A Writer in the Spotlight – Beth Fantaskey

This week again I was lucky enough to have a YA author give me an exclusive interview! The idea behind the “Writer in the Spotlight” feature is that published (and bestselling) authors are the best source of advice for us, would-be-published writers. Today’s interview is with the amazingly nice Beth Fantaskey.

Author : Beth Fantaskey

Genre : Young Adult, Paranormal Fiction

Location: Pennsylvania, USA

Website : http://bethfantaskey.com/

Books :

Jessica’s Guide to Dating on the Dark Side (2009)

Jekel Loves Hyde (2010)

Jessica Rules the Dark Side (2012)

My interview (19/04/2012)

On writing

Did you always know you wanted to be a writer?

No, while I was growing up, I had no idea that I wanted to write, and I actually became a writer out of necessity.  When I graduated from college, I had no job prospects, so when a friend mentioned that a public relations office was hiring writers, I applied.  When I turned in my writing sample, the man who would become my boss said, “You know you’re a writer, right?”  I got hired on the spot, and that’s what I’ve done ever since – thank goodness!

When and where do you write?

I write in my home office, which is a messy space that fortunately has a nice view of my neighbor’s gorgeous garden.  I write while my three children are at school.  As soon as they are out of the house, I sit down to work. 

Do you ever experience writer’s block?

That’s an interesting question, because I think people experience that in a lot of different ways.  I do have days where the words don’t seem to flow naturally, or I really have to struggle for ideas.  I suppose that’s my form of the disease!

What do you say to people who want to be writers? How difficult is it to get published?

I always give people the same boring but sincere advice, which is to treat writing like anything else you want to be good at – meaning practice every day.  I get the sense that some people think writing is a “gift” that you either have or don’t have.  But in my opinion, it’s also a talent that you can develop with hard work and practice.  So I always encourage aspiring writers to sit down and work, just like you’d practice piano if you wanted to be a concert pianist, or do soccer drills if you wanted to be a soccer star.

I worked as a professional writer for nearly twenty years before I tried a novel, and I learned something every day on the job.

Is it better to outline and plot your novel or “go with the flow”?

I can’t speak for everyone, but I tend to go with the flow.  I like to know where a  story will start and end – especially in terms of how the main characters will develop – but beyond that, I just let the rest come out naturally.  I honestly don’t think I could stick to a plot, because it seems like new possibilities always open up as I write.  For example, I’ll leave a cliffhanger at the end of a chapter, and suddenly I see new directions to take.  I envy people who can create detailed plots, though.  I think that’s probably a more sane way to work! 

Do you set goals for yourself as you write?

I generally strive to finish one chapter each day, but hopefully achieve more than that.  One chapter (mine are usually short) seems like an achievable goal – and not overly intimidating – so I think about that as I sit down at my computer.  However, in the back of my mind, I’m also expecting to go past that mark.  I guess that’s my way of breaking down the big job of writing a complete novel by looking at it as a series of small steps.

On “Jessica’s Guide to Dating on the Dark Side”

To write this book, where did you get your inspiration from? Were you aware of the coming vampire trend in YA literature when you wrote it?

Honestly, if I’d been aware of the trend, I probably wouldn’t have written the book.  I had no idea that the market was already getting saturated, because I didn’t read YA lit before I started writing for YA readers. 

The inspiration actually came from my family.  My children are adopted, and sometimes we wonder what their birth parents are or were like.  Maybe doctors?  Farmers?  Teachers?  Who knows?  That gave me the idea to write the story of a grounded, logical girl who discovers that her birth parents were different from anything she could have imagined – and how that rocks her world.  I took that to the extreme by making Jessica’s birth parents vampires, because they are very close to “human” in terms of appearance and habits, and therefore almost within the realm of believability, but “monsters,” too.  That’s how I ended up writing about vampires.

Jessica and Lucius: How did you come up with those characters? Are they based on real people?

None of my characters are based on real people.  I swear, they just sort of spring to life, fully formed, as I write about them.  Vampire prince Lucius, in particular, was a vivid presence from the minute I started writing his first letter home to his uncle.  It was as if he walked into my office and began dictating to me – which seems like something he’d do.  Within the first few seconds, I felt like I knew everything about him. 

What type of music did you listen to when you wrote those books?

