Carolyn Kephart – The Ryel Saga: A Tale of Love and Magic

Title: The Ryel Saga: A Tale of Love and Magic

Author: Carolyn Kephart

ISBN: Amazon ASIN: B00359FD28 (digital text)

Page count: ~500 pages (250,000 words)

Genre: Fantasy

Price: $0.99 (Kindle Store & Smashwords.com)

Author Bio:

Early life as a military brat gave me a deep appreciation of nomadic lifestyles, a combined wariness of and respect for authority, and close-up insights into the warrior mentality and its manifestations, all of which influence my work to a very discernible degree. Later years in academia and abroad furthered my ongoing study of human nature at its best and worst. My writing examines the essence and nature of good and evil and love and hatred, especially when those entities and emotions mesh, collide, or transubstantiate.

Tell us about your book:

The Ryel Saga is epic archetypal fantasy that traces the journey of a man in search of answers, who finds that more questions arise with every step. Lord Adept Ryel Mirai seeks the long-lost spell that will rescue his mentor from the wraithworld of the Void, but a malignant entity likewise imprisoned has enlisted the aid of the wysard’s strongest rival to find the spell first. A race against time ensues, and Ryel is led from the grim citadel of Markul ever further into the World, encountering unlikely allies and terrible enemies as he learns that he might well gain all that he wishes–although not, perhaps, as he wished it.

The characters are all human beings or demonic forces. Standard tropes–trolls, orcs, elves, halflings, shield-maidens and tavern-wenches, dark lords and talking swords–are completely absent. The language is elevated, as befits the subject matter.

How long did it take to write the book?

Not more than three years total, but a very long time intervened between the first draft and the final cut, neither of which have any resemblance to each other now.

What inspired you to write the book?

I’d just finished Lord of the Rings and thought the human characters were stiff and stilted compared to the often too-cutesy non-humans, which spoiled my enjoyment of the story. The wysard Ryel Mirai had lived in my imagination since childhood, and one summer day when I was visiting the in-laws and needed a book to read, I decided to write one instead.

Talk about the writing process. Did you have a writing routine? Did you do any research, and if so, what did that involve?

I write only when I feel inspired, because I want my words to pour out white-hot on the page if they’re going to happen at all. The Ryel Saga took no research since its world was of my own design, but countless influences came into play, from my own experiences and a lifetime of reading. I learned French as an undergraduate, and French literature (Balzac, Gautier, Daudet, Dumas) had a strong influence on my writing style. Exotic lands, myths and legends, ancient history and heroic biography all played a part in the story’s development. I’m forever indebted to John Dryden’s The Conquest of Granada, a rhyming ‘love and honor’ play from 1702 depicting the royal court of Moorish Spain; its otherworldly grandeur influenced the creation of the imperial city of Almancar and shaped the building of the book’s world.

What do you hope your readers come away with after reading your book?

I want readers to experience the awe I feel whenever I read something wondrously rich and thrilling and truthful. According to many of my reviewers I’ve accomplished that, which is inexpressibly gratifying.

Where can we go to buy your book?

The Ryel Saga is available in digital format for the Kindle at Amazon.com, and at Smashwords.

Any other links or info you’d like to share?

My website is Carolyn Kephart: A Writing Life, at http://carolynkephart.com. It has links to my blog and my bio, as well as to professional reviews not featured on my Amazon listing,

Excerpt:

Ryel felt himself enmeshed in Edris’ eyes, that were a burning black in his pale face. Felt himself drawn, and changed, and torn. “What is the Art?”

“You’ll learn.” Edris reached out and laid both hands on his nephew’s head, as if in blessing. His long fingers slid into Ryel’s hair, and Ryel shuddered at the touch, but not because of fear; rather because it seemed as if he had longed for that contact all his life. He closed his eyes, giving himself up to it. Then he heard Edris’ deep voice whispering in a strange tongue, not words so much as a continued murmur like the storm-wind outside. Ryel clenched his teeth, shivering.

The fingers moved like frozen slow currents through his hair. But suddenly they turned to ice-knives, stabbing his temples so cruelly that his senses seemed to reel, and the air to blacken before him.

Edris’ voice tore through the blackness, still speaking the guttural tongue of the North. His fingers slid to the back of Ryel’s head, seeking the nape. “You were marked for the Art, boy. It found you, and left its stamp. Forever.”

“No,” Ryel gasped. “Don’t touch me. Not there.”

But Edris’ implacable fingers had found the hard lump of scar tissue. “Remember how you got this, lad. Remember all of it.”

At that command and that touch, the light returned—bright sharp high-summer light. Ryel found himself alone in a green infinity of grass, alone save for his horse Jinn that grazed nearby. The air was searing hot, so achingly ablaze that he winced at it, and sweated from crown to heel. But on the horizon in every direction great dark clouds were gathering fast. Shielding his eyes with his hand he watched the lowering masses with increasing disquiet, wondering how it was that they seemed to center on him. Slowly he turned round about, watching the clouds scud ever nearer, the circle of light shrink around him until suddenly there was no light left at all, only endless roiling black. And out of the blackness flashed lightning, bolt after blinding rending bolt—

He would not remember more. He would not relive what came next. He cried out until Yorganar pulled him free.

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