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D. T. Kane’s Epic Fantasy Book Club, The Acktus Trials, Analysis of Chapters 24 and 25-Episode 20

D. T. Kane discusses chapters 24 and 25 of his epic fantasy fiction novel, The Acktus Trials, with his audience. (NOTE: These chapters were previously narrated in episodes 18 and 19).

http://dtkane.com

If you’re enjoying the Acktus Trials, or have already read it, please consider taking a minute to leave a review. Reviews help authors by increasing the visibility of their books, which helps get them into the hands of more readers. Thank you for your support!

Follow this link to leave a review: https://www.amazon.com/review/create-review?&asin=B09QZ8MQ38

The Acktus Trials, an epic fantasy novel, available now:
https://dtkane.com/books/the-acktus-trials/
https://books2read.com/theacktustrials

Part II of The Spoken Books Uprising, Declaimer’s Discovery, now available!
Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B09R18NZ5G/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i1
Your preferred retailer: https://books2read.com/declaimersdiscovery

Map of Oration: https://dtkane.com/resources/map-of-oration/

Below are my notes/script for the show, not a verbatim transcription:

PERSONAL UPDATE

Welcome back to D. T. Kane’s Epic Fantasy Book Club. Today is May 16, 2022 as I record this, episode 20.

A bit different this week, as we’re only doing an analysis section. The last two episodes were only narration because by the time you listen to this, I’ll be in Europe in the midst of a two-week vacation! So, I’m sort of coming to you from the past this week. Woah, time travel!

Since this will be a couple weeks old by the time it comes out, I won’t dwell long on the personal update. On the writing side, I am nearly finished with the first draft of The Spoken Books Uprising, Part IV (title to be announced soon!) I wasn’t sure I’d make it, but it turns out the draft is only going to be about 100,000 words instead of the 110,000 I’d estimated, so by the time you hear this, I should have a complete draft of that and be able to rest easy on vacation. I’ll probably be daydreaming about the plot for Part V, which I find much easier to do than drafting or editing.

As for the vacation, I’m off to Ireland for 8 days, driving counterclockwise around the country: 2 days in Dublin, then Cork, two days in Kerry, Ennis/County Claire, Galway, and then Longford and Cavan Counties, which is where my wife’s family is originally from. Then we’re flying to Paris for a few days and Brussels for two days. Man, I could go on about all the plans we have, but I’ll restrain myself for now. I’ll probably give some updates in the newsletters, so signup for those if you haven’t already (dtkane.com/email-signup, and I’ll of course talk about it on the show when I return, episodes 22 and 23.

ANAYLIS CHs. 24-25

Ch. 24

A Flying Book

So Chapter 24 picks up the morning after Eromer brings Baz and Rox to his cave. Baz gets up with sun, after worrying all night about his pending trip to Tome, thinking up all sorts of worst case scenarios, like Hellar using his Influencer to cause Rox to cut Baz’s head off.

But Eromer helps put Baz’s mind at ease a bit. How calm is this scene Baz walks out into? A glowing sunrise, Eromer floating in the air, eyes closed, humming, causing grain to flow out of barrels while his animals munch on it. Even surly Baztian has to smile.

Then Baz and Eromer have a brief, but fascinating, discussion. First, Eromer tells us that Pront vi Lextor essentially turned him into a flying book. “He illuminated us with the inks of the Books, and we became like them. Like them.” So that’s how Eromer casts spells without Books. The spells are tattooed right to him.

Well, the observant of you might wonder then, why hasn’t this be done more often? It’s awfully inconvenient lugging around all these Books. Well, apparently the process is dangerous. As Eromer tells us, his blood had to be changed “at the most fundamental of levels,” elements infused into it. Many of his kind did not survive the process.

At first, Baz seems to think Pront vi Lextor was some mad scientist, but Eromer corrects him. No, the dragons volunteered for the process. It was a great honor, as Pront vi Lextor was attempting to “restore the Orators to their old powers.”

*Also, I’ll also note about why tattoos aren’t used, recall that new Spoken Books can only be created by a Bound who can Write, so presumably that rule also holds true for tattoos. So the fact that there’s no tattooing is likely also for the same reason there are no new Books—no Bound can Write.

Of course, Baz immediately asks Eromer what he means, but Eromer demurs to answer. Still, it seems pretty plain: It was once possible for men and women to cast spells without Books, and the Enigma was trying to figure out how to once more grant them that power. Why didn’t he? Well, “the Dark Ones ruined [his] work.” And sometimes, Eromer tells us, he can still hear the Dark Ones’ voices when he sleeps.

Really interesting here. First, Baz recalls that he too recently heard voices, when he cast that shadow spell to save Rox and Deliritous from Marla and Hellar. And, those of you with good memories will also recall that Pront vi Lextor was hearing voices in the prologue. What does this all mean? Well, I’ll leave you to draw your own conclusions, but… whoa!

Very Few

Baz’s conversation with Eromer is cut short when Rox exits the cave. Eromer agrees to watch over Deliritous while Rox is gone and they’re quickly on their way, flying on Eromer’s back to Tome.

While in flight, Baz asks Eromer how many other Book Dragons there are, and he replies “very few.” Apparently, there are those who find the Book Dragons “far more valuable dead than breathing.” Hold that thought a moment to the end of the chapter.

They catch sight of Tome, closer this time than when we glimpsed it from a great distance. Oddly, the tall tower of the Great Library seems largely intact, withstanding time’s decay, save for its roof, which has been blown off. Some sort of magic going on here? The rest of the city certainly hasn’t held up so well. Most of the buildings little more than “piles of rocks—rubble heaps covered in centuries-old decay.”

This is as far as I may go.

Eromer sets them down at the very outskirts of the city, still a decent walk into the ruins. But Eromer will go no further because of his failed oath. But he still wants to help however he can. So he tells Baz to remove an object he has in a pouch that’s hanging from his neck. And Baz gasps when he sees it! Now, we know it’s got to be something pretty special, because Baz doesn’t really seem like the gasping type.

A viscous liquid glowed within, swirling about the a container as if it had freewill. Baz couldn’t say what color it was; each time he looked it seemed to be a different one of the five hues of the elemental quintet.

It’s a vial of dragon blood, Eromer’s own. And according to Rox, “there is no greater gift.” Eromer directs Baz to give it to the “Keepers of What Remains,” though Eromer declines to tell Baz who they are. “There secrets are not for me to tell. You will know them. Know them.” Mysterious.

OK, I told you to hold the thought a minute ago about why some people want to kill Book Dragons. The text doesn’t draw this connection directly, but if their blood is as valuable as Rox says, perhaps that’s why some people want to kill them. Book Dragon poachers? Of course, we don’t yet know why their blood is so valuable. But we will soon 🙂

While Rox is still staring in wonder, Baz calls Eromer over conspiratorially and asks him for a favor, but we don’t hear what he asks. What’s that all about? Whatever it is, Baz seems to think that it will help keep him alive if he gets out of Tome with his hide intact. Baz isn’t putting his faith in Deliritous to hold up his bargain, even despite Baz’s apparent new found respect for the Torchsire heir.

Eromer flies away and Rox and Baz head off into the ruins, actually exchanging jokes with one another.

Ch. 25

Magic

So Baz and Rox have an uneventful day walking to the ruins from where Eromer dropped them off and they camp for the night in the shell of an abandoned house. They have dinner, and Baz is getting ready to get some sleep when Rox stretches his hand out over their small fire. He’s holding his completed wyrmtooth necklace. And he wants Baz to have it.

This is apparently a big deal. Listen to how Rox describes it: “In Enigma, when someone tries to trick you, but you see through their ruse, we say you can’t fool a wyrm, for a wyrm knows no Lies. A wyrm’s talisman grants its owner insight from the All Truth herself, an ability to see through deceit.”

This is a significant object in Rox’s culture, and he’s giving it to Baz because Baz saved him from the wyrm. “You take it. And my thanks.”

But Baz doesn’t want to take it. He can’t take a gift from a man he doesn’t even like. So he tells Rox, maybe I saved you, but I did it for selfish reasons—I needed you for survival, not because I cared about your safety. “I can’t believe there’s much of your Truth in that.”

“The words stung Baz’s mouth worse than any misspoken spell as they left his lips.” Baz insists he doesn’t regret them, but of course we know he’s saying that because he actually feels the opposite. He’s starting to come around to Rox and he feels bad about turning down the big man’s gesture.

But Rox is undeterred, and follows up with one of my favorite exchanges in the book:

“My mother once told me there is magic in Truth.”

“Magic? What’s that?”

“I do not know,” Rox replied. “but I think that’s the point.” The big man held the necklace out toward Baz with renewed vigor.

Now, I’m not sure how many of you have noticed, but I don’t use the word “magic” in this or most of my other writing. That’s because magic by definition, implies something fantastical or not understood. And, of course, from our real world looking into the world of Oration, what they do with Spoken Books and the elements is magic. But in world, it’s the way of things, so why would they call it magic? Doesn’t really make sense to me, so I avoid the term.

