Beyond Magic and Swords: The Political and Academic Power in The Ravenglass Throne

Discover the inspiration behind The Ravenglass Throne. Shaped by my experiences in academia and journalism, this story explores military, political, and academic power, disability representation, and the complexity of influence in a fantasy world.

Hello from Morecambe!

I wanted to take a moment to share why I wrote The Ravenglass Throne.

For me, this story started with a desire to see myself—and the complexities of power I’ve observed throughout my career—reflected in fantasy.

Having spent time in both academia and political journalism, I’ve seen how different types of authority clash, compete, and sometimes complement each other.

That experience shaped the three sisters at the heart of this story, each of whom represents a different approach to power: military, political, and scholarly.

Elana’s story, in particular, is personal.

Like her, I have a visual impairment, and it was important to me to write a character whose limited vision isn’t a tragedy or a superpower—it’s just part of who she is.

Fantasy often presents disability in extremes, but I wanted to show what it’s really like to navigate both physical spaces and political landscapes with partial sight while holding significant responsibility.

My love of fantasy is woven into this story.

The political intrigue of The Goblin Emperor, the aerial military action of Temeraire, and the character depth of The Farseer Trilogy were all influences.

But I also wanted to bring something new: a world where different kinds of power—academic, political, and military—don’t just exist side by side, but must work together.

Adelinde’s arc is shaped by my time in research.

Too often, fantasy treats scholars as side characters who exist to give information to the ‘real’ protagonists.

But research has its own kind of power, and I wanted to explore that—along with its limitations.

My background in journalism also played a role.

I’ve spent years studying how information flows through power structures, how narratives are shaped, and how decisions are influenced by competing interests.

That’s why the world of The Ravenglass Throne is filled with shifting alliances, misinformation, and political manoeuvring—because that’s how power really works.

At its heart, though, this story is about three sisters learning to value each other’s strengths.

The divisions between academic, military, and political power can seem insurmountable, but The Ravenglass Throne explores how different approaches don’t always have to compete—they can complement.

This is the story I wish I could have read earlier in my own journey.

If you’ve ever felt caught between different worlds—whether academic and practical, physical and political, or personal and professional—I hope you see a little of your own experience reflected here.

I’d love to hear what you think—what kind of power do you find most compelling in fantasy?

Let me know by dropping a comment over on Patreon, where I’m always happy to chat.

Happy reading,

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Dark Fantasy Academies: The Cost of Survival and Power

Discover why academy stories in dark fantasy captivate readers. From brutal training to psychological transformation, these tales explore the price of survival and the human capacity for adaptation. Uncover the dark allure of fantasy academies and their characters.

There’s something darkly compelling about watching characters learn to kill.

Not the Hollywood version – quick montages set to upbeat music – but the brutal, grinding reality depicted in dark fantasy.

The bloody knuckles, the broken bones, the psychological toll of learning to end lives.

The Brutal Reality of Training

My novel Guild of Assassins shows us this unflinching reality through Soren’s training at the fortress.

Each lesson serves a dual purpose: teaching him to kill while simultaneously killing who he used to be.

Master Quillon’s anatomy lessons aren’t just about understanding bodies – they’re about seeing people as collections of vulnerabilities to exploit.

Master Varus doesn’t just teach weapon skills – he breaks down resistance to violence through systematic brutality.

Why Dark Academy Stories Captivate Us

But why do these dark academy stories captivate us so deeply?

Perhaps because they mirror our own anxieties about adaptation and survival.

When Soren learns to craft poisons with Tamasin or master stealth with Rolan, we’re watching someone transform themselves to survive in a hostile world.

It’s an extreme version of our own daily compromises and adaptations.

Training as Transformation

Compare this to Jay Kristoff’s Nevernight, where Mia Corvere’s training at the Red Church similarly strips away her humanity piece by piece.

Or look at Pierce Brown’s Red Rising, where Darrow’s brutal education reveals how violence reshapes not just bodies, but minds.

These stories speak to our deepest fears about what we might become when survival demands transformation.

The Price of Power

The training sequences in dark fantasy academies serve another purpose – they show us the price of power.

Every skill Soren gains costs him something of himself.

Learning to move silently through Rolan’s maze means accepting a predator’s mindset.

Mastering Elysia’s lessons in manipulation means surrendering authenticity.

Each capability gained is a piece of humanity lost.

Dark Fantasy Academies vs. Lighter Counterparts

This is what separates dark fantasy academies from their lighter counterparts.

Hogwarts teaches magic as wonder; the guild fortress teaches it as weapon.

The Night Angel trilogy’s Durzo Blint doesn’t just teach Azoth to fight – he teaches him to stop seeing himself as human.

These stories recognise that learning to kill isn’t just about physical skills – it’s about psychological transformation.

The Addictive Nature of Transformation

Yet there’s something addictive about watching this transformation unfold.

When Soren progresses from fumbling apprentice to capable killer, we feel satisfaction despite our horror.

Perhaps because these stories tap into our own desires for competence and control.

In a world that often leaves us feeling powerless, there’s visceral appeal in watching someone learn to reshape reality through sheer will and skill.

The Academy as a Crucible

The academy setting itself plays a crucial role.

By isolating characters from the outside world, it creates a pressure cooker where change becomes inevitable.

The guild fortress, like the Red Church or the Sigma school of assassins, serves as a crucible where old identities are burned away and new ones forged.

The geographical isolation mirrors the psychological isolation necessary for transformation.

Evolving Relationships Under Pressure

But the best dark fantasy academies, like in Guild of Assassins, don’t just show individual transformation – they explore how relationships evolve under extreme pressure.

Soren and Alaric’s friendship deepens even as their training tries to pit them against each other.

The bonds between recruits like Nia, Isolde, and Ganrel form precisely because they’re all being broken down and rebuilt together.

Master-Apprentice Relationships

There’s also something compelling about the master-apprentice relationships in these stories.

Whether it’s Varus’s brutal instruction or Tamasin’s poisonous lessons, each teacher forces their students to confront uncomfortable truths about themselves.

They serve as mirrors reflecting what their students are becoming, making denial impossible.

Questioning Our Capacity for Transformation

Perhaps most importantly, dark fantasy academies force us to question our own capacity for transformation.

When we watch Soren learn to kill with the same hands that once created beauty, we’re forced to ask: what would we become if survival demanded it?

How much of our humanity would we sacrifice to gain power or ensure survival?

The Human Capacity for Survival

This is why training sequences in dark fantasy resonate so deeply.

They’re not just about learning to fight or kill – they’re about the human capacity for adaptation, for transformation, for survival at any cost.

They show us that the most dangerous changes aren’t physical, but psychological.

Embracing a Harsh Truth

In the end, maybe we’re drawn to these stories because they acknowledge a hard truth: that survival sometimes demands becoming something we never thought we could be.

Through characters like Soren, we explore our own capacity for transformation – both the empowering and the horrifying aspects.

Your Thoughts

What are your favourite dark fantasy academy stories?

How do you think they differ from traditional school settings in fantasy?

Share your thoughts below.