The Book of Shadow
Curse of the Unnamed Book 1
by Bruce Blake
Genre: Epic Fantasy
Llyris
Fildarae is an outcast tainted by a sliver of magic in a world
terrified of the supernatural. Loathed and distrusted, she uses her
ability to control a magical Unnamed to survive.
Caedric
Carpera is desperate to save his son from a deadly illness. He
enlists Llyris to locate a lost tome containing secrets capable of
healing him, but its location is a mystery that’s already claimed
lives. Thrust into a hostile world, Llyris and her companions risk
everything to find the relic and return before the child’s sickness
prevails.
But who is the enigmatic old man who appeared out of
nowhere to set them on this dangerous expedition? And what does he
really want?
Only a perilous mission to an untamed land can
save the boy and reveal the truth.
Except some truths are too shocking to be exposed.
Get
ready for an epic fantasy adventure full of twists and turns from the
author of the Khirro’s Journey trilogy and The Books of the Small
Gods. Scroll up to one-click purchase your copy and start reading
right away!
Florida
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Shadow Scarred
Curse of the Unnamed Book 2
The
Book of Shadow was found, but the quest continues…
Llyris
Fildarae is still reeling with the news of her heritage imparted by
an old man claiming to be the great mage Amnayel Prisma—doubtful,
though he’s proven able to perform unusual wonders even a magik
couldn’t. He cured a boy, yet now demands a stave to aid in healing
a fallen knight.
The quest she and her companions embark on
requires them to travel to the Obsidian Fields, a place no one has
visited since time immemorial. Even Prisma himself—if that is who
he is—cannot tell them what it may look like or what to expect once
there.
What dangers will they face? Magic? Deadly curses? The
undead again?
No
one knows. Not even a Shadow Scarred.
Scroll
up and one-click purchase to follow the exciting journey of Llyris
and her companions as their adventure continues in Shadow
Scarred.
A Shadow Upon the Land
Curse of the Unnamed Book 3
A tome. A stave. The fate of the world.
When Llyris Fildarae packed up her Unnamed and took an unlikely group to locate the Book of Shadow and save a boy’s life, she had no idea the evil she’d encounter.
When she and her companions set out on a second expedition, this time to find the savior mage’s stave, they couldn’t have guessed the dangers awaiting them.
Separated, trapped, and navigating perilous lands, their only hope of survival is to find their way home.
But where is home if everything is left in ruins?
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My Top 10 Favourite Books/Authors
Wow…that’s a tough question, but I’ll give it a try. Both of these lists are in no particular order, because actually rating them on a best to worst scale is a ludicrous thought.
Books
American Gods by Neil Gaiman
Speaker for the Dead by Orson Scott Card
The Stand by Stephen King
The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. LeGuin
The Road by Cormac McCarthy
The Lord of the Rings (we’ll count the entire trilogy as one entry) by JRR Tolkien
The Fifth Element by NK Jemisin
Dawn of Fear by Susan Cooper
The Time Traveler’s Wife by Audrey Niffenegger
To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee
Authors (after reading my list of favourite books, some of these might sound familiar)
Stephen King
Neil Gaiman
Joe Abercrombie
JRR Tolkien
Alfred Bester
Ray Bradbury
Robert E. Howard
George RR Martin
Isaac Asimov
Edgar Allan Poe
Do all the characters come at once, or as writing?
Typically, the main characters of my stories are planned ahead of time. For instance, in The Book of Shadow, Llyris, Rein, Hinter, Tesfira, Jai, Cirril, Mikol, Emeryn, Ilkari, and Viden Misk were all chosen and named before I began writing, as were lesser characters like the Carpera family. More secondary characters are more often added as needed and frequently dreamed up on the fly as the direction of the story evolves. An example of this is that you will meet a character named Vyle in the third book of the Curse of the Unnamed series (A Shadow Upon the Land) whom I had no idea would exist until he introduced himself to me. Now, he’s one of my favourites.
What kind of research do you do before beginning a book?
I typically spend between 2 weeks and a month planning a book, though it’s hard to gauge because I typically do it in fits and starts while I’m finishing up another project.
What that panning looks like varies from book to book. If I’m beginning a new series, I have to look at world building and character planning, magic system design, and then researching any creatures or elements that already exist in popular culture (for instance, in the Curse of the Unnamed series, you will find unicorns, dragon, trolls, ogres, piskies, and more).
Some demand even more research. I am currently planning a book that will take place around Mount Kilimanjaro, so I’ve had to do some real-world research, something I’m not too used to as a fantasy author.
Do you see writing as a career?
It’s not my full-time gig yet, but it’s going to be.
What do you read/your favourite genre?
