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Monday 9 November 2020

AUTHOR INTERVIEW with MATTHEW WARD| The Legacy of Steel Blog Tour


Hi guys! I'm very excited about today's post because it is my blog tour stop in The Legacy of Steel blog tour! If you're following my Bookstagram, which I hope you are, you might know that I absolutely LOVE Legacy of Ash and I've been raving about it since I read it in May. But what's more, I've been saying over and over again how much I'm excited about the release of Legacy of Steel, which is already out by the way, and here I am, a tour host!

If you haven't read Legacy of Ash, please do so because it is a great book! Here's my REVIEW of it.

I'm so so grateful to the author Matthew Ward, who invited me to be a host. He was kind enough to do this interview with me and I'm excited for you to read it, so without any further ado let's get right into it!

(This interview is spoiler FREE.)

What is your writing routine? 

 

I’m very much a ‘start early and work through’ person. If I don’t get underway by about half eight in the morning, the day very quickly turns to dust.

 

How long I’m writing? That depends. If I’m in the drafting stage, I normally aim to get a chapter done each day, which means that the days can sometimes run long if I’m struggling with a particular scene or even a recalcitrant sentence. If I can’t get a chapter done in a day, it’s normally a sign that I’m trying to do too much in too few words … and I need to get better at spotting that earlier.

 

As far as the broader task goes? I normally write one draft, front to back, then go back and do two edits. The first is dropping in details I think the story needs, but I didn’t include the first time, and the second is pruning for length. Books the size of Legacy have to keep a fair pace going, and however efficiently I think I’m writing, there’s always more I can smooth away to keep the story moving.

 

What comes to you first, the plot or the characters?

 

Bit of both, because the plot is the characters. Or the main characters, anyway.

 

In the case of The Legacy Trilogy, the relationship between Viktor and Josiri is more important than the actual events – what happens, happens to shape that relationship, rather than the other way around … at least for the most part.

 

Other characters join the cast as part of the writing process, either to provide perspective, drive the plot ... or because I have something (or someone) fun I’d like to include. The best characters are often the ones introduced this way.


 

How do you handle writer's block? 

 

I suspect what we term ‘writer’s block’ is a bit different for everyone. I certainly don’t run out of ideas, which is one of the common symptoms I see listed.

 

As I mentioned earlier, my frustrations tend to arise out of chapter simply not refusing to die, and needing another scene, and another. And most times it’s because what I thought was a chapter is actually two or three chapters, and I need to reappraise the structure a bit.

 

When the obvious has finally dawned, I’ll either push on through and finish the chapter according to its new place and format in the grand scheme, or I’ll stop for the day and come back fresh the following morning, or later in the week. Sometimes stepping away is the right thing to do. Gives the brain a chance to do a little unconscious processing.

 

What is your favourite and least favourite part of the writing and publishing process? 

 

I actually really like editing – the odd nudge and tweak that really makes the story and characters shine. In truth, I don’t do much heavy editing for structure, so it’s all about polishing events and dropping in cool bits of foreshadowing. I’ve eaten my greens during the drafting process, so now it’s time to have fun with dessert.

 

On the other side of the coin, I hate the opening sentences in new chapters. Always overthink them, writing them a dozen times and ultimately end up throwing most of what I’ve written away.

 

What piece of advice would you give to an aspiring author? 

 

Keep writing!

 

It’s really dull advice, but it’s the best there is. For all but the very luckiest or best connected, it’s a long road to publication. You need to stay the course and hone your craft so that when luck does break your way, you’re ready for the opportunity.

 

I suppose the other piece of advice is to figure out as early as you can what style of writing (and what writing process) works for you. Everyone’s different, and while there are plenty of folk on the internet determined to give you the do’s and don’ts of writing, in the end, what works for you is what works. There’s so much bad advice out there, and it can really kill your confidence if you let it.

 

Of course, this is also advice, so I’ll leave it up to you to decide whether it’s good or bad.



You have said before that you have drawn inspiration from Slavic folklore, what is your favourite thing about it? 

 

I love the gothic feel to it – unsurprising, as so much of classic gothic fiction is rooted in Slavic folklore. It’s that sense that there’s something strange lurking beneath the forest’s edge, or in the river weeds or in that one, isolated cottage where no one goes.

 

It breathes wonder into the world, and the world can always use a little more of that … just like Slavic folklore could use being acknowledged for it’s far-reaching influence more often than it is. Without it, there are no vampires or werewolves and precious few witches.

 

I also love (or perhaps that’s not the right word, considering) the duality present in a lot of Slavic folklore – that transition point in history when benevolent spirits were recast as demons and tempters as Christianity spread deeper into Eastern Europe and evicted older deities and traditions. Mythology reflecting history. There’s a lesson there.