But here Rox does use it, so there’s something special about wyrm teeth according to him, something we don’t understand. What did he say a few lines ago? It grants the “ability to see through deceit”? Maybe that’s something more than a bit of superstitious dogma? We can’t be sure for now, but Baz does eventually accept the gift, if begrudgingly.

“Don’t get any ideas, Rox. I still don’t like you.” Which, again, if Baz really felt this way, he wouldn’t feel inclined to say this aloud.

Citiless

Baz is awoken by Rox at Dawn, because a band of Citiless have walked past their hiding spot. Rox suggests they follow them, as perhaps they’ll lead them to Books. Baz nearly dismisses the idea, but then rethinks his opinion of Citiless. His only source of information about Citiless is from Readers, and we know how biased Readers can be. And Baz realizes, the only Citiless he’s ever seen, the man who was tortured back at the beginning of the novel, could allegedly Read. So maybe Rox is onto something here.

But Baz isn’t going to take any risks, either. He pulls out a Book and casts one of the few spells he actually has experience with. A “sound deadening spell,” apparently one Deliritous had him cast frequently so he could sneak off to see Delida at night. Remember, Delida is the Creation Speaker who was supposed to accompany him on the Trials, and Baz implied earlier that her and Deliritous have an ongoing affair.

Also, just an aside, have you caught the symbolism of Baz now carrying the Bookpack? The torch has passed, he’s assuming power now.

So they start following the Citiless, who are apparently on patrol for the contestants in the Trials. Baz overhears them talking, and it sounds as if the Citiless have actually been tracking them since the Firelands. Perhaps a bit more organized than the Readers back in Erstwhile would like to think if they have such a scouting network.

The Citiless leader is a young woman named Ehma in a green shirt with yellow embroidery. And she appears to be carrying a bag with a Book inside. Bingo! Good call, Rox.

Rox and Baz follow them for quite a while, finally ending up on a broad avenue that leads to the base of the Great Library’s tower. Here, Baz is perplexed. There seems to be rubble piled up all around the tower, there’s nowhere to go. But then Ehma takes the Book out of her bag and begins Speaking. So she’s a Cuss, or is it an Orator here? Regardless, it appears that Citiless who was caught at the beginning of the Book wasn’t just an isolated incident. Ehma finishes her spell and portion of the rubble vanishes! Revealing a “tall, oak door with an ornate handle in the shape of a quill.” Where does that lead?

Today, you are my oath.

Well, we don’t find out yet. Because rubble suddenly crashes to the ground behind Baz and Rox. Baz catches a glimpse of Hellar running around a corner. He’s exposed them to the Citiless! Baz curses and reaches for a Book, but pulls out that Book of shadow he used earlier, and immediately drops it. Did he hear those voices again when he touched it? Maybe his imagination, but he’s not using it.

So it’s to Rox to defend them. He tells Baz that today, Baz is his oath. Then charges out into the Citiless like a mad bull. Valiant, I suppose, but probably not a great idea. This is the first time we’ve really seen Rox in battle, and he is a force, to be sure. Crashing into the Citiless like “a mad bull into a flock of sheep.” He cuts one’s hand off, breaks another’s nose, and makes a third run. But then Ehma catches him in a spell, freezing him in place. A moment later, another Citiless who snuck behind Baz holds a knife to his throat. They’re caught!

Ehma proves to be a hard woman, with “cold, gray eyes.” She is upset over the injuries to her friends and orders Rox be killed, as he’s “too much of a risk.” Baz immediately objects, as if we needed more evidence by this time that he likes Rox. Rox is just trying to fulfill his promise. Rox is just doing what every man hopes to be able to do: Fighting for something he believes in. Why should he die for that?

Frantically, Baz comes up with an idea: Rox, the blood, show them the blood!

CONCLUSION

Homework: Read Ch. 26.

Quote:

“There’s a grain of truth in every fairy tale.”

― Andrzej Sapkowski, The Last Wish

Until next time, this has been D. T. Kane’s Epic Fantasy Book Club.

D. T. Kane’s Epic Fantasy Book Club, The Acktus Trials, Chapter 25-Episode 19

D. T. Kane reads chapter 25 of his epic fantasy fiction novel, The Acktus Trials, and discusses the chapter with his audience.

Home

If you’re enjoying the Acktus Trials, or have already read it, please consider taking a minute to leave a review. Reviews help authors by increasing the visibility of their books, which helps get them into the hands of more readers. Thank you for your support!

Follow this link to leave a review: https://www.amazon.com/review/create-review?&asin=B09QZ8MQ38

The Acktus Trials, an epic fantasy novel, available now:
https://dtkane.com/books/the-acktus-trials/
https://books2read.com/theacktustrials

Part II of The Spoken Books Uprising, Declaimer’s Discovery, now available!
Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B09R18NZ5G/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i1
Your preferred retailer: https://books2read.com/declaimersdiscovery

Map of Oration: https://dtkane.com/resources/map-of-oration/

Characters in this Chapter:
Baztian (Baz): Our main character
Rox: Deliritous’s Harbour (bodyguard)
Ehma: Leader of Citiless Patrol

D. T. Kane’s Epic Fantasy Book Club, The Acktus Trials, Chapter 24-Episode 18

D. T. Kane reads chapter 24 of his epic fantasy fiction novel, The Acktus Trials, and discusses the chapter with his audience.

http://dtkane.com

If you’re enjoying the Acktus Trials, or have already read it, please consider taking a minute to leave a review. Reviews help authors by increasing the visibility of their books, which helps get them into the hands of more readers. Thank you for your support!

Follow this link to leave a review: https://www.amazon.com/review/create-review?&asin=B09QZ8MQ38

The Acktus Trials, an epic fantasy novel, available now:
https://dtkane.com/books/the-acktus-trials/
https://books2read.com/theacktustrials

Part II of The Spoken Books Uprising, Declaimer’s Discovery, now available!
Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B09R18NZ5G/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i1
Your preferred retailer: https://books2read.com/declaimersdiscovery

Map of Oration: https://dtkane.com/resources/map-of-oration/

Characters in this Chapter:
Baztian (Baz): Our main character
Rox: Deliritous’s Harbour (bodyguard)
Deliritous: Baz’s master, heir to Torchsire Library
Eromer: The Book Dragon!

May 13, 2022 Fantasy Quote OTW

“There’s a grain of truth in every fairy tale.”

― Andrzej Sapkowski, The Last Wish

By definition, fantasies are made up. Which begs the question: Why read a story where the impossible happens? Therein lies the genre’s beauty, as the answers are diverse. Fantasy satisfies a variety of desires.

Perhaps you seek pure escapism, a whimsical world apart from the confines of the mundane. Relax as the elves sing; taste that elderberry wine; cheer as the hero slays the dragon.

Or maybe you struggle with a difficult topic and seek to tackle it in a safe setting, the backdrop of magic and monsters serving as a buffer between you and unsettling truths. At times it is easier to examine a thing through a filter of the fantastic.

Or perhaps you want it all—a great story that both transports you to another world and challenges you to consider the difficult questions of your own; questions that many would prefer to leave unanswered. In this respect, the realm of fantasy can hold greater truth than reality.


Note to readers: Each week, I share a fantasy quote and indulge my inner philosopher with a brief essay based on said quote. Share your favorite quote with me and I might feature it in a future newsletter! Email: dtkane@dtkane.com.

D. T. Kane’s Epic Fantasy Book Club, The Acktus Trials, Chapter 23-Episode 17

D. T. Kane reads chapter 23 of his epic fantasy fiction novel, The Acktus Trials, and discusses the chapter with his audience.

http://dtkane.com

If you’re enjoying the Acktus Trials, or have already read it, please consider taking a minute to leave a review. Reviews help authors by increasing the visibility of their books, which helps get them into the hands of more readers. Thank you for your support! 

Follow this link to leave a review: https://www.amazon.com/review/create-review?&asin=B09QZ8MQ38

The Acktus Trials, an epic fantasy novel, available now:

https://dtkane.com/books/the-acktus-trials/

https://books2read.com/theacktustrials

Part II of The Spoken Books Uprising, Declaimer’s Discovery, now available!

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B09R18NZ5G/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i1

Your preferred retailer: https://books2read.com/declaimersdiscovery

Map of Oration: https://dtkane.com/resources/map-of-oration/

Characters in this Chapter:

Baztian (Baz): Our main character

Rox: Deliritous’s Harbour (bodyguard)

Deliritous: Baz’s master, heir to Torchsire Library

Eromer: The Book Dragon!

Below is a copy of my script/notes for the episode, not a verbatim transcription:

PERSONAL UPDATE

Welcome back to D. T. Kane’s Epic Fantasy Book Club. Today is Sunday, May 8, 2022 as I record this, episode 17.

