Fantasy Author's Handbook
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Fantasy and science fiction author and editor Philip Athans shares his experience through witty, informative, entertaining and inspiring posts. Whether he's decoding the legal page of a print book or analyzing word choice, his posts will make you think about your work in a different way.
Fantasy Author's Handbook
1w ago
I happened upon this Big Think video this morning and it got me thinking. It’s only six minutes long, so watch it now, please.
Isn’t that the primary role of the fantasy and science fiction author? To create and convey a sense of wonder? One of the earliest science fiction magazines was called…
The guy they named the Hugo Award after was onto that idea at least as early as 1930.
So then the question bears asking…
How much wonder are you conjuring in your work in progress?
—Philip Athans
Fantasy Author’s Handbook is now on YouTube!
Did this post make you want to Buy Me A Coff ..read more
Fantasy Author's Handbook
2w ago
A couple days ago I started reading The Deceivers by John D. MacDonald, chosen at random from my huge shelf of old paperbacks.
Very early in the book, two characters, both of whom are readers, have a late night conversation that centers on their mutual dissatisfaction with the ordinariness of their own late 1950s suburban American middle class existence…
I mean that if you take a lot of mealy little people who have already sort of sold their souls down the river before the book even starts, then you can’t really give a very large damn about what happens to them. The author can ..read more
Fantasy Author's Handbook
3w ago
From time to time I’ll recommend—not review, mind you, but recommend, and yes, there is a difference—books that I think authors should have on their shelves. Some may be new and still in print, some may be difficult to find, but all will be, at least in my humble opinion, essential texts for any author, so worth looking for.
By now you’ve joined the Fantasy Author’s Handbook GoodReads Group, right? Because… well, of course you have. There you will have seen that we do a bimonthly group read, and this month (March 2024) we read Growing Great Characters from the Ground Up: A Thorough Primer ..read more
Fantasy Author's Handbook
1M ago
A bit of rant here, to take or leave.
There are a lot of ways to take a shortcut past thinking and into talking and for what at least seems to be a majority of people talking about books (and movies, etc.) the quickest and easiest thinking bypass is the process of reducing a work of art to a series of “tropes.”
There aren’t a lot of words I truly hate but this is one of them, at least in the context in which it’s become popularized. And you know what I mean.
There are two things that are terrible about this process of reduction into tropes and that is that it diminishes books and the authors w ..read more
Fantasy Author's Handbook
1M ago
There’s good writing advice, interesting writing advice, iffy writing advice, and then there’s terrible, awful, spirit- and creativity-destroying writing advice, and the worst example of the latter category is “Kill your darlings.” What makes this nonsense so bad is how often and irresponsibly it’s repeated.
Often attributed to Dylan Thomas, sometimes William Faulkner (who, if he followed this advice himself would have killed The Sound and the Fury in its entirety), and then repeated by other teachers and authors including Stephen King. In reality the concept seems to have ..read more
Fantasy Author's Handbook
1M ago
I have been vocally anti-AI/LLM/Chat bots “writing” fiction—“writing” anything—or making any sort of “art” since the first rumblings made themselves known, and I continue to rail against it as it continues to accelerate into an uncertain future.
But something made me start to really think about this. Am I turning into that fusty old man ensconced entirely and forever in the Good Old Days? Am I reacting to AI like Woody Allen reacting to the computer?
If you’ve watched any Woody Allen movies in the last couple decades you’ll know what I mean. Here’s a bit of a scene from Blue Jasmine  ..read more
Fantasy Author's Handbook
1M ago
As of this morning, this blog has 910 subscribers, and the accompanying YouTube channel has 224. So… what are the other 686 of you waiting for?
Wait… you didn’t know I started a YouTube channel to accompany this venerable old blog on the subject of writing fantasy, science fiction, horror, and fiction in general?
Well, take a look at this, my friends…
I started out with an admittedly clunky, accidentally standard definition welcome video, which, I guess, you can skip…
But then started talking about writing and publishing in videos like…
…in which I get into show, don’t tell; info dumps ..read more
Fantasy Author's Handbook
2M ago
Most of this post is from the original version of this from back in September of 2015, but a wild Twitter kerfuffle over the past twenty-four hours had me linking to the old post over and over again, and it being Tuesday morning, seemed like I have to dive into the senseless “battle” once more, so here goes, at least updated enough that it doesn’t start with an online course I haven’t been teaching for several years now.
Anyway, once again we’re being told that all prologues are bad, no books should ever have a prologue, and all authors who write prologues are bad, and anyway, it’s best to jus ..read more
Fantasy Author's Handbook
2M ago
Harkening way back to December of 2014, and the first appearance of “The Sci-fi Paperback Grab-bag,” and continuing a series of posts showcasing how any and every novel we might read is a lesson in writing, one way or another, let’s look at Star Bridge by Jack Williamson and James E. Gunn, which I randomly chose from those stacks of now-400+ mass market paperback books.
In an effort to combat the weird backlash I’ve been seeing against the basic fiction writing advice: “show, don’t tell,” and continuing on from my post from December 26, “How to Tell,” let’s look at a genre-specific e ..read more
Fantasy Author's Handbook
2M ago
This was going to be a short one this week because…
Oops, I mean…
This was going to be a short one this week. I want to talk about the word “because,” because…
Ah, crap, hold on…
This was going to be a short one this week. I want to talk about the word “because.” I think “because,” which like all words is perfectly fine and in no way “banned,” sometimes—actually, fairly often—sounds clunky.
What do I mean by “clunky”? Well, I’m not even sure. My issues with “because” are based only on a feeling. When I see sentences like this:
Bronwyn is crucial to the war effort because her exceptional ..read more