face, and folks she is beautiful. Fierce. Strong. Determined. Most of all, real. Everything you want in a heroine and a maga. (And with no need for any bikini armor.)
I'd love to show you a cover preview with Eolyn's face, but my mother always told me to leave the desert for last. So here's another appetizer:
In case you're wondering, that's the clawed forelimb of a Naether Demon, creatures summoned from the Underworld to assist the Syrnte army in their invasion of Moisehén.
I confess, all my attempts at secrecy may soon come to naught, as High Maga might get some special and unanticipated exposure in the coming weeks. If that happens, you'll be sure to hear about it. If not, stay tuned for more previews, and several weeks down the road, a full and proper cover reveal.
Promo Video for Ecology Through the Writer's Lens
My second vagancia was for my day job at Avila University. As some of you may remember, we are planning a travel course next spring that will integrate literary and scientific modes of understanding the forest. We have everything set to go; now we just need the students. Yesterday, I sat down with Windows Movie Maker and put together this simple video as a way of spreading the word about the course. It gets me excited about going back to Costa Rica; I hope it gets my students excited, too!
Those were my vagancias this week. What were yours?
You know you enjoy your job when the best parts of your work feel like vagancias. Here are two vagancias I indulged in this week:
Cover Design for HIGH MAGA
For me, the biggest act of self-indulgence on the way to publication is cover design.
Friends and followers of Eolyn, we are sooooo very close to having the cover art finished! I wish I could share with you every delightful piece that Thomas Vandenberg has sent my way over the past several days, but we're just going to have to wait a little longer. Because no matter how fantastic the images so far, Tom still wants to do more.
On Heroines of Fantasy this week, Terri-Lynne DeFino posted a wonderful reflection about the face of women in fantasy. Quite coincidentally, just before this post went live, Tom sent me his rendition of Eolyn. The cover for High Maga will allow us to see her face, and folks she is beautiful. Fierce. Strong. Determined. Most of all, real. Everything you want in a heroine and a maga. (And with no need for any bikini armor.)
I'd love to show you a cover preview with Eolyn's face, but my mother always told me to leave the desert for last. So here's another appetizer:

In case you're wondering, that's the clawed forelimb of a Naether Demon, creatures summoned from the Underworld to assist the Syrnte army in their invasion of Moisehén.
I confess, all my attempts at secrecy may soon come to naught, as High Maga might get some special and unanticipated exposure in the coming weeks. If that happens, you'll be sure to hear about it. If not, stay tuned for more previews, and several weeks down the road, a full and proper cover reveal.
Promo Video for Ecology Through the Writer's Lens
My second vagancia was for my day job at Avila University. As some of you may remember, we are planning a travel course next spring that will integrate literary and scientific modes of understanding the forest. We have everything set to go; now we just need the students. Yesterday, I sat down with Windows Movie Maker and put together this simple video as a way of spreading the word about the course. It gets me excited about going back to Costa Rica; I hope it gets my students excited, too!
Those were my vagancias this week. What were yours?
Published on September 12, 2013 15:27
September 5, 2013
An author interview, marketing sanity, and Eolyn's best colors
Hello!
I've been very busy this week finishing up the application for my sabbatical, among other things, so instead of writing a full post, I'm going to direct you elsewhere for your reading pleasure.
I have a new author interview up on Top Shelf Books . This is one of my favorite interviews ever. It ties together thoughts on all three of the companion novels in the Eolyn series, and gives you an idea of what to expect from HIGH MAGA next spring and DAUGHTER OF AITHNE in 2015.
Also, on Heroines of Fantasy this week, I have a post on how to keep sane while marketing your novel. It was fun to write; I hope it's helpful to read.
Thomas Vandenberg is working on Eolyn's wardrobe for the cover of HIGH MAGA. If you have a color preference for her dress, now is the time to let us know.
I'll be back with a full post next week. In the meantime, enjoy the magic!
I've been very busy this week finishing up the application for my sabbatical, among other things, so instead of writing a full post, I'm going to direct you elsewhere for your reading pleasure.
I have a new author interview up on Top Shelf Books . This is one of my favorite interviews ever. It ties together thoughts on all three of the companion novels in the Eolyn series, and gives you an idea of what to expect from HIGH MAGA next spring and DAUGHTER OF AITHNE in 2015.
Also, on Heroines of Fantasy this week, I have a post on how to keep sane while marketing your novel. It was fun to write; I hope it's helpful to read.
Thomas Vandenberg is working on Eolyn's wardrobe for the cover of HIGH MAGA. If you have a color preference for her dress, now is the time to let us know.
I'll be back with a full post next week. In the meantime, enjoy the magic!
Published on September 05, 2013 06:08
August 27, 2013
On Serendipity and the Dance

