Monday, April 16, 2012

What We're Reading Part II!

Back on March 26, we delved into the eclectic reading choices of several of the Inkies. We'll follow up today to complete the list. I know I'VE found a number of books to add to my personal to-read-list. I hope you will, too!
I've been amazed by the diversity of reads! Are there any favorites" Well, several Inkies are reading/planning to read Anne Nesbit's  THE CABINET OF EARTHS.
 
ERIN CASHMAN: I am reading CABINET OF EARTHS right now and I love it!

KATE MILFORD: I just devoured in one sitting Anne Nesbit's CABINET OF EARTHS, which I read in print; it was an arc I snagged from McNally Jackson. I adored it, and immediately ordered a copy for my sister who loves fantasy a lot but loves Paris more.

LENA GOLDFINCH: I just finished Anne Nesbet's THE CABINET OF EARTHS and Erin Cashman's THE EXCEPTIONALS.
THE CABINET OF EARTHS is what I can't help calling "deliciously strange". At turns creepy, fun, tender, and deeply thought-provoking, it's filled with descriptions you want to read two or three times before continuing on. A book to be savored, not rushed through. And I fell into THE EXCEPTIONALS and didn't want to come back out.  I especially loved Claire's connection to the hawk and all the other "specials". I heard about both books through The Enchanted Inkpot blog. I'm now in the middle of CLOCKWORK PRINCE: Book Two of The Infernal Devices series by Cassandra Clare. I forget where I first heard about book 1, CLOCKWORK ANGEL, but I picked up Book Two because I loved Clare's Steampunk/Fantasy world and her characters. Though I've been reading more ebooks lately, I read these in hardcover.

AMY GREENFIELD:
I've been reading some wonderful books lately, including Leah Cypess's MISTWOOD. I loved the fierce and fascinating heroine, the gorgeous descriptions of her powers, and the twisty plot that kept me guessing right up to the end. (As a writer, I also noticed the fabulous transitions, which really quicken the pace.) 
Another great recent read is Holly Black's WHITE CAT. Such a great idea: a world where magic meets the mob. I fell hard for its black humor, its brilliant characterization, and the zany but impeccable logic of the plot.I missed both these books when they first debuted because I was dealing with a transatlantic move at the time - I think I lost almost a year of my life to that move! - but they've been on my radar for a while because I had friends who raved about them. Oh, and I read them both in paperback. I have a Kindle (a gift) but I tend to use it mostly for reading manuscripts. Next up: More Inkie books I've just bought, including Anne Nesbet's THE CABINET OF EARTHS  and Cinda Chima's THE DEMON KING.

LAURA McCAFFREY: I just burned through Bill Willingham's comic, FABLES: LEGENDS IN EXILE, and I can't wait to start the next collection in the series. The setting is Fableland, the underground home of the Fables, fairy tale characters, in New York. The Fables have been driven out of their homeland by an arch-enemy, the Adversary, and though they long to return to the lives they left, they've transformed into party girls and bureaucrats, bounders and detectives. A clever read for sophisticated teens. Another sophisticated read for teens: THE WINDUP GIRL by Paolo Bacigalupi. In this dystopia, money is measured in calories, and bio-terrorism has transformed a futuristic Thailand. Definitely for older teens and adults. It took me a bit to sort out all the factions - but once I did, I couldn't put the novel down.

KATE COOMBS: Just read a new YA fantasy called THIEF'S COVENANT by Ari Marmell and really liked it. The format was print. I think I saw it mentioned on somebody's blog.It begins with a girl clinging to the rafters in the shadows above a scene of mass slaughter. Next thing we know, she has reinvented herself as a thief and is carrying a pocket god around with her. In a series of flashbacks, we find out how she came to be in that room--even as scenes in the present show her being hunted by at least three different groups. And of course, she tries to solve the murder mystery!
Next up? Probably MY VERY UN-FAIRYTALE LIFE by our own Anna Staniszewski andNatalie Babbit's new book, THE MOON OVER HIGH STREET.

LEAH CYPRESS: At the moment, I'm mostly reading adult fantasy and science fiction so I can be an informed Nebula voter. But once I've read everything I need to, my next planned YA read is Kim Harrington's PERCEPTION. Actually, I'm not sure I'll be able to hold out until I've read through all the Nebula nominees - we'll see! I loved her first book, CLARITY (and interviewed her about it here), so I'm really looking forward to PERCEPTION. I will read it in print, because that's still my much-preferred reading format.

ELLEN BOORAEM: I just finished ANYA'S GHOST, a YA graphic novel by Vera Brosgol. I loved it, and last night it kept the curmudgeon I live with--a tough sell--awake and reading way past his bedtime. I'm now enthralled with A MONSTER CALLS by Patrick Ness (inspired by Siobhan Dowd's idea). Also YA, it's simpler and sweeter than Ness's magnificent Chaos Walking trilogy, but just as harrowing in its own way. Next up is THE DEATH-DEFYING PEPPER ROUX, a middle-grade fantasy by Geraldine McCaughrean, which looks very cool. All are print media, from the library. I learned about the Ness and Brosgol books from the online drumbeat, the McGaughrean from browsing at the library.

