Mar 21

One More Day: Mikki-kekki

Posted: under Background, Contents.
Tags: ,  March 21st, 2011

Since everyone appears to be enjoying the background material (I wasn’t sure you would),  and the tractor isn’t here yet, I’ll throw in some more tidbits to tide you over until tomorrow.   Or the next day.  Nothing should be spoilerish for Kings or the books following…some outcropped in the original books and some didn’t.   (And I don’t promise that there’s nothing new in background that might outcrop in this book or the next.)

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Mar 20

Legends IV: Dragon Colors

Posted: under Background, Contents.
Tags: ,  March 20th, 2011

In the original Paks books,  dragons were believed to have existed at one time, but to have been vanquished (some said by Camwyn Dragonmaster.)    No dragons had been seen in human lands for a long, long, very long time.    In this lack of direct evidence, imagination flourished, and the Sinyi, many of whom had in fact seen dragons in their living memory, did not dispel any of the notions that humans came up with.  Nor did the rockfolk, who had–if not living memory–at least a closer tie to dragons.   In fact…they found human stories about dragons amusing.   Even the gnomes, who find very little amusing.   Still, though the legends attached to dragons have little basis in fact, they are of interest in how they shape humans’  ideas about dragons.

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Mar 19

Legends III: The Severance

Posted: under Background, Contents.
Tags: ,  March 19th, 2011

Legends that cross racial boundaries (elf/human, human/gnome, elf/dwarf, etc.)  look very different in versions from the different groups.    The story of The Severance between elves and kuaknomi is perhaps the most complex of these, as it involves elves, humans, and trees.  This is necessarily a simplified version, and would be hotly disputed by some of those involved.

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Mar 18

Legends II: Falk’s Oath

Posted: under Background, Contents.
Tags: ,  March 18th, 2011

The legends of Paksworld involve a startling number of wicked kings, especially way in the past.    Gird is “historical” in that he’s not that far back and the evidence is more documentary than legendary.   Falk and Camwyn and Torre and others (including such figures as Dort the Master Shepherd, the Blind Archer,  Guthlac Lord of the Hunt) are more on the legendary side, with no direct evidence that they existed.  But for some the tales are so specific it’s hard to think they might not have a basis in reality.  Read the rest of this entry »

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Mar 17

Aging Thoughts: Snippet

Posted: under Contents, Kings of the North, snippet.
Tags: ,  March 17th, 2011

Age and inactivity usually bring reflection–and reflection isn’t always pleasant.

The usual spoiler warnings apply:   Aliam Halveric is an important secondary character, and although I chose this snippet to be as little spoilerish as possible…it will seem so to some.

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Mar 16

Wednesday Snippet

Posted: under Contents, Kings of the North, snippet.
Tags: ,  March 16th, 2011

Shorter, because I’m working very hard to get ready for a big Bach rehearsal tonight.    This snippet shows some of the background stuff that some of you appreciate and some, perhaps, skip over.  That’s fine…but there’s a reason for the background to show now and then.   This is as spoiler-free a snippet as I could find this far into the book (Chapter 20.)   But those who want to know nothing, not even the pattern on the wallpaper, should avoid it anyway.

The book itself is out here and there in Europe, so it’s time for another gentle reminder that everyone’s asked to observe spoiler space for those who haven’t got it yet.

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Mar 15

The REAL Tuesday Snippet

Posted: under Contents, Kings of the North, snippet.
Tags: , ,  March 15th, 2011

Since the previous snippet was supposed to be posted Monday (but, fooled by DST, I sent it after midnight) here’s the snippet that *should* come today.

I’ve previously posted a snippet that comes shortly before this one, about Stammel’s first experience in unarmed combat drill after his blinding.    Those who haven’t read the earlier snippet might want to look at it before reading this one.    They’re both in Chapter 9.

And spoiler warnings do apply:  don’t read below the line if you don’t want to know what happens.

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Mar 15

One More Week & Snippet

Posted: under Kings of the North, snippet.
Tags: ,  March 15th, 2011

Seven days.   And I’ve been absent (mostly health-related) more than here–apologies for that.   However, here’s a snippet from Chapter 11 of Kings, which begins the unwrapping of a long-held secret: what really happened in Old Aare?

This will be a fairly big chunk, and thus some of you might find it spoilerish.  Hence, spoiler warning–don’t venture beyond the break if you want to know absolutely nothing about what’s coming.   For those who go on, there’s a several-paragraphs gap in the snippet, not to hide anything but to shorten it for blog use.

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Mar 09

Some Cultural Bits

Posted: under Contents, Kings of the North, the writing life.
Tags: , ,  March 9th, 2011

While we wait another couple of weeks for the US release of Kings, here’s some more background to consider.   Back when I first discovered the complexity of Paksworld (as much as was needed for that first set of books)  I knew that having so much magic, of one kind and another, would almost certainly displace technological innovation, wherever magic worked well enough and was economically viable.

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Mar 07

Dragons, Etc.

Posted: under Contents, Kings of the North, the writing life.
Tags: , , ,  March 7th, 2011

One of the topics UK Editor suggested for a blog post for the Orbit Books site was “favorite fantasy dragons” with a lead-in to Kings of the North.    Those of you around in the great burgeoning of SF/F in the late 1960s and 1970s will remember that “dragons” were fairly common.    Some belonged to older mythologies  and some had been softened and tamed and made almost bland.

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