The single most important skill of the
craft is attitude.Dance has been a part of my life for almost as long as I can remember. I started my classical training at the age of eight. Like many little girls, I dreamed of being a ballerina, though I never quite had the body for it. The decision to set dance aside as a career option and pursue a more academic line of work happened early in high school. Even though I did not go on to be a professional, I have never stopped dancing, or stopped studying dance.
In a way, not pursuing a professional career in dance set me free. From that moment on, the pressure to reach a competitive level of excellence was off, and I could just dance for fun. When I went to college, I joined the dance theater at my university, where I was introduced to modern dance. For the next twenty years, modern dance would be my favorite art form. I studied it with various instructors in Houston, Austin, and most recently in San Jose, Costa Rica.
It wasn't until I moved back to Kansas City, ironically enough, that I plunged into flamenco. At the time, I was most interested in continuing to study modern, but my sister, a long-time member of the Kansas City dance community, recommended that I check out flamenco classes with Tamara Carson of OLE Dance and Music of Spain.
This was not the first time I'd encountered flamenco. I had a brief introduction to it in high school, and took a few classes again as a grad student at the University of Texas in Austin. Though flamenco had long fascinated me, I don't think I was quite ready for it until I stepped into Tamara's class and hit the dance floor with my first golpe. After that, I was hooked forever.
Why flamenco?
Well, first and foremost, flamenco is attitude. This was probably the number one reason why I decided it was time to learn it. The steps, the rhythms, the postures and facial expressions all communicate the same fundamental message: Don't mess with me. At the time I started taking flamenco, I felt the need to internalize a little more of that kind of grit.
Flamenco is also passion and sensuality. Passion in every sense of the word: anger, desire, love, loss. Whatever the emotion of the moment may be, flamenco challenges us to live it to the fullest.

