Author Interview: Susanna Kearsley, The Firebird

The Firebird by Susanna Kearsley

The Firebird by Susanna Kearsley, Author Q & A

 

I absolutely adore Historical Fiction.  I also really enjoy reading novels that incorporate some spirituality and / or mysticism (think the Avalon Series by Marion Zimmer Bradley). To me, there’s something really special in how this kind of writing can bring history alive, enriching the facts into a fully realized world, all the while incorporating elements that are less wrapped in reality,  like magic and the paranormal.

 

I’m serious when I say that paranormal historical fiction just sends my already overactive imagination into overdrive.

 

The Firebird by Susanna Kearsley has generous sprinklings of both history and the paranormal. These two devices are stirred in with romantic notions that would turn the heads of even the most hardened cynic to create a novel that engages, entices and questions. Although slow at take-off, as the pace of the novel quickens, the reader is drawn in to two parallel stories that explore human nature, love, friendship and loyalty, in a situation where the present really does learn from the past. And, if you’re like me, you will truly fall in love with the two sets of protagonists, Nicola and Rob, and Anna and Edmund.

 

By the end of the Firebird you’ll be weeping, cheering, and truly smiling.

 

My Q& A with Susanna Kearsley

 

1. How did you come up with the concept for Firebird? It’s such a unique premise. Did you have an interest in the paranormal before writing the novel?

I have an interest in the paranormal in that I find the whole notion of things that occur in our world that we can’t yet explain scientifically very intriguing.

 

Years ago, when I was doing research for my novel The Shadowy Horses, a book that involved an archaeological dig in the Scottish borders, I was introduced to the concept of remote viewing—the apparent ability of some people to “see” things far removed from them in time or distance. The academic studies that had been done on this, by everyone from the Soviets to the CIA, were fascinating, as was the actual field experimentation carried out by researchers, in particular Canadian archaeologist Dr. J. Norman Emerson (1917-1978), the highly-respected founder of the Ontario Archaeological Society, who was a pioneer and champion of the use of what he termed “intuitive archaeology”, making use of psychics to assist him with his digs. One of his closest collaborations was with a man who not only demonstrated abilities of remote viewing, but of psychometry as well—the ability to “read” details of the history of an object by holding it. So that’s where the character of young Robbie McMorran, the 8-year-old Scottish boy gifted with similar psychic abilities, who helped my field archaeologists dig in The Shadowy Horses, was born.

 

Later on, just as the first ideas for The Firebird started forming and I was starting to get the first glimpse of my modern-day characters and of the little wooden carving that would be the start of their adventures, a reader emailed me to ask if Robbie was ever going to get his own story. Her timing couldn’t have been better, because when I write a book with a twin-stranded storyline, one that weaves the past and present stories together, part of the challenge is finding the right literary device to serve as a bridge between the two. In the past I’ve used things like reincarnation, genetic memory, actual time travel, or the simpler technique of having other characters just tell their stories to the heroine, but with The Firebird, especially since the little carving played a central role, I could see how Rob’s psychic abilities could be used to link the two stories, and lend more interest to the modern storyline, as well.

 

 

2. How much time do you spend researching? Do you do all your prep before starting to write or ongoing?

 

It’s very much an ongoing thing. I do a lot of reading beforehand, both of the history and of actual firsthand accounts, letters and documents written by people who were there at the time—very often by the characters I’m writing about. And I visit the places where the story will be taking place—in this case Scotland, London, Belgium and Russia. But while I’m at home doing the actual writing there will always be places I reach in the book where I’ll have to stop and search out something else, some detail that I didn’t know I didn’t know. I’ll have to hunt down other documents and letters, or find people I can talk to who might know the answers to my questions, and what I find out will often form the basis of new scenes, or take the story in a new direction that I hadn’t planned, so then I’ll need to do more research…

 

 

3. With regard to your process, are you a planner or a wing-it kind of writer? How much did you know about what could happen?

