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Showing posts with label Guest Post with Marshall Ryan Maresca. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guest Post with Marshall Ryan Maresca. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 26, 2019

Guest Post with Marshall Ryan Maresca - A Parliament of Bodies


Photo Credit: © Kimberley Mead

Marshall Ryan Maresca grew up in upstate New York and studied film and video production at Penn State. He now lives Austin with his wife and son. His work appeared in Norton Anthology of Hint Fiction and Rick Klaw’s anthology Rayguns Over Texas. He also has had several short plays produced and has worked as a stage actor, a theatrical director and an amateur chef. His novels The Thorn of Dentonhill and A Murder of Mages each begin their own fantasy series, both set in the port city of Maradaine. For more information, visit Marshall’s website at www.mrmaresca.com.

      
  


TEN FACTS ABOUT A PARLIAMENT OF BODIES
1. A PARLIAMENT OF BODIES is the third novel in the Maradaine Constabulary series, which follows Inspectors Satrine Rainey and Minox Welling, ex-spy and untrained mage, who previously appeared in A MURDER OF MAGES and AN IMPORT OF INTRIGUE.

2. A PARLIAMENT OF BODIES is also the ninth novel set in Maradaine, and thus it builds on the plot threads that have been laid out in all the different series, giving a richer experience for the fans who have been following all the Maradaine books, while still standing on its own as a singular story.

3. A PARLIAMENT OF BODIES crosses over explicitly with the Maradaine Elite series, with the main characters Dayne Heldrin and Jerinne Fendall playing key roles in this story, following up on their appearance in THE WAY OF THE SHIELD.

4. A PARLIAMENT OF BODIES also follows up, indirectly, on events in the upcoming SHIELD OF THE PEOPLE. While Parliament comes out first, it takes place after Shield. Despite that, reading Parliament first works very well. Especially since it was written first.

5. A PARLIAMENT OF BODIES also follows up on events from IMPOSTERS OF AVENTIL, where Minox and Satrine got involved with the Aventil constabulary and the entangled gang politics of that neighborhood.

6. A PARLIAMENT OF BODIES was originally scheduled to come out last fall, but we decided it was best to slide it to March, so WAY OF THE SHIELD come out first, setting the stage for Dayne and his involvement in the greater Maradaine story arc.

7. A PARLIAMENT OF BODIES is the first novel to feature characters introduced in all four Maradaine series.

8. A PARLIAMENT OF BODIES has twisted murders, corrupt officials, jurisdictional fights, the Prince of Maradaine and Minox’s goth, death-obsessed cousin Jillian.

9. A PARLIAMENT OF BODIES has two very different antagonists, both of which were an absolute delight to write.

10. A PARLIAMENT OF BODIES is filled with consequences, and no one is emerging from it the same. I wrote it, and it made me cry. Hopefully it’ll break your hearts as well.


The city of Maradaine is vexed by the Gearbox Murders: a series of gruesome deaths orchestrated by a twisted mechanical genius. With no motive and no pattern, Inspectors Satrine Rainey and Minox Welling—the retired spy and untrained mage—are at a loss to find a meaningful lead in the case. At least, until the killer makes his most audacious exhibit yet: over a dozen victims in a clockwork deathtrap on the floor of the Druth Parliament.

The crime scene is a madhouse, and political forces conspire to grind their investigation to a halt. The King’s Marshals claim jurisdiction of the case, corruption in the Constabulary thwarts their efforts, and a special Inquest threatens to end Minox’s career completely. Their only ally is Dayne Heldrin, a provisional member of the Tarian Order, elite warriors trained in the art of protection. But Dayne’s connection to the Gearbox Murders casts suspicion on his motives, as he might be obsessed with a phantom figure he believes is responsible.

While Satrine and Minox struggle to stop the Gearbox from claiming even more victims, the grinding gears of injustice might keep them from ever solving these murders, and threaten to dismantle their partnership forever.

