Inside the Book:
A fiery fairy battles for purpose.
Liefdom is the story of Gentry Mandrake. Born with natural weapons in a race known for pacifism, he is cast out and hated for his differences. He hunts for a place among his people, while fighting to defend the human child bound to him. His violent nature makes him wonder at the purity of his soul, while the dark creatures he must face seem too great to defeat. Can he overcome such terrible foes to defend those he loves?
What are you most
proud of accomplishing so far in your life?
I had a pretty rough
childhood. When I was about 24, I went to therapy and worked out my issues.
Took about fifteen years all told. It was the hardest, most soul-crushing thing
I ever did, but it made me who I am now. Most people can’t do that. Most people
can’t look at themselves, see a flaw, and know it is up to them to fix it.
How has your
upbringing influenced your writing?
I can say a lot of bad
things about the people that raised me, but my mom was fascinated by my
creativity. I was her favorite party game. She would get a piece of paper and
send it around the room. Everyone would write down the weirdest thing they
could think of. Then she would hand the paper to me. I had about two minutes to
start telling my story. It had to have every one of those elements in it. Sometimes
that meant five things, sometimes ten, anything from a car battery to mutated,
skinless rabbits. In that way, she helped me hone my mind for creating stories.
When and why did you
begin writing?
Writing started for me
when I was in fifth grade. Mr. Olsen gave me the assignment at 20th street
school. He blew my mind by telling me I could write a story. For reasons I
still don’t understand, I thought you had to have permission to write a story. Mine
was about a boy whose parents get a divorce and his dad goes on safari. For his
birthday, the boy gets a crate in the mail from his dad, and it’s a purple hippopotamus.
The boy rode it to school.
Do you recall how your
interest in writing originated?
My interest in writing
started in fifth grade, but before that, I was obsessed with stories. My family
told amazing stories. Everyone in my extended family told wonderful, colorful, inappropriate
stories. As a kid, I just sat and listened to them in a kind of awed stupor. I remember
they would play poker and drink at my grandparents’ house and the kids would
play. I would stand right next to my grandfather and listen to them tell
stories. Through the fog of the cigarette smoke, the characters they created were
larger than life. I studied the craft as a kid, was obsessed with it. My
grandfather would go to the bathroom and I would be chased away to play with
the kids. I always came back, though. He would put his arm around me as he
played his cards, and he would snap at anyone that tried to make me leave.
When did you first
know you could be a writer?
My freshman English teacher, Mrs. Hegg, presented the idea to me.
I wrote a story about a pumpkin that witnessed a murder for a Halloween
assignment she gave. I read it to the class and she freaked out. She gave me a
standing ovation. She took the story from me and read it out loud again. After
class, I tried to run away, but she caught me and brought me back to her desk.
She looked at me with light in her eyes and said, “How long have you been
writing?” I told her then that I would burn the story after I had read it three
times. She freaked out, almost screamed in horror actually. She begged me to
never do that again. “Bring them to me,” she said. She wouldn’t even read them
if I didn’t want her to. She just wanted to protect them. She is in my writers
group to this day. She is a brilliant poet. I love that woman with all my
heart.
What inspires you to
write and why?
My characters inspire
me to write, actually. They live fascinating lives. They love and hate and
fight and struggle, and it is inspiring. There is a theory in writing that if
you create a good enough character, you can just sit back and let them act.
They will get into adventures. You just need to write it down. That’s how it is
with me.
What genre are you
most comfortable writing?
I’m exclusive. I’m
only a fantasy writer. I have one good trick in me. I can create fantasy at a
whim. Otherwise, writing baffles me. People who write screenplays amaze me. I’m
a novelist. If I a poet can say it in ten words, it will take me three pages to
get the point across. Poets are wizards. If different forms of writing like
this blow my mind, different genres do as well. I don’t know how romance
writers do it. All that love, all that passion, packed into three hundred
pages. The good ones can affect a love life for years to come. I would like to
write a western some day. It would have to have wizards. I would start working on
it now, but Stephen King already wrote that series and it was magnificent. Why
tread on that ground? I’ll stick to fantasy. If I’m writing it, and it doesn’t
have a sword and a spell in it somewhere, then something is wrong.
What inspired you to
write your first book?
It was Halloween
again. Wow, I just put that together. It was coming up on Halloween and I
wanted to publish a short story. I decided I would write my first serious
fantasy piece. Back then I was dabbling in a lot of troubled waters and I wanted
to just stick to what I loved. I got started writing a short, maybe twenty-page,
story about a murderer and five strangers in a tiny little quarry village. When
I got to page 36 and I was just getting my feet set, I realized I was writing a
book. Terrified me. I was scared to my core. No way I could pull off a whole
book! But I have a great woman in my life and she told me I could. She believed
until I did.
Who or what influenced
your writing once you began?
Stephen King is a god.
There are a lot of names I’m supposed to say first, so here goes. Robert E.
Howard was big for me. H.P. Lovecraft, another juggernaut of my early years.
Kipling was huge for me when I read The
Jungle Books. Blew my mind. But Stephen King was the one. What he is doing
is amazing, the sheer volume of work coming out of him year after year. The
work ethic it takes to pump out one great book after the next, man, he taught
me how to do it. I read On Writing,
when I got started. It was bought for me by a guy who mattered. His name was
Adam, but he is not around anymore. Man, that book showed me how to do it.
What do you consider
the most challenging about writing a novel, or about writing in general?
