Interview with Evan Winter

Great interview with Evan Winter today! If you’re not familiar with Evan, I suspect you will be soon. His debut novel The Rage of Dragons was self-published to incredible success and he was picked up by Big 5 publisher Orbit for the series. They released a new and improved (?) The Rage of Dragons, and it’s now live in eBook, hardback, and audio.

Both cover images go to the same book. The first is Orbit’s new cover, and the second is Evan’s old one which he references below. Who deserves two covers this good for one book?!?

Anyway, Evan is an author on the way up, and he’s really a nice guy who is a lot of fun to talk to. I recommend you keep an eye on this one!

Find The Rage of Dragons HERE or head to http://evanwinter.com to learn more about, well, Evan Winter.

AC: Hi Evan, thank you for joining me today. First of all, congratulations on your publishing deal with Orbit! My fans know I’m an Indie Publishing evangelist, but it’s awesome to see someone who’s had success in that arena find a Traditional deal that works for them — and by all appearances looks to be on their way for even bigger success. While I like Indie Publishing, it’s worth noting there is more than one way to skin this cat! So, first off, can you tell us a little bit about your debut, The Rage of Dragons, and what else is in store for the series, The Burning?

EW: Hi AC and thanks very much for taking the time to do this with me. I was really glad you asked and can’t wait to talk ‘shop’! I guess, to answer your first question, I’d say that The Rage of Dragonsis book 1 in a planned 4-book series and, to give you a quick sense of what book 1 is about, it’s best described as either Game of Thrones meets Gladiator or The Count of Monte Cristo meets Gladiator. 

AC: What inspired you to write the series?

EW: I’ve always loved fantasy as a literary genre and The Rage of Dragons, the whole series really, is me in conversation with all my favorite stories. When I write, it’s perhaps a little selfish because I’m trying to tell myself a story that I would think is amazing. I’m trying to connect more tightly to this thing that’s been a wonderful constant in my life by offering up the best of everything it’s given me as seen through the perspective with which I view the world. I’m writing the series because, as wonderful as the genre has been to me, it was hard for me to feel that its stories were actually for or about me, and I wanted to play some small part in changing that.

AC: I agree, it seems to me the best stories are the ones we write for ourselves. That’s deep, we’d better bring it back! As someone who successfully self-published a book and is heading toward what I’m sure will be an awesome relationship with Orbit (it’s out now!) can you talk a little about what is different between the two publishing methods, and if anything surprised you about either one?

EW: I have to start by saying that I’m new to both publishing methods. I only self-published one book and now that one book is being traditionally published. So, while I’m almost the opposite of an expert in either system, I’m more than happy to talk about the things I’ve noticed:

First up, I was surprised by how much a self-publisher needs to understand their publishing platform(s) if they want to succeed. For example, if you publish on Amazon and aren’t aware of how the platform treats new releases versus old releases, pricing sweet spots, appropriate cover styles given the genre, advertising, etc, etc, etc, it’ll be really difficult to get your book read by more than family and friends. A successful self-publisher is a businessperson every bit as much as they are a creative person. I think it’s important to note that. <AC – this is very true>

On the traditional publishing side, writing to a contractual deadline is hard. It’s harder than I thought and finishing off a second book (which people tend to say are always the most troublesome) under a deadline has been interesting. Also, I thought that working with a Big 5 publisher would mean giving up a lot of creative control over the story, but I haven’t found that to be the case. Editors and publishers aren’t there to change your story. They’re there to help you tell the story you want to tell to the very best of your ability and learning that made me much more comfortable. 

Lastly, even in the short time I’ve been with a traditional publishing house, it’s been eye-opening to see the types of opportunities that they can offer, which simply weren’t available to me when I was self-publishing. From putting my book in big chain stores and independent shops across the continent to lining up interviews with major media outlets to providing the extra social proof that helps make things like movie or TV deals happen, traditional publishing can open doors that would still be too heavy to open on my own.

AC: Major media outlets? You are too kind! Wait, you weren’t talking about me, were you? Hmph… Let’s move on. Before writing, what were you up to, and do you think it helped in this new career?

EW: Before writing, I worked in film. I was a music video director/producer, and I do think it helped me as a writer. Music video directors write the scripts for the videos and I’d been doing pitches and sharpening up scripts for two decades. 

The work was a masterclass in valuing your creativity while balancing it against the needs of the business. I think doing that for so long taught me not to conflate my own identity with the creative output. My identity goes into the creative, but I am not the creative and I must be able to step back and be clear-headed in how to improve it while it’s still a work in progress and then, when it’s delivered and ‘on-air,’ I must be able to let it go so that I can create again.

