Authors Review Books | Fantasy Podcast Por J. G. Gates arte de portada

Authors Review Books | Fantasy

Authors Review Books | Fantasy

De: J. G. Gates
Escúchala gratis

OFERTA POR TIEMPO LIMITADO. Obtén 3 meses por US$0.99 al mes. Obtén esta oferta.
The show where your favorite authors tell you about the fantasy books they love!Copyright 2025, Steed Publishing and Media, LLC
Episodios
  • Authors Review Books | Behind the Keyboard with Katharine E. Wibell | Oct 18, 2025
    Oct 18 2025
    Behind the Keyboard: An Interview with Katharine E. WibellTranscript J. G. Gates: Hello and welcome to the Behind the Keyboard segment of Authors Review Books. My name is J. G. Gates, and please help me welcome Katharine E. Wibell.Katharine is a high fantasy author, artist, nerd, extrovert, and speaker. Her first series, The Incarn Saga, began in 2016 with Asara’s Claws. Soon three more books completed this fast-paced new adult shifter fantasy.Currently, The Djed Chronicles, a Noblebrite YA portal fantasy series, will release its sixth book in 2026. She also creates hand-painted TTRPG miniatures based on her characters, along with accompanying game material.So, Katharine, thank you so much for being with us to share your authorly insights today.Katharine E. Wibell: Thank you for having me here.J. G. Gates: Happy to have you. First of all, let’s dig into your writing process. Tell me about how you write.Katharine E. Wibell: That’s a big question! As far as process goes, I’m a morning writer, but I like to juggle multiple projects at once. In the mornings I focus on whatever new manuscript I’m writing—or sometimes editing—and in the afternoons I handle social media and publication tasks.Having this kind of writing cycle, where I work on multiple projects at different stages and often from different series, allows me to release two or three books a year. I love high fantasy in all its forms, and being able to jump between mythic retellings and my YA portal fantasy keeps me energized. It helps me avoid burnout and writer’s block—at least so far!J. G. Gates: When you start a new project, how do you approach it? Are you a plotter, a pantser, or something in between?Katharine E. Wibell: I’m a plantser—I plant the seed and let it grow. I like to have at least a loose outline, often more detailed than that, but still flexible.I always know the endgame when I start. I know my main characters, their personalities, and the basics of the world system. But if new characters or subplots emerge as I write, I let them. I don’t want to be so rigid that the story can’t breathe. I want the world to take its first breath and come alive.J. G. Gates: How long are your planning documents? Some writers have a few sentences; others have forty pages.Katharine E. Wibell: It really varies. For example, I’m finishing a Greek myth retelling right now. I have a loose timeline and scattered notes, but what I really use is what I call rolling notes.Whatever chapter I’m working on is at the top, and below that are pages of notes—ideas, bits of dialogue, future scenes. As I go, I can drop those notes in chronologically where they belong. By the end, those rolling notes can be forty pages long! It keeps me from getting lost in the future while staying focused on the scene at hand.J. G. Gates: Do you keep those notes in the same document as your manuscript?Katharine E. Wibell: Usually, yes. But I also keep a separate style sheet—a reference for characters, physical details, personality notes, scars, wounds, place names, cityscapes, unique terminology. It’s easier to check that than scroll through a manuscript.So I mainly use two key documents: the rolling notes and the style sheet.J. G. Gates: You’ve published quite a few books. How long have you been writing?Katharine E. Wibell: I’ve been storytelling my whole life. As a kid, I made up characters, backstories, and worlds with my sister. Some of those ideas—things I dreamed up at age eight or ten—became part of The Djed Chronicles.I first wanted to write a book in high school, but I didn’t start with my “passion project.” Instead, I worked on another idea that became Asara’s Claws. I dabbled with it, took a break for college, and finally published it in 2016—about ten years after I first imagined it.Since then, I’ve released nine novels and sixteen novellas, with special editions on the way soon.J. G. Gates: Where do your ideas come from now?Katharine E. Wibell: Everywhere. My brain just spins off stories. I’ve always loved myths and legends, so I split my writing into two main categories: myth-based retellings and original fantasy worlds.Asara’s Claws came from a vivid dream. My multiverse grew out of my childhood play. One world came from a D&D character I played—I want to turn that into a D&D-style progression fantasy with Witcher vibes. Another story grew from a political intrigue challenge my husband gave me. Inspiration can truly come from anywhere, and that’s what I love.J. G. Gates: There’s a lot of talk about “writing to market.” How much does that influence your process?Katharine E. Wibell: A bit of both. My first series was 100% for me—I didn’t even know marketing was a thing. I published my first book, waited two years, and wondered why no one found it!Now I still write what I’m passionate about, but I’m more aware of what readers are looking for. I think about how to describe my book, what tropes it...