Stephenson on the left; Tamara Carson third from the left.
Most of all, flamenco is support. I've rarely encountered such a community-oriented, supportive form of dance. This is an art form that a person can do whether they are eight years old or eighty. No matter what your age or skill level, your compañeros, both dancers and musicians, unite to support you, to ignite the fire inside and help you show attitude, passion, and sensuality without holding back.
Long before I started flamenco classes, I had decided to incorporate dance as a form of Primitive Magic in Eolyn's world. Still, flamenco gave me a new window on how that magic might manifest itself. The dance shared by Corey and Eolyn on Midwinter's Eve, for example, has always had a flamenco style in my imagination. Not with any taconea (footwork), but with the very elegant movement of the arms, the intensity of the focus, and the studied steps that dominate slower moments in the music.
One curious aspect of my journey with flamenco (and yes, I'm finally getting to the serendipity part) is that it has closely paralleled my journey as a writer, as well as Eolyn's journey as a character.
When I first started classes with Tamara, I was finishing up the final draft of Eolyn. So incorporating that flamenco attitude was also about building confidence in myself as a writer and artist as I contemplated sharing Eolyn with the larger world.
One of dances I learned during this period was Sevillanas. A classic introduction to flamenco, this dance is not simple, but the footwork is relatively straightforward, so you can really focus on finding and expressing your own personality as a flamenco dancer as you learn the steps. It is also a dance performed with a partner, so you are never alone. Partners cue off each other in the same supportive and playful fashion that makes all of flamenco so wonderful.
Here's an example of Sevillanas (and no, it is NOT being danced by me; the artists are Fanny Ara, Marina Elana Scannell, Jason Macguire, and Felix de Lola):
Of course, I found my partners in publishing during this same period, at Hadley Rille Books. And we've been dancing ever since!
When I started working on my second novel, High Maga, Tamara began teaching us Tangos de Malaga. This is a very difficult dance that I still struggle with. It is serious in tone and aspect, and the lyrics are focused on themes of death, poverty and overall misery. The dance fit almost too well with the war-time context of my second novel, and I found I was able to capture the essence of more than one of my characters through learning it.
Here is Tangos de Malaga; this video features Kansas City's very own Alma Flamenca, with Jarrod Stephenson on the guitar and Margaret Gordon dancing:
After Tangos de Malaga, Tamara gave us a short break with Alegrias, an all around happier dance that lets you smile once in a while. At the same time, I gave myself a short break from the darker side of Eolyn's world. When I returned to writing to start Daughter of Aithne, Tamara began introducing her flamenco class to Tientos.
According to the story I heard, Tientos was originally crafted to be danced by men. So it has a very masculine feel about it, and often women who perform it will wear slacks and vests. Tamara couldn't have picked a better dance to get me in the mood for Daughter of Aithne, because in Eolyn's third and final book, it will be the women who, in many cases, must wear the pants. Figuratively speaking, of course.
Here's a sample of Tientos, featuring Marina Elana Scannell once again:
Needless to say, I'm, uhm, still working on that footwork. . .
That's today's post. I hope you enjoyed this glimpse of the dance and music of Spain, and especially my musings on how one creative art can feed into another.
As a finale, I offer this brief medley of OLE's wonderful repertoire. Enjoy!
Published on August 27, 2013 07:50
August 22, 2013
Exciting News and Fun Interviews
Great news! I met with my editor Eric T. Reynolds last week, and the release date for High Maga is now official. Officially official. I mean, it can't get any more official than this!
First we said Spring of 2014.
Then we narrowed it down to April.
For the last several weeks, I've had my countdown timer set to April 26, just to play it safe.
And now (drumroll) here is the date as confirmed by the chief editor of Hadley Rille Books himself:
April 4, 2014.
That's right:
04-04-2014
Easy to remember, but mark your calendars anyway.
For those of you who have been watching the clock, I'm sure you're happy to realize your wait has been shortened by a full 22 days! As soon as the ARCs are ready, I'll be hosting some pre-release events and giveaways. I cannot wait to share this story with you! But, unfortunately, I have to wait, just a little while longer.
In the meantime, check out the sneak preview of the amazing cover art below!
Speaking of exciting events, author Deb Sturgess hosted me on her blog recently with an audio interview for her series, Embrace Magic, a weekly conversation about fantasy and romance. We had a great chat about what inspired Eolyn, the importance of flawed characters, challenges of publishing, and keeping everything in balance in the life of a writer. Please stop by Deb's blog to listen to the interview, and to share your comments and questions.
Tonight I'll be heading over to Prospero's Uptown Books for open mic readings. The topic? Animals! I've got a lot of material I could offer, but for the moment I've narrowed it down to either the wolf fight between Akmael and Eolyn, or Selenia and the Mulian Dragon from 'Creatures of Light'. (Suggestions and preferences would be much appreciated!) I'm also very much looking forward to hearing stories from other KC area authors. It should be a great time, and I hope you'll stop by if you're in the neighborhood.

High Maga, currently in progress by Thomas Vanderberg
Published on August 22, 2013 15:22
August 14, 2013
A time to live, a time to die

~Mage Corey, from High Maga
A couple years back I had a very interesting experience while doing a beta read for my good friend and fellow author Terri-Lynne DeFino.
In the original version of the manuscript she sent me, one of the major characters faded into the background during the last third of the book. This situation didn't sit right with me.
On the one hand, the story was very well constructed up to the last page; lots of tension, uncertainty, and conflict all around. Terri had tight character arcs for everyone -- except this particular individual. He had played a crucial role in the first part of the book, but by the end it was like reading about a ghost, a person unseen and without any power over the events at hand.
Then it hit me: I felt like I was reading about a ghost because this character was a ghost. Terri had passed through a crucial moment in the story when he should have died, but did not.
When I brought this to Terri's attention, she knew immediately that I was right. In fact, she confessed that for several reasons she had conscientiously resisted the instinct to 'kill' him in precisely the same place that I identified as his moment to die.
Terri went on to 'fix' this part of the manuscript before the book went to press, making the character's story much more fulfilling, moving, and heroic. More worthy of the extraordinary person he is. (In case you're curious, her wonderful novel is now available as A Time Never Lived, another great title from Hadley Rille Books.)
When Terri and I first had this discussion, I was not new to killing characters. I had sent a fair share to their deaths in Eolyn. As for High Maga, it is a veritable blood bath by comparison to my first novel, as many of you will soon find out.
Letting my characters die time and again hasn't been easy for me, but I've done it, for the most part because I've recognized how important those deaths are for plot, tension, and story building.