Praise for the MARADAINE UNIVERSE

“Maresca’s debut is smart, fast, and engaging fantasy crime in the mold of Brent Weeks and Harry Harrison. Just perfect.” —Kat Richardson, national bestselling author of Revenant

“Veranix is Batman, if Batman were a teenager and magically talented…. Action, adventure, and magic in a school setting will appeal to those who love Harry Potter and Patrick Rothfuss’ The Name of the Wind.” ―Library Journal (starred)

“Marshall Ryan Maresca is some kind of mad genius…. Not since Terry Pratchett’s Ankh Morpork have we enjoyed exploring every angle of an invented locale quite this much.” —B&N Sci-fi & Fantasy Blog

“Another exceptional book from MRM and adds yet another layer of vibrancy and depth to the ever expanding city of Maradaine. The Holver Alley Crew will appeal to fans of Scott Lynch or Leigh Bardugo’s Six of Crows.” ―Powder & Page

“Take the caped avenger of Batman, the teenage-superhero angst of Spiderman, the street-gang bravado of West Side Story, and toss in the magic of Harry Potter, and what have you got? Marshall Ryan Maresca’s The Thorn of Dentonhill.” —Kings River Life Magazine

“Maresca brings the whole package, complete and well-constructed. If you’re looking for something fun and adventurous for your next fantasy read, look no further than The Thorn of Dentonhill, an incredible start to a new series, from an author who is clearly on his way to great things.” —Bibliosanctum

“Not many books make me want to jump inside the pages and live among the characters. The Holver Alley Crew was an addicting read.” —Night Owl Reviews (top pick)

“The Thorn of Dentonhill was a fast-paced read with action from start to finish. I loved every minute of it.” —Short and Sweet Reviews

“Definitely a fun read, and one classic fantasy fans will likely enjoy.” —Bibliotropic

You can purchase A Parliament of Bodies at the following Retailers:
        

And now, The Giveaways.
Thank you MARSHALL RYAN MARESCA for making this giveaway possible.
Winner will receive a Copy of A Parliament of Bodies 
(The Maradaine Constabulary #3) by Marshall Ryan Maresca. 
jbnpastinterviews

Thursday, March 8, 2018

Guest Post with Marshall Ryan Maresca


Photo Content from Marshall Ryan Maresca

Marshall Ryan Maresca grew up in upstate New York and studied film and video production at Penn State. He now lives Austin with his wife and son. His work appeared in Norton Anthology of Hint Fiction and Rick Klaw’s anthology Rayguns Over Texas. He also has had several short plays produced and has worked as a stage actor, a theatrical director and an amateur chef. His novels The Thorn of Dentonhill and A Murder of Mages each begin their own fantasy series, both set in the port city of Maradaine. For more information, visit Marshall’s website at www.mrmaresca.com.

      



JOURNEY TO PUBLICATION BY MARSHALL RYAN MARESCA
PART I: RAMBLING PRE-AMBLE
So, way back in 2000, I was talking a certain amount of talk about the idea of writing novels, and had a number of little snippets of stories. Fits and starts. I also had the starts of worldbuilding– more broad brushstrokes stuff than real details. A world with a handful of nations that could mostly be described with a couple of sentences. But I certainly didn’t have anything concrete that I could consider real writing work, or even anything that was properly on its way to being real something acceptably novel-like.

And then came the strange offer.

Through a friend-of-a-friend, I was brought into a project involving a fledgling gaming company. They were gearing up to release a new RPG system, and a series of rulebooks to go along with it. The game was supposed to be a sort of universal-system, usable in any fantasy setting, but they wanted there to be a “house setting” that they could present, and the worldbuilding I had done was the setting they wanted. And they wanted some tie-in novels to support the setting.

I really was not ready for this.

For one, I needed to get the worldbuilding to a level that was sufficiently organized and comprehensible to someone who wasn’t me. For another, I needed to have something that could at least be a start to these tie-in novels that they wanted.

