Breaking news! My gutsy Shahkara and her page-turning adventures have finally found a publishing home – within the talented ranks of Clan Destine Press (CDP). Shahkara, the first book in my newly-dubbed Heart Hunter series, will be released in print and e-book formats by May next year.
Okay, it’s not really breaking news since it’s almost a week ago that I was offered my shiny, three-book contract, but I was without internet for nearly a week while I was wining and dining with My Publisher and some awesome authors at the Gold Coast and attending RWA Conference workshops and parties. So, I haven’t been able to e-spruik my news until now (Cheryse dusts a couple of extra days beneath the speckled, loungeroom rug).
So I’m now a Contracted Author and I have to admit that I am bubbling with delight. I did not think that a publishing contract would be this magical. I thought that after so many long years of writing and buried manuscripts, of waits and rejections, that being published would be an anti-climax. It wasn’t. It is my dream come true – a dream that dates back to the tender age of seven. Okay, I still have a whole TARDIS-full of other characters and stories that keep bouncing off my grey matter, but at least this one story I can now share with the world.
How did the contract happen, you ask? Well, I’d been so sick with the flu that I didn’t even know if I’d make the conference or not, and then I only found out a couple of days before that my prospective publisher Lindy Cameron (aka CDP) would be visiting the Gold Coast. So when Lindy, my friend Jacque and I sat down for coffee, I was a little gob-smacked when she very matter-of-factly announced that she loved my manuscript and was offering me a three-book contract.
Yes, I had been waiting for a publishing reply from Lindy. I had submitted my Shahkara MS to her 10 weeks earlier following a successful pitch at Bundaberg WriteFest – but since that same solicited manuscript had been languishing at another large publishing house for 19 months, I’d begun to wonder if Shahkara would forever remain locked in digital despair.
So there I was, trying to swallow down my post-flu coughs, and Lindy suggests we all head to the nearest bookstore to discuss Shahkara cover options. I do recall her jumping when I released a belated squee (which she may have thought was a fire alarm) but then we scampered off to QBD to run our fingers over dozens of glossy and embossed covers. “It’ll be a wrap-around,” Lindy says. “All CDP covers are wrap-arounds. What do you think of this one?” After 20 minutes at QBD, we were sparking on all eight cylinders and I had a very visual idea of what my Shahkara cover might look like, come next year.
That’s when we spotted the NBN TV cameraman, zooming in on the book-lined shelves. As a journalist, I felt it was pretty much a no-brainer that if a Gold Coast cameraman is filming footage in a bookstore at the same time there’s a national writing conference about to start in the same city, then they’re most likely on converging paths. “Are you here for the RWA Conference?” I piped up. He nodded his head and was soon wanting to know our connection. What else could I say but: “Yes, we’re attending, and this is My Publisher and she’s just offered me a book contract!” A TV interview ensued…
Once we left QBD, there were all sorts of Very Important Publishing stuff to do – like shoe shopping and an exotic lunch. I don’t understand why all Publishers don’t go shoe shopping with their Authors. It’s a lot of fun – especially if you take photographic evidence 🙂 We returned to the resort and there might have been more coffee and discussions of books and publishing. Oh, and maybe a photo shoot.
Lindy didn’t stay for the conference. She’d only flown to the Gold Coast to deliver Rowena Cory Daniells‘ hot-off-the-press The Price of Fame novels to her (and offer me a contract). The rest of us author types toddled back to the RWA conference (where I unexpectedly was asked to stand on stage and be applauded for securing my first book sale *uncomfortable twinge*) while Lindy flew on to BrisVegas for more Very Important Publisher stuff.
The moral to the story? Even if you’re sick, make sure you attend all writing conferences scrawled in red on your calendar. You never know when you’ll have a successful pitch or when a Publisher might fly in and offer you a contract. In fact, maybe the Gold Coast marketing gurus could fashion this concept into a tourist attraction: Stay at XYZ resort and meet with your favourite Publisher… it could catch on!
So, my friends, I have so much more to share with you re my forthcoming book series and CDP, but suffice to say that today I am just thrilled that my Shahkara series has a home – and that it’s with a very fine stable indeed!
2013 Postscript: Shahkara will be published with the fabulous new title, The Blood She Betrayed, in 2013.
Thirteen years ago, I stepped into the enchanted, battle-lashed world of Rowena Cory Daniells’ The Last T’En and never really stepped back. Her characters enthralled me and I loved the detail and political intrigue of her world. I was delighted when I heard that Rowena had written a prequel trilogy. The Outcast Chronicles, set 600 years before The T’En, are packed with magic, secrets, over-riding ambitions and misplaced loyalties, and I couldn’t wait to ask her about them.