 

I’m very much a wing-it kind of writer. When I start a book, I generally know the central group of characters and the initial problem facing them, and I have a rough idea where I’d like them to end up, but that’s it. I set them loose on the page, and see what happens. Of course for the historical half of the story, many of those characters were actual people who really lived, and I knew from their letters and documents where they were at certain times, and what they did, and who they met and talked to—those details couldn’t be changed. Any 18th century characters I created had to move within these confines, so that sometimes took a bit of thought, but my planning didn’t go much further than marking out a calendar with dates and times of meetings and locations and events. The characters still drove the story forward, in my mind. Events that I initially thought would become very important ended up taking a back seat to other happenings that I didn’t even know about when I began the book, and real-life characters who I thought would play major roles were overshadowed and outplayed by lesser-known ones who emerged from the first-hand accounts and journals I was reading. It’s a process that I truly love, the way a story grows, and I find if I try to plan it out beforehand it’s not nearly as enjoyable, and what I end up writing isn’t half as good, as if I simply wing it, as you say.

 

 

If you’d like to learn more about Susanna Kearsley, The Firebird, or any of her other books, visit her websites or connect with her on Twitter.

 

Visit her website: http://www.susannakearsley.com/

Tumblr: http://susannakearsley.tumblr.com/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/SusannaKearsley

 

 

 

 

So, what do you think? Are you going to read The Firebird?

Chick Lit for Smart Chicks. And Everyone

 

One good hustle and The blondes

 

A duo of amazing novels. That’s what I call these two novels by Canadian women, about women, and… well you get the picture.

 

One Good Hustle by Billie Livingston 

one good hustle by billie livingston

 

Sammie Bell. 16.  The daughter of two con artists.  Essentially abandoned by her alcoholic mother and hustler father.  Sammie wants an ordinary life, but doesn’t know if she can fight her genetic predisposition to be ‘in the game’.  Living in Burnaby, B.C, with her mother, Marlene, who goes off the deep end following a scam gone bad, Sammie seeks haven and stability at her friend Jill’s home.  There, she gets a taste of what a real home is like with Jill’s parents Lou and Ruby.  But, she still craves the love and attention of her parents, and essentially sits by the phone waiting for her father, Sam to call from Toronto, to tell Sammie he’s coming to rescue her and Marlene from their Welfare existence.

 

Sammie is confused. She loves her mother, she hates her mother. She goes to visit her, but doesn’t go in. She likes a boy, she pushes him away.  Jill is her best friend yet at times she disgusts Sammie.  She wants a job, she wants it all to come easy.  Living a straight life is hard for this girl who was brought up in the life since before she knew it.

 

I wasn’t sure if One Good Hustle was for me. At first, I thought it was a Young Adult book and handed it over to my 18-year old daughter to read.  But, when she took too long, I retrieved it.  And, I was glad.  Livingston tells her tale  with a poignance and honesty that could only come from her own experiences growing up in Vancouver, BC.

 

As the novel is set somewhere in the late 70s, it’s supposedly a simpler time. Having the novel set in that time, though, opens up so many more opportities and choices for a young woman to make. After all, it was before helicopter parenting and cell phones.  With her disrupted innocence, Sammie reminds me so much of the  ’Anonymous’ from my own coming of age novel Go Ask Alice.  She’s proof that the optimism of youth is not to be wasted, nor is a child’s love easily displaced.  This novel is a must read from a fantastic writer.

 

Unputdownable Factor: 10/10

Recommend Factor:  10/10

 

 

The Blondes by Emily Schultz

 

This book was a big surprise. For some reason, when I read the jacket, I thought it was a light and fluffy piece of chick lit.  But, instead what I got was a meaty, yet skillfully wrought, social commentary on women’s relationships and how we can abandon our sisterhood so easily.  In fact, the novel was so smart that it’s a struggle to summarize without spoiling the story. But, I’ll do my best.

 

Women have stupid dreams. 

 

As an opening line, that is a winner.  Uttered by our narrator, Hazel Hayes, abandoned in a cottage and heavily pregnant.  It’s winter.  The world has been infected by a strange virus and mass hysteria.  Hazel begins talking to her unborn child, sharing her story, meandering forward and backward , slipping nuggets of information to both her unborn baby and us, the reader sparingly, and yes, teasingly.

