Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Dark Triumph Interview with Robin LaFevers!

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DARK TRIUMPH - His Fair Assassin Trilogy (Book 2)
Sybella's duty as Death's assassin in 15th-century France forces her return home to the personal hell that she had finally escaped. Love and romance, history and magic, vengeance and salvation converge in this thrilling sequel to Grave Mercy.
Sybella arrives at the convent’s doorstep half mad with grief and despair. Those that serve Death are only too happy to offer her refuge—but at a price. The convent views Sybella, naturally skilled in the arts of both death and seduction, as one of their most dangerous weapons. But those assassin's skills are little comfort when the convent returns her to a life that nearly drove her mad. And while Sybella is a weapon of justice wrought by the god of Death himself, He must give her a reason to live. When she discovers an unexpected ally imprisoned in the dungeons, will a daughter of Death find something other than vengeance to live for?



Ello - So here I am in love with another Robin LaFevers book and I realize that there is something fundamentally evil about ARCs. Yes, you get to read a book way before others do. But it also means you must wait so much longer for the next book. This is quite evil. Because I really have no idea how I'm going to handle this wait. Fortunately, I have the remarkable pleasure of interviewing the Assassin Nun Master herself and pick her mind for as much information as we can!

 Ello - Congratulations for developing another strong female hero! And what a hero! Dark and damaged but so fierce and yet incredibly empathetic. She is similar and yet so different from Ismae and I love them both! Can you tell us how you approached Sybella and her story that was different from the one for Ismae and Grave Mercy?


Robin - When Ismae first arrived at the convent, both Annith and Sybella just kind of showed up on the page, and Sybella in particular with her brokenness and borderline histrionic personality disorder threatened to take over every scene she was in. It became clear to me that the only way to keep her under control was to promise her her own book. Once I’d decided that, she was able to become the secondary character she was, but she was constantly throwing me heavy, meaningful glances as if to say, just you wait. You promised and you will get an earful. And so I did.

Pieces of it came to me while writing Grave Mercy. For example, I realized halfway through that book who her family was and I was like, Oh my god! And then I had to sit on it for the rest of the book to be certain no hint of it escaped.
One of the biggest differences was the since Sybella had so much backstory and baggage, hers was a much more personal story, told against the backdrop of her own, hugely dramatic life, whereas Ismae was more of a player on the stage of history, and that greatly affected the two narratives I think. Not for better or worse, just different.

Ello – Ah, that explains so much! Because it really did feel more personal and intense! All right - First of all, let me make clear how much I love the Beast! I loved him in Grace Mercy and I just love him to pieces here! I adore the romance between Sybella and Beast, and how they slowly earn each other's trust and respect. At what point in writing this series did you decide for these two to get romantically involved? While you were writing Grave Mercy? Or had you planned all along for them to get together?

Robin - Ah, good question. Let’s see. I think it was also fairly early on in the writing of Grave Mercy that I kept thinking, Beast would be perfect for Sybella, just the sort of guy that would show her what a true heart looked like.  And he was supposed to die there in the final battle of Grave Mercy, but I just couldn’t do it. I just couldn’t write that death, so I left it open, mostly to ease my own heart, but then it quickly became apparent that my subconscious had known exactly what it was doing.
And then, when I began doing the initial writing for Dark Triumph and saw just how intertwined their pasts were and why Beast, more than any other man in the world, would be able to get in under her defenses, I decided my subconscious had been having a very, VERY good day.

Ello – Your subconscious is very smart because I would have been very upset with you if you had killed off Beast. I’m still harboring a grudge for another death in Grave Mercy that I have YET to get over, BTW! Ok so I was fascinated by all of the weapons used in both Grave Mercy and Dark Triumph, like Sybella's secret stash of knives. How did you research what sort of weapons were used in this period?

Robin - Well, I do have two sons and a husband who never met a weapon they didn’t love, so we’ve had a fair amount of practical experience around here. Plus, writing in the Age of Google means that no historic fact or bit of research is ever very far away.

 Ello - Also, if you were a nun assassin, what would be your weapon of choice?

Robin - I’m afraid I’d lean toward gentle weapons and most likely poison would be my specialty. Also? I am squeamish.