Big personal update for me this week is I ran my half marathon yesterday that I’ve been talking about over the past couple months. The Ellicotville Happy Half for those wondering. EVL is a beautiful ski resort community about 40 minutes outside Buffalo, NY. Not quite as flat as I would have liked, but I still reached my goal, just barely. I was aiming to complete the race in 2:10 and crossed the line in 2:09:58. Couple big hills got me toward the end, but still managed to pull it out and lessons learned for my next race!

For those of you who read the weekly newsletter, you’ll know that I like to compare running to writing–they’re both endurance sports where persistence pays off, so I like how they complement one another. Plus it’s good exercise.

Other than running, I continue my work on Part IV of the Spoken Books Uprising. I’m now in the homestretch of that and intend to have the first draft completed by May 20, since I’ll be out of the country starting May 21 for two weeks. More on that at the end of the episode.

ANAYLIS CH. 23

He wouldn’t run

So Baz and company fly away on Eromer. He’s definitely got some strong magic going on. No wings, and Baz can’t even tell when they’ve lifted off the ground, because he’s got his eyes shut. But before we know it, they’re soaring over the Firelands. And a few interesting sights.

One, we get our first glimpse of Tome, the spire of the Great Library poking over the horizon. Awe, exhilaration, nausea. Baz’s emotions running the gamut. It’s an amazing sight, seeing something that Baz has ever only heard spoken of as a historic relic. But it also marks the approaching end of his journey, driving reality home. He’s going to have to face the dangers of the ruins, the Citiless who apparently dwell there, and after that, he worries what Deliritous will do with him once the Trials are done.

But Baz finally admits outright that he owes it to Deliritous to finish the Trials for him. Baz acknowledges it would have been easier and even understandable if Deliritous hadn’t saved him. Baz finally letting his guard down just a bit.

The other notable sights are the pockets of greenery that Baz notices spotted across the otherwise desolate Firelands. “Little bastions of uncorrupted grass and trees that had somehow avoided succumbing to the all-consuming swamp that surrounded them.” What are they? They’re Book Dragon dens. There’s more than just Eromer! Though, he notes there are fewer each year. What’s happening to them? Not clear at this point. Old age? Or is something else killing them? Regardless, they’re doing what they can to “keep the power of the Scribes alive?” What does that mean? Hold that thought.

Comfort

Baz gets a bit surly for a moment–how might the world be different if the Book Dragons actually went into the world instead of hiding in the Firelands lamenting a failed oath? But then he realizes he’s not unlike the Book Dragons—he didn’t want to leave his home either, despite not really liking it. This bothers Baz, though he can’t put his finger on it. But this is sort of a hidden big moment for him. The first time that Baz actually realizes it’s maybe not right to sit around in comfort when there’s good to be done out in the world. This is a concept I find particularly important: Do we live for comfort, or do we live to chase our dreams and do something meaningful, which often involves at least a bit of discomfort? I’ve actually got a post-it note on my monitor that says “Fuck Comfort” to help remind me never to get complacent.

OMG BOOKS!

So we land in Eromer’s clearing. It’s like an oasis, even bigger than the other sanctuaries Baz saw from the sky. Which suggests something about Eromer, right? Why is he the Book Dragon with the biggest lair even though he was so young at the time of the Burning? He’s even got a bunch of animals, squirrels, chipmunks, deer, and horses. And a giant dog. Novel the dog! Of course a Book Dragon has a dog named novel. Still, Eromer is depressed when Baz comments on all the “life” in the clearing. “This is the merest fraction of what this land used to be. To be.”

Eromer’s “house” is a giant cave. Glass spheres hovering in midair supply light, but Baz barely notices those, because the cave is full of bookshelves, all of them FULL of Spoken Books. More Books than in all of Erstwhile Baz says. “What little I was able to save from the Great Library before the shelves fell. So little, of so vast a collection.” Driving home the point that Spoken Books weren’t always as rare as they are today. Many destroyed during the Burning, and remember others were destroyed by Deliritous’s ancestor during the Second Burning.

For an instant, Baz sees a way out of going to Tome. But Eromer says he can’t have any of the Books because they aren’t his to give. He’s just looking after them until He Who Writes returns to claim them. Who’s that? Why, Pront vi Lextor, the Enigma, of course! This floors Baz, since Eromer speaks like he knew him. Here’s the final evidence from last week’s quest–Eromer is holding onto Books he personally saved from Tome and knew the Enigma. He’s the same dragon from the prologue.

Rox also notes that Book Dragons were followers of the Enigma, which is why Enigmans worship them. They don’t tell lies, just like Rox and his people.

I wish you to know I am sorry

No we get back into some philosophy. Rox notes that Eromer is suffering from the symptoms of a broken oath. That’s why he has all the animals. He’s caring for them to try to make up for his failure. “It is the only way to find Truth after you have lied, by fulfilling a greater oath.” Remember at the beginning of the chapter, we find out that Eromer was angry when Baz suggested killing the horses, saying he’d rescue them later.

This starts us on an interesting discussion. Baz says Eromer is being arrogant, thinking he alone is to blame for the Burning. He was young, surely he wasn’t solely responsible. Is an oath broken just because its cause extinguished? Baz argues no if there’s no causal link between your actions and the end of the oath. If Deliritous died in his sleep from a disease would Rox be guilty of breaking his oath?

Rox says that when you truly devote yourself to an oath, you feel blame for its loss no matter the cause.

Baz: Guilting yourself for something outside your control doesn’t create actual responsibility for the loss.

Rox: Have you never suffered a failure that troubled you deeply even though it was out of your hands?

Of course Baz has. His brother. If only Baz had kept his mouth shut all those years ago, maybe Tax wouldn’t have been retired. I’m not sure Baz and Rox are really even arguing here. Rox doesn’t necessarily disagree with Baz’s point about actual responsibility. Really what they’re debating is whether it’s “right” to feel guilt over a failed promise that was out of your control. The logical answer seems no–if you couldn’t have done anything, why feel bad? But here’s the paradox: if you were truly dedicated to a cause, how could you not feel bad about it failing? If you didn’t feel bad about it failing, wouldn’t that mean you weren’t truly dedicated, and thus dishonest about your dedication? So is the logical path actually a sign of dishonesty in this instance?

Then Rox is like a mind reader here. He knows Baz is thinking of his brother. And Rox apologizes for hurting Tax! Oh, Rox. If we didn’t love him already, we love him now, right? He’s got regret over what he did to Baz’s brother. He worries it wasn’t consistent with his oath. Was Deliritous truly endangered by Tax?

Baz of course says Rox can’t possibly understand what it was like to lose Tax. But again our giant teddy bear killer surprises us. He lost family too. When Deliritous’s father “acquired” him, he left behind a sister, Adalexa Stonebinder. And he has sworn an oath that one day he will return to her. Woah! That’s a huge bit of news, isn’t it? Rox has actually sworn another oath that’s potentially conflicting with his promise to Deliritous. And it seems he was brought into Torchsire’s service against his will. “When they took me away” he says.

Of course, Baz can’t let this nice moment last. “Maybe you’re a bit less of a lout than I thought. [Rox chuckles] But we’re not friends.” What happens when we get back from the Trials, Rox, and Deliritous wants to turn me in for a Cuss? Rox says Deliritous wouldn’t go back on his oath, but Baz asks whether Deliritous is more dedicated to the Truth or his father? Rox has no answer, which I guess is an answer.

Funny, though. Even though Baz is throwing Rox’s effort at bridging the divide between them back in his face, Baz shows some growth here. He doesn’t really blame Rox or Deliritous. Deliritous “is just a product of his environment.” Echoing what his brother told him back at the beginning of the book, Baz seems to have finally adopted a mature attitude as well. But still, how can he and Rox be friends when they both know that, ultimately, Rox would support Deliritous in breaking his oath and getting Baz killed? Baz even silently admits to himself that Rox has a heart beneath his killer’s exterior. Maybe Rox even understands him.

CONCLUSION

Homework: OK, we’re going to be going into vacation mode the next few weeks. You’ll still get an episode each week, but they’ll be a bit shorter. Next week (Episode 18) will be just Chapter 24, no analysis after. Same the following week, Episode 19, will be just Chapter 25. Episode 20 will be my discussion of those chapters. Then Episode 21 will be Chapter 26, which is very short, and my analysis of that chapter. But this will all be leading up to a very significant (and long) chapter 27. So hopefully you’ll forgive me the shorter episodes since you’ll be getting a marathon of an episode out of me when I return from vacation.

Quote:

“The more you learn, the more you realize how little you know. Still, the struggle itself is worthwhile. Knowledge is the root of power, after all.”

― Joe Abercrombie, The Blade Itself

Being told to “enjoy the journey” is an overused cliché. But clichés tend to be clichés for a reason: there’s truth buried in them. It’s easy to become obsessed with the next thing, and the next thing after that, and so on ad infinitum.

But what is living if not the present moment? That’s all we have–the past is gone and the future never guaranteed. So stop and smell the roses, or feel the sunshine on your face, or actually taste that morning coffee. Embrace the present and take power back from the stresses of life.

Until next time, this has been D. T. Kane’s Epic Fantasy Book Club.