 

We learn that the world has been taken over by an apocalyptic type disease that affects only women who either have blonde hair or who have dyed their hair blonde.  Hazel, a graduate student whose studies coincidentally focuses on aesthetology, more specifically ‘How women look and what they think they look like’, is in New York City escaping her life when the first cases of The Blonde Fury happen. She becomes stranded when countries institute martial law. Right after finding out she is pregnant.  She makes every attempt to return to her family in Canada, and to tell the father of her unborn child that she is expecting.  Throughout her journey, Hazel witnesses, and shares with us, what the strain of danger and fear will do to people, how easy it is to fall into the trap of mass hysteria, and how women’s loyalties to each other are easily disrupted by self-interest.   other.

 

I am in awe of Emily Schultz.  This success of this story comes only because of her skillful manipulation of past and present, truths and fiction.  Her prose is spare, enough, although sometimes frustratingly not enough.  But, in a good way. The Blondes made me smarter.

 

Unputdownable Factor: 10/10

Recommend Factor:  10/10

 

I was provided these books for review from Random House Canada. the opinions, however incredibly positive, are my own. I swear.

 

 

 

 

 

Stray Bullets: Right on Target

Stray Bullets by Robert Rotenberg

Stray Bullets by Robert Rotenberg

I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again that I’m not a big fan of Crime Fiction.  I’m pretty sure its because I’m a Curious Cathy and can’t help flipping to the end to see the whodunnit. Which, of course, completely defeats the purpose of the genre, which, obviously, is the waiting. To see whodunnit.  As such, I have to exercise restraint when reading any type of suspense or mystery novel.  And, anyone who knows me is well aware that restraint and patience aren’t necessarily my strong points.

But… also like I’ve said before, when I’m sent books by Simon & Schuster that I normally wouldn’t pick up, I’m usually pleasantly surprised.  It’s nice when my own taste is trumped by someone else’s-I’m open-minded after all.

Stray Bullets is the second book I’ve read by Robert Rotenberg.  The first was Guilty Plea (I can’t link to the review right now, because of this. However, hopefully the rest of my content will be added to this site, and I will be able to.)

Just like in his previous novel, Rotenberg sets the story in our mutual hometown of Toronto.  The novel opens with a shooting at Tim Hortons, the home of the ubiquitous coffee us Canadian call a double double (two creams and two sugars).  The victim?  A little boy on his way into the coffee shop for a donut.  The motive?  A young woman has dumped her career criminal boyfriend while he’s still in prison.  He’s out for revenge, and turns up at the Tim Hotons where she works.

The potential perps? The jealous boyfriend, his sidekick best friend, the new love?  Who knows… the trouble is all caused by a stray bullet.  And the phrase, ‘Here, take this.’

What I liked

Rotenberg is an actual criminal lawyer, which lends an element of realism to the tale.  He weaves a true crime story,  and what’s great is that you get perspectives from more than one level of the criminal justice system-the detective, the police officer, the defence and prosecution lawyers. Its also nice that he carries through many of the same characters from earlier books. Its always nice to see old friends, after all. I was enthralled the entire time with Stray Bullets.  I was fooled, then I totally knew what happened, then I was fooled again. There were bad guys, good guys, redemption, and just rewards. All the elements of a great story were covered.  Lovers of this genre, I believe, won’t be disappointed.

What I didn’t like

Really, the only complaint I have with the book are the extensive references to the city of Toronto,.  Its obvious that Rotenberg loves his city dearly, and as such, gives it a starring role in his books.  However, the mentions become forced after a while, particularly the descriptions of each location or site’s history or importance.  When reading a book about New York or San Francisco, or even Detroit, natch, the reader is left to their own devices to place the locations in their imaginations.  After all, one can always Wikipedia if more details are needed.

Recommend Factor:  7/10 (Totally genre based)

Unputdownable Factor 9/10 (after all, it is a mystery..)

If you like watching any of the CSIs , you’ll love Stray Bullets….

Here’s the author answering some of your fan questions

You can find Robert Rotenberg on Facebook, or on Simon & Schuster’s Website.

And..lastly,if you are in the Toronto area, and want to meet Mr. Rotenberg and ask him questions of your own, check out his free Indigo event

Date: Tuesday, May 8th, 2012

Time: 12:30pm-2:00pm

Location: Indigo Books & Music, Toronto Eaton Centre