15
Sep

Fantasy Books and Back Matter

   Posted by: rettstatt   in fantasy, storytelling, writing

Candlewick has officially accepted the final draft of the manuscript for my book, the first book in the five-book Kaimira series. Now it’s in copy editing, and the on-sale date is July 8, 2008.

Thor's Map

I’m currently working on supplementary material (back matter, or appendices). You know, all that cool stuff that gets attached to fantasy novels? Maps, little histories, and the sort? As a child, I obsessed over them. They were what gave my my first understanding of the concept of world building, and that the story was only one part of a larger world the author had created. The supplementary materials were what made me feel like I had permission to join in the world building, to sketch my own maps, to write my own heroic poems about the Fellowship of the Ring, or cryptic riddles for the Seeker in The Dark Is Rising sequence. It also gave me the first experience of geeking out over a fantasy world, though we didn’t call it geeking out back then.
To be creating these things for my own story is a bit surreal. I tell myself I have to be careful not to geek out too much, that I have to keep everything as reader-friendly as possible, and then I remember that it was the geeking out that attracted me to those materials in the first place. They were a meeting point between the author’s obsession and my own about the fantasy world that existed just beyond the margins of the page, of which the story in the book was only a facet, the tip of an iceberg.

So my strategy now is just to have fun with it. If it’s something I find exciting enough to warrant a few pages in the back of the book, then I think the readers will like it as well.

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This entry was posted on Saturday, September 15th, 2007 at 15:33 and is filed under fantasy, storytelling, writing. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

3 comments so far

 1 

Good luck with the copy editing–and coming up with the supplementary material. My sons are big fantasy buffs and love the maps and fold-outs. Just getting them started on Stephen Donaldson’s old Thomas Covenant series but we’ll keep our eye out for Kaimira next summer. May it be a smashing success for you.

September 15th, 2007 at 17:35
Shawna Cotner (Rettstatt)
 2 

Congrad’s Chris…Brandi and I are looking forward to the release date of your book. We can’t wait to read it… Kiss those beautiful girls for us.
Love ya cuz.

September 19th, 2007 at 19:12
 3 

GEEK OUT DUDE. It shows that you wholeheartedly believe in it (or the theory of it)– and readers can smell that. If you don’t go over the line, geeking out the max, then your readers won’t mimick as quickly.

Look at Eoin Colfer– he did bits and pieces for Artemis Fowl… but no one really took to it as much because it felt “less” – like he was just having fun and not in seriously belief. It was marketing-cool.

Now think about JR Tolkien, Christopher Paolini, JK Rowling, etc… they went for it… they REALLY went for it, like their characters were real. That’s what people dug about it. The slight chance that it MIGHT be real– because if someone has to believe their stories are real (in theory) its the writer.

So again I say– GO FOR IT. Of all people who get to wholeheartedly geek out, it’s you– you lead the pack.

September 26th, 2007 at 14:23

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