D. T. Kane’s Epic Fantasy Book Club, The Acktus Trials, Chapters 21 & 22-Episode 16

D. T. Kane reads chapters 21 and 22 of his epic fantasy fiction novel, The Acktus Trials, and discusses the chapter with his audience.

http://dtkane.com

If you’re enjoying the Acktus Trials, or have already read it, please consider taking a minute to leave a review. Reviews help authors by increasing the visibility of their books, which helps get them into the hands of more readers. Thank you for your support!  Follow this link to leave a review: https://www.amazon.com/review/create-review?&asin=B09QZ8MQ38

The Acktus Trials, an epic fantasy novel, available now:

https://dtkane.com/books/the-acktus-trials/

https://books2read.com/theacktustrials

Part II of The Spoken Books Uprising, Declaimer’s Discovery, now available!

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B09R18NZ5G/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i1

Your preferred retailer: https://books2read.com/declaimersdiscovery

Map of Oration: https://dtkane.com/resources/map-of-oration/

Characters in this Chapter:

Baztian (Baz): Our main character

Rox: Deliritous’s Harbour (bodyguard)

Deliritous: Baz’s master, heir to Torchsire Library

Eromer: The Book Dragon!

Below is a copy of the script/notes I used for the episode, not a verbatim transcription.

PERSONAL UPDATE

Welcome back to D. T. Kane’s Epic Fantasy Book Club. Today is Sunday, May 1, 2022 as I record this, episode 16 of the podcast.

Writing wise the past week was a bit of a challenging one. Found a couple holes in the subplot of Part IV of The Spoken Books Uprising that required me to go back and re-work a few things in my outline. I even dove into a couple craft books and reviewed some plot archetypes and beats to help diagnose where I was going wrong. I find that very helpful when I’m stuck, looking to examples of things that I know work in order to jumpstart my imagination. I’m not the best at just pulling ideas out of thin air, but give me just a few sparks and I can turn them into a blaze given enough time to let my imagination work.

Still, it felt frustrating at the time because when I’m in drafting mode I try and get the story out as quickly as I can, so a day or two of no serious movement in word count feels like I’ve stalled. But I figured out where my issues were and now I’m back on track, and having diagnosed and remedied the problems now will never make my life a lot easier moving forward, so I need to just tell myself to be happy with that.

On a more personal note, my two-week trip to Europe is now 20 days away. I’ll be recording some episodes in advance so that there’s no gap while I’m gone, though a couple will be shorter episodes than normal. But hey! Either that, or no book club at all, and I didn’t want to ghost you guys while I was gone.

Finally, the half marathon I’ve been talking about is next weekend, so next week I’ll let everyone know how that went. I’ve put in some good training and I’m excited to get out there and see what I can do. Wish me luck!

ANAYLIS CH. 21-22

Chapter 21

Rox, get out of there!

Is Baz showing concern for Rox? Certainly sounds like it, though I’m sure if we asked Baz he’d only say it’s because he’s as good as dead if Rox isn’t around to protect him. Then again, wasn’t Baz just considering running away from Rox?

So this is an altogether different dragon. Does its description sound at all familiar to you?

At least as large as the wyrm they’d encountered, and it was shaped similarly, body one long line, though it had four legs. Glowing blue eyes were positioned above a flattened snout. It reminded Baz more of a dog than a great monster, particularly its drooping ears, each larger than a horse. A crest of white hair topped its head, flopping from side to side as the dragon’s upper body hovered above Rox, the rest of its length hidden behind the debris in the road. Thin strands of hair like mustaches hung down from either side of its snout, rising and falling as the beast drew breath.

But the most incredible thing about it was its hide. A strip of white hair ran down the length of its back, but the rest of its pale skin was bare, almost as if shaven. And upon it there was writing, tattooed over so much of the skin’s surface it seemed more ink than flesh. Words from each of the branches of the Trinity, written in the quintet of elemental colors. Something about the creature’s appearance tugged at Baz’s memory, but he was far too concerned with staying alive to pay it much heed.

It sounds a lot like the dragon from the prologue, right? It even repeats the ends of its sentences like the one in the prologue did. It’s a Book Dragon, like the statue we saw in the Conservatory and Leanna’s workshop. Apparently they aren’t extinct.

Interesting point here that, while most people seemed to think Book Dragons were extinct, Rox seems to recognize it. He’s even got a special name for it, Illumined One, and says its sacred. Now, has Rox just seen the statues too, or does he have some special knowledge of Book Dragons? Hmmmm. Rox’s depth continues to grow.

So every time Baz speaks, the dragon gets upset. Rox says it’s because it thinks Baz is trying to cast a spell. Which is interesting. Apparently the dragon can sense others able to draw power from Books. And also, the fact that Rox is able to so quickly put that together suggests he does, in fact, have some special knowledge of the creatures.

However, speaking is also the key to befriending the dragon. “You just have to Speak its name [to befriend it]” Rox tells us, which is tattooed on the dragon’s forehead. The keen observers among you out there will recognize this was foreshadowed back at the beginning, since Leanna’s name was also inscribed in the forehead of her Book Dragon statue in her workshop. Baz, of course, is skeptical, but goes ahead and tries to Read the name. “Eer-rooo-meeer.”

You enunciation is awful

It talks! And not just in one of the magic languages of Spoken Books, but the common tongue that Baz can understand. We learn that the Book Dragon was attacked by Hellar and his dragon and its tail is stuck under a large boulder. That’s why Eromer was so skiddish around them–he thought Rox and Baz might have been friends of Hellar. A Hoarder of Words (Reader) and his Oppressed (Speaker). Seems he has different names for lots of things in this world.

He calls the dragon a “Lost One.” Rox explains this is because the Fire Breathers betrayed their oath to protect the Great Library during the Burning. Recall that this was eluded to back in the prologue, where the Book Dragon there noted that the Fire Breathers fled during the Burning.

So the Book Dragon is in a predicament, and Rox is more than happy to offer it help. He seems a bit awed by the creature, and is quite angry when Baz doesn’t show it the proper respect. But when the dragon mentions having a cave, an idea strikes Baz. The thing can fly, and it has a safe place nearby. So he strikes a bargain with the dragon—we’ll get the rock off you, if you take Deliritous back to your cave and… fly us to Tome! Ah-ha! Who was wondering just how I was going to get Baz to Tome after the disaster with Deliritous? Well, what better way than to fly him there?

Part 4

Chapter 22

When the Shelves Fell

So we move right on to the fourth and final part of the novel and Chapter 22.

We saw in Chapter 21 the Book Dragon is VERY touchy about any talk relating to Tome or the Great Library, and here we see why. The Book Dragon–Eromer–is over 400 years old! He was there when the Burning happened. He’ll agree to fly Rox and Baz to the outskirts of Tome, but he won’t go into the ruins themselves because he failed his oath to protect it and can’t bear to enter. That would seem to explain why he also has odd names for many things–his speech is centuries old. The Burning is “When the shelves fell.” And yes, that is an homage to the famous Star Trek TNG episode “Darmok,” which I think is sort of fitting since that episode is all about communicating with an alien who doesn’t speak English, and here we have Baz communicating with a dragon. “Shaka, when the walls fell.”

And what does he call Baz? An “Orator,” which you’ll recall from the recitation of Oration’s history during the opening ceremony of the Trials, was the term for men who could both Read and Speak prior to the Burning. Eromer uses the term as if it isn’t 300 years out-of-style.

But interesting, when Baz corrects him and says where he’s from, he’s called a Cuss. Eromer is shocked, not because Baz and Read and Speak, but because that means he’s an Oppressed, a Speaker. And yet, he’s asking Eromer to help heal a Hoarder of Words (Reader). Interesting, as this suggests that Eromer retains some connection to the current world, since he obviously knows what “Cuss” means.

Gossamer Words

So the first prong of the deal was for Eromer to take Deliritous back to his cave and care for him. But he says Deliritous can’t fly in his current injured state. So the dragon begins to sing, just like Tax did with the Retirees back in the sub-basement of Torchsire Library. Except, to Baz’s amazement, the song has power! Deliritous begins to heal, his burns disappearing. The dragon doesn’t have any Spoken Books, but there is the writing on his body, and some of it glows as he sings. So, it seems, the Book Dragon is a flying Spoken Book, it can draw magical power from itself!

Serious implications here. Remember, Tax had a tattoo of Spoken Words on his arm last Baz saw him. Is he trying to give himself the same powers as a Book Dragon? But if that’s the case, why don’t all the Readers just do that and do away with the Books? Curioser and Curioser.

One final note: did you notice how Eromer’s tail seemed to heal itself? Bloody when they levered the rock off it, then merely bruised minutes later? Seems this Book Dragon has more magic powers than we’ve seen out of anyone else, man or beast, to this point of the story.

And so we leave our heroes this week, preparing to fly away on the Book Dragon.

CONCLUSION

Homework: Next week we’ll read Chapter 23. We see where Eromer lives and some rather interesting furnishings in his cave. Then we learn something of Rox’s past that unsettles Baz.