Except, of course, part of the problem was they weren’t really sure what they wanted. I’m not in any way going to say that I was writing great stuff that they ought to have run with… but they were never able to articulate what it was they were looking for. I never even quite got a straight answer of whether they really wanted novels or something else.

What I did know is that they had 100 ISBNs. I’m not sure if anything ever came about. The project didn’t so much fall apart as peter out. I don’t even know what happened to the people behind it. Communication just stopped after a certain point, and nothing more came of it.

As part of the process of this, I ended up with the beginning of something, a beginning that was for all intents a travelogue-in-discussion. Really. While things happened, what happened was more or less a thin excuse for the main characters to be able to discuss each nation in the world in broad brushstrokes. While it was very rough, a lot of what was in this bit were the beginning seeds of what would eventually become the (deservedly trunked) Crown of Druthal.

PART II: THE WELL EARNED-TRUNK
It took quite some time, but I did eventually finish that novel. It was not good. Crown had some good bits, but it was mostly a plotless meander, a travelogue novel where events of the story were dictated by where I wanted to take the characters on their tour of the worldbuilding work I did. It was very much, “I have done all this work, and now I must show it to you.”

But as I was finishing Crown, I started to come up with the core ideas that would eventually evolve into those first books in each Maradaine series: Thorn of Dentonhill, A Murder of Mages, Holver Alley Crew and Way of the Shield. Now, these were especially rough core ideas. A sense of the characters, and what kind of stories they would be. I had now figured out that I needed an outline to break a story down before I got started with really writing it. So my next step was figuring out how to properly outline a whole novel.

Frankly, a lot of advice out there on the subject is not a big help. I’ve railed on the flaw in “three act structure” before, and will do so again, but core of it is “Act Two” is usually left to “rising action”, which tends to boil down to “more stuff happens” and it’s not particularly helpful.

So I got to work, instead of looking for advice on outlines or analysis of stories*, analyzing stories myself and figuring out how they were structured, and applying that to developing a structure for myself. I used novels, of course, but also TV series and comic books. These two were actually quite useful in thinking about how to keep hooks in an audience, how to use episodic events in service of a greater story.

And with that, I designed my Twelve-Part Outline Structure**. And from that, I was able to put together a rough draft of Thorn of Dentonhill.

So, as I approached the end of 2009, I had a “polished” 70K draft of Thorn of Dentonhill that I was querying. I had a rough draft of Holver Alley Crew. I still had a delusion that any given project I was working on, I would be able to finish “next month”. I had now gone to the ArmadilloCon Writers’ Workshop two more times, using the opening chapters of those two projects.

In 2008, the opening chapter of Thorn prompted the pro writer I worked with to tell me, “You’re really close with this.”

In 2009, the opening chapter of Holver Alley prompted an editor from Tor to tell me, “You have a lot of real talent.” Yeah, I floated on that for a while.

Queries for Thorn were getting some hits, but nothing sticking.

And I sold a short story. A REALLY short story. Specifically, to the Norton Anthology of Hint Fiction, and my story was only 21 words long. But it was a sale, in a real book that was going to be in bookstores.

And then I got an email from the man who would, eventually, become my agent. He had read Thorn, and loved it, BUT at 70K, it was too short to sell. I needed to beef it up to the 90-100K zone. You know, novel length. Something I had missed in my process.

I wonder how many agents quickly dismissed my query letter because of the word count.

So, I dove back into Thorn.

PART III: THE PATIENCE GAME
This process involves a lot of waiting. And doing more while waiting. The waiting is not a bug, it’s a feature. The slowness of the industry gives you time to work and get better.

When I rail against self-publishing, it’s not because self-publishing is, by definition, bad. It’s because most people do it out of impatience, and thus do it badly. This series has been loaded with stories of doing work that wasn’t good enough and striving to do better.

A friend from my theatre days would say, “Any problem can be solved with money or time.” Time is your friend in this business. Use it.

