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Blog Archive
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2021
(196)
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▼
April
(18)
- Interview with D.W. Ross, the author of Cold From ...
- The Shadow of the Gods by John Gwynne Review
- Grievar's Blood by Alexander Darwin (reviewed by M...
- Interview with Ryan Howse, the author of Red in To...
- The Last Watch by J. S. Dewes (reviewed by Caitlin...
- Fugitive Telemetry by Martha Wells (reviewed by Ca...
- Interview with Michael J. Fletcher & Clayton Snyde...
- Skullsworn by Brian Staveley review
- Exclusive Cover Reveal Q&A: The Horns Of The Hunte...
- SPFBO Finalist: The Lost War by Justin Lee Anderso...
- Man Of Steel: A Retrospective Review (by Debdip Ch...
- SPFBO: Interview with Justin Lee Anderson
- The Helm of Midnight by Marina J. Lostetter review
- Exclusive Cover Reveal Q&A: Whispers Of Ruin & Ech...
- The Girl and The Mountain by Mark Lawrence review
- Migrations by Charlotte McConaghy (reviewed by Łuk...
- Hummingbird Salamander Review
- The Big Score by K.J. Parker review
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▼
April
(18)
Monday, April 19, 2021
Exclusive Cover Reveal Q&A: The Horns Of The Hunter by Frank Dorrian (by Mihir Wanchoo)
Official Author Website
Preorder Horns Of The Hunter over HERE
Preorder Horns Of The Hunter over HERE
Today
we have the pleasure of having Frank
Dorrian over for the cover reveal of Horns
Of The Hunter. Frank has had a
varied career including mental health, Operational analysis and Thai boxing. Frank’s Liverpool roots have informed a
lot of his worldview and inspired him to write about the darker side of fantasy
fiction. Frank reveals what inspired him to write about a mythological fight between
gods set in his world. Why he chose Felix
Ortiz & Shawn T. King (the
new dream team as he calls them) and more about the book below. So read ahead
and enjoy…
Q] Welcome to Fantasy Book Critic Frank and thank you for your time. How
have things been with you in 2020-21?
FD: Thanks for having me! 2020-2021…a
crazy time for almost everyone, I think. I’ve been extremely fortunate that the
situation in the UK has let me spend more time at home with my family and focus
on my writing. I’m very lucky to be able to find a lot of positives over the
last year, though I think being a natural hermit helps!
Q] Can you tell us about the inception of Horns Of The Hunter. What prompted
you to write about the legendary Luah Fail deities?
FD: It has been quite a long
standing one! The basic idea came from a chapter I wrote in The Shadow of the
High King, where one of the characters mentions a feud between two of Luah
Fail’s gods – Cu Naith the Warrior and Luw the Hunter. I had this
image of two giants fighting on a mountainside that really stuck with me over
the next few years, but I kept pushing it aside to work on other projects. In
2020 I ended up needing a break from what I was working on and decided to throw
the opening to Horns of the Hunter on the page as a palette cleanser.
The idea was to take the week off and write a 5000 word short story about these
two feuding gods and submit it to a magazine. Two months later I had a full
length manuscript sitting with alpha readers.
Q] The Horns Of The Hunter cover by Felix Ortiz & Shawn T. King is
stunning to say the least. Can you reveal how you worked with both of them to
create it? Did you give them an outline to work off on or did you leave them to
their own choices after revealing your thoughts?
FD: I had a great time
working with Felix and Shawn on the cover, they’re both awesome fellers
and a breeze to collaborate with. Initially, I reached out to Felix with
the general concept (two celtic-looking giants warring on a mountainside) and
some (pretty nitpicky) details on certain aspects of the characters’
appearances to make sure they were in keeping with their in-book descriptions. Other
than that, though, I made it clear I was happy for him to let his imagination
run rampant. It was a ton of fun watching the concept evolve into its final
form as Shawn came onboard to handle the design work, and the two
bounced ideas back and forth. Shawn’s typography work was all off his
own head, though, outside of a huge nod of approval from both Felix and
I. I absolutely love how Shawn tied the typography into the title of the book –
the little horn effect in the letter ‘o’ – I think it tops off the overall
theme and adds another level of character to the cover.
