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Natania Barron

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

PREORDER
  • writing

    I can hear the voice inside my head–saying you should be with me instead.

    April 24, 2009 / 3 Comments

    Me: Will you guys shut up, please? I’m trying to wake up here. Peter: But you just had a huge revelation about me, and you’re honestly thinking of working on that short story about grubby worm spider things in a Victorian garden? Spindly Grubbings: *intelligible chittering* Me: Yes, Peter. I am thinking about that. Doesn’t mean I have committed to anything yet. I have one afternoon to do this, okay? I’m trying to prioritize. Cora: (sighs) Great. So you’re leaving me on an island filled convicts and no resolve? Me: Stop sulking, Cora. You’ll be fine. You have friends to watch you while I’m– Captain Pars: Friends? She has friends?…

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    In the trenches between pain and progress.

    September 20, 2012

    The Sound of October Revival

    January 5, 2018

    Writing… With Exceptional Children

    January 27, 2020
  • blog,  geek,  writing

    My path to girl geekdom.

    April 22, 2009 / 1 Comment

    Yellow, not pink. Shel Silverstein, not Mother Goose. Dad on guitar, not songs on tape. Unicorns, not horses. Galaga, not Ga-Ga dolls. Muppets, not puppets. TMBG, not DMB. Fraggles, not ruffles. Wrinkles in Time, not Babysitter Clubs. Crusher, not crushes (but: crushes on Crusher) Ant farms, not petting zoos. Home-made, not Little Debbie. Poe, not a poser. Science, not social, experiments. Renn, not savoir, faire. News Radio, not Friends. Kids in the Hall, not SNL. Bald Eagles, not American Eagle. The Next Generation, not Generation X. Smoking hobbits, not smoking habits. “ooh!” not “eww!” Mallrats, not actual malls. d20s, not detention. Fangirl, not fanclub. “Bloody Mary” – not Bloody Maries.…

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    Queen of None is Out Today!

    December 1, 2020

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

    July 31, 2012

    On Feminism and Women Who Rock

    August 3, 2012
  • WIP,  writing

    Dreams and revelations.

    April 21, 2009 / No Comments

    I have written lots of stuff over the years, but my problem is always finalization, finishing. The first finished novel I ever wrote is a prequel, of sorts, to The Aldersgate, occurring in the same world but some 400 years before. It’s called Peter of Windbourne, and it has been sitting in stasis for… oh, three years or so. First novels are a tricky business. Writing them is like having your first crush; it’s a hectic, messy, emotional process, and the outcome isn’t necessarily something you hold onto for the rest of your life. Peter isn’t that bad, but it’s had a major, central problem that has taken me a…

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

    December 28, 2012

    Words are flowing out like endless rain inside a paper cup

    September 24, 2012

    Work, Write: How to Nurture Your Writing and Still Get a Paycheck

    June 11, 2016
  • blog,  publication,  writing

    All the world’s your stage: the performativity of online presence

    April 20, 2009 / 5 Comments

    My freshman year of college, I discovered MUSHing, specifically Elendor, the Tolkien-based MUSH. Besides being a hole for creativity (well, who needs to write anything original when you’re in a world as detailed as that one…) it was my first real exposure to an online community. And it’s there that I discovered the vast difference between real and perceived personalities in virtual space. I called it a MUSHPersona. There were people, for instance, whom I knew in real life as relatively mild-mannered bookworms, who online became sarcastic, self-important, jerks. Shyguys turn into relentless flirts. Housewives turn into vixens. And I’ve found, especially with the birth of social media and the…

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    Image by FEMA - public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

    Burning down the house. Again.

    September 6, 2012

    Welcoming Winter, Gravely

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

    Watcher of the Skies and Thoughts on NaNoWriMo

    November 14, 2012
  • fantasy,  geek,  writing

    Embracing my inner dragon… early fantasy writing.

    April 17, 2009 / 2 Comments

    Most of my college years were spent trying to be a “real” fiction writer. That is, writing crappy short stories and outlining (okay, thinking about) crappy novels in the real world, with real problems, and real issues. While I would say it was wasted time, I don’t think that’s the case  entirely. I mean, all writers have to grow, right? I was just embarrassed to love SF/F so much; I believed that it was, on some level, childish and certainly not a legitimate endeavour. Well, thankfully I came to my senses after I got my BA. But even before that, I couldn’t shake the fantasy bug entirely. Rifling through my…

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    A Room of Their Own: A Look at Characters and the Spaces They Inhabit

    November 18, 2012

    Masks and Malevolence Cover Reveal, and Some Notes

    November 30, 2017

    Glimpses Into the Costuming of The Lord of the Rings, the Rings of Power

    February 10, 2022
  • fantasy,  geek

    The mask and the mirror: Otherness and fantasy literature

    April 15, 2009 / 14 Comments

    Take some elves, dragons, dwarves, hobgoblins, orcs, fairies, gnomes… (ad nauseum; lather, rinse, repeat) and add a protagonist, a wizard, and a magic weapon then voila: you have a fantasy novel. Other races, other peoples–especially those living in other worlds–typify, for many readers anyway, the very heart of fantasy literature. We want maps, cultures, civilizations, religions, and the oh-so-obvious dichotomies of good and evil. It’s comfortable, from a reader’s perspective, to fall into a world that is familiarly different–not uncomfortably so. The best-selling fantasy series of all time most often adhere into this very pattern. While some “classic” fantasy has fallen out of fashion as far as working writers are…