AC: I saw you mentioned bartending in two different countries. This is a subject near and dear to my heart ;) What’s your best drink?

EW: Haha! Great question! I make a mean mojito and my personal favorite, if not a good bourbon straight, is probably an old-fashioned. 

AC: While trying to research your bartending, I found this in your bio: “Born in England to South American parents, Evan Winter was raised in Africa near the historical territory of his Xhosa ancestors.” Break it down for us! Where did you grow up?

EW: Another tricky one, eh? I grew up in Zambia in central Africa. I was there for my formative years and then my family moved to Canada (hence the ‘eh’). :)

AC: Where do you live now, and why did you end up there?

EW: I’m in Toronto now and, before that, I was in Los Angeles doing the film thing. At the moment, I have connections to four different continents and I keep thinking it might be nice to turn that four into five…

AC: I imagine in interviews you get questions about diversity a lot. Instead of me trying to lead you somewhere with a question, can you tell us your thoughts on diversity in fantasy?

EW: A very good and very difficult question. It’s hard to answer in a way that gets across my true feelings in anything less than an essay, but I’ll try. 

I have worked in some form of storytelling for the entirety of my adult life and I believe that stories have an incredible amount of power, much more power than they are typically credited in having. For example, the largest consumer brands have learned that they can best effect our buying choices not by appealing to our intellect but our emotions and connections to stories.

So, instead of telling us things like, “buy the Zune it has a 3xM processor, 5GB of memory, and a Formula 3 hard drive.” They learned to say, “Here’s something new for people like you. For people with taste and style. Here’s 1,000 songs in your pocket, because your life deserves its own soundtrack.” 

It’s why the Olympics come with a story on every major athlete. It’s why politics speaks in terms of the narrative of the day or moment. Stories matter. Stories change minds and opinions and the form your story takes, the people it chooses as its protagonists, those things matter too. 

So, ‘diversity is important’ and ‘representation matters’ — both are true, because stories have power and they, in good part, point to the edges of how far we can go while also suggesting how far we can fall. They can uplift, cause change, help, or hurt, and America’s greatest export is its stories. Its stories have changed the way the world looks at itself and at each other. 

Stories have power, and in the best world possible, the heroes and heroines in them will not look only one way.

AC: Great answer!Stories matter. Somehow in this day and age with access to mind-blowing technology that we were promised would make us all connected, we’ve somehow become strangers with each other. A big fat epic fantasy novel is a pretty pleasant way to bridge that gap… In my own books, my childhood tends to inspire the themes, and travel as an adult tends to work its way into worldbuilding and the more tangible aspects / inspirations of the story. Do you find your past playing a significant role in your imaginary world, and how so?

EW: I think we experience this similarly because the world within which my first series takes place is entirely the world of my childhood. I took Zambia, as I remember it, and put it on the page. I did not try to align my child’s memories with my knowledge as an adult. Instead, I very much wanted the world to look like what I knew it to be when I was 5, 7, 9, 10.

AC: I first noticed you gaining popularity on Reddit’s r/Fantasy. Can you talk a little bit about how that occurred, and give us some thoughts on how social media has changed the way authors interact with fans?

EW: Reddit’s r/Fantasy is probably the world’s single largest group of fantasy fans. It has over 600,000 subscribers and it’s a great place to go to get to know fantasy a bit better. Or, if you already know the genre well, it’s a fantastic destination if you’d like to talk genre ‘shop.’

I’d been subscribed to r/Fantasy for about ten years (I think) under a different account and I’d visit every day. I didn’t post though. I was a total lurker. I just read and consumed the content.

But, when I finished The Rage of Dragons, I wanted to share it with people who I thought might like it. I mean, I shared it on Facebook and my family and friends were super supportive, but most of them don’t read fantasy. They were just happy for me that I’d written a book. r/Fantasy was the dream share. I had no idea if anyone would care about the book, but if anyone would, it would be r/Fantasy. 

So, I had an animated version of my book cover (I was going to use it in Facebook ads) and I made a post using the animated cover because I thought it might attract a bit more attention than me simply saying that I’d written something. I was lucky, the cover caught a lot of eyes and that drew people into the post to see what the book was about. Like I said, r/Fantasy is a big place and, though it was only a fraction of the everyone there, enough people were interested and gave the book a try to shoot it up into the top 250 books on Amazon. That push, so early in launching the book, gave it a chance to be seen by fantasy readers on Amazon, and that’s what really got the ball rolling…

AC: What is something readers don’t know about you?