Q] What was your first reaction when you saw it? How does it hold up (in your
opinion) to what the main story is about?
FD: I was blown away, to be
honest, as Felix has this innate knack of capturing other people’s
imaginations alongside his own, its enormously impressive. Shawn’s
design work just totally completes it, too. They’re the dream team. It’s been a
long time since I last put a book out, so it was quite an emotional moment! In
terms of holding up to the story, personally, I think it’s perfect. Horns
of the Hunter is the tale of Naith and Luw’s struggle against
one another, and, while there’s other scenes in the book that would no doubt
have made for an awesome cover, it only felt right that their conflict take
centre stage.
Q] Let’s talk about Tales Of Luah Fail, you have so far written different
types of books (sprawling dark, epic fantasy, origin novellas and now a story
about feuding gods). What prompted you to go back in time to write this
specific story and do you plan for more such tales?
FD: I was nearing the end of
writing a 300,000 word-long first draft, of what is probably the darkest thing
I’ve ever written and probably ever will write. Between working fulltime and my
family commitments, it took a long, long time and took a hell of a lot out of
me mentally. It was, literally, grim work, and that project almost completely
broke me as a writer. I felt the
need for a bit of a change, and as I said above, the image of Cu Naith and
Luw fighting had always stuck with me. I threw the opening to the book
on the page and it just flowed – it was the most fun I’d had writing in years
and the story just spilled out of me.
I ended up finding there
was way, way more to the tale than I’d first imagined, that there was history
in the history. I do indeed have more planned for the series! I’m writing book
2 at the moment – King of Embers – and I’ve got the gist of book 3 and
some notes on it rolling round my head. I’ve gotten some spin off tales for it
planned too, that may or may not be part of the series. I have not decided as they
are quite a way off being penned, but I’m having a lot of fun with Tales of
Luah Fáil.
Q] What was the inspiration for The Shadow Of The High King? Where did the idea
come from and what compelled you to see it through to the end?
FD: When it came to writing
The Shadow of the High King back in 2014, I was very influenced by a short
story I wrote as a kid about a wandering mercenary who got caught in the middle
of a town being attacked by a mysterious force. At that point in time I was
devouring the major grimdark fiction of the day, Joe Abercrombie and
Mark Lawrence in particular, along with the Saxon Stories by Bernard
Cornwell, all of whom were huge influences on my style. I was also
enormously inspired by the Dark Souls series of games (they are one of my major
loves, I’m covered in tattoos of the games’ characters). I think, more than
anything, the joy of getting back into writing fantasy after a 10 year hiatus
was what drove me to see it through, mostly. I forgot how much fun writing was,
and I really wanted to see if other people enjoyed my writing too.
Q] Can you tell us more about the world
that this story as well as your past books are set in and some of the saga’s
major characters? What are the (geographical, magical, physical) curiosities of
this world?
FD: The world of Horns of the
Hunter is, essentially, a younger, more magic-infused version of the world that
forms the setting of my other works, TSOTHK, To Brave the End, and
Scars of the Sand. In HotH, sorcery is more commonplace,
though I would say it remains a fairly low-magic world compared with other
fantasy settings. Some curiosities of the world in HotH that I found
most interesting would be the vast swamp full of marrow-sucking leeches (very
fun part of the book to write), and the ruined, otherworldly landscape of Golga,
filled with massive pits lined with the dead.
The world itself is run
through by (literal) veins, filled by what the people of Luah Fail call
Earthblood, which is where the world’s magic is sourced from. This remains the
same in the later world of the Weaving Shadows and Blackshield Dogs
series, though sorcery is infinitely more rare a gift.