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    So You Have a Book to Promote During a Pandemic

    October 9, 2020

    A Room of Their Own: A Look at Characters and the Spaces They Inhabit

    November 18, 2012

    Masks and Malevolence Cover Reveal, and Some Notes

    November 30, 2017
  • writing

    I write because…

    April 13, 2009 / 4 Comments

    it makes me happy. the voices tell me to. other voices tell me not to. it’s what I know. it’s everything unknown. it’s who I am. it’s everything I’m not. it’s escape. I want to leave something behind. there are too many stories to tell. there are too many secrets to share. there are too many zombies at the window. it keeps me company. it saves me from reality. it brings me closer to the real world. the machine is already primed. everything’s already been written. it might be better if I write again. it’s the best of me. it’s the worst of me. it’s the greatest freedom I know.

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    Queen of Mercy News Roundup!

    March 29, 2025

    The Story of How I Got Literary Representation

    April 1, 2021

    Writing Advice From Misty Massey, Bobby Nash, John Hartness, and Trevor Curtis

    January 14, 2020
  • WIP,  writing

    WIP excerpt from Blue Heron

    April 8, 2009 / No Comments

    First draft caveats, but I liked this bit. Aboard the Vagrant, approaching a dead Earth. — Sacha sputtered as she came to, gagging again on the tube down her throat. She had not got the hang of it, even eight trips in. Her first thought was: Shit, not even remotely helpful. “Calm down, just a second,” came Dr. Sten’s voice, low and comforting enough to convince Sacha to stop sputtering. She felt the tube slide out, taking phlegm with it, and she gagged a few times, seeing spots. The lights were dimmed in the room, but she could still see the screen blinking to her right, the images of the…

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    Perception, Imagination, and Experience: “Stairway to Heaven” and Melodies Unheard

    January 9, 2013

    Rock-a-Bye and Rock ‘n’ Roll

    June 7, 2012

    Rock Revival: Draft Zero

    October 22, 2012
  • publication,  writing

    Old school #queryfail

    April 8, 2009 / 2 Comments

    Your manuscript is both good and original, but the part that is good is not original and the part that is original is not good. – Samuel Johnson I mean, he only wrote the Dictionary. What did he know?

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    Queen of None Wins the Manly Wade Wellman Award for 2021!

    July 13, 2021

    Netherford Hall is here!

    August 14, 2024

    On Achieving Writing Distance

    December 27, 2014
  • writing

    The day Clary Darcy destroyed the world.

    April 7, 2009 / No Comments

    I entertained the notion of writing a YA novel a few months ago. Didn’t get too far, but I stumbled upon the 522 words that I did write down and found it to be rather amusing. Made me smile, at least. Thought I’d share. — We begin with the end. The end of a world: a plunge into darkness, destruction and despair. The usual. An accident, an impossibility, and yet, a fact. Clary Jane Darcy stood in the middle of it, aware that she had caused it, and not yet certain that she was still alive. She could feel her mind, understand that she was thinking, but her body felt…

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    Gods of Londinium – A Decade of Reflection

    December 14, 2022

    You built it up brick by brick…

    July 24, 2012

    Gods of Londinium is Coming July 2021 from Falstaff Books!

    April 30, 2020
  • queen of none,  writing

    Perspective tension

    April 6, 2009 / 1 Comment

    I am still having a problem. When I wrote Queen of None a few months ago, it happened very quickly. To this date it’s the fastest I’ve ever written a book. At the time, writing it was the easiest thing in the world. Everything flowed magically, or so it appeared to me, and when it was done it was with a feeling of rather impressive triumph. I may have danced. Now I’m editing, and I’m having issues. Just coming off of another book, which was third person limited, this first person narrative is seriously getting under my skin. Where I thought it was engaging before, I’m feeling like it’s annoying…

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    Cool news: Queen of none available for pre-order Now

    August 14, 2020

    Check Me Out on the PopDNA Podcast talking Sir Gawain, the Green Knight, and Queens of Fate

    March 20, 2023

    Loving Lancelot or, the Force of Character

    December 9, 2009
  • writing

    The blood between the lines: writing who we are

    April 2, 2009 / 4 Comments

    When I was three, my world was changed irrevocably. I had been a very happy child, by all accounts, albeit a little precocious and sometimes serious for my age. I loved art, music. I used to stand next to my dad while he played guitar, and leaned my head on his knee to hear the vibrations of the music. I watched my mother sketch life from the nib of a pencil. But no one was as life-changing for me as my sister. Llana was born, and everything came into focus. I remember virtually nothing before she came into the world, this little blond miracle. Though now she’s an elegant woman,…

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    Writing… With Exceptional Children

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    A Little Literature Love Part One: Fran Wilde and Rivers Solomon

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    Pilgrim of the Sky is up for Pre-Order!

    September 19, 2022
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Natania Barron - © 2026
 

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