story be nearly as compelling if it were written any other way?But in reading Terri's manuscript, I gained a new perspective on this age old aspect of the craft. I learned that in order to truly respect a character, we must allow him or her to meet their destiny, especially when that destiny is death.
If we force a character to live past their moment, we condemn them to being a ghost in our fictitious worlds, to becoming personalities without form or reason; the types of characters our readers tend to get annoyed by and may even come to hate.
If we allow them to die in their moment, we give greater meaning to their life. Everything they desired, fought for, did or failed to do stands out in sharp relief against the impact of their absence. The reader comes to appreciate the character more, to remember them better, and to say long after they finish reading the book, "If only he (or she) hadn't died. . ."
All of this has come back to me in recent days, because in the writing of Daughter of Aithne, I've had to let another character die. Who, how, or why is irrelevant at the moment (after all, this particular death may be edited out again by the time the novel hits press). What matters is the impulse it gave me to share these thoughts with you.
Like Mage Corey in the war-torn world of High Maga, we as authors cannot always save our characters. But that's okay, because sometimes what's more important is to bear witness to their fates; to stand close by when they meet their darkest hour.
~*~ I have a fun post up this week on Heroines of Fantasy about The White Queen , and how the incomparable Philippa Gregory has inspired me as an author. Stop by to read and share your thoughts when you have a chance. Also, my Orangeberry Book Tour will continue next week on August 19th with a guest post on the Quality Reads UK Book Club. Please stop by to say hi, and by all means, share the link with your friends!
I hope you are in for a great weekend.
Published on August 14, 2013 20:48
August 9, 2013
Interview with author Mark Nelson

I met Mark through Hadley Rille Books. Mark is a career educator and for the last twenty-two years has been teaching composition and literature at a small high school located in the rain shadow of the Cascade Mountains in eastern Washington State. He is happily married to his best friend and fellow educator, and together they have raised three beautiful daughters and one semi-retired cat. Words, music, food and parenting permeate his life and serve as a constant source for inspiration, challenge and reward. To temper such unremitting joy, Mark plays golf: an addition that provides a healthy dose of humility. You can visit Mark at the Heroines of Fantasy.
I have read Mark's novels Poets of Pevana and King's Gambit, both set in the vibrant fantasy world of Pevana. Mark is a great new voice in fantasy, and I recommend his work to anyone who enjoys stories with a heavy dose of danger, intrigue, adventure, and romance.
Now, without further ado, here is our interview with Mark:
Q: Tell us a little bit about your novels Poets of Pevana and King’s Gambit.

Q: The world of Pevana is wonderfully complex and very original in the context of fantasy, especially with its emphasis on a culture of poetry. What inspired the characters and world of Pevana? The Poets of Pevana started as a result of my online interaction with fans of the rock band Styx on a message board dedicated to discussing the band and music in general. The community quickly morphed into something that went well beyond rock and roll and related topics. I met several fellow poets on the site and one in particular, Joey Barat, aka Devyn Ambrose, became an online friend. We started having these poetry duels on the site where we had to make something out of unrelated terms posted by the other. We posted our results on the website message board and the other community members loved it. We kept it up for months and the seeds for what became the core of Poets were sewn.
I figured out early on that there was a story here. I kept seeing pie-slices of experience all intersecting at certain points--in this case a rowdy festival in a mock medieval city. King's Gambit got started soon after I finished the first draft of Poets, but I stalled out after a few chapters. I realized the story would be more convoluted, more political, and I was not sure I had the time or skills to pull it off. King's Gambit's plot never changed much from those early whiteboard notes. The people we see in the tale were all laid out in notes jotted down over an extended period of time. What surprised me about King's Gambit is the extent to which the characters took over the story from me. The first draft was heavily dependent on the male points of view. And yet I found myself liking Eleni's character the most after finishing Poets. When my editor TeriLynne DeFino suggested King's Gambit was more of a woman's book, I took a while but then warmed up to the irony of it: a war story dominated by the sensibilities of some cool ladies.

