James Tallett
When
and why did you begin writing?
I was sitting outside
one morning on a beautiful summer’s day chatting to my mum about books,
primarily fantasy, and she said something along the lines of “You’re a good
writer, you’ve read enough, why don’t you give writing a fantasy book a try?” It
seemed like such a good idea we sat down and built a map for a continent, and
jotted down the names of the major cities. An updated version of that map is here, and the place names
are still the same. I’ve been writing in the setting we created that day for
about eight years now, give or take a few months.
Did
you know straight away that it was what you wanted to do?
Not really. Writing was a very on and
off process for me at first, and it still is to a great extent. I’m well aware
it’s never going to be my primary career, but I do love to spin a good tale,
and I’m trying to average one published novel (and one smaller work) every
year.
What
inspired you to write your first book?
Being told I should give it a try. The
setting arrived over the next couple weeks, and by the end of the first month I
more or less had the idea for the story in place, or at least the opening
chapter. The beginning of Tarranau has changed very little in plot from when it
was first conceived, although I didn’t yet know where the rest of the story was
going to end up.
Do
you have a specific approach to you writing? (plotting, scheduled writing times
etc)
I plot out every story before I write
them (well, every story longer than about 5k), and I generally try and write in
the mornings before I go to work, but aside from that, there isn’t a lot of
structure in how I write. Everything is in order though, I always start at page
1, scene 1, and write from there to the end of the story.
How
did you come up with the title / name of your main character?
I borrowed the name of Tarranau from an online
gaming colleague of mine during the high school days. He was an Englishman who
had the username Tarranau, and when I asked him what it meant, he told me it
was Welsh for thunder. I liked it so much that years later I remembered the
name, and the main character has had it from the first day he hit paper.
Is there a message in your novel that you want
readers to grasp?
If there is, it’s not there
intentionally. I don’t want to bring conscious moralizing to a story, I want to
tell a good story. If there’s a message in there, it evolves out from how the
tale is written, and the actions of the characters. And each of them has their
own outlook on the world that usually isn’t the one that I have. My stories
would be pretty boring if all of the characters were carbon copies of me.
What
made you choose the independent route for your writing?
Time and royalty rates, mostly. And control.
As an indie author, I control the art, the publishing, when it goes on sale,
marketing, etc. It’s nice to have control over all these aspects of the novels,
but it also means a lot more work in some respects. And the money is more
visible in coming out of (and hopefully going back into) my pocket.
If
you had to choose, which writer(s) or what book(s) has inspired you the most?
The first true fantasy story I can ever
remember reading was Lord of the Rings, in 3rd grade. It’s almost
certainly the tale that kickstarted my love of reading and writing fantasy. But
in terms of time spent reading, it’s probably the Wheel of Time. I can still
remember the bookstore where I got the very first book in the series when it was
published. At the time, there were little free teaser novels they gave away
that had the first couple chapters in them. I grabbed one, read it, and went
right back for the huge tome that was the first book. I’ve read every one
since, for the last twenty years.
You
reference three different novels on your website, but with a series called the
Four Part Land, can readers expect another novel?
There are six novels and one anthology
plotted for The Four Part Land. I know, it doesn’t fit in with the whole Four
ethos, but it wasn’t planned that way. The story is currently unfolding as two
different trilogies. Tarranau is book
#1 of the Tarranau trilogy, while Chloddio
(the next book to appear) will be book #1 in that trilogy. I’ll be alternating
the publishing of each series, so overall Tarranau’s series will be books #1,
#3, and #5, while Chloddio will be books #2, #4, and #6. They run concurrently
in the setting’s time, and there is a fair amount of overlap. For instance,
Tarranau takes Chloddio’s job when he gets fired, for various reasons.
Finally, the last book is Unfolding a New Continent, and is the
anthology collection of all the short stories and novellas that I’ve written
about The Four Part Land. Longer tales from this will be published individually
in ebook formats, as well as the final print collection.
What
can your readers expect from you once The Four Part Land series of complete?
Well, there’s a few things going on and
planned, but I already have plots for 4 short novels in the Arhosa setting (a
grim fantasy setting), Our Land (a gunpowder fantasy novel), a SF setting as
well, and whatever else catches my fancy between now and then. There’s a lot
I’ve got in mind, and it’s a matter of which gets written.
What
do you find to be the most challenging aspect of writing?
Staying committed. The words come fairly
easily if I take the time to sit down and hammer away at the keys, but keeping
myself at the keyboard and writing has always been the hardest part. I either
come up with a new idea, or get distracted, or burn out on the current story.
The creation of Deepwood Publishing has
done very little to help, but it has slowed down the process of burning out by
giving me many more things to work on in small doses.
Did
you learn anything from writing your book and what was it?
That I need to plot more when writing.
Or, at least, that I write more skillfully when I plot the story out
beforehand. And that if you give me a setting, I will create plots till the
cows come home. It’s almost more fun than actually doing the writing itself,
since each plot is a story in miniature.
Do
you have any advice for other writers?
Write every day. It makes
the writing smoother, easier, and more connected between sections. Letting the
writing lead where it must is also important. I have never plotted the death of
a main character. But sometimes they die, and that is how the story should be.
Also, I try and provide some
writing tips on my blog here.
They’re usually focused around various aspects of creating a fantasy setting,
and what I do that might help others.
Do you have anything that you want to say to your readers?
A story isn't a complete
story until it's been through the hands of the writer and the reader.
I've put a strong framework into place, but until the reader's mind fills in
all the little details and scenes and fleshes the world out, it doesn't truly
come alive.
That's why readers are so
much fun as an author – they bring the world alive again for us as well. After
eight years poking around the inside of The Four Part Land, I can see every
mound of terrain and the daily lives of the people so well it's like wandering
around my local town – it's all so normal I don't notice the extraordinary.
Questions and comments from those who see the world for the first time bring
back the magic for me.
Thank you for the support
and the kindness you’ve shown over the years.
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