Ello – I’m not! (grins – that’s why I love those knives!) I remember reading that it took you five or six years to write Grave Mercy. For Dark Triumph, however, you were under a much tighter deadline. Was it hard switching gears between these very different timeframes? How were you able to manage drafting the sequel so quickly? And do you have any advice for writers who are undertaking similar deadlines?

Robin - Hoo boy. We just don’t realize what a luxury it is to be able to take as much time as we need to write a book until we no longer have that time, do we? Because yes, it was hard switching gears. Part of what helped is that by taking so long to write that first book, I did have most, if not all, of the world building issues firmly in place. I was still able to have fun with it and surprise myself (the charbonnerie!) but most of that heavy lifting had been done.

The second thing that helped was that because Sybella was in Grave Mercy, I had had to figure some of who she was out while writing that book, so I didn’t hit it cold. Plus, I mentally toyed with ideas for the second book during the various down times that come up during the publication schedule for the first book. Having the story have a less broad scope also helped immensely. Even so, it took me seven hefty drafts to get it where I wanted it. No mean feat in just ten months.

Ello – You are amazing, Robin! This book is amazing! From 5 years to 10 months and this book is just as good, if not better! Robin, you know I'm a huge research hound also. And I'm quite jealous of the breadth of historical research you undertook for this fabulous series. And I know that there are always kernels of research that we fall in love with but can't always find a way to put into our books. Did you find some fascinating historical fact that you would like to share with us here that didn't make it into either books?

Robin - You know, I didn’t! I was able to use all the stuff I fell in love with. Or if I didn’t use it yet, I’ll be using it in book three.

Ello – Speaking of book 3, can you take pity on a desperate person and give us a little teaser about Book 3?

Robin - Gosh, I so wish I could! The problem is, well, see answer #5 above. I’ve just spent very little time with Annith. She was so peripheral to books one and two that I didn’t have the advantage of getting to know her even a little bit. Compounding that was that I realized I’d only ever seen her through Ismae or Sybella’s eyes and had never stepped into her skin and been her, which I am doing now and learning all sorts of surprising things. But of course, nothing I can share. Sorry! (Mostly because it’s all very fluid at this point and hasn’t solidified yet.)

Ello – Ok, I shall suffer by whining in an over the top, melodramatic manner! Thank you Robin for sharing with us a little bit about Dark Triumph! And if any of our Inkpot readers have not yet read Grave Mercy, well, what are you waiting for? And if you have and are eagerly waiting for Dark Triumph, I promise you are in for a gorgeous treat!!

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Cute and Creepy: More middle-grade covers

Animals, gorgeous, gruesome, or cute. Spectacular images. Interesting typefaces, sometimes neon
green.

Cover designers, sly bootses all, have an arsenal of tricks to catch our attention.  And if all else fails, you can’t beat a good dragon.
   
Herewith, day two of our spring middle-grade fantasy cover extravaganza. These books have pub dates between January and June 2013. “Middle grade,” again, means the audience is somewhere between ages eight and fourteen.  We’ll show you young-adult covers April 8 and 9.

As always, if there’s one we’ve missed, please link to it in a comment.

Click on "read more" to see the covers. And tell us your favorite!

Monday, March 25, 2013

In Your Dreams: New Middle-Grade Covers!

If a cover designer wants to draw us into a book, what better way than to tap into our dreams?

Or our nightmares.

And so on this season’s middle-grade fantasy covers, we float or we fly, sometimes on magnificent beasts. We swashbuckle with swords. We hobnob with mermaids and ghosts and our fellow humans. Boys face danger alone and unafraid . . . and just LOOK at the number of girls taking charge of their destiny!

Sometimes there be monsters. Very cool monsters.

This post covers middle-grade covers for books published between January and June 2013. (“Middle grade” these days seems to be anywhere between ages eight and fourteen.) As usual, there are so many we’ve split the post in two—look for more cover awesomeness right here tomorrow. We’ll show you the young-adult covers April 8 and 9.

If we missed one you think the world should see, please link to it in the comments.

The covers are after the break (click on "read more"). Which one's your favorite?

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Necromancing the Stone with Lish McBride


Congrats to Van Pham for winning a copy of Necromancing the Stone. Thanks to everyone for reading and commenting!

With the defeat of the evil Douglas behind him, Sam LaCroix is getting used to his new life. Okay, so he hadn’t exactly planned on being a powerful necromancer with a seat on the local magical council and a capricious werewolf sort-of-girlfriend, but things are going fine, right?