I mostly read in the arena of speculative fiction—fantasy, science fiction, and horror—with an emphasis on the particular genre I’m writing, so mostly epic fantasy these days, though In try to mix up style and settings. I just finished reading Joe Abercrombie’s First Law trilogy and started on The Poppy War by RF Kuang. In the same time period, I also listened to Terry Pratchett’s Going Postal, A Court of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J. Maas, Rage of Dragons by Evan Winter, and The Only Good Indians by Stephen Graham Jones (see, I like to get outside my current writing genre, too).
Do you prefer to write in silence or with noise?
Definitely with noise. Before the days of Covid, I used to always write in a coffee shop, just like a good little writerly cliché. I find them a nice balance because there is a little bit of distraction from the music playing and other people around, but nothing that demands your attention. When I started having to write at home, I had to readjust and rediscover what worked for me. The one constant is coffee, or what I like to call creativity juice. After that, I write best with music on, usually listening through earbuds, but it has to be music I have no chance of wanting to stop and bop along with. To this end, I mostly listen to Nordic fold music…it sets the atmosphere and tone I lie, but there is no chance I’m going to try to sing along.
If anyone’s interested in a playlist, drop me an email.
I’m moving at the beginning of December, so my place is a shambles and I lost my office space for now, so it’s thrown me off completely. I can’t wait to get settled again.
Do you write one book at a time or several?
I only ever actively write one project at a time so I can immerse myself in the world without distracting from it. I write best, and most productively, when I can get into the world as much as possible. When the idea for The Book of Shadow became too much for me to bear to keep from writing it, I stopped work on a book in my Icarus Fell urban fantasy series so I could concentrate on it.
I do use spare time to plan future books while I’m writing, but I don’t work fully on more than one project at a time.
Pen, typewriter, or computer?
The first novel I ever wrote (though it wasn’t the first I published) was Blood of the King, the first book in my Khirro’s Journey trilogy. I didn’t have very good keyboarding skills at the time, so I wrote the entire first draft longhand, thinking it would be faster than typing it. While it was probably true, I quickly realized that, after I finished it, I was just going to have to type it into a word processor, anyway. I’ve written on a computer ever since. My laptop is for nothing but writing and web research. In fact, its designation is “Bruce’s Novel Writing Machine”.
Do you have any advice for new authors?
The best piece of advice for anyone who wants to write is to just do it. Find at least a few minutes every day and write, even if it’s only a couple of hundred words. Creating is a muscle that needs to be flexed and the more you use it the stronger it becomes.
But that’s advice you’ll hear from every author, so I’m going to add a second suggestion…
You are going to get bogged down in the middle of your book. It happens. The solution is not to go back to the beginning and start editing, hoping that doing so will prompt what should come next. Editing is a different skill from writing and I’ve seen a number of first-time authors who end up with a great first half of a book that is never blessed with a second half. When the dog days of the middle come, keep writing. It doesn’t have to be good, or even anything you keep—that’s where those editing skills come in later—you simply need to keep moving forward.
Do you try to be original or to deliver to readers what they want?
My usual MO is to take a tried and true trope and crank it on its ear. Give the reader what they want, but in a fancy envelope, or delivered by a stork. The premise of my Books of the Small Gods series is based on the old trop of scroll, prophecy, chosen one, except my story contains several scrolls, with several different prophecies that can be interpreted in a number of different ways.
What’s most difficult thing about writing characters from other genders?
Avoiding stereotypes. Not only is it difficult, but if you don’t accomplish it, you’re likely dead in the water. When I write female characters as a CIS, het man, I always make sure I use predominantly female beta readers. It’s one of the reasons why I’m proud of The Book of Shadow—it has three female viewpoint characters and has been very well received by my female readers.
How long does it take you to write a book?
So far in my career, this doesn’t have a straightforward answer. The quickest I’ve ever written the first draft of a book was When Shadows Fall (the First Book of the Small Gods). I writing full-time when I penned it and the first draft took fourteen days. I wish I could say that was typical, but the longest it’s taken me to write a book is measured in years. These days, I’d say it’s about three months.
Bruce Blake lives in a small town on Vancouver Island in British Columbia, Canada. When pressing issues like shovelling snow and building igloos don't take up his spare time, Bruce can be found taking the dog sled to the nearest cafe to work on his short stories and novels.Actually, Victoria, B.C. is only a couple hours north of Seattle, Wash., where more rain is seen than snow. Bruce is the father of two amazing humans and does his very best to keep a bearded dragon alive and healthy, though he doesn't have much success at doing the same with house plants. He spends too much time work a traditional job and not enough time writing but hopes to change all that soon.
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