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	<title>David Drake &#187; Queen of Demons</title>
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	<description>Science Fiction &#38; Fantasy Writer</description>
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		<title>Queen of Demons</title>
		<link>http://david-drake.com/2002/queen-of-demons/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 19 Feb 2002 01:01:17 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Queen of Demons]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Donato]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fantasy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hieronymous Bosch]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jennie Faries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Series]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tor]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.karen-zimmerman.com/?p=159</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[QUEEN OF DEMONS, my second Isles fantasy, uses the structure of Lord of the Isles, so it was simpler to write than if I&#8217;d had to construct an entire world. Nonetheless there was the challenge of how much of the first book to recapitulate in the new one. In the event I repeated very little. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_920" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 166px"><img class="size-full wp-image-920" title="Queen of Demons" src="http://david-drake.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2002/02/queen.jpg" alt="Queen of Demons" width="156" height="254" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Cover art: Donato</p></div>
<p>QUEEN OF DEMONS, my second Isles fantasy, uses the structure of <em>Lord of the Isles</em>, so it was simpler to write than if I&#8217;d had to construct an entire world. Nonetheless there was the challenge of how much of the first book to recapitulate in the new one. In the event I repeated very little.</p>
<p>With the exception of <em>Standing Down </em>(written to close the first Hammer collection) every one of my novels and stories has a beginning, a middle, and an end. That means basically that I have to reintroduce continuing characters at the opening of each book, but I don&#8217;t give any more of their backgrounds than readers need to know to understand the current plot. <span id="more-159"></span></p>
<p>This isn&#8217;t a new situation for me: I&#8217;ve been writing stories in series since 1971, starting with the Vettius-Dama fantasies and in 1973 the first of the Hammer&#8217;s Slammers series which is still humming along today. (For what it&#8217;s worth, I didn&#8217;t expect <em>Black Iron </em>or <em>The Butcher&#8217;s Bill </em>to start series when I wrote them. That just happened.) Because the Isles series is deliberately open-ended&#8211;that is, I started with the intention of writing in the series for as long as the market wanted more books and I wanted to write them&#8211;it was doubly important that each installment be self-standing.</p>
<p><em>Queen of Demons </em>, like the other books in the series, is told from four interwoven viewpoints. I&#8217;m just not the guy to write a 200,000 word novel&#8211;but I can write four 50K novels and draw them very tightly together at the climax.</p>
<p>I didn&#8217;t want <em>more </em>than four viewpoint characters, however. Steve Stirling and Eric Flint are both very skilled writers, but they consistently take about twice as many words as I would when they develop one of my plots. There are various reasons for the difference, but I believe the most important one is their tendency to use more viewpoint characters than I would.</p>
<p><em>Queen </em>draws plot elements are from varied sources&#8211;I have eclectic tastes and will steal ideas from almost anybody. The outline of the Beast whom King Valence III serves came from the <em>Shah Nama </em>. The germ of the inhuman body in the wine cask was from <em>Trader Horn </em>, of all things. (The book, that is, not the mediocre movie. Oddly enough it actually does repay reading; though I might have said the same thing about <em>Finnegan&#8217;s Wake </em>if I&#8217;d devoted as much effort to Joyce as I did Horn/Lewis.)</p>
<p>The intelligent ape Zahag (a chimp, not a gorilla) had been bubbling in the back of my mind ever since I read the Greek story (maybe ascribed to Aesop?) of a fellow who taught apes to dance: all went well till somebody tossed nuts onto the dance floor. Intelligence and culture aren&#8217;t the same thing, and a beast remains a beast however intelligent it may be.</p>
<p>And the scale-hunter Hanno was based on Mountain Men like Liver-Eating Johnson, though Hanno is a <em>very </em>cleaned-up version of the real thing. Remember the point I made above? I could amplify it by saying that a beast remains a beast even if it happened to have been born in Boston before moving to the Rockies to hunt scalps.</p>
<p>I frequently use the paintings of Hieronymous Bosch (and occasionally those of the elder Breughel) either directly as settings or indirectly for what they kick off in my mind while I look at them. I did some of both while I was plotting and developing <em>Queen.</em></p>
<p>As a general rule, I plot books scene by scene. That is, what you read is arranged in the order I composed the plot. With <em>Queen </em>I decided to vary my technique. I created the plot by following each of the four characters for the requisite number of scenes, then braiding them together.</p>
<p>I won&#8217;t say the technique didn&#8217;t work&#8211;I mean, there&#8217;s a book, after all&#8211;but it resulted in a lot of waste effort. I wound up reassigning business between characters&#8211;from Sharina to Ilna in particular&#8211;and I still had a lot of great ideas left over. (Waste not, want not: business intended for <em>Queen </em>wound up in <em>Servant of the Dragon </em>and <em>Goddess of the Ice Realm </em>. Very possibly it&#8217;d been improved by fermenting longer in the back of my brain.)</p>
<p>Oh&#8211;one more thing before I close: my friend Jennie Faries read the novel in mss. She phoned one afternoon and said, &#8220;Killer penguins?&#8221; No, no, no: those are giant versions of the Creataceous swimming bird <em>Hesperornis </em>&#8230; which, okay, you could think of as a penguin with teeth.</p>
<p>I learned a lot in the process of writing <em>Queen </em>; and I had an enormous amount of fun. I decided I was beginning to get the hang of writing Big Fat Fantasies&#8230; and that was a particularly good thing, because I intended to write a lot more of them.</p>
<p><em>&#8211;Dave Drake</em></p>
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