Showing posts with label Imora. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Imora. Show all posts

Sunday, April 3, 2016

Imora - FAQ



IMORA – FAQ


Are there any epic battles between good and evil?

Epic battles?  Sure.  Good and evil are sort of blurred lines in this book.  Is the dragon evil for eating a village when she's hungry?  Is a warrior evil for wanting to kill a dragon for glory and fame?

Are there any noble warriors on an epic quest?

Uh.  No.  That's an old hat I'd rather not wear.  I find books like that boring to read, so I can't imagine writing one.

Are there any farm boys with world saving destinies?

Uh.  No.  No destiny.

Who is the main character?

That would be Imora, a dragon.  The entire book is told from her point of view.

What is your favorite part of the book?

When Imora is at her weakest, struggling to survive as a huge creature bound to the land and having to adapt to a new way of living without her wings.  There is a point when she is forced to find a new cave to sleep in for a hundred years and it's in a warm place, which for an ice dragon is very uncomfortable.  A hundred years later she wakes to find the landscape drastically altered into a swamp, in which she has become a feature.

Who is your favorite supporting character?

I'd have to say it is the scribe she encounters.  While she doesn't eat him (she doesn't eat everyone in the book!) she still finds a way to use him to further her own glory in a sort of selfish, but at the same time nice way.  This historian/scribe manages to meet her on a level playing field intellectually.

How does the setting relate to a place you have been?

Any New England day with LOTS of snow and ice around!

What is Imora the Ice Dragon's favorite color?

Any of the shiny ones!  You know, like gold, silver, rubies, sapphires- those are colors right?

What is Imora the Ice Dragon's favorite food?

Believe it or not, fairies are not only a very tasty treat, but extremely nutritious.

If Imora the Ice Dragon could go on any vacation she wanted, where would it be?

She would definitely go to the North Pole and spend a couple decades just lounging on a glacier and hanging out with polar bears.  She'd need a few thousand servants to supply her with a constant stream of fish.

What does Imora the Ice Dragon do for fun?  I mean, she's got decades of being awake; she must have some sort of hobby to fill in the years?

You're right.  Even Imora needs to take a break from showing off how powerful she is to the locals so they don't think they can mess with her.  Hunting takes up a lot of her time, but when she's chillin' in the ice cave with a full belly, she likes to make ice sculptures.  When she really needs to relax, she crochets with hooks made from bones and really, really, really big skeins of yarn.

Does this story have a central lesson?

If there is any central lesson, its that dragon's are not humans.  

At what point did you decide to continue writing this book?

As soon as the outline was done.  I like plotting everything out before I start writing.  I don't always stick to the outline 100%, but I like to know what's coming so I can think about and take notes on parts I know are upcoming so I'm ready to write them when I get there.

Did the book turn out the way you wanted it to?

The biggest problem I had with Imora, was trying to make sure she couldn't easily be replaced with a human character, both physically and in the way she thought or made decisions.  She had to be alien enough, that is different enough, from a human character but also be sympathetic to the reader.

Did you face any obstacles when writing this story with plot problems or character development?

The biggest problem I had was how to order the chapters.  Part One is really the middle part of the story.  Part Two is the beginning.  Part Three is the end.  The reason for this is Chapter One of Part One has the strongest introduction to the dragon, with her waking up in an ice cave after a hundred years asleep.  I struggled with this order a lot and had a hard time finding a better way to introduce her.

Have you read books similar to this?

Conn Iggulden's historical fiction Conqueror series about the Genghis Khan gives the reader a hard, stone-faced character you just don't mess with or defy.  Likewise, the main character in Bernhard Cornwell's Saxon Stories is brilliantly arrogant and sees himself as an awesome, teeth kicking warrior.  Of course, Game of Thrones gives the reader many "villain" POVs.

There are plenty of fantasy books too.  I remember reading the beginning of a Piers Anthony book that started in a goblin's point of view and the idea of an entire book told this way really struck my imagination.  I don't remember the name of the book or if I even finished reading it after it dropped the goblin's point of view. 

The Orcs trilogy tries to give us the orc's point of view but mostly could have been about a band of human mercenaries instead of monstrous, other-worldly orcs.  We really didn't get a good idea of what it was to be an orc as much as it was to be a team of mercenaries working for the bad guy.  We do get a good glimpse at other non-human characters though.

