BookTok Made Me Do It: Part 2
The Secret to a Stunning AND Easy-to-Follow romantasy
This is a two-part deep dive on making your book not just beautiful, but beautifully clear.
🗺️ This week: We map it all out. Literally. Because no fantasy or romantasy is complete without one.
📖 Last week: Why book aesthetics matter more than ever, and how multiple POVs can help.
❤️ this post if you’re a sucker for pretty books that actually make sense.
Fantasy Worlds Come Alive with Beautiful Maps
It Began with Tolkien
J.R.R. Tolkien is widely regarded as a pioneer in fantasy cartography, having created some of the earliest and most influential maps in the genre.
Tolkien's own cartographic journey began in the 1920s with hand-drawn maps that laid the foundation for his expansive world-building. These maps were integral to his storytelling process, evolving alongside his narratives and providing a visual framework for the complex geography of Middle-earth.
The collaborative efforts between Tolkien and his son, Christopher Tolkien, further refined these maps. Christopher’s meticulous redrawing of his father’s sketches ensured consistency and clarity, culminating in the detailed maps accompanying The Lord of the Rings trilogy.
Tolkien’s maps have had a lasting impact on the fantasy genre, inspiring countless authors to incorporate detailed cartography into their world-building. His approach underscored the importance of geography in storytelling, demonstrating how maps can enrich narratives and engage readers on a deeper level.
A good map signals that the author has truly thought about their world, mapping out continents, kingdoms, and journeys in detail. Plus, maps are aesthetically pleasing, of course. There’s nothing quite like flipping open a book and being greeted by a sprawling landscape of mountains, forests, and tiny scripted place names. It gives a sense of scale and adventure. Example: The intricate map of Prythian from Sarah J. Maas’s A Court of Thorns and Roses, featuring the faerie courts and mortal lands.
When a map is both beautiful and useful, it elevates the whole reading experience, letting us immerse ourselves in the fantasy world as explorers on the page.
Like many indie authors, I started small. 🖊️ I mocked up a map in Canva.
🎨 Then I upgraded—hiring an artist to bring my world to life.
✨what’s your favorite fantasy map of all time?
This is a great reminder to work on my map for my upcoming fantasy work! I haven't started one yet 😅
My favorite map is probably Brigid Kemmerer’s Defy The Night