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Apr
18
2012

I’m a McNally fantasy FAN GIRL!

Cover Art, News | 6 comments

Download your FREE copy of M. Edward McNally’s first book in The Norothian Cycle, The Sable City, on Kindle.

Free on iTunes, too!

A few months ago I reluctantly started reading a fantasy saga by M. Edward McNally. Reluctantly, because though I’d heard from so many readers that his books were awesome, I also heard they were a bit lengthy, as is any well-written fantasy where extensive world-building is required. Since my day job of designing book covers was taking up so much of my time, I barely had time to write my own books, let alone read. But I finally forced myself to make the time, and I was not disappointed.

After finishing all three of The Norothian Cycle novels, I am anxiously awaiting the fourth installment. In fact, if I may be so bold, without a doubt, M. Edward McNally’s books are the best fantasies I’ve ever read. In my opinion, they far surpass Rowling and Tolkien.

((Dodging wizard and hobbit turds!!))

I do not say this lightly, and I do not say this because M. Edward McNally is also my friend. I say this because it’s true. And though words cannot do justice to how strongly I feel about these books, I think the best way I can express myself is through art. And, so I present my very first fangirl art. Creating fan art is not something I do for comission. I will not take fan art requests. It is my way of giving back to an author who has thoroughly entertained and moved me in a rare way.

As a special treat for my blog readers, M. Edward McNally has also answered some of my FANGIRL questions! Squeee!!!

Matilda is my favorite character. She’s brave, clever and kicks ass! Click to enlarge.

TW: Your world-building is unlike any I’ve ever read. I love the little details from religion to culture. What’s amazing is that you’ve covered several different countries within this world. How long did it take you to come up with your civilization?

McNally: Heh. Well, this may be where I sound sort of psychotic, so if you want to go ahead and dial 9,1, and keep a finger above the phone, I’ll understand. ;-)

Here’s the deal. Way Back-In-The-Day of the flannel-clad ‘90s, I was a grad student pursuing an English degree with a Creative Writing emphasis, with the goal of being a “professional” author. Having some shorts published in Midwestern lit journals, starting to shop around a bloated and pretentious “literary novel,” that sort of thing. At some point however, given that all my profs were professional, award-winning, agented authors with traditional deals, and they were all still teaching college full-time to make ends meet, I had to give serious thought to whether I was really just on the road to being a college prof, who wrote on the side. And given that after TAing a lot of writing courses I had come to believe that writing really can’t be “taught,” I knew I didn’t want to try and teach it for the rest of my life. So I finished that degree, but then switched to the History department (figuring I could at least teach that with a clearer conscience), and I quit writing fiction for almost ten years.

Baaaddd boy, John. Love his enchanting green eyes? That’s all I’ll say about him without ruining the saga. Just read!!!

Now, the thing about creative juices is if you try to throw a dam across them, they go to weird places. While I wasn’t writing, but was instead working in the history field, my main hobby became a scholarly, uber-nerdy exercise that amounted to building a whole world in my head and in a giant stack of notebooks, from scratch. It was sort of like a version of the computer game Civilization I played in my brain, in that I didn’t just make a map and start filling it with peoples and places and things. I made a map, and started filling it out with primitive tribes, then imagined or played out centuries of history as the groups evolved, interacted, made war and peace, took to the oceans, created their own places, etc., etc. And because I had been quite the D&D/Tolkien nerd in my youth, I didn’t just “play” with humans, but used a lot of the archetypal fantasy elements like orcs and elves and dragons, and of course, magic. My historical work, when I was doing that, was focused on Religious and Cultural Identity (mostly in Russia and the Balkan states) so those sorts of issues influenced the inventing or “playing through” of my own history, which was in turn informed by “real world Central Asian, Slavic, Middle Eastern, and even Polynesian cultures, as much as it was by the European motifs out of which most classic “Fantasy” is built.

So, yeah. The short answer is “about ten years.” And I never thought it would be the setting for stories, until some characters living in my head started insisting that it was. ;-)

TW: Tilda, Zeb, Rhianne, John and Phin. Where did you get the inspiration for their characters? Do you actually know people like them?

McNally: Sweet, I can continue with long, droning answers. ;-)

Tilda, aka Matilda Lanai of Miilark, was really my inspiration in a lot of ways. After the above mentioned decade or so, I had this meticulously constructed fantasy world, at an early-gunpowder/Age of Sail historical period, but there wasn’t exactly anything I could do with it.

And then, totally inexplicably, I just got an image in my head of a young woman in a vast field of steppe grass stretching to every horizon, slowly approaching a wounded warhorse, holding an apple in her hand.

I started writing fiction again because I had to find out who she was and what she was doing. Now I’m four books in, and I’m still finding out more about her every day. J

As to the specifics of character for Tilda, Zeb, Rhianne, John, Phin…Uriako Shikashe the samurai or Miss Horn the Minotaur, like every character in fiction they are some mixture of me, everybody I know, who I wish I could be, and who I wish other people were. ;-)

TW: If you could live the life of any one character in your books, who would it be and why? I’d love to be Tilda because she is brave, clever and kicks ass.

McNally: I’d love to be as adventurous as Tilda too, to be able to change the whole path of her life on a dime…hmm. Now that I think about it, that is sort of what I did. Otherwise I’d be giving a lecture on Bulgarian History somewhere. ;-)

Here’s an odd thing I’ve discovered. The “casual friend” sort of people who’ve read the books insist that Zeb is a stand in for me, in that he’s sort of an affable, well-meaning wisenheimer. With a bad haircut. People who know me a little better say Claudja Perforce reminds them of me, in that while she acts friendly, warm, and caring, it’s usually because she’s thinking two or three steps ahead, with a goal in mind. I’m not sure I’m wholly comfortable with either analogy, but there you go. ;-)

TW: How many more Norothian Cycle books can we expect from you?

McNally: I’ve always been hesitant to say, as I’m a total “pantser” while writing, and I feel like saying a certain number might either force me to drag things out, which is the last thing I’d want to do, or else make me stop with more story to tell, which would be almost as bad.

That being said, I think it is a nine book series. Though as the epilogue of Book I hints, it may be up to the children of the main characters in the early books to see things through at the end. Sometimes a daughter had to finish her parents’ work. ;-)

TW: NINE BOOKS! Happy FANGIRL dance!!! I think these books are better than any fantasy I’ve ever read, even Tolkien. What say you to that?

 McNally: I say if word gets out, people dressed as hobbits will be burning me in effigy. ;-)

Seriously though, love Tolkien or hate him, find some of his prose dated or whatever, everybody has to acknowledge he fundamentally built the Fantasy genre as it is today, and everything else is different than his stuff only by a matter of degree. To be mentioned in the same sentence with JRR is wholly ri-donkulous. ;-)

TW: When these books are made into blockbuster movies, will you still be my friend?

McNally: Absolutely. Just call my social secretary, and he’ll pencil you in. We’ll do lunch, week from Tuesday at Spago. ;-)

Download M. Edward McNally’s first book in The Norothian Cycle, The Sable City for FREE, on Kindle!

Free on iTunes, too!

** Stock art from istock.com and dreamstime.com.

***The Norothian Cycle logo was taken from Ed’s book covers, created by Jack Wallen.

6 Responses to I’m a McNally fantasy FAN GIRL!

  1. I love the fan art and I have to agree with you on McNally he’s an extremely gifted writer. I’m almost done book 1 and can’t wait to get to book 2.

  2. Thanks much Tara, and Julia, too. :-)

    Wow, I really put a lot of smiley/winky faces in stuff, don’t I? That might be part of the whole “psychotic” vibe (winky face)

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