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Natania Barron

fantasy author, fashion historian

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Queen of None

Book One in the Queens of Fate Series

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The second book in Natania Barron's Arthurian fantasy series.

Queen of Fury

Book Two in the Queens of Fate Series

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Netherford Hall

Book one in the Love in Netherford series

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  • fantasy,  writing

    (Dis)illusion – on magic

    February 6, 2009 / No Comments

    When I was young, the pursuit of magic was a daily adventure. I was nearly obsessed with tapping into some unknown ability, like a Jedi, that when unleashed would undoubtedly solve my problems. Of course, my love of fantasy fueled this preoccupation. I saturated my imagination with books that reiterated my convictions: magic was possible, it was just a matter of finding it. At about the age of twelve, I started writing what could (technically at least) be considered novels (though nothing was ever finished). And magic was everywhere; I remember how intoxicating it was to create a world for the first time, drawing a map, and developing magic. Of…

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    December 4, 2012

    There Are No Guilty Pleasures in Reading

    March 9, 2020

    The Mother-Hero in Arthurian Fantasy

    November 19, 2020
  • blog,  fantasy,  podcast

    Just to clear something up re: self-publishing

    February 5, 2009 / No Comments

    Okay, so the last few weeks I’ve been thinking a great deal about “self-publishing” and its definitions. Publishing has been radically altered because of the Internet, and so have the concepts of rights ownership and creative property. From the getgo, when I started The Aldersgate Cycle Blog, the idea was that I wanted to invite people into my creative process with no strings attached. Yes, technically podcasting my chapters is self-publishing, but it’s not the end-product. I don’t plan on going through Lulu or any of print-on-demand publishers at this space in time because, frankly, I haven’t even tried to get the book published. From the beginning I have referred…

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    Eating Authors over at Lawrence M. Shoen’s Blog

    February 20, 2015

    Queen of None is Out Today!

    December 1, 2020

    On Feminism and Women Who Rock

    August 3, 2012
  • blog,  writing

    The white space: what we don’t write

    February 4, 2009 / No Comments

    Writers are always told: write what you know. It’s as cliche was “the pen is mightier than the sword”. Unfortunately this leads to lots of fledgling writers composing short stories about twenty-somethings disillusioned with life, breakups, and college. At least, that’s the bulk of what I wrote in my undergraduate writing classes (and what most folks wrote)–for the most part, they were drivel. The thing is, you can take the adage to mean more than one thing. It’s not just writing about what you know, as in what your life is about, but also what kind of reading you do, what worlds you know. Hence, these days I write fantasy,…

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    December 4, 2012
    from Flaxman's Iliad - 1792. Public Domain.

    Watcher of the Skies and Thoughts on NaNoWriMo

    November 14, 2012

    Escapism of all stripes

    September 16, 2012
  • blog,  fantasy

    Writing to reach you

    February 4, 2009 / No Comments

    I’ve been in a writing zone lately. Every day, writing. In the car, in the house, upstairs and downstairs. It doesn’t seem to matter. As I’ve mentioned over at the Aldersgate Cycle blog, I’ve been so busy that blog writing isn’t really a possibility (except um, obviously right now). I realized I’ve clocked about 70K in the last month and three days. Which is impressive. But what really got me is that I’ve written 35K in the last ten days. Though I’m typically very, um, unpredictable when it comes to writing, I have little in the way of explanation for this one. To my knowledge no one has spiked my…

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  • WIP,  writing

    Going for the jugular: killing characters

    January 30, 2009 / No Comments

    These days high-profile writers get a lot of press for doing awful things to characters. Yes, killing a protagonist can be a very effective way of adding a hint of surprise to your novel. But it’s by no means unusual or original. I mean, if you ever have read any George R. R. Martin or heck, even J.K. Rowling, you know that people make a very big deal about killing characters. It even becomes some writers’ defining characteristic. The weird thing is that it’s not new. Take the “Song of Roland”. Hint: everybody dies. Well, Roland and Oliver die. And everything falls apart. Pretty much the same story in Arthuriana.…

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    A Knight Yule Remember: The Green Knight Makes the Cut

    August 1, 2021

    As Graceless as a Three-Legged Baby Elephant

    June 19, 2012

    A quick one while I’m away… 2012 to 2013

    December 28, 2012
  • Uncategorized

    Giving GoogleDocs a second chance.

