FANTASY WRITING
MONDAYS & THURSDAYS
7 PM GMT
LIVE ONLINE COURSE ON FANTASY WRITING
5 MAR 2026 - 20 APR 2026
DURATION:
7 WEEKS
MONDAYS & THURSDAYS
7 PM GMT
Bring your world to life — and leave with a first chapter of a novel that’s ready for an agent’s desk.
Under the mentorship of Ed McDonald, author of The Ravensmark Trilogy and The Redwinter Chronicles Trilogy, you’ll shape your story — with guidance, feedback, and a cohort that gets you.
WHO THIS COURSE IS FOR
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YOU ARE A FANTASY WRITER WHO FEELS LIKE YOU’RE WRITING IN A VACUUM
You’ve got worlds in your head, characters whispering at 2 a.m., and a story that refuses to leave you alone — but the journey feels lonely, slow, and endlessly uphill. This fantasy writing course gives you a creative home base: a place to connect with other writers, stay accountable, and finally bring your novel across the finish line. You don’t have to build your universe alone.
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YOU ARE A FANTASY WRITER WHO WANTS A CLEAR, PRACTICAL PATH
Designing a world is easy to dream about — much harder to execute. We’ll walk you step-by-step through crafting your protagonist, structuring your plot, building your magic systems, and navigating the publishing maze. Whether you’re ten years into your magnum opus or staring at a spark of an idea, you’ll be guided by an experienced author and come away with a story that’s ready for its next chapter.
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YOU ARE A FANTASY WRITER WHO CRAVES REAL FEEDBACK (FROM PEOPLE WHO GET IT)
Finding readers who can give thoughtful, useful critique shouldn’t feel like a side quest. Here, you’ll get first-rate feedback, sharpen your character arcs, strengthen your plot, and learn how to revise with purpose — all while building a peer circle you can rely on long after the course ends. You’ll leave with stronger pages, smarter instincts, and a realistic understanding of the publishing landscape across traditional, indie, and self-publishing routes.
Build your world & launch your novel.
Real industry format, real stakes, and a portfolio piece that announces you’re ready for the shelves. Turn that idea in your head into a submission-ready package: you’ll craft your first chapter, shape your full story synopsis, and write the cover letter.
A solitary craft meets a collaborative engine.
Writing fantasy doesn’t have to be lonely. You’ll brainstorm with peers, test your characters, raise the stakes of your conflicts, rewrite in new narrative voices, trade structured feedback, and pitch your book to a supportive panel you simply won’t find outside a class setting.
We’ll dig into every layer of fantasy writing — from premise and magic systems to character arcs, sensory world-building, and plot architecture. We’ve distilled the essentials into one sharp, story-building journey. Your world isn’t going to write itself, but we can help you map it.
Get hands-on with guided exercises and case studies pulled straight from fantasy’s best. You’ll dissect Tolkien, Sanderson, Le Guin, Hobb, and more to understand how legendary stories are built — then apply those same techniques to your own novel.
Your final project brings your world to life on the page — a polished submission pack built to impress an agent. You’ll craft a standout cover letter, a tight and compelling synopsis, and a first chapter that proves your voice, world, and characters are worth turning the page for.
Ed McDonald
Portfolio- Writes acclaimed epic fantasy, with six published novels across The Ravensmark Trilogy and The Redwinter Chronicles, earning a dedicated global readership
- Channels a lifelong love of fantasy into authentic worldbuilding, drawing on his training in medieval swordsmanship and a deep passion for storytelling
- Teaches at universities across London as a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, bringing over a decade of academic experience into his craft
- Contributes fiction and commentary to magazines and charity anthologies, expanding the fantasy landscape through short stories and insightful articles
Every tale starts with a spark. In this opening class, you’ll meet your instructor and fellow writers, uncover the influences that shaped your love for fantasy, and warm up your imagination with the stories and tropes that live closest to your heart. Together, we set the foundation for the world you’re about to create.
- Meet your instructor
- Syllabus breakdown
- Assignments overview
- Icebreaker exercise: Discussion of favourite tropes and novels/series
Fantasy holds many worlds and one of them belongs to you. This session helps you explore major subgenres, identify where your voice feels most at home, and shape the early vision of the story you want to tell. You’ll learn to pitch your idea clearly and recognise the type of fantasy that fuels your creativity.
- Genres & subgenres
- Finding your niche and passion
- Workshop: In pairs, discuss story ideas, explaining what subgenre it fits into and why.
Behind every great fantasy lies a powerful premise. This lesson guides you through shaping that idea into a clear theme, compelling conflict, and stakes that truly matter. You’ll study how authors anchor extraordinary worlds in universal human questions — and build the foundation of your own tale.
- Central themes and messages
- Developing a strong, unique story premise
- Case Studies: The Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien & Legends & Lattes by Travis Baldree
- Workshop: In small groups, present your story premise. Ask clarifying questions and suggest ways to make the premise stronger, or more compelling.
Assignment #1: Write a one-page premise summary with your protagonist, goal, conflict, and stakes.
A fantasy world must feel alive… layered, vast, and shaped by forces older than your characters. In this lesson, you'll learn how to craft continents, histories, and cultures that feel lived-in. We’ll explore how maps guide narrative, how societies gain their depth, and how unique peoples and traditions turn a setting into a world readers long to return to.
- Unique lands, geographies, & cosmologies
- Maps and their role in storytelling
- Case Studies: The Stormlight Archive by Brandon Sanderson, The Wheel of Time by Robert Jordan
- Believable cultures, governments, & social structures
- Unique fantasy races and species
Magic is the heartbeat of many fantasy stories — but it needs rules, purpose, and consequences. This session helps you build a magic system that enhances your world rather than overpowering it. You’ll look at hard and soft systems, explore limitations that create tension, and discover how magic shapes culture, power, and everyday life.
