Back to Urban Fantasy

After publishing several medieval fantasy books–five to be exact–I decided to return to urban fantasy, the genre of my very first novel, Demonkeeper / Damliche Damonen. And now I’m celebrating the German release* of my new novel, Im Zweifel fรผr das Monster (Monster Lawyer).

So why write an urban fantasy about a lawyer representing monsters? First of all, urban fantasy is awesome! How fun and scary is it to imagine modern-day monsters among us? Answer: very fun and very scary. Also, writing Im Zweifel fรผr das Monster as an urban fantasy was a natural fit for meโ€”an organic choice. Im Zweifel is a marriage of two passions in my lifeโ€”Iโ€™m an adult lawyer, and I have loved monsters since I was a little boy. There is nothing more โ€œurbanโ€ than the lawโ€”modern civilizations are built upon itโ€”and monsters are inherently fantastical, and so the natural habitat for a lawyer/monster story is indeed urban fantasy.



Key Seattle Sites in Im Zweifel fรผr das Monster / Im Zweifel fรผr das Monster Cover

A Q&A with my Publisher

Auszรผge aus Fragen und Antworten mit meinem Verlag

After several medieval fantasy novels, why did you decide to write urban fantasy?

When I wrote my first novel, Demonkeeper (Dรคmliche Dรคmonen), nearly twenty years ago, I was a criminal prosecutor in juvenile court. I loved monsters and fantasy, and the young criminal defendants I was seeing in the courtroom were very real and had hard, gritty lives. So I created young fictional characters and put them in a real-life setting (Seattle), and then used monsters to represent the turmoil and perils of a hard life. It felt perfect for urban fantasy.

Now things have come full circle in my writing career, and Iโ€™ve returned to urban fantasy. Crazy as it sounds, the original young fans of Demonkeeper have all grown up! And because Iโ€™m writing adult novels, Monster Lawyer (Im Zweifel fรผr das Monster) can be genuinely horrifying, and it is! Itโ€™s also serious and fun at the same time. Like Demonkeeper, there are societal themes to give Monster Lawyer depth, but I still weave in humor whenever I can becauseโ€ฆwell, Iโ€™m me.

Warum hast du dich nach mehreren High-Fantasy-Romanen entschieden, Urban Fantasy zu schreiben?

Vor fast zwanzig Jahren schrieb ich mit Dรคmliche Dรคmonen meinen ersten Roman. Es war recht junger Urban-Fantasy-Roman, und jetzt bin ich zu meinen Ursprรผngen zurรผckgekehrt, denn so verrรผckt es klingt: die ursprรผnglichen jungen Fans der Dรคmlichen Dรคmonensind erwachsen geworden! Diese Geschichte ist fรผr sie. Und weil ich jetzt Romane fรผr Erwachsene schreibe, ist Im Zweifel fรผr das Monster wirklich gruselig! Aber ich webe immer noch Humor ein, wann immer ich kann, weil… nun ja โ€ฆ ich ich bin.

Demonkeeper has a lot of humor. How is this with Monster Lawyer?

The fact that Demonkeeper was both spooky and funny is a product of my personality. I like to see the humor in things, even if those things have a dark side. I think itโ€™s good to laugh when addressing death in particular; it helps us deal with our mortality.

Itโ€™s the same with Monster Lawyer. The idea of a lawyer representing monsters strikes me as hilarious, and the situations that arise when Daniel Becker represents monsters in legal cases are delightfully ludicrous. But the idea of representing a monster has a very serious side too. I work with lawyers who represent real-life murderers, and their representation of killers can be seen as an analogy to representing โ€œmonsters.โ€ This serious underlying theme lends Monster Lawyer depth and makes Danielโ€™s character arc extremely interesting, especially because of his painful childhood relationship with the monster heโ€™s asked to defend as a grown-up. No more spoilers, but I can tell you that Monster Lawyer is funny and sad and serious and raises lots of ethical questions. Itโ€™s truly an adult take on monstrous urban fantasy, but with plenty of immature humor to make it fun too. I hope!

Additionally, writing Monster Lawyer was a real experiment for me in mixing humor and horror. One thing I learned is that the tone of the tale can be โ€œspookyโ€ and funnyโ€”those two moods can coexistโ€”but when real โ€œhorrorโ€ arrives, the humor flees the page, goes into hiding, and doesnโ€™t come back until itโ€™s safeโ€”usually not until the next chapter.

Dรคmliche Dรคmonen hat eine Menge Humor. Wie ist das bei Im Zweifel fรผr das Monster?

Die Vorstellung, dass ein Anwalt Monster vertritt, finde ich urkomisch, und die Situationen, die entstehen, wenn Daniel Becker Monster in Rechtsfรคllen vertritt, sind herrlich lรคcherlich. Aber ich habe auch gelernt, dass der Ton der Geschichte gruselig und lustig sein kann โ€“ diese beiden Stimmungen kรถnnen nebeneinander bestehen โ€“, aber wenn echter Horror auftaucht, flieht der Humor, versteckt sich und kommt erst zurรผck, wenn er sicher ist โ€“ normalerweise nicht vor dem nรคchsten Kapitel.

