Thursday, August 22, 2024

From the Backlist - Taking a Break from it All

Art byYao Yao Ma Van As - Tax Season

Here at the Supernatural Underground, we are enjoying another insightful read from our back-list, posted  by Nicole Murphy. It's called, Taking a Break from it All

In this post, Nicole offers tips and tricks from her own well of resources, with other Sup authors adding their thoughts to the comments. 

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There's been lots of ideas coming from the Supernatural hivemind on things we do to get creative. Kim makes space - I've gotten into that a bit more as well, ensuring that nothing else is going on except me and the words. Terri reads (I can read when I'm editing, or between books, but when I'm drafting - no can do). Pamela and Jocelynn both listen to music (I need complete silence). Amanda uses images - the real estate website is a great idea and I know other people who are made for images but that doesn't work for me. Helen's three pages in the morning sound wonderful.

For me, however, the thing that really works is taking a break.

It probably sounds counter-intuitive - that taking time off the computer helps me when I'm on it. But the thing is, I find I dry up if I spend too long at it. I can pound out some great wordage, sure, but then my brain gets overloaded. Push it too far, and it will come to a standstill.

But taking a break doesn't mean a break from the story. Far from it - it's a break from that act of sitting and fingers moving on keyboard, but I'm still working, things ticking away in the background....

Read the entire post here ...

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You can check out Nicole Murphy's complete works on Goodreads. Wonderful books!


 

Friday, August 16, 2024

Choose Your Weapon - The Unarmed

 

One Puch Man by Yusuke MurataONE - Seinen Manga

The Unarmed

Perhaps the original fighting technique in Fantasy Fiction, and human history, is the unarmed. Used for offence and defence, this is a melee style that sports the punch, kick, head-butt, or similar forceful blow. Not as elegant as the sword, ranged weapon or magic, it can be quite effective, in the right hands. :)


History 
image - Sam Steiner (CC BY-NC-SA)

Hand-to-hand combat was common in gladiator matches in ancient Rome and in medieval sports including jousting after one was unhorsed. 

As early as 1022 BCE, Chinese soldiers of the Zhou Dynasty were trained in close-quarter unarmed combat.

Contemporary martial arts also have unarmed attacks at their core. For example, Karate, originating in Okinawa, teaches students to use their hands and feet to deliver blocks and strikes against an attacker. 

But what about the pure power of a punch or kick? Is it enough? 

Quotes 

Bruce Lee himself said Muhammad Ali would kill him in a fight. Bruce also said, Take any professional boxer against a black belt of any traditional martial art and the boxer would win.

But in Fantasy Fiction, that might be a different story.


Brandon Sanderson's Steeheart is a great example of Fantasy fiction that packs a punch. And check out this quote:

“Never throw the first punch. If you have to throw the second, try to make sure they don't get up for a third.”― Brandon Sanderson, Steelheart

This reminds me of Lee Child's Jack Reacher character who makes up for the lack of Fantasy with an extra scoop of BRAWL power! His basic philosophy is to "Hit them fast. Hit them hard, and hit them often." 


But does one have to be a giant man to win a fistfight?

No, not at all.

Denice Zamboanga: Filipina bantamweight Champion

Take Ava Sykes in The Blood in the Beginning

Who is Ava Sykes?

Undergraduate by day, bouncer by night, Ava Sykes works hard to build her life in New LA, a city experiencing the Aftermath of a seismic disaster. Her prospects improve until she stumbles upon an evil no sane person would want to confront. 

Suddenly, her life, her city and everyone she cares about is in danger. Pushed to the edge, Ava taps a power she never knew she had . . . and uses it. 

...I clocked him in the head with a roundhouse kick, my steel-toed boots hitting home. He staggered, weaving from side to side before he toppled over backward, crashing onto the ground. I wiped sweat from my forehead as, incredibly, he stood back up and came at me like a wrecking ball. What’s this guy made of? I dropped to a crouch and swept my right leg around to trip him up. He leapt over it and landed, fists swinging, pounding me into the ground. As my head found the pavement, I rolled onto my back and caught him with a kick to the crotch. He fell forward. I followed with a punch to the throat. It choked him back for a second, long enough for me to squirm away, find my feet and run...  - Falconer, Kim. The Blood In The Beginning. Mira. Kindle Edition. 