I live close to a small university with a radio station, and that’s what I usually listen to while I work.  It’s mainly alternative rock.  I definitely have to work to music, which seems to be true of most writers, don’t you think?  I guess it’s such a solitary job that you need some company. 

What are you working on now? Is it another “Jessica’s” book?

I am actually working full time on my doctoral dissertation.  I took a break from school to write my three novels, but if I don’t finish this year, seven years of education are down the drain.  I really want to finish my degree, so I’m hustling. 

Reading advice

Which authors inspire you now?

I’m still inspired by the classic English-literature canon, which is reflected in my books.  For example, my character Lucius Vladescu loves literature, and in the first book does a rather dramatic classroom report on Wuthering Heights.  And, of course, my second novel, Jekel Loves Hyde, is a modern interpretation of The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.  I guess I’m a traditionalist.

Which YA books would recommend?

You know, as I mentioned before, I didn’t really read YA lit before writing a YA novel – and I still don’t read it.  Before, I just didn’t know much about the genre, but now I deliberately avoid that whole section of the bookstore because I don’t want to be influenced by what other YA writers are doing.  I just want to make sure that I’m always writing in my voice and style, and never subconsciously being swayed by other authors’ works.  I know there’s a whole incredible world of YA books waiting out there, the minute I’m done writing for young adults, though!

You can follow Beth Fantaskey on Twitter and learn more about her books on Goodreads.

 

Vampire books

What’s on my bookshelf ? 1

Toward the end of the 1990’s, long before the craze about vampires that has taken hold of the Western world for the past 5 years, I started reading Vampire books. I have never stopped, and I now find myself with an entire bookcase dedicated to the genre, filled with the best and the worst of Vampire novels.

 If you’re interested in the topic of Vampires in literature, but don’t really know where to start, here is a guide of what to read first, and what to avoid at all cost. Then it is up to you to make up your own mind about these titles.

 

1-    Dracula, Bram Stoker

When diving in the huge pool of Vampire books, why not start with a classic? Dracula was written in 1897 and is still a landmark in the Vampire literature. It is an epistolary novel depicting the vampire Count Dracula in his attempt at relocating from Transylvania to England while Professor Van Helsing tries to destroy him. It is fast-paced, gothic, creepy and still attention-grabbing.

 

2-    Interview with the Vampire/The Vampire Lestat, Anne Rice

Moving on from Dracula, the next landmark in Vampire literature is the work of Anne Rice. Written in 1973 (published three years later), Interview with the Vampire is the most famous of The Vampire Chronicles series. It tells the story of 200-year-old vampire Louis, as he himself recounts his life during an interview with a reporter in New Orleans. My favorite novel in the series, however, is The Vampire Lestat, written in 1985. The book tells the story of Louis’ maker, a French vampire called Lestat de Lioncourt. 560 pages long, the novel is incredibly well-written and fluid for its length, and wonderfully gripping.

 

3-    The historian, Elizabeth Kostova

A debut novel and a masterpiece. Published in 2005, the book mixed three different narratives to tell the stories of Vlad the Impaler, his fictional equivalent Dracula and a history professor looking for Vlad’s tomb. Filled with amazing descriptions of setting and rich themes, the novel also has a riveting plot and an eerie atmosphere. It refers to a long tradition of gothic/Victorian/detective/horror/historical novels as well.

In the 1990’s, Vampire novels moved on from the traditional stories centered on the vampires themselves to introduce human heroes (usually heroines) having to deal with vampires. However, since Anne Rice had proven earlier that vampires didn’t have to be the bad guys of the story, this new kind of vampire books often showed the vampires in a good light, turning them into the heroine’s love interests. Among those books, you can have a look at:

 

4-    Blood Books, Tanya Huff

A strong-willed PI investigates strange cases and comes across a 500-year-old vampire in Toronto, Canada. Together they face supernatural threats, while slowly falling for each other. What I enjoyed about this series was the vampire character, Henry Fitzroy, who is witty and just creepy enough. The books have been turned into a Lifetime TV series called Blood Ties in 2007.

 

5-    The Southern Vampire series, Charlaine Harris

As of today, the series has 12 titles and has been turned into a very successful TV show called True Blood by HBO. I have only read the first two books, as I wasn’t very fond of the main (human) character Sookie Stackhouse and of the fact that vampires are only a background to the main story. If I’m advertized vampires, I want vampires!