Most authors choose a Private Investigator or a Cop as their hero in Urban Fantasy, but you chose a lawyer. Why?

Well, yes, I am a lawyer, and it is good for me to write what I know. It gives me an interesting and genuine perspective to share, and I can create scenes for my readers that are not clichรฉ or overused. Itโ€™s true that many stories use a cop to generate situations for action on the streets, and an attorney is more of an analyst in an office. As a prosecutor Iโ€™ve never chased criminals down dark alleys. But the real-life drama of a courtroom is incredible. Iโ€™ve tried burglaries, rapes, homicides, you name it. Serious stuff. I handled a home-invasion stabbing where one of the five defendants received a sentence of life without parole. Trying a case in front of a judge and jury and waiting during those tense moments for the verdict to be announced is a heart-pounding, emotionally exhausting experience. Now imagine youโ€™re trying a case with monsters and, if you lose, the penalty is that you get eaten. You get the picture.

Of course, Monster Lawyer’s lawyer-protagonist, Daniel Becker, also goes into the field to track down evidence, and he has a supernatural investigator to help out, so we get plenty of on-the-scene action throughout this particular story.

By the way, lawyers are a natural fit for fantasy. They are experts on rules, and well-developed fantasy worlds have well-defined rules. So do monsters. Vampires have rulesโ€”they drink blood, sunburn easily, and only die when you shove a wooden stake through their hearts. Werewolves have rulesโ€”full moon transformations, bites that cause lycanthropy, and getting shot with silver bullets really sucks for them. As I like to say, fantasy worlds and monsters have immutable laws, and where there are laws there are lawyers.

Die meisten Autoren wรคhlen einen Privatdetektiv oder Polizisten als ihren Helden in der Urban Fantasy, aber Sie haben sich fรผr einen Anwalt entschieden. Warum?

Nun ja, ich bin Anwalt, und ich schreibe gerne darรผber, was ich kenne. So kann ich eine authentische Perspektive vermitteln und dennoch Klischees vermeiden. Im Gegensatz zu Daniel Becker, dem Helden von Im Zweifel fรผr das Monster, habe ich aber noch nie Verbrecher durch dunkle Gassen gejagt. Reale Anwรคlte sind ja eher die Analytiker im Bรผro. Aber Daniels Fall ist von der Art, dass man keine offizielle Unterstรผtzung anfordern kann. Also muss er die Action-Szenen selbst durchstehen.

Very excited! Hereโ€™s whyโ€ฆ

Okay, so the Fall 2022 Random/Penguin House catalog for Germany is out. This is the catalog that goes to booksellersโ€ฆlike Barnes and Noble, Village Books, etc.

Monster Lawyer (by me) is the second book listed under fantasy. This is an “I’m #2!!!” victory, which is awesome by itself. But that’s not all.

Many huge titles get a full page in the catalog. I’ve shown the Game of Thrones page below as an example 10 books–one page. The Star Wars books (written by Terry Brooks, R.A. Salvatore, George Lucas and other random authors of some repute)–two pages.

And Monster Lawyer? One book–two full pages (fun pics below). Wow! Love it. Cautiously optimistic about its lauch. Aww, screw itโ€ฆcrazy excited for the Halloween launch. They’re calling it “Unsere gruseligsten fantasy-titel zu Halloween.” Yeah, I didn’t know either, but Google translate says: “Our spookiest Halloween fantasy title.” I’ll take it!

Looking forward to going to Germany to promote it in October. The last two times my publisher supported/marketed my books like this we ended up on the bestseller list, and so I see good things ahead (and dead people, but that’s from Monster Lawyer II, which I’m currently writing–just did a killer whirlpool sucking down a boat at Deception Pass sceneโ€ฆso much fun).

I am currently reading…

I am currently reading (and enjoying) Ben Aaronovitch’s novel Rivers of London. I’ll admit I’m a sucker for urban fantasies, where the monsters walk among us!

Rivers of London is good stuff, with lots of supernatural fun and, of course, London. What a super setting. The tone is not quite as zany as Christopher Moore’s Dirty Job (set in San Francisco), but it is amusing in its own right. I love these books that explore famous cities well enough that the city essentially becomes a character in the story. They are eerily like my upcoming novel (summer ’22), which is an urban fantasy that explores the mysterious dark-n-rainy city of Seattle–the U.S. title is MONSTER LAWYER (because, yeah, I’m also a lawyer), and the German title is to be determined. Stay tuned, because I intend to take you on a monster-guided tour through the dark places in Seattle.

But back to Rivers of London. Great book. Check it out if you like urban fantasy.

Click “Home” above to go to Ben Aaronovitch’s page!

My best,

Royce

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