Writing Magazine

FANTASY FULFILLED

If you didn’t have the good fortune to grow up with Artemis Fowl, Eoin Colfer’s series of eight fantastical adventures of the young criminal mastermind, you might well have relished reading them to family members, or sneaking a peek when the kids finally put them down. And if you did, you almost certainly wished you could have the same rip-roaring reading experience as an adult.

And now you can, because the bestselling Irish author has written his first fantasy novel for adult readers. Highfire has all the Colfer trademarks, being a smart genre-bending fantasy novel starring Vern, a foul-mouthed, bad-tempered, vodka-swilling dragon who wears a Flashdance T-shirt, The last of his kind, he hides out in the Louisiana Bayou. Violent, funny and populated by a cast of misfit adventurers, the ensuing story rollicks along at a cracking pace.

It was, says Eoin, originally intended as a book for children.

Highfire almost happened by accident,’ he says. ‘That book started as a children’s book – the first couple of chapters were old grumpy character meets child and heart melts. I had a grumpy dragon. And it didn’t feel right and I felt I was holding back. As soon as I let the dragon be foul mouthed and drunken it felt like a better character. But the writing is not that different. I don’t have to think about suitability or what’s appropriate for children and that’s the only difference.’

In common with Eoin’s children’s literature, though, the world it creates is one of unbridled imagination.

‘Most kids’ books are demented but we’re not really allowed to bring that through to adult books,’ he

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Writing Magazine

Writing Magazine4 min read
Piracy, Pillage & Plunder
Mary Read first entered my life when I was kneeling on the floor, doing a Horrible Histories jigsaw puzzle with my young son. There was a passing reference to two female pirates, Anne Bonny and Mary Read, and this piqued my curiosity enough that I Go
Writing Magazine3 min read
Get Published
In the 1970s and 80s horror fiction was huge, the genre dominated by bestselling titles by Stephen King and James Herbert, writes Gary Dalkin. Shelves were filled with books by Ramsey Campbell, Shaun Hutson, Brian Lumley, Mark Morris, Stephen Laws a
Writing Magazine3 min read
Tips And Exercises For Writing Historical Fiction:
In writing historical fiction, it’s easy to get lost in the dates and facts that you’ve been researching (Who was monarch at the time? Which countries were allied in the War of Spanish Succession?). This can lead to sterile writing, and getting caugh

Related