Woo, Nightwish!

This Friday I’m going to Sydney to see my favourite band, Nightwish, live in concert.

Yes, of course I’m going to wear my Nightwish t-shirt. Duh!

If you’ve never listened to Nightwish before, here’s a link to one of their songs that’s particularly good. I love the violin solo in the middle especially (Side note: I actually used to play the violin. I wonder if I could have pulled that solo off myself?).

Meanwhile, in relevant news, I’m expecting the final edit of The Shadowed Throne to arrive this week, and it’ll be going to the printers in February. The Australian release isn’t far off now!

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The Price of Magic

I’ve just come back from my usual seaside holiday for the festive season, which was a lot of fun. Unfortunately I fell into a lagoon and ruined my cherished MP3 player, but that was the only mishap, and I’m pleased to report that I did accomplish something other than opening presents and going for unexpected swims while fully clothed.

I don’t take breaks from writing while I’m on holiday, and since I was leaving my laptop behind I took along a novel I’d decided to write by hand, which I started last year during my trip to the US. Well, during this holiday I finished it.

I may have mentioned it here earlier, but since it’s now finished it would seem appropriate to reveal a few things about it. So here goes.

>ahem<

Not many people know that The Dark Griffin wasn’t actually my first novel. The first thing I ever published was a humourous book for kids, called The Land of Bad Fantasy. I wrote it while still in highschool, and it was a pretty silly little story that parodied fantasy as I saw it at the time (If you want to know more about it, the cover and some other details are on the Books page).

This new story is slightly similar to LoBF, in that it’s a humourous story for kids. But where as LoBF never got serious, this one does, and it deals with some bigger issues which I thought were interesting. It came when I was thinking about artists, and how the really good ones always seem to be troubled people. Van Gough died in a mental institution. Samuel Johnson was nearly blind and suffered chronic lung problems. Edgar Allen Poe may well have committed suicide. Jackson Pollack was an alchoholic. The list goes on.

I wondered why that seemed to be so common, and whether art comes first and makes artists suffer, or if it’s the other way around (I eventually decided that art follows suffering. Why? Because being miserable drives you away from other people and into your own mind, which is where art comes from).

In any case, thinking along those lines gave me the idea for a new book.

“What if”, I thought – “what if there was a world where you could be born with magical powers… but if you had powers you also had some sort of problem? A disease, or a disability of some kind – and the more powerful you are, the more crippling your problem. And what if… what if in this world there was a really powerful person who could save the world – but who also suffered from suicidal depression? How can you save the world if you can’t even get out of bed in the morning?”

I’m usually pretty bad at coming up with titles (only two of my published works didn’t have their titles changed at some point), but this one was easy. I called it The Price of Magic.

And I pretty quickly decided not to tell it from the point of view of the depressed character, and also that I would make the story at least semi-humorous, because otherwise I would run the risk of making it too downbeat for anyone to want to read. I’m not sure why I decided to make it for kids; it just felt right. And since I was due to go to America around that time, I decided to write it by hand the way I did in highschool, so I could take it on the road with me.

After that I just had to write it – albeit in fits and starts, usually while away from home. I set off on this year’s summer holiday determined to finish it at last, and I did. I’m very pleased with the result. I read at least half of it aloud to some kids I looked after, and they got into it right away – asking questions and even making requests (they all asked if the depressed character could get better and not be depressed at the end of the book).

It’s all very promising, and hopefully a good sign of things to come. Now all I have to do is type it up and show it to my agent. I’ll let you know how it goes.

Wish me luck! And happy holidays!

~KJT, feeling jolly

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The American Edition is Here!

Does size matter?

Does size matter?

Today Penguin sent me some copies of the US edition of Shadow’s Heir – I’ve photographed the two different editions together. As you can see, this time around the Australian edition completely dwarfs the US one – but don’t worry; the contents are the same!

The fact that my personal copies have arrived means that the US edition should be on sale in America very soon, if it isn’t already. I hope everyone enjoys reading it.

 

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The Shadowed Throne Cover Reveal

Today is a very exciting day! I have now been given permission to share the cover of the next book, The Shadowed Throne, which is of course the sequel to Shadow’s Heir. This includes the back cover, so now you can read the blurb!

Personally, I like this cover. The man shown on it is Kullervo, who is mentioned in the blurb and also features in one of the prequel stories on the short stories page (The Creature, if you want to read it). I’m very pleased with the model they chose, since they found someone who actually looks genuinely gawky the way Kullervo does.

And yes, that is a wing poking out from under his cape.

Shadowed Throne Final

If you’re having trouble reading the blurb, it says:

Laela the half-breed raised in the South is now the Queen of the North. The seemingly invincible Arenadd Taranisaii and his partner, the dark griffin Skandar, are missing. The Northerners blame Laela for Arenadd’s disappearance, but she knows the truth…

With only her griffin partner Oeka to help her rule, Laela struggles to maintain power and tensions mount with Arenadd’s cousin, Saeddryn, who believes she is the rightful ruler.

Laela is forced into a desperate fight to stay Queen as the entire North is plunged into a brutal civil war. To win, she will need the help of a new friend, the odd shapeshifter Kullervo, and a surprising griffin ally from the past.

But the true test of Laela’s strength will come when the deadly Shadow That Walks returns…

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Book 11

This morning I started work on book eleven, which I have now titled The Serpent’s Coils.

Now let’s all see how long it takes me to finish it!

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K.J.Taylor, Master of Libraries

As anyone who’s read my books will have noticed, every Eyrie in Cymria is governed by a Council which is made up of senior griffiners. Every griffiner is referred to as a Lord or Lady just by virtue of being a griffiner, but once they’ve obtained an official position they are given the title of “Master”. An Eyrie Council is made up of the most important Masters, who hold the most powerful positions – some of which are Master of Taxation or Gold (the griffiner in charge of taxes, and sometimes the Eyrie treasury as well), Master of Law (supreme judge in charge of dispensing justice to the entire territory, and presiding over the trials of important people such as other griffiners), and Master of Healing (the most skilled doctor and master of all other medical practitioners including griffin healers).

Well, anyway, I’m pleased to announced that as of today I, too, am now a Master despite not having a griffin. I’ve just recieved my final results from my university (the University of Canberra), and have passed my last two assignments with Distinctions for both of them. This means that, pending some paperwork and my graduation ceremony, I am now a Master of Information Studies. This is a fancy way of saying that I hold a Master’s Degree in all the things you need to know to run a library or archive.

That might sound a little boring, but you’d be surprised. Archivists get to learn all sorts of interesting things!

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