As for the characters, the
main characters of HotH are Naith and Luw. Anyone who’s
read my works featuring Harlin (TSOTHK and Scars) will possibly
recall them (or may know Naith as Cu Naith). Naith is
like… this huge, swaggering, arrogant douchebag – totally obnoxious to almost
everyone around him, and utterly convinced of himself being the greatest
warrior in the world. Which, to be fair, he is. Still Luw is more the
more mild-mannered, thoughtful character of the pair, gentle and considerate
where Naith is rough, violent and ignorant. They’re a pretty big
contrast to each other throughout the entirety of the book, which I think
worked well into the mythological theme I was running with in HotH.
Aside from those two, there
is also Sile, the central focus of their feud and one of the primary
characters of HotH. Hers is another name people who have read my other
work might recall. I won’t go into too much detail on her, that’s something
better left to the story itself to tell, but she’s very much an enigmatic,
fiercely independent sorceress, and I had a hell of a lot of fun writing her
character.
Q] How many books are you planning to write in the Weaving Shadows series as
well as the Blackshield Dogs stories?
FD: The Weaving Shadows will be a trilogy, with perhaps a companion/inter-novel novella (like a
book #1.5) that’s floating around my head. Book 2 of the trilogy is currently
at a 1st draft. It’s been a long time since I first put TSOTHK out
there (nearly 5 years at this point), and a lot of people have been asking
where #2 is. It was the project I mentioned earlier that I had to step away
from. It is coming though, I promise. I’m planning on doing a rerelease of TSOTHK
(you heard it here first) once the trilogy as a whole is
written, done and dusted. They will be released in pretty rapid-fire
succession.
The Tales
Of The Blackshield Dogs series will have about six books
in total, each book detailing the origins of characters who will play a pivotal
role at some point in the Weaving Shadows trilogy, finishing with the
origin tale of Arnulf, the Black Dog himself. It’s been a while since I’ve
had time spare to work on the series, which is upsetting as I love writing it but the 3rd book is in the works, currently at about 10-15%
completion and the 4th is pretty much planned out, which is
something I don’t usually do (I’m a pantser).
Q] What are you reading currently? Are there any current authors or books that
you would like to give a shout out to?
FD: I am reading a sci-fi
book at the moment! Big Red by Damien Larkin. It’s about an Irish
soldier stationed on a Nazi-founded New Berlin on Mars, questioning his role in
a genocidal war against an alien race while he tries to piece together his
memories of a disaster that affected his battalion. It’s good stuff, I’m not
usually one for sci fi, but its kept me reading into the night.
In terms of shoutouts, I
recently finished Dragon Mage by ML Spencer. Absolutely
fantastic book, it’s a modern day classic and one everyone should pick up.
Pawn’s Gambit by Rob Hayes is another book I would like to give a shout out
to. I read an ARC of it while I was recovering from surgery back in January, and
it’s one of the most intelligent stories I’ve read in a long time. Really
admirable stuff.
I would also like to give
a shoutout to Exile, by Martin Owton. I ended up in
hospital over Christmas 2020, and Exile kept me company through some pretty
miserable nights. Great little book, I’m looking forward to sinking my teeth
into the follow up.
Q] In closing, do you have any parting thoughts or comments you would like to
share with our readers?
FD: Yes – thanks for having
me on Fantasy Book Critic! Also, a major thank you to anyone who decides to
check out Horns of the Hunter, I hope you enjoy them
Preorder Horns Of The
Hunter over HERE
OFFICIAL BOOK BLURB: An age of myth. A
bitter feud. A storm of legend.
It is the closing days of the Enkindled King’s
wars for Earthblood, and a cycle of violence and hatred sparks a bitter feud in
his shadow.
Náith, the Warrior. Luw, the Hunter. Cast aside and burned by their lover’s betrayal, the
two find themselves trapped in a bloody struggle for the affections of Síle, the Maid of Mael Tulla.
Cherished as a healer and bringer of verdant life
to barren lands, Síle stands as a
mystery unto all – even those who would claim her heart. For one so gentle and
kind, secrets and bloodshed swarm about her like flies upon a corpse.
Consumed by hatred and heartache, both Náith and Luw will take the darkest of trials and challenge death itself,
unaware of the true game being played.
A storm beyond imagining waits for the Warrior and the Hunter. One that will decide the fate of Luah Fáil.
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