In the end I wanted to tell a story about how politics can suborn faith and twist it into a false expression. I wanted to write a story about small lives that intersect with great ones and great events. I wanted to write a story that paid homage to the power of words and the need to comment on life. I wanted to write a story relating how the choices we make ultimately shape our character.
Q: Do you have a favorite character (or characters)? I love all my characters, even the detestable Byrnard Casan and the corpulent Sevire Anargi. Early on, obviously, Devyn and Talyior claimed my attention, but as I mentioned above, Eleni Caralon grew on me, as did Prince Donari. Hence their intensified roles in King's Gambit. I loved developing the notes for Sylvanus Tamorgen, the Tyrant who wanted to be a grandfather. But the two who I really took a liking to over the course of King's Gambit were Lyvia, Sylvanus's daughter and Demona Anargi, Sevire's estranged wife. Both gals more than hold their own in King's Gambit. Kembril Edri still haunts my sleep. I hated what happened to him, but Devyn's character is an outgrowth of Kembril's persona. Eventually, I'd like to codify the folk tales of the region, as told by Kembril as he sat there beneath his oak tree in the holy dust of the Maze.
Q: What was the most challenging aspect of writing Poets of Pevana? King’s Gambit? The most challenging aspect of writing both novels has been getting stuff past my editor! Terri-Lynne DeFino took a chance on Poets, but since then we have become adept at working with each other. I have a number of bad habits, and she consistently points them out to me when I write them. I have learned how I compose from going through the editing/publishing process. These have been hard but great lessons. I've taken them back into the classroom with me to good effect. I thoroughly enjoy writing. One of the reasons I started Poets was to see if I could gain the discipline needed to see a story through from beginning to end. I love keeping track of my word count, pushing myself to keep aware of my flaws, to keep track of cliche and repeated language. Writing makes me a sharper thinker. I love the medium as a mode of expression.
King's Gambit is a much larger story. It also ended up being a bit longer than Poets. But the ideas were big, the risks greater both for me and the characters. I had to juggle points of view in Gambit, had to concern myself with pace and event more precisely. I had to let some characters tell the story and let go of the narrative control--with happy results, I think. I had to gain and lose some people. I'm no GRRM: that stuff still hurts.
Q: Do you have any new projects underway? What can we expect for the future? I am currently editing/revising book three in the cycle, tentatively titled Path of the Poet-King. It relates the events that happen just after the close of King's Gambit. I am slowing down a little in an effort to smooth out rough spots and make adjustments to the plot necessitated by things that happen in King's Gambit. Demona's character is much more fully realized now, and that has forced me to re-do chunks of the new book for continuity. It helps that I am working from an already completed draft. Book four is yet to be written. In fact, I was settling down to begin book four two years ago when I looked at the pile of story I had on my lap and decided to try and shop the first book. I felt I owed it to myself to at least try. DeFino liked Poets,and the rest is now my future: writing. Book Four, King's Peace, is heavily noted, plotted for the most part and might conclude the story arc with my Pevanese characters. And yet even as I type this, I am not so sure. I keep seeing a line at the end of this as yet unwritten book: "Come, let's go find that shade of green..." So, you never know. THAT is another reason why I love writing: there are surprises behind every verb, metaphor, and sound. If my work ever receives a box set treatment, I would like to call it Pevanese Mosaic. Just saying...
Q: What advice do you have for aspiring authors? My advice to aspiring writers is to stop posing as what they think is a writer and actually write. Finish something. Tell the truth--even if it’s a made-up truth. Search out and accept constructive criticism. Feedback is vital even it if rips apart your illusions. You write better when you understand the depth of the contract between writer and reader. And I think it is ok to write for pleasure alone or for close friends and family. An audience, no matter how small, is a cool thing. In the end what we produce adds to the collective experience.
The publishing adventure has changed my life and how I see the rest of it passing. Words are now more important to me than ever, and I can't wait to see what happens next. I feel lucky to be part of the HRB family. Good friends, great writers, awesome people. I am glad to be a small part of it.
Published on August 09, 2013 06:00