by Guest Blogger Doug Gibson
First appearing in his blog Plan9Crunch
Doug Gibson is a colleague of mine who has written published stories, is a retired editor of a city newspaper, and maintains his blog Plan9Crunch. His blog focuses on discussions of books and classic films, particularly classic B-movies of the horror genre. Obviously he adapted its name from the Ed Wood film Plan 9 From Outer Space. He recently read my newly released novel Celeste & the White Dragon and reviewed it, then interviewed me about the novel. By his permission, I reproduce his blog entry here for your enjoyment. The images have been added by me.
I recently had the pleasure of reading the fantasy novel, Celeste & the White Dragon, (Worldsmith Stories, 2019) from author D. Michael Martindale. He’s a talented writer who is the author of the novel, Brother Brigham, which I reviewed on a blog (here). Celeste & the White Dragon is the first novel in a series that will encompass several volumes. It involves a search for a young princess, sought after for the powerful, magical energies she possesses. She’s being protected as well as she can by those who love her and want to protect her from others willing to kill her to appropriate her powers.
Village witches, powerful sorceresses, warriors with magical skills from other lands, wizards, kings, soldiers, magical divine pilgrims, humans fated to turn into beasts…all are determined to either preserve or possess the ancient magic that lives within the princess. Various motives, including love and power, motivate them.
I found Martindale’s writing exciting and compelling. He created a world of nations, customs, and peoples that blends magic with the gods of the lands. It’s an exciting read, carefully constructed with sequences and twists to sustain a series. I’m looking forward to the second book of the series.
— Doug Gibson
After reading Celeste & the White Dragon, I asked Martindale if I could interview him about the series. He was kind enough to consent. You can also purchase Celeste and the White Dragon here. In the interview we discuss characters and events that readers will discover in the novel.
Plan9Crunch: I’m fascinated by the evil of Gwendolyn, her cruelty mixed with her regret and silent prayers at times for those she hunts. Do you find analogies, historical or literary, for her character? Did any inspire your creation of her?
Martindale: In the first version from over a decade ago, she was closer to a stock villain. I gave her an understandable motive, but still made her basically evil.
Since then I’ve matured literarily and find such villains boring. The high school bully who simply exists without motive, the sinister government shadow organization that always seems to end up being behind terrible things that happen, like in the Dustin Hoffman film Outbreak (usually represented by Morgan Freeman who gets a twinge of conscience in the end), or even most recently the Sci-Fi Channel adaptation of Ursula K. LeGuin’s A Wizard of Earthsea called Earthsea that I’m in the middle of watching right now, where the bad guy is a military ruler that just wants to conquer the islands of Earthsea for no particular reason. Karate Kid is another example of stock villains who are there just to drive the plot.
You might call these anti-inspirations that informed me of what I did not want Gwendolyn to be. I find stories where everyone is trying to do good as they perceive it, but coming into conflict with each other, to be vastly more fascinating than the typical stock heroes and villains. (My apologies to Tolkien.)
The first time I remember seeing an antagonist like that was in the coming-of-age film Lucas where the villain was a school bully, except that he was a nuanced bully who in the end came to admire and applaud Lucas for his courage.
The greatest inspiration for Gwendolyn was recognizing that I had created such a stock villain and I wanted her to be more complex than that. In her eyes, she was the hero of her story. And that’s just plain good characterization.
Plan9Crunch: The energy supply of Kasimir’s magic, jewels embedded in the body, was very interesting. Did you find similar instances in research, or is this a plot development you have blazed?
Martindale: It wouldn’t surprise me if someone else had come up with the idea that I’m not aware of, since it seems there’s nothing new under the sun, but I came up with that one all on my own. Having gems or blood involved somehow with magic is nothing new. But the mechanism of attaching them to one’s skin so blood will leak out when removed so the blood can activate the magic is entirely my concoction. I wanted something different about my wizards so they’d stand out and not seem cliche, and that’s what I dreamed up. Basing them on Arabian wizards more than European ones was also a part of that.
Plan9Crunch: Are there parallels between the massive, long searches for Celeste, where opposing sides search for her, in other literature or history?
Martindale: Other than Sleeping Beauty? Compared to George R.R. Martin’s series that he based significantly on British history, I didn’t do a lot of historical analogies in Celeste. I did borrow heavily from European culture and geography simply to make a rich and complex world easier to fashion instead of creating one whole cloth.
The story, not so much. It’s a story I came up with on my own, no doubt influenced consciously and subconsciously by all sorts of influences in my life. I mixed together multiple legends and myths and created my own unique mythology from them that I hope appears seamlessly integrated, and will continue to do so in future volumes.
Plan9Crunch: What fantasy authors or filmmakers inspired you? I know you are more impressed by the film versions of Game of Thrones than the books.
Martindale: Tolkien, obviously. It’s nearly impossible to write fantasy without being derivative of Tolkien to some extent, since he practically invented the modern fantasy genre.
Another was Jack Vance from his book The Dying Earth, a fantasy with a magic system that I loosely borrowed some elements from for mine. Dungeons and Dragons was an important influence, with its explanation that the power of spells comes from the breath the spellcaster speaks them with and the words on magical scrolls. It’s where I came up with the idea of breath spells vs. spells cast with materials that are burned and crushed.
Which means I guess I can count Albert Einstein as an influence too, since the power to cast magic comes from converting matter to energy, except the equation E=MC2 probably isn’t quantitatively accurate in Celeste’s universe, because that produces a crapload more energy than the witches of Cueldea produce with their magic.
