Writing the Sangrook Saga
After I finished the Klondaeg series, I wasn’t really sure what was next. Between that uncertainty and the birth of my first son, I took a break from writing and tried to regroup and brainstorm. During that process, a start-up small press posted an open call for a dark fantasy anthology. It was a high concept piece, a family saga of a family of evil necromancers with twelve writing prompts to be filled from the submissions process, creating a mysterious and contradictory account of the family history (since the authors wrote each chapter independently). I was really intrigued by the concept, so I chose a prompt and wrote the story that became “The Curse of Sangrook Manor.”
I didn’t win that slot. The publisher did, however, contact me saying that there was a slot they weren’t able to fill from the open call and they wanted me to write it. I accepted and wrote that story. I was excited. I’d caught the attention of a small press, they liked my work, and I was going to be in an anthology. Somewhere in there, there was even talk of a graphic novel adaptation.
Alas, the company folded before the anthology was ever published. So there I was, with two related dark fantasy stories spawned from the same concept. I eventually decided that since I’ve come this far, I may as well write the anthology on my own. That’s the beauty of self-publishing, after all. Now that it was a single-author project, I was free to discard the prompts and generate a more consistent world, history, mythos, and magic system, but I wanted to hang on to some mystique, so many things go unexplained. In fact, I let the Dark Souls games influence my storytelling. Much of the history and the connections between chapters are left for the reader to infer; even the timeline of the chapters is a puzzle for interested readers to solve.
I adapted both existing stories to fit this new world, released “The Curse of Sangrook Manor” as a stand-alone, and got to work creating five more stories in that world, for a total of seven chapters of “The Sangrook Saga,” each dealing out a miserable fate to a new victim of the Sangrook clan, which taken together tell the dark history in of world reeling from a War of the Gods and the forces trying to bring order to it. I’m not sure if it’s better to call it an anthology or an oddly-structured novel, but I hope you’ll be interested in delving in and exploring it with me.
“The Sangrook Saga” releases on Kindle and paperback on June 22, 2018.
The Sangrook Saga
I didn’t win that slot. The publisher did, however, contact me saying that there was a slot they weren’t able to fill from the open call and they wanted me to write it. I accepted and wrote that story. I was excited. I’d caught the attention of a small press, they liked my work, and I was going to be in an anthology. Somewhere in there, there was even talk of a graphic novel adaptation.
Alas, the company folded before the anthology was ever published. So there I was, with two related dark fantasy stories spawned from the same concept. I eventually decided that since I’ve come this far, I may as well write the anthology on my own. That’s the beauty of self-publishing, after all. Now that it was a single-author project, I was free to discard the prompts and generate a more consistent world, history, mythos, and magic system, but I wanted to hang on to some mystique, so many things go unexplained. In fact, I let the Dark Souls games influence my storytelling. Much of the history and the connections between chapters are left for the reader to infer; even the timeline of the chapters is a puzzle for interested readers to solve.
I adapted both existing stories to fit this new world, released “The Curse of Sangrook Manor” as a stand-alone, and got to work creating five more stories in that world, for a total of seven chapters of “The Sangrook Saga,” each dealing out a miserable fate to a new victim of the Sangrook clan, which taken together tell the dark history in of world reeling from a War of the Gods and the forces trying to bring order to it. I’m not sure if it’s better to call it an anthology or an oddly-structured novel, but I hope you’ll be interested in delving in and exploring it with me.
“The Sangrook Saga” releases on Kindle and paperback on June 22, 2018.
The Sangrook Saga
Published on June 04, 2018 17:09
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