The only challenging
thing to writing a book is sitting down to write. Stephen Pressfield wrote a
brilliant book. It is one-part instructional manual, two-parts a kick to the
butt. The book is called The War of Art. Man,
that book is amazing. Bought me for by a great writer, friend of mine named
Siobhan. The book talks about many things all writers need to hear, but the one
thing that stood out to me is this. He says, “The writer knows what the wanna
be doesn’t. Sitting down to write is harder than writing.” Once you have
hammered out the time, once you have sat down to do the work, once you have
shut down all the demons telling you that you are wasting your time, once you
have walked away from every distraction, the work just flows.
Did writing this book
teach you anything and what was it?
Writing Liefdom taught me my purpose. It gave me
my thesis statement all my work is about. At its core, Liefdom is a study on protecting innocence. It’s about a fairy who
does anything necessary to save the life of a boy. When I was finished, I knew
what I wanted my work to be about. There is no higher calling than protecting
the innocent. A child is always worth fighting for. In some way, every book I
have written has been about that idea.
Do you intend to make
writing a career?
Writing is all I’m
really good at. Now, my saint of a wife will tell you something else. She and I
have had this argument many times, but the truth of the thing is this: I have
one marketable skill, one thing I can do that few others can. Writing is all I
have, and I have made my life about it. I work all the time. I have written 16
novels, all rough drafts, all unpublished, all telling the story of one
continent in a unique world. Every one of them is connected. There are five
series in all. Each series stands alone, but together, they tell one crazy tale
that weaves around itself again and again. This is my life. This is all I’ve
got.
Have you developed a
specific writing style?
I like multiple point
of view characters in a book. Now, that is not popular. Every one I have
talked to wants to know whose story it really is. My work will almost always
have many stories being told at the same time. I like past tense. I like third
person. I like my fantasy to be huge and unstoppable. In the bible, Samson kills
thousands of men with the jawbone of an ass. When I heard that the first time
in church, I almost cried. It was a magnificent story. One man, possessed by
the power of his god, killing thousands of men at a time. How does that happen?
How mighty of a god do you have to be? Well, if you believe the story, that is
great. If you don’t, then it is just a story. But that is the kind of fantasy I
want to read, that I what I want to see, that is what I write.
What is your greatest strength as a writer?
My greatest strength as a writer is that it
never stops coming. When I was a kid, I played a lot of Dungeons and Dragons. I
was that kid. I wanted to play all the time. I was the guy that came up with
the story. If I wanted to play, I had to keep telling stories. I had to create
on the fly. I had to keep telling stories that my friends wanted to be a part
of. I would play for hours on end. One game, we played for 27 hours. For 27
hours, I had to come up with characters and settings. I had to come up with
plots for six guys and keep it interesting for 27 hours. I did that for
decades. For decades, I would start a story and keep it going for hours. I learned
to just create on a whim. The ideas never stop with me. I have nine more books
to write before my epoch is finished. When it is done, I have an idea that will
propel me through another 24 books. It won’t stop coming.
What is your favorite
quality about yourself?
I’m loyal. To a fault.
When you’re my friend, that is it. I’ll tell you a story, ’cause you haven’t
told me to shut up yet. My best friend Chris is a brilliant artist and I love
him dearly. His wife came over the other day and she was talking to mine while
I was sitting there, listening and butting in every now and then. She started
saying that Chris was driving her crazy because he would bring out stuff from
everywhere and just leave it out. She would have to put it back where it
belonged. I jumped on this right away. I said, “As you should. If he goes to
the trouble of bringing it all out, the least you can do is put it back.” My
other friend is having a baby. They told us all, but not the names they were
thinking of until they had one nailed down. I was talking to his wife and I
said, “You should go with the name Matt wants. It’s perfect!” She looked at me
like I was crazy. She said, “What did you say?” She was starting to get mad at
him ’cause he was not supposed to tell anyone his names. I said, “Yeah, he
hasn’t told me what it is yet, but he is my boy. He is right. It’s perfect. Go
with that.”
What is your least
favorite quality about yourself?
I have a lot of
crippling self-doubt that I have to work though. When I look at myself, sometimes
I can’t see my worth. I can’t see why I have wonderful people in my life and a
fantastic wife by my side at all times. I can’t see what they see. I just have to
have faith it is there.
What is your favorite
quote, by whom, and why?
“Be bold and mighty
forces will come to your aid,” by Basil King. This came to me when I started
writing. Actually, a few months after I had started writing my first novel, about
the time in a novel when the newness has worn off and you’re starting to hear
self-doubt and you’re getting scared. Writing a book is scary stuff. You put
your emotions, hot and cold, down on the page. You are writing things people
are going to feel strongly about. People are going to make assumptions about
their lives based on the characters in your book. When I read Sturm Brightblade,
as a kid in high school, he affected my personality. He helped shape the man I
became. When you realize you have that kind of power, you are a monster if you’re
not a little terrified. Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman would have had trouble
writing Sturm, had they known the effect he would have on me. In the face of
the fear of writing, and all that comes with it, you have to be bold.
For more about Liefdom,
and Jesse Teller, visit his KindleScout campaign page: https://kindlescout.amazon.com/p/1HPG86CQEF8U0
Meet the Author:
Jesse Teller lives in Missouri. He hasn’t always, but like storytelling, it snuck into his bones. He lives with his wonderful, supportive wife and two inspiring kids. When he is not pounding too hard on his poor keyboard, you can find him bumping into walls and mumbling to himself.

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