This is all my way of saying that my re-write of Thorn didn’t immediately lead to my agent signing me on. It took him a while to get back to it, and he waived his claim to exclusivity in the process. I explored other agents, had a few other full-requests, and walked pretty far down the road with one before she passed.

I even went to a conference to pitch to agents. This was a great experience, which I recommend if you can swing it, and here’s why: just about everyone attending is in the same place as you. At a lot of genre conventions, you’ve got fans who are there to be fans, and pros who are there to promote… and there’s not a lot for the aspiring writer. Pitch conferences are for the aspiring writer, so you find a lot of camaraderie.

In fact– at this point I was querying both Thorn and Holver Alley, and had finished a draft of Murder of Mages. Like I said, use the time, keep working. My scheduled pitch was for Sunday morning, and after some vacillating I had decided to pitch Thorn. Saturday at around 5pm, I checked my email and saw I had received a form-letter rejection to my query for Holver Alley.

From the very agent I was pitching to the next morning.

Needless to say, I was a mess. And this is where the camaraderie comes into play. One of the volunteers, who was also pitching her own project, spotted me and immediately realized Something Is Very Wrong. She more or less dragged me over to her table, pried the problem out of me, and then proceeded to shove me in a secluded corner with another agent.

Now, neither said corner shoving nor the following morning’s perfectly fine scheduled pitch resulted in me getting signed– that happened a couple months later with Mike, so it all worked out well in the end– but in that moment, it was exactly what I needed.

And, hey, two months later I had an agent. So that meant I had made it, right?

Yeah… still a ways to go. Thorn and Murder didn’t sell for over two years.

PART IV: AND THE CRAZY PLAN
So, I had drafted Thorn of Dentonhill, A Murder of Mages, The Holver Alley Crew and The Way of the Shield. In essence, four “Book Ones” that were able to just be their own books, but also able to launch series, if they sold and that’s what the publisher wanted. Excellent. And they were all set in the same city, so I was able to use all that worldbuilding work together. But, of course, my brain started working on what those series would each look like— rough outlines and long plans.

And then it hit me: a beautiful, absurd, absolutely mad Long Plan where all four series both do their own thing while working together as a greater sequence. To the best of my knowledge, no one had ever tried such a thing. I wrote out these notes and sent them to a dear old friend.

“The only way you could do this,” he said, “Is if you got the right publisher. Someone who would actually let you pull this crazy plan off.”

I got the call from DAW Books in December of 2013. And friends: they were The Right Publisher. Sheila Gilbert, my editor, seems to understand exactly what I’m trying to do and works with me to make it the best that I can make it. And that meant giving each series its own feel, its own vibe. It’s own voice.

And now we’re on Lady Henterman’s Wardrobe, which is the seventh book in the entire Maradaine sequence, but only the second Streets of Maradaine novel. And this is where some of the elements of the Big Crazy Plan really start to kick in. Some of those bits will be subtle, and some will be sledgehammers.

But it’ll be a heck of a ride.


Mixing high fantasy and urban fantasy, the second novel of the Streets of Maradaine series follows the Rynax brothers' crew of outlaws as they attempt their biggest heist yet and restore justice to the common people.

The neighborhood of North Seleth has suffered--and not just the Holver Alley Fire. Poverty and marginalization are forcing people out of the neighborhood, and violence on the streets is getting worse. Only the Rynax brothers--Asti and Verci--and their Holver Alley Crew are fighting for the common people. They've taken care of the people who actually burned down Holver Alley, but they're still looking for the moneyed interests behind the fire.

The trail of breadcrumbs leads the crew to Lord Henterman, and they plan to infiltrate the noble's house on the other side of the city. While the crew tries to penetrate the heart of the house, the worst elements of North Seleth seem to be uniting under a mysterious new leader. With the crew's attention divided, Asti discovers that the secrets behind the fire, including ones from his past, might be found in Lady Henterman's wardrobe.