Cherie: What inspired you to write The T’En and did The Outcast Chronicles grow from the world building of your first trilogy?
Rowena: Most books end when the kingdom is won and the last castle falls. I started the original T’En story when the castle was falling. I’d been reading Machiavelli’s The Prince and was fascinated by the challenge of holding a kingdom once it has been conquered. Once General Tulkhan conquered Fair Isle, he had an army outnumbered by the conquered people. To hold onto what he’d won he needed Imoshen, last of the royal family. Meanwhile, Imoshen had to choose between prolonging the battle by siding with the rebels or trying to smooth the transition of power to ensure her people survived.
A couple of lines in the original trilogy about Imoshen’s namesake, Imoshen the First, made me think about how history is written by the victors and I wondered why Imoshen the First had fled her homeland. What had been hidden when they wrote their history and what had been lost in the six hundred years since the T’En came to Fair Isle?
From this, the story of the first Imoshen grew.
C: Tell me about the main characters in The Outcast Chronicles?
RCD: In the original trilogy the rivalry and distrust between the T’En men and women was only hinted at. In the prequel it divides their society. The males live in brotherhoods while the females live in sisterhoods. The T’En women are not as physically strong as the men, but they have more powerful gifts. Four hundred years ago there was terrible rivalry between the brotherhoods and T’En children were killed. The sisterhoods united and forced a covenant on the T’En males. The brotherhoods had to give up their pure T’En children to the sisterhoods to rear. Naturally, the men resent this.
Meanwhile, the True-men and women fear the T’En, who live segregated lives on their estates or their island city. No one knows why some perfectly respectable True-men produce children with T’En traits but, if this happens, these babies are sent to the T’En and never spoken of again.
Imoshen (left) was raised by a covenant-breaking brotherhood, who hoped to use her to overthrow the sisterhoods but she escapes and seeks sanctuary with the sisterhoods, who punish her father’s brotherhood for breaking the covenant. Imoshen realises the divide between the T’En men and women is making her people vulnerable but the distrust is so deeply entrenched the sisterhood leaders won’t listen to her and the brotherhood leaders hate her.
Sorne (right) is the disinherited son of the True-man king. Because he was born part T’En (a half-blood Malaunje), he can never sit on the throne. His father sends him away to be raised as a weapon to infiltrate the T’En city and discover their weakness. The king wants to rid his land of T’En, both full- and half-bloods. Soon, Sorne will have to decide where his real loyalty lies.
Tobazim (left) is more scholar than warrior. Inspired by old tales of honour and glory, he goes to the T’En city hoping to win stature. But only the strongest and most ruthless males rise to lead the brotherhoods and his brotherhood’s leader is a cruel tyrant. How can he serve his brotherhood when all they respect is violence?
Perceptive and loyal, Ronnyn (right) was born pure T’En, while his sister Aravelle (left) was born a half-blood Malaunje. Normally they would have been separated at birth, but their Malaunje parents ran away from the T’En so they could keep Ronnyn. Now that Ronnyn is twelve, his gift starts to manifest. He and Aravelle keep it hidden because if they return to the T’En their parents will be punished. Before long they realise untrained power is dangerous.
This is a kingdom forged in magic, divided by distrust and betrayal. This is a fantasy-family saga; the characters are linked by blood, love and vows as they struggle with misplaced loyalties, over-riding ambition and hidden secrets which could destroy them. Some make desperate alliances only to be betrayed by those they trust, and some discover great personal strength in times of adversity.
C: Many of your readers strongly identified with Imoshen of The Last T’En. Do you think that Imoshen the First in The Outcast Chronicles will resonate as strongly?
RCD: Readers have told me I do terrible things to my characters. I like to test them by putting them in situations that force them to make difficult moral choices. Imoshen the First is faced with terrible choices, but she tries to stay true to what she believes is right. So in that way she is like the Imoshen of the original trilogy.
C: How did you make your first book sale?
RCD: My very first book was a children’s book and it was picked up from the slush pile. The Last T’En trilogy was sent to a publisher before I had an agent. Out of the blue the editor rang me and made an offer on it. I said, ‘I’ll just call my agent’, hung up the phone and danced around the kitchen before madly contacting a writing friend for advice about agents.
C: Did The Outcast Chronicles require a lot of world building?