Listener Question:

Quest: Last week’s quest was what is the name of the Book Dragon from the prologue. Well, maybe I’m giving away a bit too much here, but we’ve only been given the name of one Book Dragon, Eromer. It’s the same dragon!

In preparation for seeing where Eromer lives next week, I’d like you to let me know what your favorite home from a fantasy novel is. Could be a house, a cave, a hovel, a hobbit hole, or something else. Someone just has to have lived in it.

Quote:

“In my experience, communication is a matter of patience, imagination. I would like to believe that these are qualities that we have in sufficient measure.”

– Captain Picard, from the Star Trek TNG Episode “Darmok”

Until next time, this has been D. T. Kane’s Epic Fantasy Book Club.

D. T. Kane’s Epic Fantasy Book Club, The Acktus Trials, Chapters 19 & 20-Episode 15

D. T. Kane reads chapters 19 and 20 of his epic fantasy fiction novel, The Acktus Trials, and discusses the chapter with his audience.

http://dtkane.com

If you’re enjoying the Acktus Trials, or have already read it, please consider taking a minute to leave a review. Reviews help authors by increasing the visibility of their books, which helps get them into the hands of more readers. Thank you for your support!  Follow this link to leave a review: https://www.amazon.com/review/create-review?&asin=B09QZ8MQ38

The Acktus Trials, an epic fantasy novel, available now:

https://dtkane.com/books/the-acktus-trials/

https://books2read.com/theacktustrials

Part II of The Spoken Books Uprising, Declaimer’s Discovery, now available!

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B09R18NZ5G/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i1

Your preferred retailer: https://books2read.com/declaimersdiscovery

Map of Oration: https://dtkane.com/resources/map-of-oration/

Characters in this Chapter:

Baztian (Baz): Our main character

Rox: Deliritous’s Harbour (bodyguard)

Deliritous: Baz’s master, heir to Torchsire Library

Below are my notes/script for the episode, not an exact transcription:

PERSONAL UPDATE

Welcome back to D. T. Kane’s Epic Fantasy Book Club. Today is Saturday, April 23, 2022 as I record this, Episode 15.

With release week behind us, it was back to writing and making good progress on Part IV of the Spoken Books Uprising. My first draft broke 50,000 words and I think I’m on track to have it finished before May 20. That’s my goal because May 21 I’m flying to Europe for two weeks, and don’t plan to be doing much work then! Ireland, Paris, and Brussels. It’s going to be awesome and I plan to be sharing lots of photos with all of you upon my return. I’m sure I’ll find some new inspiration for things to put in future novels as well.

Preorder Part III, Declaimer’s Flight: https://books2read.com/declaimersflight

I’ve also got my half marathon in two weeks that I’ve mentioned several times on here before. Just got back from an 11 mile run before recording today, so my legs are barking a bit. If those of you watching on YouTube see me fidgeting around more than usual, you know why!

ANAYLIS CHs. 19-20

Chapter 19

Who did Deliritous think he was?

We start just as we left off last week, with Baz in shock over Deliritous sacrificing himself to save Baz. Baz is actually angry: “Who did Deliritous think he was, putting Baz in his debt like that?” Why do we think Baz feels like this? Could it be because he sees that Deliritous is actually the better man than him? That he was willing to change where Baz hasn’t been so far? Tough way to learn that lesson.

Then Rox shows up, having pulled himself out of the bog. And we get some contrast here, first Rox cradling Deliritous like a child—once again, we see how much Deliritous appears to mean to Rox, despite the fact that Rox is essentially another of Deliritous’s slaves.

Then he punches Deliritous square in the chest. Baz laughs when Deliritous curses, showing he isn’t dead.

The tender moment quickly passes, though, when we realize Deliritous is severely burned and all the medicine they had with them was in his saddle bags, which have been cooked by the dragon. But even in his dire state, Deliritous isn’t willing to give up on his dream. We see even more growth here—recall back just about 10 chapters ago, Deliritous wanted to turn back with a broken leg. Now he’s suffered likely mortal burns and he still wants to press on.

Baz sees the impossibility of Deliritous going on and offers to finish the Trials for him on his own while Rox takes Delirious back to Hamlet. “He owed it to Deliritous now.” It continues to be unclear whether Baz has actually truly changed, or if he’s making this offer solely out of obligation. He’s certainly having an internal battle with himself.

He wanted to be furious at Deliritous for even suggesting that he be grateful to the man who had robbed him of his brother. That Baz knew he owed Deliritous his life only worsened the resentment he felt. But would he have rather died than be in Deliritous’s debt? The answer to that question seemed like it should be obvious, but in Baz’s mind it was clear as smudged ink.

Regardless, Deliritous won’t accept the offer. Instead, he suggests they go find some Citiless. Maybe they’ll help him, though Baz points out they’re just as likely to murder them and rob them of all the Spoken Books they have.

Waste is a lie

So they will continue on. But how are they going to transport Deliritous? Well, leave it to Rox. He hacks up the dead horse with his razor and turns it into a sled they can put Deliritous on. Not the most pleasant of scenes here. You know those horse bones can’t be that clean, and Deliritous is also blistered with oozing sores. “The whole thing stank worse than Rox had after crawling out of the bog.”

And it’s not particularly comfortable, Deliritous whimpers over every bump, and Rox is despondent at his charge’s pain. Has to wipe his arm across his eyes several times. Baz puts together that Rox must feel like a big brother for Deliritous. Interesting that maybe Baz is coming around to Rox more than Deliritous, why do we think that is? Rox is, after all, the one who actually tore Tax’s eyes out. But he even recalls staring into his brother’s eyes once when he was sick without connecting the loss of those eyes back to Rox.

Twenty-Seven

That’s how many Readers have died on the Trials in the past 50 years. And it seems Deliritous is preparing to become number 28. “I never really considered it a possibility it could happen to me. But I do now.” Even Baz can’t remain dispassionate in the face of such an admission, eyes burning. Could he really continue to hate this man? He’s just afraid, like any other person in his situation would be. But yet, he’s also brave, still pushing toward what now seems an impossible goal. Baz is glad when Deliritous passes out. At least he’s spared from the agony he’s suffered on Baz’s account for a little while.

Chapter 20

I can carry him.

And now, friends, I invite you to remove your reading glasses, put on your cardigans, and join me this week’s installment of D. T. Kane’s Epic Philosophy Book Club.

Right. So Rox and Baz carry on, dragging poor Deliritous along. Baz is trying to convince Rox that this isn’t working, but Rox isn’t having it: “It is a great Truth, giving your life for a promise. I am ready.”

Baz counters, “There’s no Truth in pursuing a hopeless path…. Anything has to be better than this.”

Rox, growing angry, responds, “We could do worse. We could give up. I will not…. I am no surgeon. I cannot heal him. But I can carry him to someone who may be able to help.”

OK. Who’s got the winning side of the debate here, do you think? Is dying for a promise noble? Or forget noble, is it the right thing to do? I think most of us can agree with the premise that keeping promises is a good thing. But to what point? If it will hurt someone to keep a promise, should you still keep it? What if it will hurt yourself? It’s tough to give exact answers to such general questions. But here, you’ve promised to keep someone safe and now they’re at the brink of death with seemingly no way out. Is sacrificing yourself worth it?

Well, I’m very thankful that I’ve never personally been in such a situation. But I think the key thing here is hope. I think if there was a 100% chance that Deliritous wasn’t going to make it, Rox, and most people in a similar position, wouldn’t sacrifice themselves. But the thing is, almost nothing is 100% certain. Death and taxes, right? And maybe Chuck Norris. Besides that, there’s always some chance. And the thing is, when you care deeply enough about a promise, even the smallest sliver of hope is worth keeping that promise. At least, that’s my theory. And that seems to be Rox’s too. Baz perhaps is more of a realist, but I’d love to ask Baz what he’d do if it was Tax on that sled instead of Deliritous. And who knows, maybe I will ask him that question in another book. *raises eyebrows*

Freedom to Choose

But Rox understands that Baz needn’t bind himself to Rox’s oath. Baz gets angry at that, since Rox insinuated the other night that he’d sworn an oath to Deliritous, but is now suggesting Baz break it after just lecturing him on the virtue on sticking to oaths. But Rox explains that he doesn’t really believe Baz swore a bind oath: “You must be free to swear an oath.”

Again, Baz initially takes offense, thinking Rox is saying Speakers can’t keep oaths. But what Rox means is a slave can’t be bound to an oath given to his master, because there’s no free choice there.

“They could die,” Baz replies.

A paradox, Rox says, one even Enigmans like him apparently can’t solve. It’s true, a man can always choose death. But is an oath sworn where the only alternative is death–the proverbial gun held to the head–a true promise? Rox doesn’t think so. Do you?

This is sort of the same question as before. Maybe modified slightly. Is your own personal truth worth dying for? I guess it likely depends on what you’re being asked to do, though I suppose we can assume that if someone’s holding a gun to your head, it’s something you would never consent to otherwise. Maybe that answers the question right there. I mean, there’s a reason “duress” is a defense to most crimes.