Praise for LADY HENTERMAN’S WARDROBE

"Marshall Ryan Maresca is some kind of mad genius…. Not since Terry Pratchett’s Ankh Morpork have we enjoyed exploring every angle of an invented locale quite this much." —B&N Sci-fi & Fantasy Blog

“Veranix is Batman, if Batman were a teenager and magically talented... Action, adventure, and magic in a school setting will appeal to those who love Harry Potter and Patrick Rothfuss' The Name of the Wind.” ―Library Journal (starred)
You can purchase Lady Henterman's Wardrobe at the following Retailers:
        

And now, The Giveaways.
Thank you MARSHALL RYAN MARESCA for making this giveaway possible.
1 Winner will receive a Copy of Lady Henterman’s Wardrobe 
(The Streets of Maradaine #2) by Marshall Ryan Maresca.
jbnpastinterviews

Tuesday, March 7, 2017

Guest Post with Marshall Ryan Maresca - The Holver Alley Crew


Photo Credit: © Kimberley Mead

Marshall Ryan Maresca grew up in upstate New York and studied film and video production at Penn State. He now lives Austin with his wife and son. His work appeared in Norton Anthology of Hint Fiction and Rick Klaw’s anthology Rayguns Over Texas. He also has had several short plays produced and has worked as a stage actor, a theatrical director and an amateur chef. His novels The Thorn of Dentonhill and A Murder of Mages each begin their own fantasy series, both set in the port city of Maradaine. For more information, visit Marshall’s website at www.mrmaresca.com.

      



Series: Streets of Maradaine (Book 1)
Publisher: DAW (March 7, 2017)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0756412609
ISBN-13: 978-0756412609

Praise for THE MARADAINE UNIVERSE

“Maresca’s debut is smart, fast, and engaging fantasy crime in the mold of Brent Weeks and Harry Harrison. Just perfect.” —Kat Richardson, National Bestselling Author of Revenant

“Veranix is Batman, if Batman were a teenager and magically talented…. Action, adventure, and magic in a school setting will appeal to those who love Harry Potter and Patrick Rothfuss’ The Name of the Wind.” ―Library Journal

“A well-conceived and well-written melange of popular fantasy sub-genres: there’s a university with a magic department, there is some vigilante derring-do and thievery…. If you’re looking for an action-and-adventure-filled new fantasy series, then The Thorn of Dentonhill will suit very well.” —Civilian Reader

“The Thorn of Dentonhill is a light-hearted, fun read, and Maresca has introduced a hero with plenty of room to grow, a couple of villains who will provide plenty of conflict in upcoming books. And, most importantly, he’s created a character that I care enough about to continue reading.” —Relentless Reading

“Take the caped avenger of Batman, the teenage-superhero angst of Spiderman, the street-gang bravado of West Side Story, and toss in the magic of Harry Potter, and what have you got? Marshall Ryan Maresca’s The Thorn of Dentonhill.” —Kings River Life Magazine


A FEW WEEKS AGO I WAS ASKED THE QUESTION, "WHY DO YOU WRITE STEAMPUNK?"
This was kind of a surprise to me, because I never would have thought I wrote steampunk. And I said as such.

However, will acknowledge that what I write is fantasy which has been influenced by steampunk, in that I’m bringing in technology beyond what is typically found in “traditional” fantasy, but not quite bringing it to steampunk levels.

“Gearpunk” or “Clockpunk”, if you will.

A society that will be a secondary-world steampunk civilization in about fifty years.

Part of doing that involves bringing in technology that is, shall we say, plausibly impossible. It’s fantasy, so the writer is given some leeway, but as long as you devise a device that seems like it could be made, then fact that it doesn’t really exist (or would work if it did) doesn’t matter as much.

For the Maradaine (Thorn) and the Maradaine Constabulary books, this was mostly background worldbuilding. There were hints of it with, say Jiarna’s magic-tracking equipment in The Alchemy of Chaos or the multiple lenses on Leppin’s skullcap in A Murder of Mages, but for the most part, it didn’t draw attention to itself.