RCD: I’ve been working on The Outcast Chronicles for ten years as my writing group know. I kept putting drafts of the book in for critiques and they would say ‘too much world building and back-story’. So I would go away and rewrite from an earlier point in the narrative to reveal the back-story.
With regard to the world building, I felt the question of magic hadn’t been dealt with in fantasy books (or at least I hadn’t come across it). After all, how would we feel if there were people amongst us with gifts? I think those without powers would resent and distrust those who had the gifts. Then you have to ask yourself how did the gifts arise? I theorised that it was a recessive gene, which a few True-people carried. Sometimes, they produced Malaunje babies. And sometimes, when these half-bloods grew up and had children, they produced pure T’En babies with full-blown gifts. I thought the power of these gifts would be expressed differently in men and women and this would affect the way the genders interacted.
Power must have consequences. This would shape the people and their society.
C: You and your husband own a company that designs book trailers and covers. What were the challenges of creating a book trailer for your own book?
RCD: I do know the characters and the world, but in a way this makes it harder, just as it is harder to write a synopsis of your own book because you know all the details. Luckily, I’d been keeping a resonance file on The Outcast Chronicles to give to the cover artist, Clint Langley. He produced some beautiful covers and my publisher, Solaris, produced a terrific advertisement for SFX magazine. We liked the way they summed up the story and this was what we worked from to create the trailer.
C: You have another book due out this month, a gritty noir crime with a touch of paranormal, to be published by Clan Destine Press. Was it difficult crossing genres?
RCD: As a reader, I read across genres. My short stories and my children’s books cross several genres. It is just my published grown-up books that happen to have been fantasies. I wrote the first draft of this book back in1981. I’d written around 10 books before I was twenty-five and two of those were SF mysteries. So this book wasn’t a big step outside my comfort zone.
This book has been a long time in gestation. I wrote my first draft when I was 23. When I was 36, I corrected a couple of spellings and sent it off to the Harper Collins $10,000 Fiction Prize and it made the long-short list. At that point it was the 80s story about the band, the street kids and the taxi driver who tried to help them, with just a hint of paranormal.
In my 40s, I decided to add another layer to the story. I created the contemporary layer, set 25 years later, told from Antonia’s point of view. She wants to make a documentary about the band, which rocketed to fame after the murder of one of the girl singers. I wanted the story to work on two levels, as a mystery and as a paranormal. To know that Lindy Cameron, award-winning mystery writer, selected The Price of Fame as one of her Clandestine Press books is very satisfying.
C: You have six children but you’re a writing powerhouse. What’s your secret and do you have a writing method?
RCD: My children are older now. Back when they were little, I used to write with them on my lap, or in the moments between dealing with dramas. Now, I snatch moments between work and running after teenagers and twenty-somethings, and elderly relatives. With every book I learn more about the craft of writing. With every book I feel I could have done better. I don’t know if I’ll ever be satisfied with what I write but I love the challenge.
C: What’s your next big project?
RCD: I’m currently preparing the original T’En trilogy for a reprint. I have the rights back so I’m going to release them as e-books and as print on demand. Then I have to finish the next King Rolen’s Kin trilogy. I also have a duology fantasy set in a deadly tropical paradise, and I’ve been working on an alternate history set in Australia in the 1830s.
Sometimes I wish I could just run away from life, live like a hermit and do nothing but write. I’d get terribly introverted and forget how to talk to people so it’s just as well I can’t do this.
C: What’s your advice for aspiring or emerging authors?
Read widely across genres, fiction and non-fiction. If you find an author you like, read their books for fun. Then read the books to see what works, then read them a third time to see what can be improved. Usually, on the third read, you can see the story bones.
Write the things you love to read. Join a critique group, submit to the group and rewrite. Critiquing other people’s stories is a really good way to build your writing craft muscles.
Once you’ve done that and feel you are ready, submit to something like the QWC/Hachette Manuscript Development Program. This is a great way to get noticed.
Creating atmosphere is one of the trademarks of Jason Nahrung’s writing so it’s no wonder this dark urban fantasy author knows how to make his stories crackle with suspense. Preparing for a Queensland tour to promote his latest Gothic novella, Salvage, Nahrung shares his thoughts on a powerful genre:
“Urban fantasy – it’s right up there with paranormal romance in the popularity stakes at the moment. The former uses an urban setting – contemporary ones appear to be the most popular – and adds a dollop of fantasy: city streets walked by vampires, werewolves, fairies, sorcerers. Paranormal romance looks much the same, though isn’t as bound by geography and, as the name suggests, the romance is to the fore. In urban fantasy, the romance, if any, will be secondary to the plot.