    January 27, 2009 / No Comments

    My husband has always been a huge supporter of using GoogleDocs, and I have always been skeptic. There’s something about writing in your own program and having everything just where you like it. I’m possessive, I admit. I tried writing in GoogleDocs a few times, and was always put off by myriad formatting issues. I can tolerate lots of clunkiness in the way of a word processor, but if it can’t do a handful of things I toss it out entirely. Well, I’ve been contemplating novel storage, and as a backup, I’ve been importing stuff into GoogleDocs. Then I decided to give it another try, just to see. And I…

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    Jonathan Wood’s No Hero and Yesterday’s Hero are FREE at Wired!

    August 1, 2012

    ‘Cause I’m Short On Time, I’m Lonely and I’m Too Tired to Talk

    August 24, 2012

    Arthur Re(du)x – Part One

    December 8, 2009
  • fantasy,  WIP,  writing

    More process than product.

    January 23, 2009 / No Comments

    I have been editing a book for longer than I’ve been writing it. Such is the way of things. But I am seven chapters from the end of The Aldersgate, and looking at my collected chapters in Scrivener gives me a very warm sense of accomplishment. I’m hitting the home stretch, and yesterday when I went to visit my husband at work, I was listening to the radio and tying up loose ends in my head for the last few chapters; everything sort of rushed and me, and I realized about ten minutes into my thought process that I was going the wrong way on the highway–i.e. north and not…

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    Introducing Two Brain Space

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    November 30, 2017
  • fantasy,  geek,  review,  television

    TV Review: Legend of the Seeker

    January 22, 2009 / No Comments

    Let’s clear something up first. I’m not an avid TV watcher. I don’t stake out stations like I used to, planning my evenings around programming. When I watch a show, it’s usually on DVD and most likely cancelled–a la Firefly–or on its way out, like Battlestar Galactica. And my route to the show usually involves someone, like in the case of Lost, insisting to me that this MUST BE SEEN. Because of this filter of friends and a distance from commercial interruption, I think I tend to hit right most of the time. Except with Heroes. What has been seen cannot be unseen. So, it was through the casual mention…

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    April 25, 2018
    black withered tree surounded by body of water

    Coming Out in Prose: Reflections on Pilgrim of the Sky, 10 Years Later

    September 20, 2022

    From the Arthurian Lit Readings: “Sir Palomydes’ Quest” by William Morris

    March 27, 2023
  • blog,  geek,  WIP,  writing

    Living with a writer.

    January 21, 2009 / No Comments

    I sometimes wonder what it’s like dealing with me. I mean, being a writer and immersing yourself in imaginary and weird worlds (and sometimes… universes, omniverses, and fractalverses) is by no stretch a “normal” thing to do. My kid, sure, he’s two, and he probably thinks what I do is normal. But how do I explain to him what’s going on in my head? So, in a nod to my husband for putting up with me, here’s some things you might notice if you live with a writer: Incoherent mumbling. This is usually reserved for writers in the process of thinking a novel out. You may hear quips of dialogues,…

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    On Feminism and Women Who Rock

    August 3, 2012

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    December 4, 2012

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    February 20, 2015
  • Uncategorized

    Because Twitpic won’t work.

    January 15, 2009 / No Comments

    This is a very large apple. And I am going to eat it.

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    August 24, 2012

    Arthur Re(du)x – Part One

    December 8, 2009

    Jonathan Wood’s No Hero and Yesterday’s Hero are FREE at Wired!

    August 1, 2012
  • blog

    New Header!

    January 15, 2009 / No Comments

    Huzzah. It’s amazing what one little (even if totally mediocre) change can do to a standard lookin’ WordPress page. A little nifty. And a visual pun! Granted, it’s an exploding world, but still…

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    Escapism of all stripes

    September 16, 2012

    Eating Authors over at Lawrence M. Shoen’s Blog

    February 20, 2015

    Queen of None is Out Today!

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  • blog,  geek

    Your Twitter friends

    January 14, 2009 / No Comments

    Ah, the wonderful world of Twitter. For the last year or so, I’ve found myself addicted, obsessed, and entertained by this new media darling. But over this time, I’ve also noticed some patterns emerging, and bordering on hilarity. Of course, nothing should be inferred or implied. Any similarity to those living or dead (save for @wilw!) is entirely coincidental. And rest assured, I’m guilty of quite a few of these myself. — The TMIer – This person seemed normal, and you like making new, interesting friends. But a few days into following their feed, and you now know more about their bodily functions and various diseases than you do about…

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    The Middle Eight Manifesto or; Behold! The Secret to Writing!

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    Escapism of all stripes

    September 16, 2012
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