The even harder question is whether it’s actually the right choice to choose death instead of carrying out the coerced promise. You shoot her or I’ll shoot you. What’s the right choice there? I’d like to think I’d take the bullet, but man, I get nervous just thinking about it in the hypothetical.

Baz then modifies the facts a little: “What if it isn’t your own death that’s coercing you, but the loss of another? I’d never see Tax again if I ran.”

To me, this is almost an easier question. If the life of someone I care about is being threatened, there’s probably little I wouldn’t be willing to do to prevent it from happening. But again, tough, tough choices. Even Rox, who has proved to be our surprising moral compass on this journey doesn’t have an answer. But Rox does admit that he sees the injustice of Baz’s situation: Deliritous is better than most, but he still oppresses Baz. Man, Rox really is the best of the three–he cares for Deliritous despite knowing he’s deeply flawed.

OK, you can take your cardigan off now. Baz and Rox continue onward after that rousing debate and come to a blockage in the road. Rox dismounts to see what’s going on. There’s a bright flash! And when Baz’s vision clears, what does he see?

Another dragon.

CONCLUSION

Homework: We’ll read Chs 21 and 22. Baz’s last encounter with a dragon ended poorly. But we’ll see there’s something a bit different about this one. Then Baz makes a surprising deal. And lots of words get repeated. Repeated. What’s going on with that? Tune in next week to find out!

Listener Question:

Quest: What is the name of the dragon we met in the prologue?

Quote:

“We are not always what we seem, and hardly ever what we dream.”

― Peter S. Beagle, The Last Unicorn

Until next time, this has been D. T. Kane’s Epic Fantasy Book Club.

D. T. Kane’s Epic Fantasy Book Club, The Acktus Trials, Chapter 18-Episode 14

D. T. Kane reads chapter 18 of his epic fantasy fiction novel, The Acktus Trials, and discusses the chapter with his audience.

Home

If you’re enjoying the Acktus Trials, or have already read it, please consider taking a minute to leave a review. Reviews help authors by increasing the visibility of their books, which helps get them into the hands of more readers. Thank you for your support!  Follow this link to leave a review: https://www.amazon.com/review/create-review?&asin=B09QZ8MQ38

The Acktus Trials, an epic fantasy novel, available now:

https://dtkane.com/books/the-acktus-trials/

https://books2read.com/theacktustrials

Part II of The Spoken Books Uprising, Declaimer’s Discovery, now available!

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B09R18NZ5G/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i1

Your preferred retailer: https://books2read.com/declaimersdiscovery

Map of Oration: https://dtkane.com/resources/map-of-oration/

Characters in this Chapter:

Baztian (Baz): Our main character

Rox: Deliritous’s Harbour (bodyguard)

Deliritous: Baz’s master, heir to Torchsire Library

Hellar Xavier: One of the competitors in the Acktus Trials

Trunnel: Hellar’s Influencer (Speaker)

Below are my notes/script for the episode, not a verbatim transcription:

PERSONAL UPDATE

Welcome back to D. T. Kane’s Epic Fantasy Book Club. Today is Saturday, April 16, 2022 as a record this, episode 14.

It’s release weekend for Declaimer’s Discovery and it’s been a success so far. The Acktus Trials has hit the top 20 of classic fantasy eBooks on Amazon and Declaimer’s Discovery is selling well too. If you’ve been waiting to grab an eBook copy of The Acktus Trials now is a good time because it’s currently only 99 cents!

My work also continues on new writing. After a down week getting everything ready for the Declaimer’s Discovery launch, I’m back into full writing mode now and plugging away at Part IV of the Spoken Books Uprising. Part III, Declaimer’s Flight, is also now officially with my editor and on track for its June 17 release date. It’s officially available for pre-order, so get your order in now if you’re eagerly awaiting the third installment of the story.

I had a nice birthday last weekend and thank you to all of those who wished me a happy birthday. I spent the day in Buffalo, NY with my parents, sister, her boyfriend, and Mrs. Kane. We went to the Botanical Gardens, which was lovely, then visited a couple breweries and then had a nice dinner. And I did get my new pair of running shoes! And they’re orange, which is awesome.

ANAYLIS CH. 18

Careful what you wish for

We open with our trio traveling on through the Reach, a rather uneventful journey for them. Rox spends his nights creating a necklace from the teeth of the wyrm he killed, which forces Baz and Deliritous to talk to one another. And Deliritous really seems to be coming around to Baz, admitting that even if they don’t win, he’s going to start using Baz more than he was in the past. Deliritous seems to have overcome his fear of Baz, even if he is still a bit nervous around him.

This troubles Baz–he wonders if he can really trust himself if Deliritous starts putting all this trust in him. He hasn’t forgotten what Deliritous did to his brother. But just the fact that Baz is troubled by this and uncertain shows change, right? At the beginning of the story, Baz certainly wouldn’t have been troubled by the prospect of being in a position to carry out revenge on Deliritous.

Bog Bubbles

A few days pass and out travelers reach the Inkwell River. Baz had been hoping for a bath, but it seems “inkwell” is actually a pretty apt name for the water, as it’s brackish and discolored, certainly not something one wants to swim in.

The Firelands certainly don’t sound like a pleasant place.  “A boggy wasteland” and bubbles of gas that pop into gouts of flame. You have to stick to the road or worry about being sucked under to your death, and there’s a constant sound of swishing water, pulsing like a heartbeat. Baz even tells us a legend that the gas is caused by all the dead bodies beneath the bog left over from the Burning. It’s a decaying, dead place.

This area is definitely inspired by the Dead Marshes in The Lord of the Rings. I wish my prose was a tenth as good a Tolkien’s. Here’s a quick passage from Two Towers describing the Dead Marshes:

Dreary and wearisome. Cold, clammy winter still held sway in this forsaken country. The only green was the scum of livid weed on the dark greasy surfaces of the sullen waters. Dead grasses and rotting reeds loomed up in the mists like ragged shadows of long forgotten summers.

From <https://lotr.fandom.com/wiki/Dead_Marshes>

Man, what description. You can see the similarities, if not in the writing, at least in the image it’s portraying.

I knew there was a problem when I heard the roars

So they travel on through the Firelands. Not much problem initially, other than a gas bubble popping and covering them all in slime, which sends Baz into a laughing fit, and even Deliritous and Rox join in with him.

They reach a rock formation that Deliritous calls Torchsire Roost, apparently a famous landmark where his ancestor rested on his way to Tome to begin the Second Burning, which we previously learned was when he either destroyed or confiscated all the Books he could find to consolidate their power amongst the Readers of the three remaining cities of Oration.

Deliritous goes off to do some sightseeing and Baz tries to catch some z’s, but Baz, never the one to accept a good thing, worries that perhaps he’s being lulled into a false sense of security. Which actually turns out to be entirely accurate, because what does he find perched on the giant rock formation when he turns around? A BIG dragon. And not just a dragon, but a dragon with two men riding it–Hellar and Trunnel, his Influencer Speaker. So we see the great power of having an Influencer on the Trials now. No Harbour or Speaker is going to stand up to a dragon! Apparently they saw smoke from their fire and Hellar decided he needed to properly take Deliritous out of the Trials, or at least get back at him. An eye-for-an-eye so to speak. Hellar reveals that he believes Deliritous somehow Read a spell to Baz and that’s what killed his Harbour, so now he’s going to repay the favor by killing Baz.

But all the change we’ve seen in Deliritous comes to a head here. He isn’t just going to stand by and watch Baz get fried. Obviously Rox tries to stop him, but Deliritous isn’t having it. He has Rox help him onto his mount and gallops to try to save Baz, shouting out a spell for Baz to cast as he does so. It’s that spell he’s mentioned before, the one that sucks the oxygen from the air. Baz uses it and it’s semi successful, deflecting some of the dragon’s fiery breath, but it’s not nearly enough. But Deliritous reaches Baz just in time, shielding him from the blast. Except, that means Deliritous instead takes the brunt of it. Baz is knocked down and plays dead until the dragon flies away with Hellar and Trunnel still on its back.

Baz crawls over to Deliritous. He’s burned all over, his clothing melted into his skin. And his chest isn’t moving. Baz sort of goes into shock. Deliritous sacrificed himself for a Speaker?

CONCLUSION

Homework: Next week we’ll read chapters 19 and 20. Is Deliritous really dead? Rox hits us with some deep Enigman philosophy. And our heroes run into yet another obstacle. Man, it just gets better and better for them. Tune in next week! 

Listener Question:

Quest: What’s your favorite book 2 or sequel? Could be a book or a movie. Send your answers to dtkane@dtkane.com and I’ll share some of your answers next week. 

Quote:

“People who deny the existence of dragons are often eaten by dragons. From within.”

― Ursula K. Le Guin, The Wave in the Mind: Talks and Essays on the Writer, the Reader and the Imagination

Until next time, this has been D. T. Kane’s Epic Fantasy Book Club.

