How does one become a writer? My first published novel, some 35 years ago now, was A Bad Spell in Yurt. It was however far from the first book I'd written. Like many authors, I'd been making up stories since before I even started school. A lot of my early efforts were, shall we say, derivative. But I loved writing stories and, in grade school, illustrating them.
I'm a pretty decent speller (in spite of how totally weird the English language is), and I think it's because when I was writing out my stories I'd keep asking Mom how a particular word was spelled, and I'd remember what she told me.
In junior high I moved from writing kids' books with pictures to writing novels. In ninth grade I read JRR Tolkien's Lord of the Rings for the first time (certainly not the last!), and it had a profound effect on me. Fantasy rules! From then on, the majority of what I wrote was more or less fantasy—although initially a lot of it was stories set in a pseudo-medieval world that had lots of action but no magic.
Starting when I was in college, I tried intermittently to get something published. This was back when there was no self-publishing, so it was traditional publishing or nothing. For years I didn't get anywhere, and it's probably just as well, because some of it I'd now be embarrassed to have attributed to me. I was also busy being a graduate student and getting established as an academic in the field of medieval history (again, I think Tolkien is largely responsible).
But then I had an unusually vivid dream, which featured the opening of what became A Bad Spell in Yurt and much of the characters. I started writing, and my husband encouraged me to finish and try to find a publisher. And I did! Some twenty-five years after I first packed up a manuscript and mailed it off to a publisher, my first novel was published (my first academic book preceded it by a dozen years). With a great cover by Tom Kidd, it became a national science-fiction/fantasy best seller.
(When I was about seven I'd decided both that I wanted to write fun books that people would read and that I wanted to write a "history of the world." Medieval history isn't the history of the whole world, but to a large extent I've achieved my childhood dream.)
The publisher, Baen, brought out much of the rest of the Yurt series. I hadn't planned on a series, but (again) my husband encouraged me to make it a series, and he was right. But then the books went out of print, as books do, and once I got my rights back I turned to self-publishing.
Baen had published the Yurt books as mass-market (small) paperbacks. I reissued them initially as ebooks, whch remains my best-selling format.
In fact, the ebook of Bad Spell is on sale this week on Amazon, only 99 cents in the US and 99 pence in the UK. Here are the US link and the UK link. The book is half price in Canada and Australia.
As well as the ebook, I've brought Bad Spell out as a large-format ("trade") paperback and a hardcover. The rest of the series is available both as ebooks and as paperbacks (some in omnibus editions). I've also written and self-published a "Yurt, the Next Generation" series and some other books as well, having more time to write now that I've retired from that pesky day job.
Don't know if I'd recommend my path to anyone else, but that's how I became a writer.
© C. Dale Brittain 2026






