Introducing C.B. Matson: A Master of Historical Fantasy

Discover the captivating world of C.B. Matson, an author who weaves historical fantasy with rich world-building and character-driven stories. Uncover his writing process, influences, and the enchanting Tapestry series, starting with “Half Sword.” Immerse yourself in a realm where history meets imagination. Available on Amazon.

Today, we have the pleasure of diving into the mind of this seasoned writer C.B. Matson and exploring his unique approach to storytelling in the fantasy genre.

From his adventurous background to his literary influences, Matson’s creative journey is as captivating as the worlds he builds within his novels.

Matson’s life has been a tapestry of diverse experiences, with roles ranging from mining geologist to strategic planning consultant. His wanderlust has taken him across continents, immersing him in different cultures and histories.

So, grab yourself a cuppa and join us as we explore C.B. Matson’s magical realm.

How do you approach world-building in your stories?

Okay, color me lazy…writing Historical Fantasy means the world has already been built. Well, at least as it was perceived in the 12th Century. That gives me a lot of latitude. Manticores yet dwell in the high passes, old deities wander the forests. Magic still works. I love to dig into the historical details of cities and peoples…Nubian traders bring gold and ivory from the Mali Empire. Mongol tribes amass at the Gates of Alexander, soon to throw them down and overwhelm the nations of Europe. Truly more interesting than any world I could devise.

Can you walk us through your writing process?

So let’s talk about writing, yeah! [fist pump, victory dance, muscle cramp] Every writer eventually becomes this Nosferatu vampire-person for story ideas. Neighbor dies… hmmm? Virulent disease… hmmm? You get the picture. It’s the teasing out of stories worth telling that’s the art and perhaps is the toughest part of writing.

Twyla Tharp, in her book “The Creative Habit” recommends collecting and maintaining Idea Boxes of possible projects. That’s one way to sort out the phials of blood and vital humors that you’ve collected. Most writers have some kind of Idea Box, a spawning ground for new stories. Grubby little idea-larvae wriggling about…never mind. To sort this stuff out, I ask myself three questions: 1. Do I want to write this story? 2. Am I capable of writing this story? 3. If I wrote it, would anyone want to read it? By question 3., most of the larvae have died.

Turning an idea into a project and then a story means writing, and herein lies the rub: whether to “pants” and endure the slings and antics of outrageous protagonists, or “plot” and endure, well, whatever it is that plotters endure. That is, write by the seat of your pants and let the story just take whatever path it takes, or plot it all out with outlines and character descriptions, so things converge where you want them to converge, when you want them to converge. In my experience, pantsing is much more fun for the author, but plotting makes a much better product for the reader.

Would you survive in your own fantasy world?

It would be tough, the archaic language and all. Medieval toilet habits too…sheesh (scene from Monty Python and the Holy Grail comes to mind). Aside from that, yeah, ‘cause like the stuff I know, engineering, health care, and well…I know what’s gonna happen. “Run, fools, the Mongols are coming!!”

What themes do you explore in your work?

Three words that would describe my writing would be: Experiential—I try to immerse the reader in the story setting; Focused—I like to get right down into the soul of my characters; and Complex—theme, plot, and action all have wheels-within-wheels, subtext, and conflicting motives.

My themes are simple and I usually establish them at the beginning of the writing process. “Half Sword,” the first of my Tapestry series, is centered about Self Discovery. Not only my protagonist, but my supporting characters must discover their own fears, strengths, limitations, and courage before they can overcome the barriers and adversaries they encounter.

Next (as yet untitled) book in the Tapestry series is all about Belonging…finding a people, a purpose, and ultimately, love in a world torn by war and dislocation. After that, Becoming. My protagonists must become who they were meant to be, who they must be in order to survive. Did I mention that my stories are character driven?

What do you consider to be your biggest influences as a writer?

As an author (and a reader), my Holy Trinity is Bradbury-Steinbeck-Eco (all dead, yes…I know). Ray Bradbury for his evocative story lines. His narrative is almost poetic, and his plot drivers hover between sci-fi, fantasy, and magical realism. “Something Wicked This Way Comes” is perhaps my fav.

Unarguably John Steinbeck is one of the greatest 20th Century American authors. I only wish I could write dialog and create characters like he did. His stories do not build high tension, or include much action, but still, reading them is like eating a warm scone with clotted cream on a lazy Sunday morning (yes I have. And for that, and for Benny Hill, I forgive the British their somewhat irrational spelling).