D. T. Kane’s Epic Fantasy Book Club, The Acktus Trials, Chapters 16 & 17-Episode 13

D. T. Kane reads chapters 16 & 17 of his epic fantasy fiction novel, The Acktus Trials, and discusses the chapter with his audience.

http://dtkane.com

The Acktus Trials, an epic fantasy novel, available now:

https://dtkane.com/books/the-acktus-trials/

https://books2read.com/theacktustrials

If you’re enjoying the Acktus Trials, or have already read it, please consider taking a minute to leave a review. Reviews help authors by increasing the visibility of their books, which helps get them into the hands of more readers. Thank you for your support!  Follow this link to leave a review: https://www.amazon.com/review/create-review?&asin=B09QZ8MQ38

PRE-ORDER Part II of The Spoken Books Uprising, Declaimer’s Discovery, available April 15!

Preorder on Amazon: https://dtkane.us18.list-manage.com/track/click?u=749c5d9250a6b58e1deb27545&id=9ef761bc7f&e=35c8fe8c20

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Map of Oration: https://dtkane.com/resources/map-of-oration/

Characters in this Chapter:

Baztian (Baz): Our main character

Rox: Deliritous’s Harbour (bodyguard)

Deliritous: Baz’s master, heir to Torchsire Library

Below is a copy of my script/notes for the episode, not a verbatim transcription:

PERSONAL UPDATE

Welcome back to D. T. Kane’s Epic Fantasy Book Club. Today is Thursday, April 7, 2022, as I record this, episode 13.

Busy busy over here. Declaimer’s Discovery comes out next week! Hard to believe, I still have so much more to do it for. Live of a self-published author! Have to update the front and back matter in the first book, get the preorder for the third book setup so I can put a link in the second book, finish formatting the second book. Ah! But it will get done.

On top of that, I’m plugging away at Part IV as well. Not going as fast as I want, but I knew that was going to happen with the book release and podcast taking away from some of my writing time. And I have to keep reminding myself that’s all right. I’ve only got so many hours in the day, and I have a day job too! Deep breaths.

Not a ton to report on the personal front this week, though this week is my birthday. Woo! Man, 35 years old, tough to believe. I’m looking forward to a fun weekend in Buffalo, meeting up with my parents, sister, and her boyfriend. And hoping for a new pair of running shoes that I can use for my half marathon next month. We’ll see!

If you’d like to give me some last minute help to make my release next week a success, consider leaving a review of Book 1 of the series, The Acktus Trials, which of course we’re reading here on the podcast together. Thank you!

ANAYLIS CHS 16-17

CH 16

There’s a what down there with him?

So right off the bat our cliffhanger from last week is answered. Rox has fallen into a pit with a wyrm! A big one, according to Baz. Luckily, Rox didn’t fall on top of it, and it’s asleep, so there’s a chance to rescue him.

Initially, Deliritous doesn’t actually believe Baz there’s wyrm down there with Rox, looking skeptical. And Baz actually understands. Deliritous is vulnerable without Rox and his injury, and he’s worried for ten years that Baz will seek revenge on him. Baz even admits a few weeks ago, he’d have relished this situation. But now it doesn’t seem to appealing to him. Baz is changing!

So is Deliritous, apparently, since he ultimately decides to trust Baz, basically leaves it up to Baz to figure out how to get Rox out.

An Iridescent Halo

So what does this thing look like? Well, not the most creative monster you’ve ever read about, I’m sure. It’s basically just a giant snake, right? A long length of body with green scales, no limbs, sharp teeth, yellow eyes. It does have this odd glow to it, though. Almost as if the shadows themselves were afraid to get too near it. Hold that thought, it will be important in a minute.

So Baz assesses the situation and realizes he’s not going to be able to use spells to get them out of this. The wyrm breaths fire, so fire spells won’t work. And Baz isn’t great with the other spells Deliritous brought, so the wyrm would just eat Rox while Baz was trying to figure them out. I really like this. I’ve mentioned before, magic is generally more interesting for what it can’t do, than what it can. Blasting yourself out of a tight spot with fireballs might be exciting once or twice, but it gets boring fast. But figuring out how to save yourself without magic? That takes you on twists you might not have expected.

And how many of you expected this? Baz runs back to Deliritous and asks for the “metal hook thingy”–really a grappling hook. Any of you catch that we saw this getting loaded onto the horses back in chapter 8 and Baz wondered what use it could possibly have? Tricky tricky foreshadowing! And what’s the plan? Not to have Rox climb out, there’s no trees close enough to hold his weight, and he’d likely wake the wyrm besides. No, the plan is to give Rox the hook so he can retrieve his razor. Meanwhile, Baz is going to trust Rox to get his weapon while Baz distracts the wyrm. Woah! Baz still might now admit it to himself, but man, times they are a changin’! No way he would have trusted Rox at the beginning of the book.

Words of Import

So Baz throws a rock at the wyrm, draws its attention. The thing rises up, proving to be even larger than Baz thought: ten horses, nose to tail. That’s like 80 feet. I Googled it 🙂 Then the wyrm begins to Speak. Uh, who saw that coming? Well, maybe some of you. The dragon back in the prologue could talk, right? So maybe it’s not so incredible that this wyrm can too. Though it’s not speaking common tongue, but the language of Destruction. Interesting, Baz does get some sense of what it means. “Telling him to be gone, to leave its home.”

Idea from Tax that words are important even if they’re not fully understood. Welcome to D. T. Kane’s Epic Philosophy Book Club! What do you think? Is this sentiment true? I mean, in the context of the book, it seems there’s some truth to this. After all, Baz at least hinted earlier that Tax continued Baz’s education by having him listen to all the Retirees’ songs, and Baz seems to have learned something, even if he didn’t fully grasp it at the time.

What about real life? Well, let me pose this question: Ever read a book, then return to it years later and find all these new meanings you totally missed the first time? Well, does that mean it didn’t have any value the first time you read it? I don’t think so. We’re all constantly changing, and sometimes books and the meanings behind them can change for us too in different chapters of our lives. Should we simply not read something because we can’t fully understand it? I don’t think so. How would we ever learn anything?

OK, philosophy lesson over. So, I hope you think I did a decent job of building some tension here. But obviously, Baz doesn’t die. The wyrm almost breathes fire on him, but Rox gets his razor first and chops the wyrm up. Phew!

Chapter 17

Good Eats

OK, so we go from the Epic Philosophy Book Club to Diners, Drive Ins, and Dives. Rox cuts off the wyrm’s head and brings it with him and cooks it for dinner! Man! They’re a delicacy in Enigma, he says. Remember, that’s where he’s from. So initially, this seems like just the typical big brute eating a MAN’S MEAL. But come on guys, you ought to know by now I’m a little deeper than that. (Well, mostly. I did joke about throwing a rock at Rox last chapter!)

We learn that Enigmans actually sort of worship wyrms. Rox tells this quick story that all of them descend from a single mother, the All Truth. While all things are made of the five elements, the All Truth had no shadow in her, which is the element of conceit and uncertainty, says Rox. And we already know Enigmans place a high value on truth, so you can see the appeal of such a creature. Deliritous goes so far as to say that the Enigmans don’t really worship the Scribes. Their religion is Truth.

Isn’t Rox eating his god? Sure, but what else can you do when your gods are constantly trying to kill you? You fight back. And if you kill something it must be put to use. Death for no reason is a Lie! Rox, love it or hate it, he has his code and sticks to it.

Also, an interesting bit about the magic system here, that all living things are made up of the five elements. Don’t think that was explicitly stated before this point, but just a nice tidbit explaining the five elements a bit more.

A relatively ordinary man

Another significant thing that happens here: Baz sees Rox without his mask on for the first time while he’s eat and is struck by how ordinary he looks. If you didn’t notice how big he was, you’d think him just a normal man of thirty. Well, perhaps slightly more grizzled than average.

And the changes continue. We see Rox actually call Deliritous to task for failing to recognize that Baz saved him. He “deserves gratitude.” Baz can’t believe Rox thanked him, but are we really so surprised? Rox has been showing us for many chapters now he’s not just a dumb brute. In some ways, he’s the most moral of our characters. Baz is just in denial because of his brother.

Still, Rox isn’t all rainbows. While they’re talking about Rox’s obsession with Truth, Deliritous notes how there’s no bigger lie than breaking an oath. Or, Rox adds, “permitting another to go back on an oath.” A veiled threat here, just to remind Baz that Rox is keeping an eye on him. His moral code is both good and bad for Baz.

It’s more like they’re trying to keep people away

They briefly discuss the Citiless again in this chapter, because Deliritous confirms for us that the pit was likely a Citiless trap, though he says the Citiless do it so they can pillage valuables off the corpses after the wyrms kill them. Baz points out, though, that out in the wilds, most valuables like aren’t of much use. More like, they’re trying to keep people away from Tome.