Well . . . not really. He’s pretty tired of getting beat up by everyone and their mother, for one thing, and he can’t help but feel that his new house hates him. His best friend is a werebear, someone is threatening his sister, and while Sam realizes that he himself has a lot of power at his fingertips, he’s not exactly sure how to use it. Which, he has to admit, is a bit disconcerting.

But when everything starts falling apart, he decides it’s time to step up and take control. His attempts to do so just bring up more questions, though, the most important of which is more than a little alarming: Is Douglas really dead?


Cindy: It is an absolute pleasure to welcome back Lish Mcbride to the Inkpot! I was looking over ourlast interview and giveaway together and it was almost exactly two years ago. At that time, we hadn't met yet. Hoorah that we got the chance at Comic Con in San Diego as well as in Portland! 

You had mentioned Necromancing the Stone in passing in our last interview together, and talked about the consequences of all that happened in Hold Me Closer, Necromancer. I am a huge fan of the follow up consequences books. Because although we write fantasy and fantasy worlds--it doesn't mean that our heroes aren't affected by the magic or power they wield, or the often grim choices they are forced to make. How was it for you writing this sequel--where some tough situations and emotions come into play? 

Lish: Writing sequels...sucks. No, actually, that's not true. I'm writing a sequel right now and it's fine. NTS fell directly into "second book syndrome." Which means that it fought me every step of the way. Everyone told me that the second book is always the hardest, and man, they weren't kidding. It was definitely an uphill battle. That being said, there's a lot in it that I like. New characters (Taco, Minion, Sexy Gary, etc.) and we get to know a few other characters a lot more. There's certainly a few heart-wrenching moments that were hard for me to write, but they needed to be there. I got a little misty myself at times. I always try to balance it out with some happy thoughts, though. So, you know, there's some battle gnomes, too. 

HMC,N had a lot in it about choices that we make and dealing with the hand that life deals you, and it's not like that ever stops in life. Sam has to just keep on dealing, and since he drags his very human friends with him, they have to deal, too. Sure, it's nice to learn that magic is real and all that, but it's dangerous, and for people like Frank, it's certainly going to be a life-changer. It would feel weird to not examine that in the book. 

Cindy: Loved the battle gnomes! And I really appreciated the way you handled choices in both these novels. One of the interesting and refreshing things about your novels is that you write from the villain's point of view. That isn't often seen in young adult fantasy at all. Did you enjoy writing from his perspective?

Lish: Define "enjoy?" Douglas is one of those characters were it's definitely more like channeling than crafting something. Which is kind of terrifying. I mean, Douglas's pieces aren't even edited very much. Little tweaks, but usually nothing like the massive overhauls the Sam chapters take. It's weird to discover that the one character that's easiest for you to write is a violent sociopath. It certainly shouldn't come naturally to me. Yikes. 

But there's something kind of honest and straight forward about Douglas's narrative. He makes no excuses for himself. He knows that he's a monster, he just doesn't care. He wants what he wants and you better get out of his way. Last week I stopped by a high school to chat with a group of teens and one of them asked me about Douglas's chapters in NTS. He wanted to know why I showed the reader what I did--why I made you feel bad for Douglas. The question made me really happy. Evil doesn't come from nowhere. It grows. It's nourished. I wanted the reader to mourn who Douglas could have become so that you could also see why James loves him. It was nice to know that it worked for that reader. 

Cindy: Totally with you on that one. We all start somewhere, and no one is all good or all bad. This is why I love to write gray characters. I'm always fascinated by themes that arise in our stories. To me, Necromancing has a strong focus on family, loyalty, and friendship. Did these arise by chance, or were they deliberate choices when you began writing? 

Lish: Yes and no. I never, ever, approach a story with that sort of thing in mind. I don't want it to come off all "After School Special." No heavy handed morals and what not. That kind of thing can kill a story. When I was Sam's age, though, those kinds of things were important to me. My family is a hodge-podge of blood relatives, step-whatevers, family friends, my friends, and whatever strays we could pick up. It's a mess. I love it. Family, to me, is about the one you build for yourself, not just the one you're given. My teen years were rough (who's aren't, right?) and the family I built kept me going. And I'm still friends with that group. (In fact, many of them are thanked in my acknowledgements.) They act as beta readers, babysitters, writing buddies, moral support, you name it. I am where I am because of my amazing, loyal, kickass friends and family. Sam's support system is roughly modeled on my own and it only made sense for it to be that way. 