    Más Menos
    24 m
  • Katharine E. Wibell reviews Akithar's Greatest Trick by Jason Dorough
    Oct 7 2025
    In this episode, author Katharine E. Wibell discusses her “The Guardian’s Speaker” books and reviews Akithar’s Greatest Trick by Jason Dorough. Also mentioned are Dragons and Aces by J. G. Gates, Wild Reverence by Rebecca Ross, and The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss. Transcript J. G. Gates Hi and welcome to Authors Review Books Fantasy, the show where your favorite authors share the books that they love. I'm J.G. Gates, bestselling author of over a dozen novels. Most recently, you may have heard of Dragons and Aces, which is about a biplane pilot and a dragon rider from enemy nations who, you know, fall in love. So it's got enemies to lovers vibes, mistaken identity, it's got some spice and... It may be the book for you, so check it out if you're looking for a fantasy read. Our featured new release today is Wild Reverence by Rebecca Ross. True Love is more divine than any ruthless god. This is a standalone fantasy novel that features a goddess and a mortal with familiar characters from Ross's Divine Rivals series. that is our new release for the day. And by the way, if any of the books that are mentioned on this show sound like your next favorite read, there will be links in the show notes and captions where you can find them. And now let's welcome our guest, Katharine E. Wibell is a high fantasy author, artist, nerd, extrovert and speaker. Her first series, The Incarn Saga began in 2016 with Ishura's Claws. Soon three more books completed this fast-paced new adult shifter fantasy. Currently, The Djed Chronicles, a noble bright YA portal fantasy series will release its sixth book in 2026. She also creates and hand-paints TTRPG miniatures based on her characters, which is super cool, along with creating the accompanying gaming material. So, Katharine, welcome. Katharine E. Wibell Hi. J. G. Gates Yeah, thank you so much. So I know you have a book you're going to review for us today, but first I want you to tell me a little bit about ⁓ your latest book. Katharine E. Wibell Well, I-- I'm gonna throw it for loop. I'm actually, instead of talking about the latest book, which is part of the Djed Chronicle series, my YA series, I did want to kind of focus on The Guardian Speaker, which for people who like, especially in the darker side of fantasy or mythic based retellings, this may be the one for you, since The Guardian Speaker, as of the end of last year, is now a complete series of 16 novellas and they're pretty much a deep dive in Nordic myth. You follow the point of view character, this young female essentially Viking character who was born with the ability to see and communicate with everybody's animal-shaped guardian spirits, but because of her ability is so rare that people look at her talking to herself and pretty much think she's a little crazy and so she's been ostracized her whole life and shunned out of society and so she lives on the fringes of the village and where she thinks at that point of her life that she's okay just doing what she's done. That is, until she meets another person who has a similar though different ability and but he is brought in as a person in bondage and he also brings in with a warning that he has realized there is a threat on humanity and his particular ability may allow him to help stop this oncoming plague that's coming out towards them. So she does the first big decision of her life and frees this man, and in doing so and the repercussions that follow send her and her family on essentially a Viking Odyssey throughout all nine realms of Nordic myth. So that's my series in a little nutshell, and I'm really excited about it. The first, as I said, they are novellas. come out independently, and then originally I bundled them in sets of four. So… print versions but what's really exciting for me is in November, I'll be launching my special limited deluxe edition of the series. And they're going to be bundled in a set of one through eight and a set of nine through 16. And they're going to have the works, the sprayed edges, the foiling. I have worked with a variety of artists. So you're going to have character art and beautiful scene art and everything you kind of hopefully want in a special edition. So for me, that's really exciting. And so that will be my last kind of gearing up release for the year. I'm really just thrilled J. G. Gates Love it Nordic Odyssey and you know beautiful fancy books. You gotta love that. Is it gonna come to Kickstarter? Is that what you said? Katharine E. WibellYeah, so this will be a Kickstarter launch and I'm aiming usually for the third Tuesday of the month, though if you ask me what date that is right now, that is so far in advance because I am right now just working behind the scenes of setting up that Kickstarter and then that means after I hopefully fund the project, we'll be releasing these beautiful books to the world early next year. J. G. Gates That sounds super duper fun. I love it. I'm gonna ...