EW: I surfed Bondi Beach in Australia and it was awesome!

That’s all we’ve got for today. As a reminder, find The Rage of Dragons HERE or head to http://evanwinter.com to learn more about, well, Evan Winter.

Happy reading,

AC

AMA on r/Fantasy

For those who frequent r/Fantasy on Reddit, I’m hosting an AMA over there today (June 6th). Feel free to swing by and drop me a question or just a comment and an upvote! I’ll be in and out all day.

-AC

https://www.reddit.com/r/Fantasy/comments/bxg2k9/hi_rfantasy_i_am_ac_cobble_parttime_bon_vivant/

Quill: The Cartographer Book 1 is out NOW!

In case you missed all of those banners I stick everywhere on the site, Quill: The Cartographer Book 1 is out NOW! I’m extremely excited about this new release. Not just because it’s new and shiny, but because I’m really proud of what I put into it. With Benjamin Ashwood Book 1, I really didn’t know what I was doing. I wrote it as a hobby, never expecting it’d turn out to be something other than a weird fact I could use in the stupid “ice breaking games” I did in the corporate world…

Benjamin Ashwood of course turned into a success, and because of it I went full-time as an author. I was able to eventually corral my early ideas into a storyline — but that’s not where it started. Aside from the last big action scene in WotC, I had no idea what was going to be in Books 2-6 with Benjamin Ashwood! Yeah, I know…

So, with The Cartographer series, I’m not messing around anymore. This is my profession, and I’m putting the work into it. I got all the graphics you can find on the art page, I got the top narrator in the business who recently worked with George RR Martin (Simon Vance audio coming in July!). And I spent time crafting this series and world and building it into something I’m proud of.

The Cartographer is unique, it’s not like anything I’ve read. It’s researched and strategized. I know what’s going to happen in the next books, so what is happening in the first one is meaningful! All of this intrigue is going somewhere… This story is more complex and layered than Ben’s story. It’s darker and sexier. It’s also a hell of a lot of fun. In short, The Cartographer has the same sense of fun & adventure as Benjamin Ashwood, but it’s standing on a stronger base. If you care to read them, there are more layers to this onion ;)

And look at that cover! The map in the background is the map of Enhover in the book. The symbol on the front is the series logo. It’s all tied together!

Interested? You can find Quill: The Cartographer Book 1 HERE!

Interview with Will Wight

So, I’m super excited about this one! I’ve got an interview with indie fantasy legend Will Wight. If you’re not familiar with Will, he has just about the most rabid fan base of any author I’ve ever encountered. His last book, Underlord: Cradle 6, reached #5 in the overall Amazon Kindle store. That literally means it was the 5th best selling book at the largest book retailer in the world! Underlord has the best reviews I have ever seen for a popular book on Goodreads.com. Seriously, The Best Reviews I Have Ever Seen.

And you know what, Will deserves all of that. If you haven’t done it yet, I highly encourage you to start with Unsouled: Cradle 1 and figure out what all of this fuss is about. As you see in the interview, it’s definitely not my genre, but I absolutely loved the book.

Curious yet? Let the interview begin!

AC: Hi Will, thanks for taking the time to chat with us. First off, let’s get a quick overview of your books. You have the Cradle series, the Traveler’s Gate trilogy, and the Elder Empire series. Can you tell us a little bit about each series, and where do you recommend someone new to WW starts?

WW: I’ve had nothing but time since you captured me and put me in this cage, but nonetheless it’s great to be here! Traveler’s Gate was my first series, and it’s kind of my standard fantasy action story with swords, monsters, talking dolls, hummingbirds with deep and manly voices, etc. Elder Empire has a unique dual novel structure that causes lots of confusion, but besides that it’s ninjas vs. pirates in a Lovecraftian fantasy setting. Cradle is definitely where I recommend new readers start, because it’s my newest and most popular series, and it’s kind of a martial arts fantasy journey.

AC: This is a bit outside of my field, but your Cradle series is Wuxia, right? (Am I completely wrong about that?) Can you tell us a bit about that genre, and what inspired you to write in it?

