1.
What am I working on:
Book 2 of The Eterna Files, a Gaslamp Fantasy saga set in featuring two rival teams of secret agencies between New York, each tasked with finding the ‘cure for death’ on behalf of their respective governments. A teaser novella for the series launches this fall and book 1 launches February 2015. Close on Eterna’s heels, my acclaimed, award-winning and bestselling Strangely Beautiful saga (also Gaslamp Fantasy in nature) re-releases. Both series are with Tor/Forge. I’m having such fun with The Eterna Files, which takes and runs with all the themes I’ve been working on throughout my career; the spaces between life and death, the fine lines between faith, belief, spirituality and doubt, the arcane, the magical and the unfathomable mysteries of the human heart. I’m so in love with infusing the paranormal into a ‘realistic’ Victorian world and I’m blessed to have had the opportunity to do so book after book. Some of my Magic Most Foul characters will appear in Eterna, and in the finale of the series, The Double Life of Incorporate Things, I introduce two of Eterna's stars. I love weaving all my characters through different series to show them all from different angles.
2.
How does my work differ from others of its
genre:
I love this question because it’s in my particular brand of Victorian
Gothic Fantasy that I truly hope to make a lasting mark. Readers and reviewers
tend to compare my books to 19th Century Gothic authors rather than
contemporary authors, mainly because my style borrows so heavily from my Gothic
forefathers and foremothers. While I don’t utilize the density of 19th
century style, between my themes, interests and the bent of my language, my
work is entirely entwined with a dark, dramatic, dare I say ‘strangely
beautiful’ tradition.
What I attempt, while honouring and valuing my Gothic
forefathers and foremothers, is to allow for my female characters to have a
broader range of experiences and agency in my work. Most women in the
traditional Gothic are victims and/or trapped by their material confines of the
age, of expectations, mores, roles and more. The women of my novels are tasked
with saving themselves and others, rather than being a less dimensional plot
device.
3. Why do I write what I do:
This is closely tied
to how my work differs from others of its genre. I feel called to voice the
Victorian Era that I love so deeply, but to do so via a modern lens, and allow
for voices that would have been marginalized by the constraints of a classist,
excessively patriarchal society. I do so not because I think our society ‘knows
better’ than the Victorians (we have just as many skeletons in our modern
closets as they had in theirs, in some ways more insidiously considering the
pervasiveness of modern technology), but I do have current freedoms and
platforms a Victorian version of myself would have chafed heartily against. So
much of the freedom, laws and safety we take for granted today were changes
born of the constraints, injustices and traumas of 19th century
pedagogy, changes that people fought and died for.
And yet, we live in a new
gilded age in terms of income inequality and the rapidity of technological
advancement mirrors the industrial revolution in an uncanny way. There are beautiful
ways to parallel the past and the present and those connections keep me coming
back time and time again to the themes of my work and the fascinating
complexities of the Victorian era and the resilient human spirit throughout
time.
4. How does my writing process work?
*Chortle* I am entirely haphazard. Such a pantser. While I have to know a general arc and trajectory of where I'm going, every book is as mysterious to me as the last. Every book is new, every book's process feels like I'm back to square one and every time I wonder if I can cobble a book together out of the quilt pieces laid out before me. The only common theme is that I write non-linear, out of order, I write the scenes that compel me and keep me up at night. (Beloved characters are the anti-sleeping-pill).
I write what I want to write first, daydream about all the things the book needs, and eventually I put in all the connective tissue, which is the most exhausting part of the process, making all those pieces make sense. That's when it feels like work. The initial process of the book is like taking a vacation into a foreign land and I'm seeing it through the eyes of my characters, it's rather magical, really, but then the connective tissue is where the muscle comes in, and the editorial part of my brain needs to make the hard choices about making sure none of my characters have run away with the storyline too far off the core course, which has happened a few times in my career. That's where critique partners and editorial staff come in so handy, as a book that's only seen your eyes and mind alone just isn't as capable of a story as it is when it's gone through multiple revisions and some trusted viewpoints.
All in all, writing books is what I love most in life and feel is my purpose in life, and so writing process, for me, isn't just something I do, it's something I live. And I hope you'll enjoy my books!
DARKER STILL (Magic Most Foul book 1: http://tinyurl.com/darkerbn )
THE TWISTED TRAGEDY OF MISS NATALIE STEWART (book 2: http://tinyurl.com/twistedbn )
THE DOUBLE LIFE OF INCORPORATE THINGS (book 3: http://tinyurl.com/tdloitaz )
DARKER STILL (Magic Most Foul book 1: http://tinyurl.com/darkerbn )
THE TWISTED TRAGEDY OF MISS NATALIE STEWART (book 2: http://tinyurl.com/twistedbn )
THE DOUBLE LIFE OF INCORPORATE THINGS (book 3: http://tinyurl.com/tdloitaz )
I tag my darling Alethea Kontis, award-winning, NYT Bestselling author and certified Princess on this tour, catch her responses next Monday on her blog!
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