 

How did you come up with the trilogy? What inspired it?

 

The core story has been lurking in the back of my head for twenty-plus years now, though what precisely inspired it, I couldn’t say. I can point at odd bits and pieces along the way – I know where particular elements drew their inspiration, but the foundation of the story’s a lot harder to define.

 

I know that feels like a cop-out answer, but it’s the truth. Or maybe I should lean back into what I said before? That the story began with Josiri and Viktor, just as it will likely end with them too.

 

What should we expect from Legacy of Steel?

 

Short version? Legacy of Ash with the dials turned up. The challenges are greater, the consequences steeper. Old alliances are tested in new ways, and the stakes are much, much higher.

 

But at the heart of it all, it’s still the characters we know and love (or hate). For all that this is a sweeping narrative of vying nations and meddling gods, the core is always about men and women finding their place in the world, and attempting to make that world a better place.

 


How much did Legacy of Ash and Legacy of Steel change after their first drafts? 

 

Legacy of Ash went through the largest change – roughly 50,000 words worth, as a matter of fact. Sort of as a trial by fire of ‘tighter and pacier is better’. It’s easy to say now, but nothing of value was lost – it was all trimming back slightly waffly or overly-wordy language.

 

By comparison, Legacy of Steel lost maybe 20,000 words during editing but as with Ash, the book is fundamentally the same one I drafted. A little clearer in places, and a lot tighter, but still the same story. If anything, there’s more whimsy in Legacy of Steel, and I’m really glad to have been able to keep it.

 

What was your favourite scene to write in Legacy of Steel?

 

Oh, that’s a hard one. There are a couple of moments where you can feel the bombastic music swelling and the tide turning … those are always great. But there are a couple of chapters towards the end that takes place in very different settings to the ones we’ve seen before. I can’t really give any more details because, well … spoilers, but you’ll know them when you see them.

 

What was the hardest scene to write in Legacy of Steel?

 

Being a horribly repressed Englishman, I get really, really nervous about writing romantic relationships … which is why there aren’t so many of those in my books. Even so, Legacy of Steel turns on four such relationships, and doing them justice takes a lot of work.

 

It’s much, much easier to kill people. (In a literary sense, of course.)

 


Which is your favourite character? If you don’t have one, which character did you enjoy writing about the most?

 

I love Anastacia and Kurkas, both of whom have way more of my sense of humour than is entirely healthy. They also get to do as they please for most of the plot – it’s the benefit of being side characters, I suppose. Rest assured, we spend a lot more time with both than with did in Legacy of Ash.

 

If you had to describe each of your main characters in 3 words, what would those words be? 

 

Determined, unswerving, conflicted (Viktor).

Generous, defiant, frustrated (Josiri).

Arrogant, honourable, resentful (Melanna).

Angry, angry, more angry (Rosa).

 

I have noticed that in recent years military-focused and faster-paced fantasy novels have become quite big and books like The Legacy Trilogy which have a more traditional vibe to them have become a bit of a rarity. Would you say that this new trend caused any setbacks for the publishing of Legacy of Ash?

 

Honestly, I’ve no way to know … but if it’s as you say, then it’s probably done me a favour because everything old is new again! I’m not often ‘cutting edge’. I should probably try to enjoy it more.

 

Could you describe Legacy of Steel in five words?

 

War calls. The gods wake.

 

What can we expect from Legacy of Light?

 

Well, by now I’m sure you’re not expecting everything to end well for everyone at the close of Legacy of Steel. If anything, there’s a steeper mountain to climb than at the end of Legacy of Ash … but we can discuss that more nearer the time.

 

Thank you so much, Matthew, for doing this interview with me. I'm always curious about the different writing routines of authors and the way their ideas form. I was also especially excited about The Legacy trilogy after I realised that there are some Slavic elements in it. I was actually so excited about this interview that, in typical Nerd Alert fashion, jumped right to the point, no 'Hellos' or 'Byes'.

If you haven't checked out Legacy of Ash already, please do so because it's a great book and definitely go check out the sequel Legacy of Steel which I'm currently reading and loving!

Make sure to check out the other posts from The Legacy of Steel Blog Tour:

FANFIADDICT - Book review + Chapter reading
FANTASY BOOK NERD - Interview with Matthew Ward
THE FANTASY INN - Guest blog post by the author
OUT OF THIS WORLD SFF REVIEWS - Interview with Matthew Ward and a GIVEAWAY (2 winners to be chosen on Nov. 13th)
THE FANTASY HIVE - Interview with the author
GRIMDARK MAGAZINE- Exclusive: The Prologue of Legacy of Steel

Next stops:

RUN ALONG THE SHELVES - Nov. 11th 
TRACK OF WORDS - Nov. 12th
STARBURST MAGAZINE - Nov. 14th

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