    Más Menos
    17 m
  • Behind the Keyboard with Kait Ballenger
    Oct 2 2025
    In this "Behind the Keyboard" interview, we get writing, publishing, and book marketing advice from traditionally-published author Kait Ballenger, author of Original Sinner and many other books.Interview TranscriptJ. G. Gates Hi and welcome to Behind the Keyboard where we explore the writing process of some of our favorite authors. Today we have Kate Ballinger with us. Kate is an award-winning author of dark romantasy and paranormal romance. She is obsessed with tales of morally gray, sometimes villainous heroes, and can't resist a spicy redemption arc. When Kate's not busy writing kinky paranormal fantasy, she can usually be found with her nose buried in someone else's naughty books. She lives in Florida's Bible Belt with her husband and two adorable sons, and she will gladly use that belt to whip you. Kate, welcome. Thank you for being here. Kait Ballenger Thanks so much for having me. J. G. Gates So let's dive right in. So my first question is kind of open-ended, deliberately tell us a little bit about your writing process. Just like walk us through what it's like for you to approach a book from beginning to end. Kait Ballenger So it's definitely changed over the course of my career. I tend to be more of like a discovery writer or a panster as some people call it. I like discovery writer because it sounds like nicer. But I will say at the beginning of my career, I would plot out bigger plot beats like before I even started, right? Looking at like what's the inciting incident turning point one, right? J. G. Gates That's true. Kait Ballenger I can go through some of the bigger story arc structure and only then would I start to put pin to page. But I've leaned into my discovery writer-ness. we have a cat appearing with us. Welcome, pet friends. But I've leaned more into this discovery writer even more as I've started. J. G. Gates Good. Embrace the cats, please. Of course. Kait Ballenger …Continuing in my career. And so for the original Sinner series specifically, this was very much a joy project for me. It was a passion project. So it just was like, I was going on vibes at the start of it. Like I had like a couple songs that were like, you know, sparking inspiration and like varying ideas for scenes. But when I sat down, I was really just kind of letting it free flow. I do tend to edit a lot as I go. So like once I drafted a scene before I move on to the next one, the following day if I come back to it I will go through and I will edit the previous scene as a means of almost getting back in the mindset of where I was previously. So there ends up being a lot of like iteration in the process even though I'm a discovery writer so my drafts really come out relatively clean at the end because I do so much editing, but it just kind of helps me get back in the mindset of where I was going with the story. But, very much a panster. J. G. Gates I love that. And it's so interesting, because I feel like that's one of the pieces of advice that you see people say is like, never edit as you go, right? Like always, like get it on paper, get the whole thing done. Don't worry about editing as you go. But I think, you know, what you're saying makes sense to like when you sit back down again, it takes a minute to get back into the world. So like, you know, why not reread that past scene, do a little revision on it, and then you're like fully back into the world to continue ahead. Kait Ballenger Exactly, , and like and I definitely do that in like chunks too because like I follow basically the W plot method and so like and I love using that and so I break the book basically into four acts and so like I Iterate the pages like as I'm writing the first act of like okay I'm editing and I'll go back to stuff that I've already edited even and kind of read through it like make little notes like as I'm going and then once I get to the end of that section and that section's polished then I go on to the next section. And I know a lot of writers definitely give that advice of like, don't edit as you go, but for me, it helps me get back in the mindset, it helps me continue on in the story, and then when I'm finished, I have a really polished draft that is like basically ready to go off to my editor. So for me, the writing would not go faster if I didn't do the editing. The editing is a part of that process. I don't know if you're familiar with Becca Syme and her Write Better Faster courses, but I always just, I trust my intuition on that. That's the way it works best for me. And so my advice to writers is always to just go with, find what works best for you, trust your intuition, because it's going to be different for every writer. J. G. Gates That's so true. There's really as many varied processes as there are writers out there, right? You mentioned the W plot method. Can you tell us what that is a little bit? Because I'm not familiar with it either. I haven't heard of that myself, so. Kait Ballenger ...
    Más Menos
    30 m
Todavía no hay opiniones