Umberto Eco was a phenomenon all unto himself. Professor of Italian Medieval Philosophy and Semiotics, among a gazillion other topics. He wrote faster than I can talk (which isn’t that fast…but) and his first novel, “Name of the Rose” went best-seller/movie-deal right off the presses. Eco was a Renaissance man, a true genius of words, symbols, and ideas. For the quintessential Historical Fantasy, I can strongly recommend “Baudolino.” Never could quite get into his “Kant and the Platypus,” however. But hey…he’s the genius, not me.

What’s the strangest thing you’ve had to research for your stories?

Ho boy! Do I get into some weird stuff researching the Byzantine world. Perhaps the strangest is the “Apocalypse of Methodius” that foretells the barbarian invasion of the late Roman empire. Right up there would be, “The Travels of Sir John de Mandeville.” I have a 1915 translation that describes (among many other weird things) blemmyes, gryphons, and monopods, all found east of Eden in the land of Nod (where good Sir John claimed to have visited).

What do you hope readers take away from your stories?

A sense of wonder…isn’t that what fantasy is all about? Wonder, and perhaps a sense of joy…when the story wraps, the characters reach their goals and their destinies, and you can’t wait for the next tale to unfold.

Would you rather have a pet dragon or a unicorn, why?

What—WHAT? A dragon, really? Like in my backyard? Maybe a little one that would light the charcoal in my grill and growl at the Amazon drivers. But I’ve got a dog that does that (no, she doesn’t light the grill, but she enjoys it when I do).

Of course a unicorn would be quite decorative and would just graze gently in the yard. I’m afraid riding it would be tough. My luck, the neighbor would choose a dragon, a big one, and it would eat my unicorn. That, and it would leave huge steaming mounds of dragon poop all over the yard. Maybe I’ll take a pass on the whole deal.

If you could have any magical ability, what would it be?

I’d want the power to create magical ancient worlds and people them with fascinating characters having amazing adventures…Wait, I already do that. Never mind.

If you were stuck on a deserted island with one of your characters, who would it be and why?

Eponia, the horse. ‘Cause I’d get hungry on a deserted island and I could always eat the horse…okay, never mind that one either.

Where is the best place to start reading your work?

The only place to start reading my Historical Fantasy is “Half Sword” on Amazon mybook.to/Half_Sword.

Author bio:

Let’s see… [ponders stuff to definitely leave out] I grew up on the California coast and ran away to sea when I was eighteen. Still got the Coastguard Mariners Certificate to prove it.

Since then, my rather checkered career included mining geologist, commercial fisherman, civil engineer, mess-hall cook, surveyor, and strategic planning consultant. My work has taken me to Africa, Latin America, Europe, the former Soviet Union, Middle East, India, and the Pacific Islands. These days, when I’m not writing, I enjoy hiking, tinkering, and “… simply messing about in boats.”

What inspired you to start writing in the fantasy genre?

Years ago, I started writing Science-Fiction/Fantasy because that was my primary read. It was all a pile of dreadful trash, written for my own enjoyment. Then I picked up “Name of the Rose” by Umberto Eco and found my Holy Grail, Historical Fantasy.

Not saying my stuff was happy Pulitzer ever after, or even worth reading, but I upped the action and developed my own approach to the genre. When Neil Stephenson put his Foreworld series out on Kindle Worlds, I jumped in and contributed three rather large Historical Fantasies.

Find C.B. Matson online

Website: https://www.cbmatson.com

Amazon Author page: https://amzn.to/3qEfQ65

Facebook: https://tinyurl.com/2h6fx4xe

Magic, Mythology, and More: A Conversation with E C Greaves

Discover the world of fantasy adventure with E C Greaves. Explore captivating tales, unique world-building, and the author’s creative process.

Author E C Greaves interview

Welcome to this exciting interview with E C Greaves, an author and illustrator who has made a name for himself in the world of fantasy adventure stories.

Born in Solihull, UK, Ed now resides in Christchurch, New Zealand, where he continues to create unique and interesting tales that have a mildly Slavic tinge to them.

When he’s not weaving tales of magic and adventure, Ed can be found pursuing a variety of passions. He restores old vehicles, codes video games, and teaches history to high school kids. It’s hard to believe that he manages to fit all of this into his schedule, but perhaps his secret lies in the fact that he seems to be completely immune to the effects of aging—despite being far too old to explain the lack of grey hair!

As we delve deeper into this interview, we’ll learn more about Ed’s creative process and how he approaches his work as an author. So sit back, relax, and join us as we explore the fascinating world of E C Greaves…

What inspired you to start writing in the fantasy genre?