Cindy: I love that response. I think the idea of family is whom you choose to have and build really comes across in these books--of finding your own place. Do you have a favorite character from this series? And what are you working on now, Lish? 

Lish: Hm. It's hard to pick. Sam is so nice. Brid is tough and brave. Ramon is funny and loyal. Ashley is a snarky jerk (I have soft spot for snarky jerks as I tend to be one.). Frank is sweet. Brooke is the Den Mother. James is fussy. Taco is adorable and I love Sexy Gary so much I just had my friend Vlad design a sticker of him. I've spent so much time with them that it would be hard to pick. 

Right now I'm editing my next book and writing the follow up to that. They're not Sam books, but they are set in the same world. They follow Ava, a firebug, who can start fires with her mind. She's forced to work for a mob-style organization as an assassin. It doesn't sound funny, but I promise it's along similar lines as the Sam books. There are biker were-bunnies, for example. All first person so far, though, which feels weird to me now because I've been working on the Sam books for so long. No title as of yet (they rejected mine) and as far as I know the first one is slated for Spring 2014. 

Cindy: Gosh, Ava the firebug sounds so RAD. =D I cannot wait to read this and interview you in the future! Finally, since I've already asked the pastry questions--what is one of your favorite snacks while writing?

Lish: Whatever won't make my hands sticky. I want my snack to not get in the way of me working, but not enough to actually give up the actual snacking. So at this point it's whatever isn't sticky that someone else makes for me. 

Cindy: So practical! And it makes sense. But it discounts Cheetos for me, which is heartbreaking for obvious reasons. Lish, thank you so much for taking the time in your busy schedule to talk with us here!!

To learn more about Lish and her books, visit her website: lishmcbride.com

Inkpot Giveaway

I will be giving away a copy of Necromancing the Stone to one lucky winner! +1 Simply comment in this post to enter. +1 entry if you are a follower of our blog. +1 if you tweet or fb status, etc, with a link to this post and mention of book giveaway. For a total of +3 entries. I will pick a winner on Wednesday, 3/27 and post winner name at the top of this entry. Good luck! (Open to US mailing addresses.)

Cindy Pon is the author of Silver Phoenix (Greenwillow, 2009), which was named one of the Top Ten Fantasy and Science Fiction Books for Youth by the American Library Association’s Booklist, and one of 2009′s best Fantasy, Science Fiction and Horror by VOYA. The sequel to Silver Phoenix, titled Fury of the Phoenix, was released in April 2011. Her first published short story is featured in Diverse Energies, a multicultural YA dystopian anthology from Tu Books (October 2012). Cindy is also a Chinese brush painting student of over a decade. Visit her website at www.cindypon.com.

Monday, March 18, 2013

TOTW: "I'm not crying - it's just been raining on my face."


In today's post, I'm inviting those of you who are not quite as mired in denial as Bret and Jermaine here to share MG/YA fantasy books that made you weepy. Here are a few of mine to get you going.

*The Magician's Nephew by C.S. Lewis - I have a very distinct memory of sitting in the Wendy's in the University of Oklahoma student union hoping nobody noticed the tears running down my cheeks as Narnia was born out of Aslan's roar (I read The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe several times as a kid, but didn't get to the other Narnia books until I was in college - my reading habits were somewhat idiosyncratic).

*Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows by J.K. Rowling - (Are we still doing spoiler alerts for this? Becuase yeah - SPOILER ALERT!) There are so very many sob-inducing moments in this book, but the one that really did it for me was Snape's death. He was such a wounded and complicated guy, but his love for Lily gave him the capacity for great sacrifice and heroism. RIP, Severus.

*The Tale of Despereaux and The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane by Kate DiCamillo - Reading a Kate DiCamillo book is sort of like having someone put their fist through your ribcage and squeeze your heart into a pulp. In a good way. 

*Bridge to Terabithia by Katherine Paterson - It may be kind of pushing it to peg this as fantasy, but I'm going to allow it, because this is my blog post and I can do that.  And no other book has ever made me ugly cry like this one did. Seriously, y'all - great heaving sobs. It wasn't pretty.

Your turn, gentle readers. Which books made you misty?