The Forged Realm:
A History of Nemeris from Tribes to Tribute.
By Elara Voss
Edited by B. Andrew Hahn
Editor’s notes:
By B. Andrew Hahn
When I first encountered Elara Voss’s History of Nemeris, I was struck by how rare a thing it was: a chronicle that manages to be both rigorously scholarly and quietly alive. In a field often weighed down by dusty recitations of dates and decrees, Voss’s voice stands apart; dry at times, yes, but enlivened by a subtle wit and a storyteller’s instinct that turns cold facts into something that breathes. She does not merely list events; she lets the contradictions, silences, and human choices speak for themselves.
Yet the manuscript reached me in a form that reflected its origins: written in a dialect closer to the post-Arcane Wars era than to our own, with references and assumptions rooted in a world still raw from the reopening of the groves. Some passages leaned heavily on oral traditions that would be unfamiliar to readers today; others deferred, almost reverently, to works that have only recently become widely accessible.
My aim in preparing this edition has been twofold: to preserve Voss’s voice and intent as faithfully as possible, while bridging the gaps that time and distance have created. I have modernized the language for clarity, added contextual notes where needed, and occasionally expanded on points that Voss herself left to specialist texts (always with reference to those sources when available). I have also resisted the temptation to impose my own interpretations; where Voss marks uncertainty or conflicting accounts, I have left those fractures intact. In the case where the referenced material is lost to time, we can only take the judgement of the writer at her word; I will simply note the absences and let the reader make their own judgement on its authenticity.
This volume is not intended as the final word on the realm, only a foundation. Those who wish to understand the deeper workings of Magic and its costs, or the philosophical debates that shaped the Time of Magic, will find Soska’s ‘The Four Pillars’ an indispensable companion, of which I have edited and publish alongside this history. And for those drawn to the lived drama of the era’s end, I encourage you to seek out ‘The Miracle at the Block’, ‘The Fall of the Weavers’, and ‘A Shared Voice’, which provide a more intimate view of the human story of those who lived through this tumultuous time.
I am grateful to have played a small part in bringing Voss’s work to a new audience. May it serve, as she hoped, not as judgment, but as a map to a world quite different from the one we now live in.
B. Andrew Hahn, January 2026



This reads beautifully authentic like a genuine historical volume pulled straight from your world’s archives. The layered perspectives between editor and original author add depth and credibility, and the subtle tensions between sources make Nemeris feel truly lived-in. Do we ever get to see one of those major contradictions like Torven’s death or Queen Morwyn’s final days explored in full from multiple competing accounts?
Thanks Janetto, I enjoy non-fiction, and wanted to write a background history book about the world for my novels, seemed like it could be a fun aside. I expect will see several conflicting views about the life of Torven and Queen Morwyn, as well as expose a slight biases that the 'original' author shows. Thanks for taking the time to read and comment!
That’s such an intriguing way to frame it the promise of conflicting accounts and subtle authorial bias makes the history feel dynamic rather than fixed. It really reinforces the sense that truth in this world depends on who’s telling it. I also wanted to ask, would you be comfortable connecting with readers on another platform to discuss the story in more depth?