But in The Holver Alley Crew, it gets brought to the forefront. Verci Rynax is a gadget builder. In addition to making, say, specialty crossbows for the team’s sharpshooter, or helping design a new kind of getaway carriage, he makes all sorts of gadgets to help with the heists and other gigs throughout the story.

And here the trick was making the gadgets feel plausible and functional, without making them essentially arcane magic. What can he do with gears and pulleys and clamps and clockwork?

More to the point: what was possible in this world with that?

There’s a sequence in the second chapter where Asti and Verci get caught in a trap, and I had to put a lot of thought into the plausibility of the trap, the mechanics of it, because I not only needed Verci to disarm it, but I had to understand how he was going to disarm it.

With only a belt buckle.

Now, I acknowledge that some of the Gearpunk technology is pretty much just as fantastic as the magic. But isn’t that half the fun?

Mixing high fantasy and urban fantasy, The Holver Alley Crew is the first novel of Maresca’s third interconnected series set in the fantasy city of Maradaine-- The Streets of Maradaine

The Rynax brothers had gone legit after Asti Rynax's service in Druth Intelligence had shattered his nerves, and marriage and fatherhood convinced Verci Rynax to leave his life of thievery. They settled back in their old neighborhood in West Maradaine and bought themselves a shop, eager for a simple, honest life. Then the Holver Alley Fire incinerated their plans. With no home, no shop, and no honest income—and saddled with a looming debt—they fall back on their old skills and old friends.

With a crew of other fire victims, Asti and Verci plan a simple carriage heist, but the job spirals out of control as they learn that the fire was no accident. Lives in Holver Alley were destroyed out of a sadistic scheme to buy the land. Smoldering for revenge, burdened with Asti's crumbling sanity, the brothers lead their crew of amateurs and washouts to take down those responsible for the fire, no matter the cost.


THE HOLVER ALLEY CREW BY MARSHALL RYAN MARESCA EXCERPT
“Then you carry him!”

“I’ll be helping you, love,” Verci said. He threw a few more things into the pack. Smoke was filling the room. “No time to argue.”

Asti went out the window. There was a slight ledge, only a few inches, just enough for him to stand on. Above him there was only smoke and darkness; he knew both moons were roughly half full, but he couldn’t see them. The street below was chaotic, people shouting and pointing, running around in their nightclothes while the fire crackled all around. Directly below him was the canvas awning of Green- field’s locksmith shop, stretched wide and tight.

“Awning, slide, street?” Asti called to Verci. “Right,” Verci said. “Move.”

“Hold on, little man,” Asti said, rubbing the head of the baby. For his part, he was quiet, his big blue eyes staring up at Asti.

Asti sat down on the ledge, his feet a short drop from the top of the awning. Keeping one hand on the ledge, he dropped off, using his arm to keep his full weight from hit- ting the awning. Once his body was on the canvas, he let go, sliding down over the lip of it. A second later his boots hit the dirt. He stumbled forward, almost needing to fall into a roll, but he clutched at the baby and lurched backward, keeping his balance. Several people on the street cried and cheered.

Up on the ledge Raych cried, “I’m going to break my neck if I do that.”

“No, you won’t,” Verci said.

Asti looked back at the building. The whole place was on fire, smoke pouring out the windows. Verci lowered his wife onto the awning. Her eyes were locked on Asti, focused on the bundle strapped to his chest. Asti looked at the baby again, who was gurgling and smiling.

“He’s fine, Raych. Come on.” Asti held out a hand, though he knew it was a meaningless gesture. Verci stretched out, easing Raych down the awning until she was as far as he could get her without stepping on the awning himself.

“Ready?” Verci called.

You can purchase The Holver Alley Crew at the following Retailers:
        

And now, The Giveaways.
Thank you MARSHALL RYAN MARESCA for making this giveaway possible.
Winner will receive a Copy of The Holver Alley Crew by Marshall Ryan Maresca.
jbnpastinterviews