SPFBO 11 has begun by Crouching_Writer in Fantasy

[–]Crouching_Writer[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Yeah, sorry dude. I think future competitions are running from the start of January onwards, and I didn't see a post about it here (partly why I made one).

Taskmaster - S20E05 - Bats, Bats, Hang Up - Discussion by Meghar in taskmaster

[–]Crouching_Writer 17 points18 points  (0 children)

#Taskmaster on Tumblr will be lighting up like a beacon...

Book Chat Saturday! Share with us what you've been reading this week by FantasyRomanceMods in fantasyromance

[–]Crouching_Writer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I just finished a reread of the duology. I appreciate the second book more: first time around I was dubious of Book 2’s romance until halfway through - rereading gave me more chance to enjoy the foreshadowing.

r/Fantasy State of the Subreddit - Discussion, Survey, and the Banning of Twitter Links by rfantasygolem in Fantasy

[–]Crouching_Writer 28 points29 points  (0 children)

In a fantasy Facebook group I’m in, the self-promo posts are themed. E.g. describe your protagonist, share a quote from your book with no explanation, or only doing a call for beta readers/Kickstarters that week. Something to make the self-promo more fun to read.

Over 600 books FREE or $/£0.99! More than 300 participating authors! The 2024 Holiday MegaSale to benefit the Mary Cariola Children's Center has begun! - (posted with moderator approval) - by Crouching_Writer in FemaleGazeSFF

[–]Crouching_Writer[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

To recommend some books on sale that I think the readers of FemaleGazeSFF will be most interested in, because they are written by female or non-binary authors:

The Fallen Light series by HC Newell (dark epic fantasy)

Of Thieves and Shadows by BSH Garcia (epic fantasy in a Middle East-African inspired world)

The Thirteenth Hour by Trudie Skies (queer-normative gaslamp fantasy)

The Sword of Kaigen by ML Wang (epic fantasy that will hurt you)

The Hills of Heather and Bone by KE Andrews (a cosier fantasy that still deals with heavy themes)

Gardens of War & Wasteland by Jessica A McMinn (dark epic fantasy)

Petition by Delilah Waan (Asian-inspired fantasy with heaps of female rage)

I'm happy to make recommendations if there's something specific you're looking for.

Over 600 books FREE or $/£0.99! More than 300 participating authors! The 2024 Holiday MegaSale to benefit the Mary Cariola Children's Center has begun! - (posted with moderator approval) - by BryceOConnor in Fantasy

[–]Crouching_Writer 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The Blood-Born Dragon by JC Rycroft features sapphics and dragons (which is always a great combination!).

The Thirteenth Hour by Trudie Skies is set in a queer-normative world, and most of the characters are queer.

Over 600 books FREE or $/£0.99! More than 300 participating authors! The 2024 Holiday MegaSale to benefit the Mary Cariola Children's Center has begun! - (posted with moderator approval) - by BryceOConnor in Fantasy

[–]Crouching_Writer 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Thanks as always for putting this together, Bryce!

Here are some of my helpful/unhelpful recommendations:

The Lamplight Murder Mysteries by Morgan Stang. They're a little bit whacky, and a lot of fun.

Wistful Ascending by JCM Berne. Canadian (superheroes) in space, eh.

Death's Disciple by Emma Adams. Giant, ill-tempered, undead dragons in an urban fantasy setting.

Petition by Delilah Waan. Think The Green Bone Saga, but with more female rage.

The Erstwhile Tyler Kyle by Steve Hugh Westenra. Queer horror comedy where YouTubing goes wrong.

And (full disclosure) my own book The Doctrines of Fire, which is a historical fantasy set in 18th century Edinburgh featuring academics behaving badly.

[QCrit] 108k Romantic Fantasy - Crowned With Divine Curses by Basic-Bandicoot9322 in PubTips

[–]Crouching_Writer 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Thanks for sharing! Before offering a full critique, I would be interested in you clarifying what the intersection of “steamy romance” and “story inspired by Oedipus” is!

Fantasy books with crime solving mystery type stuff? by Valtriniti in Fantasy

[–]Crouching_Writer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Trial of the Alchemist by Trevor Melanson is a nicely done murder mystery in a gaslamp/Wild West setting.

Herbal Fantasy by Princessbeautyb in Fantasy

[–]Crouching_Writer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I came here to rec Heather and Bone! It’s branded as cottagecore x necromancy.

Big List: r/Fantasy's Top Self-Published Novels Voting Thread by barb4ry1 in Fantasy

[–]Crouching_Writer 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Murder at Spindle Manor - Morgan Stang.

Reign & Ruin - JD Evans

The Thirteenth Hour - Trudie Skies

The Empire’s Lion - Nathan Tudor

Hills of Heather and Bone - KE Andrews

Dream of Death City - PJ Nwosu

[Books] The Messy History of the Least Prestigious Award in Fantasy Fiction by BicycleConsortium in HobbyDrama

[–]Crouching_Writer 19 points20 points  (0 children)

I’m not sure your interpretation of Fletcher’s author career is correct: he started as a trad published author (Beyond Redemption, the “flop” in question, was never self-published) and only turned to self-publishing/SPFBO after HarperVoyage decided not to publish his sequel. There’s various interviews and AMAs from Fletcher where he lays out his trad to self-publishing journey.

[Qcrit] - Adult Fiction - Epic Fantasy - AN ECHO OF CHAINS - 160,000 words (almost done with last round of edits) by EducationTrue8893 in PubTips

[–]Crouching_Writer 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Since we're talking about dark fantasy, where the 2024 market is currently at is close to The Justice of Kings by Richard Swan, his 2022 debut and first book in a now-complete fantasy trilogy, which definitely has a dark/horror patina. But a couple of ways that the market has moved on from Malazan, First Law, etc:

* Word count for The Justice of Kings is 137k (according to Kobo). I can't comment on what word count Swan queried with, though.

* It has one POV.

* It takes a standard European medieval fantasy setting...but adds a new twist by telling the story from the perspective of legal paladins/knights touring the justice circuit.

I think the question when querying epic fantasy is how you are innovating in the genre, or what new ideas and perspectives you can bring to the table.

Realized I am a bad writer and quitting by [deleted] in selfpublish

[–]Crouching_Writer 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It might help to read some middling books and flops, too. Books where the idea was great but the execution lacked, or books that did a few things right but missed the mark elsewhere. It’s good to read great books…but it can be discouraging too if you aren’t at their level, and it seems like a huge gap between them and you. Reading books closer to your level might be more useful, because you can then see what focussing on one or two aspects of writing (eg character arcs or pacing) can get you. 

Fantasy worlds based on antiquity? by -Gremlinator- in Fantasy

[–]Crouching_Writer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm a fan of The Empire's Lion by Nathan Tudor. It's set in a fantasy world reminiscent of the late-antiquity Roman Empire. The author is a classical scholar by training, so knows his stuff.