Far Horizons: Tales of Sci-Fi, Fantasy and Horror. Issue #19 October 2015 | Page 24

Author Interview lowed. In fact, I had a nightmare one night from which I drew the basic situation of the story, Dagr is trying to rescue a girl who has been captured and taken into slavery. I also knew the ending. I just let the characters tell me everything that happened in the middle. In this way, I ended up with more climaxes, not one or two giant climaxes. In some ways, the story resembles Raiders of the Lost Arc, which was written to have 7 acts, with 7 climaxes. I liked the action-oriented way that tells a story. Gudrod Hanson Angry Shadows Rising – Zharmae Publishing, Luthando Couer I think that worked out very well. wrote. is it? Tell us a bit more about the last book you Do you have a set writing process, if so what I want to get the benefits of having a story outline, and yet also benefit from spontaneity. I am writing the sequel now and I’m following the Hero’s Journey format much more tightly than I did before. I am structuring this one more than I did Angry Shadows Rising. And actually, I am using a model from film screenwriting. But I am leaving room for characters to take the story in a different direction. I wrote Angry Shadows Rising, which is a traditional fantasy novel, with some dark themes of slavery and a growing number of dark spirits walking the earth. The book is about being a hero and struggling for what is right, against tremendous odds. It’s also about how two people, Ingrid and Dagr, grow up during a great adventure. I wrote the book to be full of action and bold, vivid opponents because I found so many fantasy novels to be full of a lot of talk or theoretical discussions. I wanted fights, giant monsters, and dark dungeons full of evil spirits. So that’s what I wrote. I think one of the most important things in writing is being willing and energetic enough to make the big edits and big changes to the story when things are just not working. I am never afraid to cut out whole sections or chapters of a novel and put them into my archive folder. What did you learn about writing whilst writing the last book you wrote? I learned a tremendous amount from my editor. I learned to be very clear in what you write because often if a reader can misunderstand your sentence, they will. The first goal for every writer is to be clear. Once you are clear in your communication, then you can tell the story. Otherwise writing is work. I work at it in the mornings, and in the evenings. I put a lot of time and energy into it. I wish that things flowed quickly on the first draft, but they just do not. Again, what can help the process is listening to the characters. Let the characters tell a story. That usually works. Do you write a lot of short stories? I don’t write a lot of short stories. I find it difI also learned the value of letting the characters ficult to find a good idea that can be captured in short tell the story and letting it go in directions that might seem a bit wild. Characters will go where their desires form. I would prefer to write a couple really good short stories rather than write a lot of them that are take them. I did not have a strict outline that I fol- 24