One of my favourite urban fantasists is Kim Harrison’s Rachel Morgan series aka the Hollows, though I’m a bit behind at the moment.
Harrison has reinvented Cincinnati as a home to all manner of supernatural and folkloric critters, with a generous dollop of magic besides. Ley lines, wicca, fairies in the backyard and vampires as flatmates are all par for the course.
The society is incredibly well detailed and logical; the magic system is one of the best realised I’ve read; the characters are engaging. Harrison’s vampires are complex biological creatures, again, some of the most credible and well presented I’ve encountered.
Some of the elements I take away from the series:
1. Take the trope, twist it, but make it logical. Half the fun of using familiar monsters is working out how to make them different in your world – not for the sake of making them different – ooh, sparkles! – but because it’s important to the story, and more likely, important to the theme; monsters are metaphors – use them wisely.
2. Location is important. The many faces – and the stuff behind the faces – of the city are explained through the senses as well as history and architecture, making a vivid, identifiable backdrop; every city has its quirks – use them.
3. Magic and other supernatural goings on all need internal logic. Apply the rules across the board; what works for the good guys works for the bad guys. Magic has limits and costs, which can constrain and test characters and add tension.
4. On that score, watch out for magic bullets and dei ex machina. Cure-alls and all-powerful magicians and entities are boring; everyone has their foibles and their motivations, which should be sensible and consistent. The victory that’s worked hard for and comes logically from the narrative is the one that will be remembered.
5. No one is evil on purpose. Cruel people don’t have a manifesto of brutality, but rather are that way because they think it’s normal; they think it’s the way to achieve their goals, and hang whoever gets hurt. You can appreciate Harrison’s villains because they have human or at least understandable motivations, whether of sexual desire or political ambition. Further, villains eschew over-complicated plots. The ideal result with the least effort is the motto.
6. In the dark before the dawn, some comic relief is, well, a relief; but the comedic sidekick can still have their serious side, and their wants and needs can and should impact on the story; they aren’t a tool to be used when needed and left on the shelf when not – they have their own lives to lead. Sometimes, when you go to the shelf, they’re off doing their own thing.
What also impresses me about Harrison’s series is the forethought, and the way that bit players in one volume can emerge as important characters down the track, with minor incidents turning out to be clues to major events later. She does a great job of pursuing her core narrative with plenty of side-trips and red herrings; Morgan is a private detective, so the books have a strong crime/thriller mentality in addition to the fantastical.
While not quite in Harrison’s league, I also tend to write urban fantasy, and rural fantasy, too; my latest piece of long fiction is set on an island, so I guess it’s a coastal fantasy, or as I prefer to call it, a seaside Gothic. The Gothic is my favourite mood, all dark and gloomy even when set on a sun-drenched beach, and I enjoy my urban fantasy in that vein – ‘dark urban fantasy’, edged with horror and suspense tropes. To me, raised in the bush, cities are the shadow world. Totally artificial, it’s only natural that they have unnatural secrets.
Why set fantasy in our world rather than one made up?
Firstly, there’s a lot less work! Politics, religion, economy, terrain, society, history … it’s all provided outside the window, with your own little fantastical addition, of course.
Secondly, the joy is in the twist: what if? What if these other things were real? How would that change things? What would that say about us – as people and a society? How can I use this premise to make my comment, to make my exploration, of who we are? Setting the story in the here and now brings it very close to home. Sometimes, stories are best set elsewhere, in another time or a fictional place; that distance is necessary for dealing with unpalatable or raw issues. But other times, it’s nice to bring it on home, right to where we live. Right to where the heart is.”
Jason Nahrung will launch Salvage (Twelfth Planet Press), his seaside Gothic tale, at Avid Reader on August 10, and will be at Logan North library on August 11, Caloundra library on August 13 and Noosa library on August 14. Salvage is also part of the Twelfth Planet Press Showcase at Melbourne Writers Festival on August 26. He also has the outback vampire novel, Blood and Dust, due out later this year.
Jason grew up on a Queensland cattle property and now lives in Melbourne with his wife, the writer Kirstyn McDermott. He works as an editor and journalist to support his travel addiction. His fiction is invariably darkly themed, perhaps reflecting his passion for classic B-grade horror films and ’80s goth rock. The co-author of the novel The Darkness Within (Hachette Australia), his most recent long fiction title is the Gothic tale Salvage (Twelfth Planet Press). For more information, visit the Jason Nahrung website here.