- Hard vs. soft magic systems
- Case Studies: Mistborn by Brandon Sanderson, The Earthsea Cycle by Ursula K. Le Guin
- Rules, limitations, & costs of magic
- Magic impact on the world and its people
Assignment #2:
Option 1: Create a rough sketch of a map for a region in your world.
Option 2: Write a one-page explanation of how magic has shaped your world and its people.
Characters are the beating heart of any fantasy tale. Learn how to craft heroes, villains, and everyone in between — shaped by their pasts, driven by their flaws, and transformed by the trials ahead. Explore archetypes, motivations, and the delicate dance between what a character wants and what they truly need.
- Backstories, motivations, & character arcs
- Protagonist vs antagonist vs side characters
- Classic archetypes
- Flawed heroes & relatable villains
- Case Studies: The Lies of Locke Lamora by Scott Lynch, The Poppy War by R.F. Kuang
- Workshop: In groups, take turns being a character from your story. The rest of the group will act as journalists or fellow characters, interviewing you to uncover your backstory, motivations, and hidden flaws.
Assignment #3: Create an in-depth character profile for your main protagonist. Include their backstory, core flaw, motivations, and a brief description of their character arc.
Dialogue reveals character, deepens tension, and quietly turns the gears of your plot. This session helps you craft conversations with distinct voices, layered meaning, and subtext that breathes beneath the surface.
- Writing natural, compelling dialogue.
- Using dialogue to reveal character and advance the plot
A great fantasy scene doesn’t just describe — it immerses. In this class, you’ll learn how to evoke mood and atmosphere through sensory detail, vivid imagery, and poetic restraint. Your worlds will gain colour, texture, and emotion your readers can feel with every step.
- Sensory details
- Mood & tone
- Metaphors, similes & descriptions
Assignment #4: Create a list of sensory details (sights, sounds, smells, etc.) for three key locations in your story.
Conflict drives the plot forward. This session teaches you to weave internal struggles with external threats, escalate tension with purpose, and keep your audience gripped as the world closes in.
- Internal vs. external conflict
- Case Studies: The Farseer Trilogy by Robin Hobb
- Raising the stakes to keep the reader engaged
- Workshop: In groups, take a simple, low-stakes conflict and, one by one, add an element that raises the stakes.
The right narrator transforms a story. Explore the strengths of first, third, and omniscient perspectives, and discover how voice shapes tone, intimacy, and reader connection. You’ll learn to choose — and command — the narrative lens that best serves your tale.
- First person, third person, & omniscient points of view
- Case Studies: All Systems Red by Martha Wells, The Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien
- Choosing the right narrator
- Workshop: Using an instructor-provided short paragraph, rewrite the paragraph in three different narrative voices.
Assignment #5: Write a one-paragraph piece of narration that sets the tone for your entire story.
Plot is the architecture of your tale — the structure that carries emotion, magic, and character transformation. This class guides you through shaping a three-act structure, pacing your revelations, and crafting an opening chapter that grips both readers and agents from the very first line.
- Plotting approaches
- Three-act structure & key plot points
- Controlling the speed and flow of your narrative
- Creating a compelling first chapter
- Building suspense & maintaining reader interest
Assignment #6: Create a beat sheet for the first act of your story, breaking down the major plot points into smaller, more manageable scenes and events.
Great world-building enriches a story without slowing it. This session teaches you how to reveal history, lore, and culture through character, atmosphere, and subtle detail — avoiding heavy exposition while deepening the sense of a world that existed long before chapter one.
- Weaving lore and history
- Case Studies: Daughter of Redwinter by Ed McDonald, Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros
- Workshop: In groups, take a major historical event for a shared fantasy world and individually write short scenes that explore a different aspect of that event’s impact.
(Optional) Assignment #7: Write a short prophecy, myth, or folk tale from your world that foreshadows events in your story.
Editing is where a good story becomes an unforgettable one. Learn revision techniques that refine voice, strengthen structure, and sharpen prose. You’ll discover how to evaluate feedback, trust your instincts, and polish your writing with clarity and intention.
- Editing & rewriting
- Self-editing techniques and checklists
- Working with editors
- Workshop: Students bring a specific piece of their writing that needs revision. With a provided checklist, review each other’s work and provide specific, actionable feedback.
Once your manuscript is ready, its next journey begins. This session introduces you to the worlds of traditional and self-publishing, guiding you through query letters, synopses, agents, and the editorial process. You'll learn how to present your story — and yourself — with confidence.
- Traditional vs. self-publishing
- Query letter & synopsis
- Finding an agent
- Covering letter
- The editorial process
- Workshop: Take 3 minutes to pitch your book to your group, who will act as a “panel of guests”. The panel will then provide quick, actionable feedback on the pitch.
Assignment #8: Write a full synopsis of your book's plot from beginning to end, including all the major plot points and the ending.
A writing career is shaped not only by craft, but by presence, community, and persistence. Learn how to develop your author identity, create samples, build a portfolio, and navigate the wider world of writing networks, events, and guilds.
- Developing a professional portfolio
- Sample development
- Networking and community
- Attending events, panels and public speaking
- Unions and guilds
- Workshop: Divide into groups and help each other brainstorm a personal author “brand” and develop ideas for a professional author bio, social media presence, and potential writing/blog topics.
What our students say
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"It was such a great experience, well worth the course fee which I invested personally - I've learnt so much and feel much more confident in my role.."
"The course at ELVTR was a great investment in my career. The materials are top-notch, and the instructors provided excellent support."
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