
And Ashok is dedicated to the law, utterly dedicated to the law. When you first meet Ashok, he's basically a guy that burns villages for a living, right? He is the guy they go to for all the hard stuff. And this is what makes it a Larry Correia book, by the way. But he's so grim and implacable that sometimes it's kind of funny how grim and implacable he is. So, our main character is basically walking around with a magical weapon of mass destruction. The black steel in this case is actually intelligent and it chooses who wields it in battle. He's actually been chosen by this black steel artifact to have it in his possession. And our main character actually possesses one. There are only so many items in the world made of black steel. It's far more powerful, except when it's used up, it's gone.

And then, the other source of magic is what's referred to as black steel, which is this mysterious substance that has been left over from the ancients. So, it is actually a renewable resource, only to get it, you have to take it from a demon and they're super deadly. There's what's referred to as a demon hide, or anything that comes from demon bodies, actually infused with the magical essence people can use.

There are a couple of sources of magic in this world. Since that time, demons have lived in the water, and mankind has lived on dry ground. Mankind was almost exterminated, but we wanted to eventually shove the demons back into the ocean. One thousand years ago there was what's referred to as the raid of demons, where demons fell from the sky, and they were on land and sea, but mankind fought that. I just love the whole concept.īasically, the people of this world, they all live on one continent that is completely surrounded and they'd never, ever go to the sea because, in this world, the ocean is basically hell. Talk a little bit about the magic system in the book, which is cool-as cool as all get out. But, epic fantasy was always a genre that I loved and I'd grown up with it. And I went on and I did alternate history and I did thrillers and wrote 20 other books first. So, I read a lot of epic fantasy growing up.Īnd then later, as an adult, when I was actually trying my hand at writing, the very first thing I was successful at was urban fantasy. From there, I started reading everything I could get my hands on: David Eddings, Ray Feisr, Tolkien obviously. My gateway to fantasy was actually Terry Brooks, The Sword of Shannara.

I grew up in an environment where reading wasn't appreciated, but my dad thought Westerns were manly. You kind of broke into writing with the Monster Hunter series, but have you always wanted to do epic fantasy. To mark the publication of Destroyer of Worlds, Correia sat down with Tony Daniel, a senior editor at Baen Books and the author of 10 sci-fi novels, to discuss his writing process, his characters, epic fantasy, and a whole lot more. The title received praise from Publishers Weekly, which called the book “masterful” and “packed with action grit,” and “sure to satisfy.” In bestselling author Larry Correia’s latest fantasy novel, Destroyer of Worlds, the third installment of his Saga of the Forgotten Warrior series, an unlikely hero battles the forces of evil and works to prevent a genocide.
