Welcome one and all – who may be reading
this - to The Spectrum of Speculative Fiction Blog Hop!
First, the rules of the competition. I have two FREE ebook copies of our epic fantasy novel, “The Best Weapon”, on offer to
give away to two lucky readers. You can enter to win by placing a comment after
this post. I will draw the winners after March 12th, and promptly
dispatch two shiny digital copies of the book via email - as Kindle, Mobi, PDF, or whatever digital format the winners prefer.
At the foot of this post is a link - click on it to access the list of other contributors to this blog hop. Lots of fab blogs and websites to browse, and more prizes to be won.
First, though, I would like to bend your
ears and eyes a little about my thoughts on writing speculative as opposed to historical
fiction. I write in both genres, more often in the latter. I must be slightly masochistic, because historical fiction places
much more responsibility on the writer. An author of historical fiction
has a duty to be as accurate as possible, and to make sure he or she has done
as much research as possible before setting pen to paper (or fingers to the
keyboard). Not everyone shares this opinion, and there is an argument that plot is more important than precise
historical accuracy. It is always tempting to bend the facts a little,
especially if particularly awkward ones threaten to get in the way of the narrative.
Hard cheese. Simply making things up isn’t good enough, unless the writer is
doing it to fill gaps in our knowledge: for instance, in my novel “Folville’s
Law” I had King Edward II and his favourite, Hugh Despenser, captured by members
of the notorious Folville gang. We don’t know the identities of the men that
finally ran the hapless monarch and his favourite to earth, so I thought it was
reasonable to say that the Folvilles were involved. There is also a nasty recent tendency in some recent fiction for certain medieval queens to be portrayed as adulteresses, in order to suit alternative theories on the legitimacy of various kings. As Father Ted might have said, down with this sort of thing!
Speculative fiction, on the other hand, can be much more
fun. One is free to invent new worlds, and to manipulate events as one chooses.
This requires much more exercise of the imagination than a historical setting,
where the world is already laid out on a plate for the author to feast on. The
creation of The World Apparent, the fantasy-world setting in The Best Weapon,
was a hugely enjoyable process stimulated by a great many beer-drinking
marathons with my good friend and co-writer, Martin Bolton.
Our world map gradually took shape,
first traced by my wavering forefinger in a puddle of stale beer, and then
scribbled on a blank leaf inside an exercise book pilfered from the office
stationery cupboard. I’m no artist, and at first The World Apparent resembled
something one might see deposited on a pavement outside a kebab house after
midnight. Fortunately, Martin took over the artistic duties, and
being a talented draughtsman he came up with the rather splendid map below:
We started work on the book in the dying days of winter 2009. It was a brisk winter, that one, and the timber wolves never left off scratching at the door of my dingy London flat. The onset of spring found me slumped in an armchair with the curtains drawn, sucking forlornly at an empty bottle of Tesco's finest blended gutrot and trying to type the last few chapters with shuddering, nicotine-stained fingers.. I hadn't eaten a proper meal since the previous October and refused to see anyone except Martin, who brought me ale and cuddles and cheap biscuits. At last our combined efforts paid off, and THE BEST WEAPON was spawned:
"The best weapon against an enemy is another enemy...
Two young men, born on opposite ends of the world, are inexorably drawn together by forces outside their control or understanding. Created and manipulated by demonic forces, they must take charge of their own destiny and seek to prevent the very disaster they are supposed to bring about. As their world slides into war and chaos, they are faced with the ultimate question: can men do without Gods?"
To further whet your appetite, here is the link to the book on Musa's website:
The Best Weapon
The book was swiftly followed by a host of mini-sequels, the "Sorrow" series, Parts 1-6 of which have been released by Musa. The World Apparent has proved a fertile hunting ground, and there is much more to come...
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