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Do you have a favourite fantasy fiction, fist-fighting character or series? I'd love to hear about it in the comments. 

Choose Your Weapon Series

Poison

The Perfect Storm

The Sword

Firearms

Ranged

Spells

Unarmed

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About Kim Falconer

Kim Falconer, currently 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 working on the third book, out in 2024.

Kim can be found on  AKWilder TwitterFacebook and Instagram

Throw the bones, read your horoscopes or Raise Your Phantom on the AKWilder.com site



Saturday, August 10, 2024

From The Backlist: "Interview With A Witch"

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We loved this interview, between author, Kim Falconer, and her Quantum Enchantment witch, Kreshkali, when it first posted -- and think it's just as fun today. 

Enjoy!

Interview With A Witch

I had the chance to catch up with one of my favourite people from the Quantum Enchantment series, Kreshkali Richter. She’s not an easy woman to pin down so I took the opportunity, with her consent, to record our conversation.

Quantum Enchantment series

KIM Kreshkali, it’s an honour to have you here in my home.

KRESHKALI Not a problem. You checked out.

KIM *clears throat* Many of our readers have asked me about your relationship to the Earth’s underground. In the first three books, you seem to be a loner, yet . . .

KRESHKALI *interrupting* It’s all about illusion. A glamour. To ASSIST, I look like a streetwise whore, scratching out a living on the edge of a ruined city. That’s the mask. After the underground was infiltrated by ASSIST, our leaders were killed. It was up to me. Pecking order, you know? I was next in line.

KIM And you’ve held it together very well indeed. But what about the magic? Did you really learn that on your own? From your mother’s grimoire?

KRESHKALI Not alone. I had Nell with me. Most of the time as kids, we studied together. Then there was the night in the sewer. Things went dark for sometime after that. But between Nell, and my mother’s books, ya, I learned the craft.

Kreshkali's cards

KIM And now you teach, of course. Can I ask who’s been your most challenging student?

KRESHKALI *chuckles* That would be Teg.

KIM Can you tell us a bit about him?

KRESHKALI Teg’s a Lupin. You know the term? Of course you do. He’s got wolf DNA merged with his own. A powerful shape-shifter, as all Lupins are, but Teg’s got something else. He’s a brilliant student. Drives me crazy sometimes . . .

KIM Because . . . ?

KRESHKALI *Surprised* If you met him, you wouldn’t have to ask! It’s like there’s no air in the room when he looks my way. Those eyes . . . He’s my apprentice though, so I keep it together.

KIM How do you cope with that?

KRESHKALI We train hard, fight dirty, study, debate, elude, detect and travel the many-worlds at the speed of light. It keeps me focused on the task at hand.

Train hard, fight...

KIM Which is?

KRESHKALI Saving Earth and Gaela, what else?

KIM Ah yes, Gaela. How did you feel when you first woke up there?

KRESHKALI #%^@ing blown away! You can’t appreciate it, because your Earth is still healthy, but for me, waking up to see the sun shine, to see stars overhead at night and not a muddy vault, to drink water fresh from a stream and walk among trees was like opening my eyes for the first time. Fresh air that doesn’t smell like death, rain that doesn’t sting like demon’s piss, people who live and train and practice magic in the open . . . seeing that did it for me. I knew then and there. . .

KIM Knew what, Kali?

KRESHKALI I would do anything to bring Earth back to life.

KIM Beautiful. Thank you. 

...

To read the full post, including some great questions for Kreshkali, click here.


About Kim Falconer

Kim Falconer, currently 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 working on the third book, out in 2024.

Kim can be found on  AKWilder TwitterFacebook and Instagram

Throw the bones, read your horoscopes or Raise Your Phantom on the AKWilder.com site

Thursday, August 1, 2024

The Year of the Villain #7 -- The Evilest of Them All!