 
Cinda Williams Chima  is the author of the Seven Realms and Heir Chronicles teen fantasy series.  Her next novel, THE CRIMSON CROWN, releases October 23, 2012. Learn more about her here

Saturday, April 14, 2012

A Dip in the Shameless Pool

Just a few bits of shameless news this week, but no less awesome.  :)

Starting off with a bang, Robin LaFevers's GRAVE MERCY received an amazing review in the New York Times this week.  I mean, how could you resist a book where the review starts off like this?
Getting bundled off to a nunnery is rarely a prelude to adventure.

But St. Mortain is no ordinary convent. The sisters there train young women to be assassins, “handmaidens to the god of death.” The reverend mother puts it bluntly: “We kill people.”
Yes, please. Sign me up. First in line. Can't wait to read this one!!!!

Meanwhile, SMALL PERSONS WITH WINGS by Ellen Booraem has been named to the 2012 Best Children's Books of the Year list compiled by the Bank Street Center for Children's Literature.  A much-deserved honor, I must say.

And Kate Milford has an interesting new project in the works. She is using indie bookstore-friendly services to self-publish a novella companion to THE BROKEN LANDS, her follow up to THE BONESHAKER. THE KAIROSE MECHANISM will be available this fall, and Kate has a Kickstarter campaign going to help the process.

So that's it for this week.  But, as you well know, we'll always be back with more shamelessness.

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Enchanted Interview with Rebecca Barnhouse, author of PEACEWEAVER

If it's not already obvious, I'm a big fan of smart, well-researched historical fantasy, and an even bigger fan of retellings--so I jumped at the chance to host the delightful Rebecca Barnhouse in a new interview with the Enchanted Inkpot, for her new novel, Peaceweaver, set in the world of "Beowulf."

 
Sixteen-year-old Hild has always been a favorite of her uncle, king of the Shylfings. So when she protects her cousin the crown prince from a murderous traitor, she expects the king to be grateful. Instead, she is unjustly accused of treachery herself.
As punishment, her uncle sends Hild far away to the heir of the enemy king, Beowulf, to try to weave peace between the two kingdoms. She must leave her home and everyone she loves. On the long and perilous journey, Hild soon discovers that fatigue and rough terrain are the least of her worries. Something is following her and her small band of guards—some kind of foul creature that tales say lurks in the fens. Will Hild have to face the monster? Or does it offer her the perfect chance to escape the destiny she never chose?
  --from the Random House website

Peaceweaver is in bookstores NOW, and here is our conversation with its fascinating author:





Tell us a little about the novel and its origins and about building Hild's wonderfully believable world. What is a "peaceweaver?"

I’m so glad you found it believable. Even though they’re both set in early medieval Scandinavia, and they’re both inspired by Beowulf, I wanted to give Hild’s world a different feel than Rune’s in The Coming of the Dragon. The society of the Danish nobility depicted in the first part of Beowulf—the hall of King Hrothgar and Queen Wealhtheow—was the impetus for the society in which Hild grows up. In Hild’s world, noble women wield power indirectly by influencing the high-status men when they serve them mead in the hall. That’s what Hild hopes to do, although things don’t work out the way she anticipates.

One role women in this society play is that of the peaceweaver (freoðuwebbe in Old English, if anybody wants to know!) who marries into an enemy tribe to help bring about an end to hostilities. Yet as Beowulf himself notes, the blade seldom rests no matter how worthy the bride. In many Anglo-Saxon stories, both the peaceweaver and the family she has tried to create come to grief when the peace she has been sent to weave is ripped apart. Hild knows these stories when she is chosen to be a peaceweaver.

This is your second novel inspired by the epic of Beowulf. Can you explain your process of adapting that material into a novel for modern young readers?

In The Coming of the Dragon, I retold the end of Beowulf, cleaving closely to the poem’s plot for much of my novel. Beowulf plays a much looser role in Peaceweaver. Instead of modeling my plot on it, I borrowed elements from the first section of the poem, as well as from other Anglo-Saxon and Old Norse literature. Although they gave me fun ideas to work with as I wrote, the story is Hild’s. The more familiar you are with Beowulf, the more you will recognize characters or lines or situations from the poem, such as the baby in the boat, which comes from the story of the Danish leader, Scyld Scefing, in the beginning of Beowulf.  But an appreciation of the novel requires no familiarity with the poem, or any other medieval literature, for that matter. 