WW: Technically I think it would be categorized as xuanhuan, which is a wuxia-adjacent genre that includes a lot of fantasy novels in settings based on Chinese mythology. But genre definitions are always very fluid, so there’s a lot of gray area. And there’s certainly a lot more than Chinese mythology in there; I draw a lot of inspiration from anime and Korean myths and traditions as well. It was largely the progression elements that inspired me to write something similar, and my clairvoyant powers tell me that I will be expanding on this answer very soon…

AC: Ah, xuanhuan. Xuanhuan is not my normal cup-o-tea, but I picked up Unsouled: Cradle 1 and really loved it. I think it was because Lindon is such a relatable character, even though he’s involved in a bunch of activities that I’ve never been involved in. Also, there’s this really satisfying sense of progression in the novel. It reminds me a lot of the new LitRPG genre, where people just like to read about a character “leveling up”. Is that typically part of xuanhuan, or was it something you worked in intentionally?

WW: Basically, there’s this whole collection of web novels around “cultivation,” which is kind of the mystical improvement of the self and your relationship to the universe. A lot of the original concepts come from Taoism. In these novels, it’s a system of growing more powerful and more connected to the world at the same time, so it’s basically a magic system and a setting centered around progression. I really resonated with that, but when I recommended a lot of translated Chinese web novels to my friends, they were turned off immediately by the prose or the cultural knowledge requirements. So I wanted to write a sort of hybrid between traditional fantasy novels and these Eastern cultivation stories in order to help bridge the gap to get people reading the real thing. Thus Cradle was born!

AC: You graduated from UCF with a Master’s in Creative Writing. Clearly, you intended to write, but I think that’s a bit unusual actually. Most of the writers I know began in some other career. Can you tell us what inspired you to study creative writing, and at what point did you know this could be a full-time career?

WW: When I was much younger, I saw a car hit an old, hooded woman on the side of the road. I rushed over to see if there was anything I could do to help, but as soon as she saw me, her eyes turned white and she began speaking with an unnatural resonance. “STUDY CREATIVE WRITING AND IT WILL BE YOUR FULL-TIME CAREER,” she told me, and then I called AAA for her.

…but it wasn’t until my first book sold enough copies to allow me to write full-time that I really believed it was possible.

AC: If the whole writing thing hadn’t worked out, what would Will Wight be doing?

WW: Professional Russian Roulette player.

AC: What’s your favorite book that you’ve written? I know, I know, that’s like asking which one is your favorite kid. Wait… do you have kids, tell us which is the favorite?

WW: My favorite book that I’ve written is always the next one. I keep looking forward to new projects and thinking of all the shiny new things I can do in the future. I don’t have any kids, but if I did, Bobby would be my favorite.

AC: What is your favorite book someone else has written?

WW: I don’t know about individual books, but I’m a huge fan of the Wheel of Time series and the Dresden Files series. There’s also that black leather book that keeps appearing under my pillow at dawn no matter how many times I burn it. I’ve tried to resist opening it, but it whispers into my ear all night…

AC: Your latest book was Underlord: Cradle 6, and I believe there’s a Book 7 in the works. I’ve also heard rumblings of more in the Traveler’s Gate world. Tell us, what is next!

WW: Book 7 of Cradle is certainly in the works, but I’m also trying to finish Elder Empire this year! I would also love to start a new series. Any new series. I just like starting new things.

AC: This doesn’t count as a brag because I’m the one saying it… Underlord: Cradle 6 debuted as the #5 best-selling book in the entire Amazon Kindle store. That’s bonkers for any book, but even more so for an independently published fantasy novel. I’m jealous, obviously, but I have to know what that is like! Does it change anything you do in the future — do you start calling Steven Spielberg?

WW: It was very exciting, but other than my own delight and entertainment, the only thing it actually changed was my introduction. Now, instead of driving new people away with my personality, I can speed up the process by saying “Hey, I’m Will, did I mention that my latest book was the fifth best-selling on Amazon on the day of its release? No? Well, buckle up, because I have pictures!”

And then by the time I get my phone out they’ve usually bolted through the nearest door.

Alright, that’s all I was able to subject Will to and he’s fled, but hopefully that gives you some insight into literally one of the hottest fantasy authors out there right now and gives you some encouragement to check out his books if you haven’t yet. Start with Unsouled: Cradle 1 and go from there. You can also find out more about Will at willwight.com. He’s got a lot of great stuff on the site, including an awesome store which I’ve been asking him about off the record!

Go get his books, and let me know what you think!

AC

FREE prequel novella for The Cartographer

Hi everyone, if you haven’t seen it, I’m offering a FREE prequel novella for The Cartographer Series. Sacrifice takes place 20 years prior to the main tale and covers an important event in the lives of our young heroes.

I do ask you sign up for the newsletter in exchange for the novella, but it’s worth it! There is great content like author interviews and free short stories, one e-mail a month, never spam. You can unsubscribe at anytime. If that sounds interesting, click the cover and get your FREE prequel novella!