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Ya can't talk villains in Fantasy fiction without talking A Game of Thrones (GoT) -- and for quite some time now I've thought Peter Baelish, aka Littlefinger, is among the most evil. And maybe, just maybe, the evilest of them all.

Petyr Baelish, aka Littlefinger
Spoiler Alert
It' s impossible to tell you why I think this without revelations, aka spoilers, about the GoT story, but after five books and an eight-season TV show, I think the plot is well known enough to survive it. If, however, you have not yet experienced either but intend doing so, then you may prefer not to read on. 

Returning to the matter at hand, you may be thinking, "What's Helen sipping in her tea lately, to think Littlefinger's the worst villain? What about Joffrey and Cersei, Roose and Ramsay Bolton, and that ultimate in brutality, Gregor Clegane, The Mountain That Rides"? Aren't they far more evil?"

Gregor Clegane, The Mountain That Rides
On the surface, the answer appears to be yes -- although even if we stay only on that surface, Littlefinger betrays Ned Stark to his death, seeks to seduce the barely-more-than-a-child Sansa Stark while still married, then murders his wife. Still, arguably nowhere near as sadistic and brutal as many others in the books* -- but let's look beneath that surface.

Littlefinger Betrays Ned Stark

One of the things I love most about the A Game of Thrones series (officially titled "A Song of Ice and Fire", or ASOIAF) is its multilayered storytelling, in which a multiplicity of characters have indepth backstories, often with nefarious motivations concealed.

As I read, I gradually became aware there was considerably more to Littlefinger than met the eye. In particular, that his unrequited love for Catelyn Stark, nee Tully, almost certainly led him to engineer the brutal deaths of her fiance, Brandon Stark, and his father, Lord Rickard. As a result she marries Ned Stark, whom Littlefinger also later betrays, resulting in his execution. 

Catelyn Stark
It's a tale of entitlement and vengeance, as well as ambition, all manipulated and masterminded from the shadows -- because Littlefinger is not an enemy his opponents will see coming. He's certainly not one to confront his enemies, and victims, openly. Yet if it stopped there, we might agree that he's a villain, sure, but maybe not the worst of them all.

Here's the thing, though. In both cases where Littlefinger pursues his personal vengeance against the Starks, the consequence of their deaths is civil war in Westeros. The first of these is the Usurper's War, which ends Targaryen rule and sees Robert Baratheon become king. 

The young Robert Baratheon
The second is the War of the Five Kings that dangerously weakens Westeros, rendering it vulnerable to the Night King, and very nearly bringing its destruction. In both cases, the civil war also gives free rein to the extremities of those like the Boltons and Gregor Clegane, resulting in widespread misery and terror.

Robb Stark - 1 of the 5 contending kings
Plus, on a far more personal level, although Littlefinger's vengeance motivation is supposedly driven by unrequited love for Catelyn, he's completely comfortable switching his "affections" (heavy use of quote marks, here) to her daughter, Sansa. "Welp, a man's gotta change with the times": that's one explanation. The other is: "What a scumbag."

Sansa Stark
All of which, weighing deeds and their consequences, is why I consider Littlefinger to be one of the greatest villains in Fantasy fiction. Feel free, though, to let me know I've gotten it completely wrong. :D

*Note: I have only read the books, not seen the HBO series, so this post is books-centric.;-)

© Helen Lowe

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About the Author

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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Previous “Year of the Villain” Posts:

January:      Ushering in 2024 -- & the Year of the Villain

February:    The Year of the Villain #1: The Lord of The Rings Pantheon

March: The Year of the Villain #2: Ursula Le Guin & “Earthsea”

April: The Year of the Villain #3: Tigana and Brandin of Ygrath

May: The Year of the Villain #4: Elidor and Formless Evil 

June: The Year of the Villain #5: When the Hero Is Really A Villain

July: The Year of the Villain #6: When the Author Messes With Your Mind