When I first read Peaceweaver, I wanted to know how old Hild was, and you had a very interesting answer to that question--but I see now that the book does include Hild's age! I'd love to know more about the challenges of depicting historical young people for twenty-first century readers, and how you strike that balance of authenticity and approachability.

People in medieval Europe (not to mention in many modern cultures) would not have paid close attention to their ages. They might not have known how old they were; in fact, it would be more surprising if they did. But it’s a convention of middle grade and YA literature that readers get told exactly how old characters are. For several years, I struggled to balance scholarship with storytelling. It wasn’t until I finally loosened my death grip on my scholarly habits and allowed the needs of the story to win that I actually got published. Even then I feared that academics would come after me with pitchforks for things like having my characters know their ages. They didn’t, of course. On some matters of authenticity, however, I stand firm, especially in terms of not giving medieval characters modern attitudes. But I’ve finally realized that if readers won’t read the book in the first place, the historical accuracy doesn’t matter a whit.

Your first novel, the marvelous Book of the Maidservant, is straightforward historical fiction, but you've since written several books of historical fantasy. Do you find that there is a blurring of the fantastical and the natural in the eras you write about that is different from the way modern peoples view things?

The Book of the Maidservant is set in England and Europe at the very end of the medieval period, the 15th century. Johanna, the maidservant, lives in a world patterned by Roman Catholicism; it’s woven into every aspect of her life. Miracles and visions are an accepted part of that world and things that might seem fantastic to us would not to her. Johanna’s world is much more urban than Rune and Hild’s, the 6th-century Scandinavian characters in The Coming of the Dragon and Peaceweaver. They tend to find magical and/or religious explanations for natural events in their rural landscape (such as misty days or thunder or the success of crops). Although all three of them live in the Middle Ages, Rune and Hild are separated from Johanna by almost a millennium, and their animistic view of nature would be as foreign to her as it is to us.

Can you recommend any resources for young readers inspired by your books to learn more about this period in history?

Judson Roberts has a wonderful website about his research for the Strongbow Saga, which I highly recommend. Readers who want to know about the culture of the hall can find online material about archeological finds in Lejre, Sweden, where a hall that must have resembled King Hrothgar’s—the one Grendel attacks in Beowulf—has been found. One of my favorite sources is Benjamin Bagby’s performance of Beowulf in Old English, as he imagines an Anglo-Saxon scop, or bard, might have performed it. Excerpts are available on YouTube. And I’m a big fan of Kevin Crossley-Holland’s book of The Norse Myths, which I first read when I was in high school.

You have what I consider a fascinating day job in academia. How do you find the interplay between your academic life and the writing life?

I’m lucky because I get paid to think about literature and language and writing. I teach Beowulf and The Book of Margery Kempe (the inspiration for my first novel), so I frequently revisit these works and other medieval literature, which inevitably leads to story ideas. Although it can be difficult to find writing time during the semester, and my creative energy is devoted to teaching, there are definitely payoffs, such as long winter and summer breaks that I can devote to writing. Usually by the time summer rolls around, the ideas are bursting to get out.

Thanks for these great questions, and for having me on the Enchanted Inkpot!

* * *
Elizabeth C. Bunce is the author of A Curse Dark as Gold and the THIEF ERRANT novels, StarCrossed and Liar's Moon. She occasionally misses the chance to put her archaeology degree to work. Visit Elizabeth at www.elizabethcbunce.com




Monday, April 9, 2012

Topic of the Week: Is It Technology or Is It Magic?

"Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." —Arthur C. Clarke

The first time I used my smartphone, I remember thinking about the above quote by Arthur C. Clarke. I was using an instrument that I knew was technological, but the technology was so beyond my grasp that it honestly felt like magic. And that (as all things do) made me think about fantasy novels.

Often, fantasy contains some element of magic. Sometimes that magic is tied to nature, and other times it's relatively unexplained. And sometimes--as in the Artemis Fowl books--that magic is coupled with technology.

Personally, I love thinking about this link between magic and technology. Perhaps what we think of as magic is just some type of extremely advanced technology, and so the story is really science fiction. Thinking like that makes my brain hurt! But it's also intriguing.

I'd love to hear your thoughts on this magic vs. technology idea. Have you read stories that you felt blurred this line? Did that make you feel more or less connected to the magic? At what point does technology start to feel like magic?

Anna Staniszewski is the author of My Very UnFairy Tale Life. The sequel, My Way TOO Fairy Tale Life, is coming in March 2013. Visit Anna at www.annastan.com.


Saturday, April 7, 2012

Congratulations Nancy Holder!

In a special edition of Shameless Saturday, we at the Inkpot have a huge announcement to make!

Our very own Nancy Holder has won the Bram Stoker Award for THE SCREAMING SEASON.  It's her fifth Stoker, her first win in the YA category, and we're just guessing Nancy won't stop until she's got a dozen of these babies laying around the house.

WOO HOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!