The second thing I tried writing was a short story set in the Mistborn world a few hundred years after The Hero of Ages . This one just didn’t work; the characters weren’t gripping for me. More importantly, it just didn’t FEEL like a Mistborn book. I got about one scene into it.
As I was working on it, however, I did some worldbuilding on this time period in Scadrial’s history. I got to thinking about what was wrong with the short story, and why it didn’t feel right. This grew into an outline regarding a completely different story—with no overlap of characters—set in the same time period. I nurtured this and started writing, and it felt right from the get-go. I had the right tone, so I kept writing, expanding my outline, letting the story grow as big as it wanted to be.
In the end, I had an 85,000-word novel that I named Mistborn: The Alloy of Law . I’m very excited about the story, and I offered it to Tor for publication with one condition: They had to put it out in 2011. I’ve mentioned before that I worried I wasn’t going to have a book release for you in 2011, what with the extra time A Memory of Light is going to take. Alloy of Law turned out so well that I wanted to share it with everyone, and use it to fill in the gap between Towers of Midnight and A Memory of Light .
You may have seen the Tor announcement on this book . It should come out this fall; I’d guess September or October. I want to reassure people that I didn’t do this instead of writing the next Stormlight book. This time period between big books had to be used to write something shorter, something more self-contained. I just couldn’t have done a Stormlight book. It was this novel or nothing. I’m pleased that Alloy of Law turned out so well.
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