Monday, June 16, 2025

The Art of Adaptation - Fantasy Monsters Part 2

@fredthepig on DeviantArt gives us a fresh reimaging of Little Red Riding Hood. 

Hello, Sup Readers!

In Part 1 of The Art of Adaptation - Fantasy Monsters, we explored the traditional tropes in the genre, like Vampires, Frankenstein, and Fae. It's clear these creatures are evolving over time, becoming more complex and less predictable. Today, I'm sharing some wonderful and eclectic new examples, all released this year.

Let's start with Rachel Gillig's The Knight and the Moth, out May 2025


From BookTok sensation and NYT bestselling author Rachel Gillig, comes the next big romantasy phenomenon: a gothic, mist-cloaked tale of a prophetess who is forced beyond the safety of her cloister on an impossible quest to defeat the gods with the one knight whose future is beyond her sight.

Sybil Delling has spent nine years dreaming of having no dreams at all. Like the other foundling girls who traded a decade of service for a home in the great cathedral, Sybil is a Diviner. In her dreams she receives visions from six unearthly figures known as Omens. From them, she can predict terrible things before they occur, and lords and common folk alike travel across the kingdom of Traum's windswept moors to learn their futures by her dreams.

Just as she and her sister Diviners near the end of their service, a mysterious knight arrives at the cathedral. Rude, heretical, and devilishly handsome, the knight Rodrick has no respect for Sybil's visions. But when Sybil's fellow Diviners begin to vanish one by one, she has no choice but to seek his help in finding them. For the world outside the cathedral's cloister is wrought with peril. Only the gods have the answers she is seeking, and as much as she'd rather avoid Rodrick's dark eyes and sharp tongue, only a heretic can defeat a god.

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And then, expected publication June 19, 2025, is The Return of the Sistah Samurai by Tatiana Obey.

Afro Samurai meets The Boondocks in this anime-inspired novel. A fresh take on ancient ideas.

I've wanted nothing more than to become a Sistah Samurai. When I was expelled from the training academy for sneaking in my stupid ex-boyfriend, I still had hope that I could cry enough to convince them to take me back. Then, demons invaded the capital and decimated the clan, and there went my dreams of ever naming my own pair of pink swords.

Until I heard a rumor of one last Sistah Samurai. I packed my favorite outfits and my trusty teddy bear, and recruited my forever bestie to help me find her. If we could manage not to interrupt her lunch, maybe we could convince her to train us? We were ready to do whatever she asked, even if that meant confronting old flames and taking down the patriarchy.

As long as we looked good while doing it.

The sequel of Sistah Samurai is an Action Fantasy novella that is an homage to the anime, Afro Samurai. Both works feature a feudal Japan-inspired setting that is rife with anachronisms. In the words of Samuel L. Jackson, “Is that a motherf—ing RPG?”

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How about The Devils by Joe Abercrombie? This is what happens when the devils are on your side! Out May 2025.

Holy work sometimes requires unholy deeds.

Brother Diaz has been summoned to the Sacred City, where he is certain a commendation and grand holy assignment awaits him. 

But his new flock is made up of unrepentant murderers, practitioners of ghastly magic, and outright monsters, and the mission he is tasked with will require bloody measures from them all in order to achieve its righteous ends.

Elves lurk at our borders and hunger for our flesh, while greedy princes care for nothing but their own ambitions and comfort. With a hellish journey before him, it's a good thing Brother Diaz has the devils on his side.

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And finally, The Floating World by Axie Oh.

From the New York Times-bestselling author of The Girl Who Fell Beneath the Sea, Final Fantasy meets Shadow and Bone in this romantic fantasy reimagining the Korean legend of Celestial Maidens.

Sunho lives in the Under World, a land of perpetual darkness. An ex-soldier, he can remember little of his life from before two years ago, when he woke up alone with only his name and his sword. Now he does odd-jobs to scrape by, until he comes across the score of a lifetime—a chest of coins for any mercenary who can hunt down a girl who wields silver light.

Meanwhile, far to the east, Ren is a cheerful and spirited acrobat traveling with her adoptive family and performing at villages. But everything changes during one of their festival performances when the village is attacked by a horrific humanlike demon. In a moment of fear and rage, Ren releases a blast of silver light—a power she has kept hidden since childhood—and kills the monster. But her efforts are not in time to prevent her adoptive family from suffering a devastating loss, or to save her beloved uncle from being grievously wounded.

Determined to save him from succumbing to the poisoned wound, Ren sets off over the mountains, where the creature came from—and from where Ren herself fled ten years ago. Her path sets her on a collision course with Sunho, but he doesn't realize she's the girl that he—and a hundred other swords-for-hire—is looking for. As the two grow closer through their travels, they come to realize that their pasts—and destinies—are far more entwined than either of them could have imagined...


What contemporary monsters are you reading right now? I'd love to hear about them!

xKim

Other Posts in the Art of Adaptation 2025

January - The Art of Adaptation - Films in 2025

February - The Art of Adaptation - Authors' Response to External Pressures

March - The Art of Adaptation - The Healing Magic of KDrama

April - The Art of Adaptation -  Reader Persuasion

May - The Art of Adaptation - Fantasy Monsters Part 1

June - The Art of Adaptation - Fantasy Monsters Part 2

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About Kim Falconer 


Kim Falconer, also writing as AK Wilder, has released Crown of Bones, a YA Epic Fantasy with Curse of Shadows as book 2 in the series. Currently, she is ready with the third book, planned to be out in 2025. TBA

Kim can be found on AKWilder.com, TwitterFacebookInstagram and KimFalconer.com

Throw the bones on the AKWilder.com site.. See you there!



