AngelKerrie
asked
James Islington:
Hi James! I'm halfway through the Licanius Triology and am desperately awaiting the Strength of the Few! What is your favorite book of yours, and what was the hardest book for you to write?
James Islington
Favourite book is a hard question! I think my best book, in terms of concept-to-execution, is probably going to be The Strength of the Few – but to be fair, that’s only natural, as I (hopefully!) am continuing to improve with experience. And of the already-published ones, I’d say it would be The Will of the Many.
But (unsurprisingly) I love all the Licanius books for various reasons, too. Shadow, being my first one, obviously holds a pretty special place for me. Echo I’m almost most proud of, because it was my first ‘professional’ book, and getting it to where I wanted it to be was a massive learning experience that I still draw a lot of lessons from. And Light because I was kind of able to prove to myself that I could wrap up an entire epic story in (at least what I felt was) a really satisfying way.
Hardest book? An Echo of Things to Come – partly because middle books are always hard, partly because it was a step up in complexity from Shadow, but mostly because it was by far the one that I felt the most pressure for. Shadow came from a no-pressure, zero-income hobby; Echo was a book that suddenly felt like might make or break me being able to make a dream career out of writing. Add in figuring out being a new parent into that equation, and it was… a stressful time! Looking back, it was excellent experience that’s held me in very good stead ever since... but I’m definitely grateful I don’t have to tackle anything quite like it again, too.
But (unsurprisingly) I love all the Licanius books for various reasons, too. Shadow, being my first one, obviously holds a pretty special place for me. Echo I’m almost most proud of, because it was my first ‘professional’ book, and getting it to where I wanted it to be was a massive learning experience that I still draw a lot of lessons from. And Light because I was kind of able to prove to myself that I could wrap up an entire epic story in (at least what I felt was) a really satisfying way.
Hardest book? An Echo of Things to Come – partly because middle books are always hard, partly because it was a step up in complexity from Shadow, but mostly because it was by far the one that I felt the most pressure for. Shadow came from a no-pressure, zero-income hobby; Echo was a book that suddenly felt like might make or break me being able to make a dream career out of writing. Add in figuring out being a new parent into that equation, and it was… a stressful time! Looking back, it was excellent experience that’s held me in very good stead ever since... but I’m definitely grateful I don’t have to tackle anything quite like it again, too.
More Answered Questions
Baz
asked
James Islington:
Hello James, I've finished your book and I'm absolutely blown away with what you've crafted,I cannot wait for more. A few questions if you don't mind: When will you be releasing the next book? Please tell me you won't be pulling a Rothfuss & make me wait 7 years, or I'm sorry but my Sha'teth friends will be wanting to arrange a deal. Did you write the entire series in one go or one book after another?
Dillon
asked
James Islington:
This question contains spoilers…
(view spoiler)[
Hey James, just finished my reread of The Will of the Many? Noticed so many things I missed on the first go around. I’m not sure if this is a future point or just irrelevant but it was on my mind. Does Diago and his family have a surname?
(hide spoiler)]
James Islington
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May 02, 2025 03:44PM · flag