The Ghoul in the Attic
asked
Sebastien de Castell:
Hi, Sebastien! The Greatcoats tetralogy has often been discussed as part of the grimdark subgenre. Do you consider those books as grimdark and do you think there's something about "The Greatcoats" that makes it different from the classics (say, Abercrombie's First Law series)?
Sebastien de Castell
I'm not much of an expert on fantasy sub-genres, but I suppose I'd say that my impression of Grimdark fiction is that it presents worlds that are inherently dark in nature (as opposed to worlds that are fundamentally good yet infected by some unnatural evil) and suggests that human qualities of kindness, decency, daring and self-sacrifice are inherently flawed approaches. With the Greatcoats, I wanted to propose that those qualities (in their aggregate form of "swashbuckling") still have fundamental value even when they seem to fail at a tactical level.
Put differently, most Grimdark fiction I've read presents a narrative in which trying to be decent is futile and, in a sense, an act of vanity because it's doomed to fail and thus bring no good to the world. The Greatcoats argues that decency and self-sacrifice are virtues not because they tend to be successful but because they tend to awaken those virtues in broader groups of people who've been beaten down into believing that their own senses of decency and self-sacrifice are irrelevant. Falcio's not successful because he's daring or valorous, but because his insistence on trying over and over again to live up to those qualities has the effect of making other people find them in themselves. Basically, he turns other people into swashbucklers.
That all sounds kind of pretentious, but then, swashbuckling has its roots in some wonderful pretensions.
Put differently, most Grimdark fiction I've read presents a narrative in which trying to be decent is futile and, in a sense, an act of vanity because it's doomed to fail and thus bring no good to the world. The Greatcoats argues that decency and self-sacrifice are virtues not because they tend to be successful but because they tend to awaken those virtues in broader groups of people who've been beaten down into believing that their own senses of decency and self-sacrifice are irrelevant. Falcio's not successful because he's daring or valorous, but because his insistence on trying over and over again to live up to those qualities has the effect of making other people find them in themselves. Basically, he turns other people into swashbucklers.
That all sounds kind of pretentious, but then, swashbuckling has its roots in some wonderful pretensions.
More Answered Questions
Eve
asked
Sebastien de Castell:
Hi! I've recently started the Spellslinger series (and by "started" I mean I've absolutely torn through the first three and am now desperately waiting for a chance to buy the fourth), and I have to ask: if, somehow, the main characters from the Spellslinger and Greatcoats series wound up in the same place, who do you think would get along with who (and, conversely, would anyone be at each other's throats)?
K3
asked
Sebastien de Castell:
just curious, but why does the spelling of Dari's name change from Dariana in Knight's Shadow to Darriana in Saint's Blood? It's not a major issue for me, just something I noticed as I read it the second time (I just got it this past weekend a. a side question to add: how do you come up with good names that go so well with the time period? I can never find a good name for the time period I want to set my characters in
Michael Britt
asked
Sebastien de Castell:
What short story did you write for the Book of the Emissaries?
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Jan 02, 2023 11:00AM · flag
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