Creating a Sense of Normalcy Amid the Chaos

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Andri E. Elia Author Interview

Borealis follows a man with the ability to transport himself through time who discovers secrets about himself and works to save the people of Yand. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

Ah, it’s not a man. It’s a young boy. It’s a coming-of-age story of an inadvertent blinker boy who finds himself in the middle of active warfare. It is a story of survival under extreme adversity, of danger, bravery, and resilience, and the ingenuity of creating a sense of normalcy amid the chaos. Many undertones of my childhood, growing up in a war zone. But like always, I infuse a light touch and humor where allowed. Meet and fall in love with Sunny, and see how he saves the world(!). He’s one of my favorite characters, way up there with Wolfpack and Snowfox.

All your characters have unique and original names; how do you come up with character names for your stories?

I draw my characters’ names from their backgrounds, environments, personalities. For example, I began the WorldmakerTM Saga in the star system of Yildun, which is a real star in the Ursa Minor constellation. Yildun means star, and I derived all primary names from it. The planet is Yand. The inhabited moon is Yenda. The worldmakers who manifest their power from this star are Yanara, Yira, Yileen, Yolinda. Yanara’s brother is Yildiz, which also starts with Y and means star.

All the goldenbloods (the bright Yandar race) have names that signify brightness, light, shine, luminance. Hence, Lucent, Flash, Blaze, Stardust.

Yanara’s children have names that reflect their personalities and abilities and also link them to their companions: Dragonlord is a dragoon (strongest mage) and is bonded to a dragon. Wolfpack, who is pathfinder, is like the alpha wolf, the leader. Sunny, well, I don’t want to spill the beans. You’ll see after reading Borealis. If not, please ask me again.

What author in your genre do you most admire, and why?

Tolkien for Fantasy. Do I need to elaborate? He’s the Master.

Anne McCaffrey, also fantasy, for her vivid world-building and characters.

Steven Brust for the first-person narration. Absolutely brilliant.

Can you tell us more about what’s in store for the people of Yand and the direction of the second book?

Ah, Borealis IS the second book in the Chronicles of Phe’lak.

Queen of Highwings is the first book.

The third book will be coming in 2025. It is titled The Beast of Phe’lak. You hear it first right here. I’m very excited about it. It features Dragonlord, whom I have been dying to write about, his dragon, Lavender, and his Yendal partner, Squirrel.

If I may add, in addition to the E-Book on Amazon, the printed book formats offer spectacular 2-page illustrated openings of every chapter, and more full-page illustrations throughout. They can be found here:

Paperback with Standard Paper and Inks: (most economical) https://tinyurl.com/jd363xh4

Paperback with Premium Paper and Inks: (most recommended) https://tinyurl.com/444hv9v4

Hardbound Premium Edition: (spectacular!) https://tinyurl.com/4s7y6ecm

Author links: GoodReads | Twitter | Facebook | Website

Fleeing the aftermath of interstellar warfare, Queen Asimia brings her husbands, her beloved uncle and grandmother, on a trek across galaxies to a new promised land. Many colonists follow her with stars in their eyes. Among them is a young, brave warrior woman, RC. When danger finds them along the way, RC sacrifices herself for her Queen, creating a time paradox that shakes two worlds—and robs a boy of his one and only love. What he must do to bring her back…

Original source: https://literarytitan.com/2024/07/30/creating-a-sense-of-normalcy-amid-the-chaos/

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