I've yet to encounter a book that gives the reader the true experience of being in the dragon's point of view- a real dragon- the kind we all grew up learning were big scary monsters.

Grab your copy today to read Imora's story and you decide, 

is Imora the Ice Dragon good or evil? 














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Sunday, February 21, 2016

IMORA – INSPIRATION

Imora is a story told entirely from a dragon's point of view.  A real dragon.  You know those huge flying creatures with evil streaks that the little people run in fear from?  Yeah, that's what a real dragon is.
There are plenty of stories written from the "bad guy's" point of view, from dragon and other monster's points of view.  These quickly turn into stories about the misunderstood bad guy and worse, they human-ize the monsters to the point where a "goblin" could easily be called a "human" and the reader wouldn’t know the difference.  Even then, it seems like most books give only glimpses of the dragon's point of view while the human characters get all the attention.
With Imora, I wanted to do something different and experience what it really is to be huge, powerful, and a little evil. I wanted Imora to be a real dragon.  Real dragons don't shy away from eating humans (hey, they have big belly's to fill!).  Imora is awake for decades at a time.  She's selfish, sure, but, you know, who isn’t a little bit?  She knows she's powerful and has no problem using that to her advantage.  And it makes her, I hope, wonderfully arrogant.
The challenge was making a character like this sympathetic and show the disadvantages of being a dragon as well.  When she sleeps it's not for eight hours, it's for a hundred years.  Where can she sleep safely for that long without some monster hunter coming to kill her in her sleep?  How would you hide something the size of a jet liner for a hundred years and protect it at the same time?  Imagine how much the world changes in a hundred years.  What if you went to sleep in the year 1900 and woke up in 2000?  How would you cope with and adapt to these changes?  How can something the size of a jet liner sneak around if it needs to?  And you know those pesky good guys always have an "instant kill" weapon specifically designed to take out the bad guy.  Well, if you’re the bad guy, the monster that eats whole villages, well, that’s a problem.  How do face something like that?  How do you remind the pesky good guys you are the power in the neighborhood so they don't come knocking on your door hoping to steal all that treasure you love to horde?

How do you make a character like this sympathetic?  Well, that’s where the plot takes us.  It’s a story about a mother trying to save her son.  It’s a story of survival not just against the hordes of good guys, but against nature and time.

Sunday, February 7, 2016

Imora - About

IMORA
For centuries, Imora the Ice Dragon Imora has watched the fierce Dengals expand their empire across the high, cold mountain ranges.  While she works to drive them back, claiming the mountains as her own, each time she sleeps for a century, they regain their footing.  When they kill her son, she finds his heart struggling for survival in a pool of its own blood.  First, she must find a way to preserve the heart while she prepares to resurrect her son.  Her journey takes her deep beneath the mountains and to the highest cloud tops.  Forced to surrender to the long dragon sleep once again, a thief steals away with the heart.  When she loses her wings in battle, she must not only find a way to exist as a creature of the ground, but find the thief and save the heart before he uses its powers for himself.
For more information, see here.

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Publication Date for Imora

Imora will be published in August of 2014 by Double Dragon Publishing.  More information about the publisher can be found here: http://www.double-dragon-ebooks.com/.  And more information about Imora can be found here:  http://danielsteeves.blogspot.com/2013/05/publication-announcement-imora.html.

Saturday, May 11, 2013

Publication Announcement - Imora

I am pleased to announce that my manuscript for Imora has been accepted by Double Dragon Publishing and is on their 2014 release schedule.  More information about Double Dragon Publishing can be found here:
http://www.double-dragon-ebooks.com/.

ABOUT IMORA:
For centuries, Imora the Ice Dragon has watched the fierce Dengals expand their empire across the high, cold mountain ranges.  While she works to drive them back, claiming the mountains as her own, each time she sleeps for a century, they regain their footing.  When they kill her son, she finds his heart struggling for survival in a pool of its own blood.  First, she must find a way to preserve the heart while she prepares to resurrect her son.  Her journey takes her deep beneath the mountains and to the highest cloud tops.  Forced to surrender to the long dragon sleep once again, a thief steals away with the heart.  When she loses her wings in battle, she must not only find a way to exist as a creature of the ground, but find the thief and save the heart before he uses its powers for himself.