
On Maps in Fantasy Novels
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“I want a reader to be nailed to the text, chewing their fingernails to find out what happens next,” he wrote, “not constantly flipping back to the fly-leaf to check just how far north exactly Carleon is from Uffrith, or whatever.”Two books later, however, he didn’t just include one map, he had five. The maps in The Heroes were intriguing because they depicted the same valley during a battle, showing the movement of troops on each day. The probably, maybe, spoiler-free map Sometimes a map is deliberately vague, or doesn’t match the book. (Jemisin’s falls into this category; not all of the towns, roads and stations she mentions in the book are on the map.) Patrick Rothfuss’s The Kingkiller Chronicles is a maddening example of this. Some places — important places — just aren’t marked on the map. Rothfuss was asked about this by Jo Walton, back when she was doing a close reread of his books on Tor.com. He didn’t really answer the question, saying instead that he would address this on his blog, but I’ve been rummaging around over there and no dice. Is his map vague for plot reasons? We will not know until his third book comes out, and it’s killing me. The you’re not getting a map until the movie comes out map And then there are the authors who avoid maps completely. Remember back before the The Hunger Games movies, when fans of the books were so hungry for maps of Panem that they were making them themselves? (And some of them were beautiful.) Suzanne Collins never released an official map but she did (I heard) work with Lionsgate when they released their official map for this summer’s The Hunger Games Exhibition in NYC. As far as I can tell, Collins has never talked or written about the lack of a map. (There was allegedly a Borders Book Club video in which she mentioned maps, but Borders took that video to its grave.) What’s your favorite use of maps in a fantasy novel? Tell me in the comments, because I really, really want to see them. Also, I’ve decided to investigate the phenomenon of maps in contemporary fantasy further. I’m digging into the process of map-making in fantasy series, talking to publishers and the mapmakers themselves about how a map is made, who makes the decision to include a map in a book, and how maps are used. Got any questions about maps? Leave them below in the comments and (although I make no promises) I will do my best to get them answered.