Tuesday, June 10, 2025

From The Backlist: "What Love Means" by Kim Falconer

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It's backlist time -- & we love this post on "What Love Means " by Kim Falconer.

Time to share it again, we thought. So here it is! Enjoy!!

The "Quantum" Series

What Love Means

by Kim Falconer

I find it fascinating that the English Language has only one word for love. We love our cars and cats and pancakes. We love our new job, the latest film and the computer that never lets us down. We love our gardens, sports, family and our lovers, but the feeling for these ‘loved ones’ can be quite different. Still, we say the same thing: I love . . . Not so in other cultures. The ancient Greeks, for example, had four different words for love with different meanings and different ‘locations.’

Love as Epithemia translates into words like horny or randy. It’s a physical, sensual, sexy love that’s hard to resist. Animal attraction. Chemistry. You know the kind? It’s tactile and felt in the body. It wants to get close, to touch and explore. It wants to have sex because that’s the only thing that will put the fire out!

Love as philia is a friendship love that brings creative inspiration. There can be a deep sense wanting to be together in companionship and co-creation. Philia is felt in the heart. We can write characters that have a feeling of philia for each other and it really screws things up if they do have sex. Or if one character is feeling the philia and the other is on fire with epithemia. These make great problems for convoluted story lines!

Love as Eros is felt in the soul. Eros is a god from which we get the word erotic, but to the ancient Greeks it was much more than just ‘sex’. The original definition of erotic (of Eros) is a situation when two or more people come together in such a way there is a lasting transformation. By this definition, sex is seldom erotic, but it can be. The Eros relationship is heady, intense, obsessive. It always leads to growth and change.

Love as agape is a divine love felt in the spirit. It may not need the body conneciton to feel fulfilled. This is also tantric, sex that opens the mind to another level of consciousness. Agape can lead to transcendence where characters move beyond their earthly limitations to become more than they ever thought possible.

Stories that contrast these kinds of love can be deeply moving because they speak to our own subtle and complex longings. One character feeling the ‘brotherly love’ of philia may be confronted by their companion’s erotic fire. Someone with the reverence of agape may not know how to face pure epithemia head on. It’s not unrequited love, exactly (it doesn’t have to distance characters) but it brings trouble and that’s exactly what we want in a good read! Mixing up the love keeps the stakes high and the dynamics flowing!

... 

What a great post! To read the original, click here

To check in on Kim, try these links:

AKWilder.com, TwitterFacebookInstagram and KimFalconer.com

Throw the bones on the AKWilder.com site -- see you there!

Kim also writes as AK Wilder

Monday, June 2, 2025

Great Leaders in Speculative Fiction #5: Katniss Everdeen & "The Hunger Games"

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Can you believe it's June already? Time swoopin' by, as it does! Howeverz, it does mean we're at #5 in the "Great Leaders In Speculative Fiction" series -- *and* the spotlight is on the inimitable Katniss Everdeen from Suzanne Collins' "The Hunger Games" trilogy.

Katniss Everdeen

Up until now, the leaders featured in this series have all come from a leadership background in their society -- yes, even Kaladin in Stormlight Archive, although his background is by no means as elevated as that of Dalinar Kholin.

Katniss, though, truly is a commoner, and poor with it. Not only that, she's a poor commoner from one of her society's poorest Districts (think state, province, shire.) Although close to her mother and sister, she's also a loner except for her hunting buddy, Dale, who is also a friend. 

The most interesting aspect of Katniss as a leader, not just a hero and champion (although she's very clearly that, too) is that she remains a loner throughout. From the moment she volunteers to take her sister's place in the Hunger Games lottery, Katniss's leadership is moral, rather than the more usual paths of governance or military prominence. 

In her person, and by her deeds, she exemplifies a riposte, and an alternative, to the cruelty and repression of the Capitol, which masterminds the Hunger Games.

I feel very sure everyone reading this knows the Hunger Games premise, but 'just in case', every District must supply two of their children, one girl, one boy, to the Capitol every year, to compete in an arena where all tributes must kill or be killed. Only the last tribute standing survives the arena.

And no one volunteers -- except for Katniss. The second book is titled Catching Fire and Katniss burns very brightly throughout, but it is a flame of moral integrity as well as physical and mental courage. The combination of the two make her an inspirational leader as well. Seeing and hearing her, people's spirits catch alight. They want to follow her example and do as she does.

Yet Katniss always stands alone. In part, because she sees the realities and uncomfortable truths that most people prefer to avoid. The trilogy ends, as it begins, with Katniss taking a moral stand -- but this time, it's not one that all, if any, among those who follow her, readily understand. 

Katniss has been pushed to a brink. The fact she survives it illustrates the degree to which she has become more symbol than person. The symbol cannot be allowed to fail, or fall, which is also why her final deed carries so much weight and does bring a lasting end to the Hunger Games.

Yet for all the fires Katniss has lit, she is more alone at the end than at the outset. And however bright her personal flame, the path from the Games, through revolution, to reach that end was always a precipice, with death on one side and failure of integrity on the other. 

Unquestionably, though, the fire Katniss Everdeen lit was a conflagration, both in the trilogy's world of Panem, and in readers' enthusiasm for her story. 

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About Helen Lowe

Helen Lowe is an award-winning novelist, poet, and lover of story. With four books published to date, she is currently completing the final instalment in The Wall Of Night series.
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Helen posts regularly on her 
“…on Anything, Really” blog, monthly on the Supernatural Underground, and tweets @helenl0we.


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