In short; long and exceptionally boring train rides to a long (and by some eldritch curse) even more boring job in finance—believe it or not, but I wrote the entire first novel on my phone!

And, I suppose since I grew up with a total nerd for a dad (playing D&D, and various fantasy games on the Atari STE with him, as a kid) fantasy was really the only genre I’d ever read, so it was all I thought to write.

How do you approach world-building in your stories?

Whilst I do have a general idea of what the world looks like—tech level, magic or whatever, types of creatures and peoples, regions, etc.—I pretty much just write stories that take my characters wherever they need to go. From there, I sorta make it up as I go along, and flesh out whatever I need to.

I take this, and jot it down in one of about 35,000 google docs (on my phone, of course), and forget about it until I catch a contradiction once a book is already pretty much finished!

Can you walk us through your writing process?

During the day, I procrastinate a whole lot. Then, in the evening, I reread some existing stuff. Finally, at around midnight, once I can no longer escape it, I start writing. It takes me through til perhaps 2 or 3 am. Which is when I try desperately to get enough sleep to survive the following day!

I usually begin with a conversation, description, or situation that sorta comes to me from the ether—more often than not, something I thought of when I was driving. And then I build on that.

My characters tend to take the story where they want it to go, and I’m most definitely not a “plan every chapter” kind of author.

As such, I let them guide me, and I then go through and tie the stuff I wrote back to the general idea I had for an overarching plot, or I try to work in stuff that references earlier things—you know, to make it seem like I actually DID plan that sweet twist!

The entire time, because I have ADHD and it’s one of the best ways I’ve found I can focus, I drink a billion litres of caffeine—coffee, cola, energy drinks—and I usually chain smoke home-grown tobacco.

Would you survive in your own fantasy world?

You know what? I think I just might.

It’s not all that much more dangerous than our own history was. I grew up on a small farm, and I am fairly handy.

Oh, and I know how to make blackpowder. Anyone with that knowledge would do just fine in a pseudo-medieval (low magic) fantasy world, I think.

What themes do you explore in your work?

Identity and belonging, motherhood, legacy, freedom vs responsibility/authority, and what exactly constitutes “right.”

What do you consider to be your biggest influences as a writer?

In all honesty—and this really isn’t something I’ve seen another author admit,—but…

I don’t actually read many books.

As such, I am more influenced and informed by general conversation and discussion on politics and philosophy, by life and the real world (particularly ancient and medieval history), and by childhood influences—earlier fantasy works (usually films) like Conan, Dungeons and Dragons sessions I played when I was like 7, hours spent poring over the pictures in Dragon magazines, countless video games (from Drakkhen and Hero’s Quest, to Ultima 7 and Baldur’s Gate).

What’s the strangest thing you’ve had to research for your stories?

The stages of pregnancy, and then what happens AFTER you’ve had a baby—how long before milk dries up, and under what conditions? how long before periods come back? what happens to your body? Etc etc

Needless to say, the algorithms started targeting me with a lot of maternity stuff on devices where I’d forgotten to block ads!

What do you hope readers take away from your stories?

I don’t aim to convince readers of anything, and I try very hard to separate my own views from those of my characters. For me, my writing serves as entertainment first and foremost.

That said, I do hope they consider their own views on some of the thematic stuff, and some of the more “thorny” or “weighty” topics discussed within.

Would you rather have a pet dragon or a unicorn, why?

A unicorn. When I was a kid, I had this beautifully illustrated book about woodland critters who hung out with these industrious little gnomes.

In one of the books, they meet these total dick elves, who at one point, steal a unicorn egg or something. I honestly can’t recall much more than a few pictures (of a stripy guy transforming into a fish, and of a telescope putting ink around another guy’s eye).

What I remember clearly, however, is this beautiful picture of a unicorn/pegasus hatched out of an egg. It was really cute and pure, and for a weird little kid who liked goblins and mud, and who was picked on quite a bit, that little white horse creature seemed to represent an innocence and goodness that I think I sorely wished was more prevalent in the world.

Weird, I know.

Wish I knew what those books were!

If you could have any magical ability, what would it be?

Teleportation.

It is, by far, the most powerful/useful ability besides perhaps just straight-up omnipotence. 9-out-of-10 dentists agree.

If not that, cos it’s cheating, then the ability to live happily and healthily without doing harm to any other living being. Photosynthesis or something!

I would also like to be able to communicate with any other living being too (maybe even some dead ones… Just to spice it up!)

If you were stuck on a deserted island with one of your characters, who would it be and why?

