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Showing posts from September, 2020

BitBoR: Hear Ye, Hear Ye!

Bathed in the Blood of Ravens is finished! Well… writing, self editing, and rewrite passes are complete. It’s in the hands of Proofreaders as I type this. The cover art is coming along nicely, thanks to the wonderfully talented Charlotte Mallory. Once I incorporate Proofreader feedback, the next step will be to get it into the hands of Beta Readers. You can sign up here to be notified when it publishes! And you can sign up here to become a Beta Reader, and get access before it publishes! I have to say, I feel rather accomplished right now. Not only is this my first novel, but it’s a huge one. If you’d like an idea of just how large Bathed in the Blood of Ravens is at 219,594 words, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone was 76,944 words. I mention this not to compare the two books in quality, but to show how big of an undertaking this was for me. So, what am I working on while I wait for Proofreader and Beta Reader feedback, you ask? Nice of you to ask… Book 2: Enveloped by Dark’s Embr...

BitBoR: Progress Update & Timeline

I wanted to post a quick update on my progress with Bathed in the Blood of Ravens , and give some insight on the Timeline between that novel and the two short stories: Threads of Night and The Curse of Kishina . Blood of Ravens is coming along nicely. I am halfway through chapter 16 of the 18 I have planned, and have reached 205k words written so far. This includes 2nd draft rewrites and ProWritingAid edits. I should have the rest of the book finished in another two weeks. After that I just need to fold in Proofreader feedback and give Beta Readers time to read through the book and provide feedback. So, publishing is close! Timeline The majority of The Curse of Kishina takes place 1292 years before the start of Bathed in the Blood of Ravens. This places the main events in this short story before the “First Era of Man”. Threads of Night takes place 657 years before Bathed in the Blood of Ravens, during year 575 of the “First Era of Man” The Kingdom of Arkhania was founded in year 1,119...

The Magic of Ayrelon: Enchanting

Enchanting on Ayrelon offers many benefits, and many challenges. The majority of enchantments are temporary, and often come with side effects. Enchantments can be placed on living things or inanimate objects. Their strength and duration depend greatly on both the caster and the resilience of the target. The more powerful the enchanter, the stronger their enchantments can be and the longer they will last. However, the side effects will also be more severe. Living flesh, for example, can be imbued with greater strength, haste or increased stamina. These forces provide benefit for a time, but also degrade that flesh and can cause permanent damage. Such enchantments also suffer from diminishing returns, due to that degradation. A horse might be enchanted to run faster and farther than normal, but those effects cannot be persisted indefinitely without causing the poor creature’s death. The same is true of enchantments placed upon inanimate objects. Objects imbued with spells also degrade as...

The Magic of Ayrelon: Alchemy

There are two types of Alchemy on Ayrelon. Chemical Alchemy involves the blending of ingredients using precise formula and processes to create salves, elixirs and the like. Magical Alchemy takes those techniques and enhances them with magical ingredients and is often enhanced through spells. Chemical Alchemy

The Magic of Ayrelon: Spellcasting

The art of creating magical effects is complex, often requiring several components in order to accomplish the desired results. The more powerful and skilled a caster becomes, the less they require these components. However, they might still choose to use them out of habit, or to gain additional focus or control over their spells. Verbal

Scrivener vs Docs

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Google Docs is free, and collaborative. I own a Microsoft 365 license, which gives me the latest version of Word . There are also several open source, free word processing programs available. Not to mention the various competitors for Scrivener , specifically targeted towards authors. So, why did I choose Scrivener? The answer to that is multi-faceted. My reasoning won’t be a fit for every other author out there, but perhaps it will shed some light on what Scrivener has to offer. If you’re trying to decide what program to use, this article should provide valuable insight from someone who is using Scrivener to its extreme. Before I begin : No, I am not sponsored and have zero contact with Literature & Latte or any of their staff. I am just passionate about my work, and the tools I’m using to produce it. Working Offline I live “out in the boonies”. Our house is surrounded by farmland, and our roads are car-and-a-half wide with no lines or street lights. They twist and wind through ...

The Magic of Ayrelon: Soulfyr

Soulfyr or Soul Casting is so named because the source of its power is generated by, and derives from the caster’s own being. The caster gains an inexplicable bond with the planet’s living essence, and that bond causes them to generate their own internal magical weave. Those with the power to cast Soulfyr magic are born with their abilities. This form of magic cannot be gained through study, or practice. Many have tried to do so, and all have failed. Furthermore, those born with the gifts do not always realize their abilities. Many live and die natural deaths without every discovering their potential. This is due to the fact that such abilities, while present from birth, lie dormant until unlocked. Unfortunately for the person so imbued, unlocking those abilities seems to require a violent, untimely death. It is unclear why this is the case, though some who have studied it believe the reason to be spiritual in nature, and this extremely hard to define. Unlike other casters who must mem...

The Magic of Ayrelon: Elementalism

Sometimes known as Primal casting, or Primal Elementalism, this type of magic involves accessing the underlying forces which comprise and govern reality. Few casters attain the ability to sense or interact with these forces. Fewer still survive their first attempt to access them. These sources of power are unrefined and without limit. Their nature is nearly impossible to understand without experimentation. No spells have ever been written for such primal forces, and so few casters gain mastery of these arts that there are very few tomes which detail the process of using or controlling them. He opened his mind again, reaching out to the primal essence of water. Leveraging a lifetime of experience with the arts, he focused his mind with a will few could achieve. He’d reached the limits of what wizardry would allow him to achieve, and fate had introduced him to these forces at just the right time. The army that threatened Haern wouldn’t wait for reinforcements to arrive. He had to act now...

The Magic of Ayrelon: Leywalking

Ayrelon is surrounded by a magical weave comprised of ley lines and nexus points. To those that can see them, ley lines appear as a white and blue stream of electricity-like energy coursing through the sky, high above the clouds, and nexus points where the lines cross glow like beacons of unbridled power. There are those who are born with the ability to see these forces, slowly developing the ‘sight’ as they grow to adulthood. Others obtain the ‘sight’ after reaching great heights of power in other forms of magic. Those that grow strong enough to see and interact with the weave are said to walk with the weave or travel the ley lines. They come to be known as Leywalkers, and they are some of the most powerful beings to exist on the world of Ayrelon. All Leywalkers begin their journey with the use of spells. Though, in contrast to Wizards they do not need to memorize those spells and store power within themselves. They can, instead, call down power from the heavens on demand to cast thei...

Let Your Characters Guide Your Scene

I’ve read a lot of blogs and articles that offer advice to authors. That advice comes in many different flavors, and sometimes seems to contradict advice you find elsewhere. I think the reason for this is that authors aren’t all the same. We process information differently because we’re human and we’re each different. Now… I’m not going to claim I’m an expert writer. In fact, I’m rather self-conscious about my writing skills. However, one thing I’m confident in is my ability to craft a story. One of the key factors for that, in my eyes, is that I give all of my characters a voice; a distinct personality that tells me how they behave, how they think, and what they would do given a set of circumstances. This mental process was enhanced quite extensively during my years of pen & paper role-playing. Without those gaming sessions, I doubt I’d be able to do what I do now. All in all, I find my mental process for handling characters a little hard to put into words… but I’m going to try. U...