Game of Thrones actually had very little impact on the story, since I dreamed up the story before I ever heard of it or George R.R. Martin. It’s impact was entirely to force me to overhaul the first version of Celeste and come up with something better that wouldn’t be laughed at when compared to Game of Thrones.
Plan9Crunch: The relationship between Edward and Celeste is—without context–conventionally appalling. Do you think readers can deal with it as an essential plot point without being squeamish? (Don’t give away anything. Just try to speak generally, if possible).
Martindale: It’s the same issue I dealt with when writing my first published novel Brother Brigham. That was directed at a Mormon audience, so it took less to cause squeamishness. I wrote nothing in that book that I thought was questionable. It’s not like I celebrated the squeamish parts or endorsed them. They just happened, as such things do in the human experience.
Even more so for Celeste. I always know when I include edgier content that it will scandalize certain readers. But I never include gratuitous content. It’s always a part of the story, and I refuse to shy away from any aspect of the human condition because it might cause squeamishness. That would be dishonest storytelling. Coming from a Mormon background, I’m keenly aware of the pressure to write “appropriately,” and I categorically reject that mentality as dishonest. Scandalous and terrible things happen in real life, and I won’t ignore them in my stories.
When someone asks, “Why did you have to include that in your story?” my response is, “Why should I leave it out?”
For those who become squeamish, I can only say, I’m sorry you felt that way, but I’m not sorry I wrote it. I’ve already had such reactions from a reader or two of Celeste over certain content, but I can’t change it for their sake because that would diminish the story and be unfair to the characters. It’s what they would do in that situation, and I’m not going to cheat on that character just to appease a reader who’s uncomfortable.
I’m hardly the only edgy writer out there. Much worse things have been written. After all, Lolita is considered a classic.
But what I hope my readers will recognize is that, while a particular scene may be uncomfortable to them, in the context, the characters are doing nothing wrong according to their culture and their knowledge at the time. The issue is not whether the unsettling things happened, but what the attitude of the story is to them, and my book certainly never condones questionable behavior. There are always repercussions.
Some readers won’t be able to deal with it, but many will. After watching HBO’s Game of Thrones, I’ve been encouraged by the fact that all sorts of terrible and squeamish things happen there, yet it’s a massively popular series. With my book, they don’t even have to see the television images of the scenes. It’s just words in a book.
Plan9Crunch: As you note in the afterward, this was a long writing process. What advice do you give to writers of the genre who know their first drafts are not good enough?
Martindale: I could write a book on this subject. The very first thing is to recognize that writing is an art and a craft, as much as painting or dance or acting. It’s a rare individual who can just pick up a pen and write something great, like Mozart apparently could do. Learn your craft! Pay your dues! That means read, read, read in the genre you want to write, and write, write, write, knowing your first million words will be crap.
The second thing is to recognize that your first draft will always not be good enough.
Your first draft is purely to vomit the work onto the page. You must gag the editor in your head, because that first draft is when your creativity runs free. Once completed, you never show it to anyone. You reread it first, so you can fix the huge gaffes and incomprehensible sentences and ridiculous spelling and grammatical errors that you’re horrified to find crept into it and are thankful no one else ever saw. The first draft anyone in the world sees is really my second draft.
Plan9Crunch: I can’t wait for the prequel. Will we learn more about the Blood King and the lands he has conquered?
Martindale: I have six more books planned. Two trilogies, and a seventh book that ties them together.
The first trilogy is Celeste, its prequel, and its sequel. I already have titles for them (subject to change): Seven Sisters and Rogue Sorceress.
Seven Sisters tells the origin stories of the primary characters in Cueldea. Rogue Sorceress tells the story of what happens up until the conflict with the Blood King will begin.
The other trilogy is about the Blood King and his sorceress wife, who they are and where they came from. That one will have a definite historical counterpart.
The final book will be the climax for the whole series.
Plan9Crunch: Anything else? Please add. Thanks D. Michael. You are a great storyteller.
Martindale: Thanks. I’ve worked hard to try to become so.
In the overhaul that resulted in the current version, I created two significant characters that weren’t there before. Both of them were spur-of-the-moment creations.
The first was Faisal, Kasimir’s brother. When I added new chapters to tell the backstory of Kasimir, who in the first version never appeared until he was on his quest, in that moment—in the first sentence—I invented his brother, who then became his companion throughout the book.
The other character was Ilsa, who appeared briefly and namelessly in one scene in the first version, then disappeared completely. When I reached that scene in the overhaul, I decided new developments required that I reverse what happened to her, and that motivated me to make her a part of the story from that time forward.
Both additions added tremendously to the story. Faisal was Kasimir’s sidekick that he could share his thoughts with, even have disagreements with, from time to time. Together they made it possible to put their culture on display to a greater degree than I had before.
Telling certain chapters from Ilsa’s point of view completely energized those chapters, as exposition that was fairly mundane became more interesting through her inexperienced eyes, like watching a child discover the wonders of the world. Then to have her become a deciding factor in certain critical moments in the plot added so much.
Part of the serendipitous rewards of rewriting and being willing to consider alternatives one hadn’t thought of before. Such moments can transform your story.
UPDATE: I’ve revised the books in the series. There are six volumes now. The prequel was split into two books, and the separate trilogy about the Blood King has been combined into one book.
The titles and orders of the books are:
- Celeste & the White Dragon
- Onotrian Empire
- Seven Sisters
- Rogue Sorceress
- Blood Queen
- Dragons of Cueldea
These are still subject to change as I develop each book.