I’d want to pick one of the Vulkari, but they’d all probably just eat me.

And whilst Zyntael could perhaps use her weird necromancy to convince the Spirits to help us, I think Phobos Lend would know of some way off the island. Either that, or he’d have a stash of rum and pipe leaf.

What would you name your pet dragon?

Wait, you mean that I didn’t get the Unicorn after all? And I poured my heart out for that question!

Fine.

“Little Stinker.”

It is my go-to pet name in anything where you can have a pet.

Where is the best place to start reading your work?

It’s available on Amazon here:

But, you know what? I really appreciate you humouring me.

So here, have the first book in the trilogy for free!

https://BookHip.com/BDZBZTW

Find out more.

Website: ecgreaves.com

Facebook: facebook.com/ECGreaves.Author

Twitter: twitter.com/GreavesEc

Enchanted Words: An Interview With Epic Fantasy Author Melinda Kucsera

Explore the fantasy world of author Melinda Kucsera as she shares her writing process, inspirations, and the eternal debate: pet dragon or unicorn? Dive into her captivating stories and discover where to start reading.

Melinda Kucsera is the author of over twenty fantasy titles.

In this interview, we will delve into her writing process, her inspiration, and whether she’d prefer a pet dragon or unicorn.

So pour yourself a nice cup of tea and let’s get started…

What inspired you to start writing in the fantasy genre?

I kept meeting people in fantasy garb who were looking for their long-lost queen. I offered to help them, only to discover that no one else can see them except me, and to help them, I need to write books about a reluctant mage and an ancient curse. They claim this will break the curse and free the queen, but I’m a bit skeptical at this point since I’ve written twenty books and I still haven’t broken the curse or freed her. I’m not saying the characters are lying to me, but someone is. 🤣

How do you approach world-building in your stories?

I keep the characters from going on at length about every facet of their world and just show the parts that actually relate to the story I’m writing. The characters don’t like when I do this, but no one wants an info dump, least of all me.

Can you walk us through your writing process?

I create a plan, then pat myself on the back for a job well done. After that, I set the plan aside and go to work. Unfortunately, my characters are stuck in my apartment while I’m at work. They pull out the plan, decide we’re not doing what’s planned, rip up the plan, set the pieces of the plan on fire and leave me to sweep up the ashes of the plan as they skip off into the sunset and do their own thing.

Would you survive in your own fantasy world?

Yes, I’d survive and live quite well in my fantasy world because I know how to follow the rules of the enchanted forest. I also know where to find quality medical care and affordable housing.

What themes do you explore in your work?

The themes I like best lately are: can you go home again, and other family-related themes. Who am I if I lose my magic, and other questions about identity. Can dreams come true and if they do, what do you do after that happens?

What do you consider to be your biggest influences as a writer?

The Lord of the Rings trilogy is a huge influence on me. I read it after I saw the first Peter Jackson film when I was in college.

What’s the strangest thing you’ve had to research for your stories?

What happens to your intestines if you get stabbed? Did you know, they can slide aside so a knife can slip past them and not even nick them? Yeah, I didn’t know that either until I went down that rabbit hole. It depends on where the person was stabbed, and it’s a common occurrence according to the research I did.

What do you hope readers take away from your stories?

A warm hug and a bemused smile because where they thought the story was going isn’t where it went, but where it ended up is better than what they thought.

Would you rather have a pet dragon or a unicorn, why?

I’d rather have a dragon. In fact, I have a dozen right now scattered across multiple books that are published and coming soon. I really don’t need another. 😂

If you could have any magical ability, what would it be?

If I could have any power, it would be the power to heal.

What would you name your pet dragon?

My dragons usually name themselves, then tell me what to call them, and I respect their wishes, so they don’t incinerate me.

Where is the best place to start reading your work?

Curse Breaker Enchanted is the best place to start and not just because it’s my first or my favorite or the book I can’t leave alone. Everything grew from that book, including the prequels.

About the author.

Melinda writes epic fantasy books when her characters allow. They sometimes drag her off on unrelated adventures to save the the greater universe where her books take place, but that’s a story for another time.

Find Melita online:

Websitemelindakucsera.com/the-more-epic-version

Youtubeyoutube.com/user/mkucsera28

Facebookfacebook.com/melinda.kucsera

Innstagram: instagram.com/MelindaKucsera28

Twitter: twitter.com/MelindaKucsera

TikTok: TikTok.com/@melindakucsera_fantasy

Pinterest: pinterest.com/MelindaKucsera9

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