Baz recalls that the Citiless who was captured back in Chapter 5 went on about learning to Read at Tome. Baz muses whether there might actually be something at Tome they’re trying to keep them from. Deliritous brushes this off, he thinks they’re just uncivilized heathens. Notice, though, how he evades Baz’s question about what a Declaimer is? “Mindless fiction.” Hmm, what’s going on here? Stay tuned!

No Stop Rune Required

Finally, we get to the end of the chapter, and Deliritous shocks Baz by doing what? He lets him memorize a spell. Just a simple one, to start a small fire. But what a huge step from even just a few chapters ago where Deliritous made Baz stand on the other side of the clearing before Reading to him. Also, a nice bit of parallelism here, the first spell Deliritous trusts Baz with is also the first spell Tax taught Baz. Coming full circle here. Now, is Baz going to grow to trust Deliritous as much as he does his own brother? Well, that seems unlikely. But certainly mountains are moving, if slowly.

CONCLUSION

Homework: Next week we’ll read Chapter 18. We head into the Firelands! Our merry band will face another challenge, and Deliritous shows us just how much he’s changed from that entitled young man we saw at the beginning of the novel.

Listener Question:

Quest: Share your favorite fantasy quote with me and I’ll feature it in a future episode.

Quote: When you don’t know what to do, do what’s right and do what’s in front of you. But not necessarily what’s right in front of you.

-Brent Weeks, The Black Prism

Until next time, this has been D. T. Kane’s Epic Fantasy Book Club.

D. T. Kane’s Epic Fantasy Book Club, The Acktus Trials, Chapters 14 & 15-Episode 12

D. T. Kane reads chapters 14 & 15 of his epic fantasy fiction novel, The Acktus Trials, and discusses the chapter with his audience.

http://dtkane.com

If you’re enjoying the Acktus Trials, or have already read it, please consider taking a minute to leave a review. Reviews help authors by increasing the visibility of their books, which helps get it into the hands of more readers. Thank you for your support!  Follow this link to leave a review: https://www.amazon.com/review/create-review?&asin=B09QZ8MQ38

The Acktus Trials, an epic fantasy novel, available now: https://dtkane.com/books/the-acktus-trials/

PRE-ORDER Part II of The Spoken Books Uprising, Declaimer’s Discovery, available April 15!

Preorder on Amazon: https://dtkane.us18.list-manage.com/track/click?u=749c5d9250a6b58e1deb27545&id=9ef761bc7f&e=35c8fe8c20

Preorder at your preferred retailer: https://dtkane.us18.list-manage.com/track/click?u=749c5d9250a6b58e1deb27545&id=1462da7a2d&e=35c8fe8c20

Map of Oration: https://dtkane.com/resources/map-of-oration/

Characters in this Chapter:

Baztian (Baz): Our main character
Rox: Deliritous’s Harbour (bodyguard)
Deliritous: Baz’s master, heir to Torchsire Library

Below is a copy of my script/notes for the episode, not a verbatim transcription.

PERSONAL UPDATE

Welcome to another episode of D. T. Kane’s Epic Fantasy Book Club. Today is Sunday, April 3, 2022 as I record this.

Drafting of Part 4 of the Spoken Books Uprising is in full swing.  I’m currently 26,000 words into my first draft and picking up steam! It’s amazing to see how the characters have grown and changed and I can’t wait to keep sharing their journey with all of you!

I’ve also been continuing my half marathon training. Been tough the past few weeks with poor weather and obligations on the weekends, haven’t gotten in as many long runs as I’d like. But I did get a 7.5 miler in yesterday. That’s about 12K for my non US listeners. Not sure I’m going to be in good enough shape to hit my goal of 2:10, but I do need to keep in perspective how incredible it is that I’m even at the point I’m at, talking about a time goal for a half marathon. A few years ago I couldn’t even run down the driveway. That’s one reason I like running, it’s sort of like an analogy for my writing. Slow, steady work over a long period and you’ll see improvement. That’s how running works and also writing—if you think about writing the whole book or whole series, you’ll be crushed under the overwhelmingness of it. But just focus on the one run or one writing session, then repeat day after day.

Finally, we’re less than two weeks away from the release of Declaimer’s Discovery, Part II of the Spoken Books Uprising! If you’d like to help me out, please take a minute and leave a review of Part I, The Acktus Trials. If you’ve been keeping up with the podcast, I think you’re qualified to leave a review. Part I is the gateway that will get readers into Part II and beyond, so having the social proof of reviews on Part I is really important to convince readers to start reading and discovery the world of Oration. Thank you!

ANAYLIS CHS. 14-15

CHAPTER 14

Reality is behind an opaque window

So we pick up pretty much right where we left off last week. Baz, Deliritous, and Rox have camped just outside Hamlet. Baz laments not having a roof over his head, but after learning that Marla was offering a reward to anyone who would give info about Baz’s whereabouts, he can’t stay in town. Also, this ruins their plan: They can’t stay in town if there’s a chance one of the townsfolk reveals to Marla that Deliritous has dark, shaved hair, and his “speaker” has long blond hair.

Baz also has to point out to Deliritous that Erstwhile frequently sends scouts to Hamlet, so they’d likely hear about the description of Deliritous’s Speaker too and put together that Deliritous hadn’t actually gone to Tome. So their plan of leaving Deliritous in Hamlet has gone out the window.

What to do now? 

I suppose this means our deal is off.

Deliritous tries to break off their deal, figuring they’ll need to go back to Erstwhile now. But Baz can’t let that happen, so he continues his manipulation of Deliritous–you’ve dreamed of this for as long as I’ve known you, stop crying about it! “Scolded by my own Speaker… You’d make my father proud.” Baz also got some painkillers from the shopkeeper, so Deliritous has those to help him keep going. And Baz points out that he’ll make Deliritous’s life exceedingly difficult if he tries to back out to the deal—“you need me to do your leg work for you.”

So Baz convinces Deliritous that he should go on, and they exchange cloaks again, Baz getting Leanna’s gift back. He keeps the hat, though, to Deliritous’s frustration. “I rather like it.” “Insolent page burner.”

Behind the curtain: I originally was going to leave Deliritous behind, but by the time I got to this point of the draft decided I didn’t want to spoil the dynamic between him and Baz and figured out a way to keep them together.

Little Del

So they begin to go over Deliritous’s plans for getting them to Tome. First, they decide to go the shorter, but more dangerous way, because that’s the way Hellar went and he no longer has a Harbour. Plus, it’s shorter and with Deliritous’s leg, they want to save as much travel as they can.

There’s then this light-hearted moment where all three of them are basically insulting how one another smell and they all laugh together, even Rox. Their relationship with one another is changing! We even learn that Rox has a pet name for Deliritous, “Little Del,” and he’s upset about failing his oath by letting Marla and Hellar successfully attack them. But Deliritous won’t have Rox feeling sorry for himself.

The plan:

  1. The Reach: wyrm country, but wyrms generally keep to themselves. If encounter, deal with fire and water spells. Wyrms breath fire and eat charred wood–nod to Patrick Rothfuss here and his “draccus” creatures.
  2. Firelands: dragons live here, “Fire Breathers.” Deliritous has brought camouflage for them to use, and also reveals that most dragons these days are small enough that Rox could fight them. Also has a spell that heats the air until it turns to water, which they can try and use to keep the dragon from breathing fire. How does this work? Well, basically it’s a spell that creates condensation, removing oxygen from the air to produce water. And if there’s no oxygen in the air, can’t have fire. Would this actually work? I’m not sure, but it sounds cool.
  3. Weeping Plains–Avoid the Citiless
  4. Your plan depends a lot on not encountering things that are dangerous.

CHAPTER 15

Plans never survive contact with the enemy

Baz has a bad feeling about this. He’s not used to things going right, listing off a litany of things that have gone wrong in his life. And once again he proves to be right. After a few hours of travel, they find the road blocked by felled trees, likely by Citiless that don’t want them coming to Tome.

The only way to continue on is to go off roading, into the trees. They follow a path they find there, until an odd assortment of sticks draws their attention. Rox goes to investigate, but falls into a hidden pit. Baz goes to investigate, rushes back to Deliritous. “We have a problem.” What could it be!?

I noticed an error on my part at the end of Chapter 15. When Deliritous is frantic over Rox, he calls Baz “Baz” several times. That’s a mistake, as I intentionally avoid having anyone but Tax call him Baz. I’ll have to fix that in a future edition. Life of an independent author!

CONCLUSION

Homework: Next week we’ll read chapters 16 and 17. Baz does something unexpected to get Rox out of a predicament, we learn some things about Rox, and Deliritous does an about face. Looking forward to discussing this and more with you next week!

Listener Question:

Quest:

Last week: My inspiration for Rox? Practical Frost from Abercrombie’s First Law Trilogy and Snorri ver Snagason from Prince of Fools by Mark Lawrence.

Share your favorite book reading experience with me!

Quote:

“Survival is the ability to swim in strange water.”

― Frank Herbert, Dune

Until next time, this has been D. T. Kane’s Epic Fantasy Book Club.