 

6-    Undead and Unwed, MaryJanice Davidson

A hilarious book, first in a series of 11 books (so far) published since 2004, Undead and Unwed is a sort of Sex and the City with vampires. It tells the story of a thirty-something unemployed former model who dies in a stupid accident and wakes up a vampire. From then on, it’s mostly a romance novel, with some very funny pages and an original plot. I have only ever read book 1, so I wouldn’t be able to say if the rest of the series keeps up with the witty and original quality of the first book.

After the 1990’s shift in Vampire literature, came the 2000’s landslide of teen vampire books.

 

7-    The Twilight Saga, Stephenie Meyer

Everything has probably been said and/or written on the Twilight Saga, but there is no denying that the series has put vampire literature back in the spotlight. Published between 2005 and 2008, the four books depict the love story between the human narrator, a teenage girl named Bella Swan, and a vampire called Edward Cullen. I personally waited until 2007 to read Twilight and its sequels, and I have to admit it is an easy read with a few original ideas (“sparkling” vampires and the warfare among supernatural beings). However, I was annoyed by the focus on the human girl rather than the vampires, whose characters were, to my mind, rather under-developed. I wish it had been the story of the Volturi rather than Bella’s. But that’s just me.

 

8-    The last vampire, Christopher Pike

An example of vampire books rediscovered after the success of Twilight, The last vampire (published in 1994) tells the story of a 5000-year-old vampire girl named Sita. To my mind, it is a very strange book, primarily focused on the history of India and the Hinduist religion. It reminds me of Anne Rice’s books, as Sita is a very old vampire who is depressed and trying to find a way to die.

 

 9-    The Vampire Diaries, L. J. Smith

First published in 1991, the series has found a new success after the release of Twilight. It is about a human teenage girl, Elena Gilbert, who falls in love with two vampire brothers. The books have been turned into a TV show by the CW in 2009. An easy read, The Vampire Dairies are mostly romance novels, which, you’ve by now guessed, are not my cup of tea.

 

10- The Blue Bloods series, Melissa de la Cruz

I was really hopeful when I started reading this series in 2007, but I have to say I have been disappointed. Set in Manhattan, NY, the books are about a group of teenagers belonging to the city’s oldest and most influential families, who find out on their 15th birthday they are in fact vampires. To me, the problem with this series is that it is more about the Upper East Side, its private schools, its select parties and its shallow inhabitants than about vampires. And frankly, there’s only some much clothes descriptions that I can take before feeling I’m reading an ad for Barney’s.

 

11- Jessica’s guide to dating on the dark side, Beth Fantaskey

At last, a good teenage read about vampires. Published in 2009, the book follows the adventures of an adopted high school girl who finds out on her 17th birthday that she is a vampire royalty engaged to a complete stranger. As her betrothed invades her life in a hilarious attempt at winning her heart, she tries –and fails- to continue her life as a normal teenager. It’s funny, it’s witty, the vampires are (finally!) the main characters again and Jessica is a great narrator.

 

12- The Morganville Vampires series, Rachel Caine

With 11 books published since 2006, and 4 more to come, The Morganville Vampires series is about… vampires living in the town of Morganville, Texas. As the main character, a 16-year-old university student, finds out that her housemates are not all human, she embarks on a one-way journey into the secrets of the vampire-run city. The books are short but packed with action and suspense. Claire is a great example of strong-willed heroin and the vampires are delightfully complex characters.

 

13- Vampire Academy, Richelle Mead

I’ll probably lose a few readers by writing this, but Vampire Academy was to me an absolute disappointment. Praised everywhere, I dutifully read the first book, eager to see what the fuss was all about. To this day, I have no idea. Published in 2007, the novel has an original setting (vampire teenagers trained to protect the country’s royalties in a special school) but I felt it was more about teenage hormonal changes than vampires. Predictable and annoying, I wouldn’t recommend it.

 

14- Infinite Days, Rebecca Maizel

Published in 2010, this is the first book in what will be The Vampire Queen series. I am currently impatiently waiting for the second book, as I loved the first one. It is about a 500-year-old vampire named Lenah, who is given the opportunity to be a 16-year-old human again. She has to adjust to her new life while her coven seeks to have her back as their queen. It is an incredibly original plot, the kind of story you read and wonder: why didn’t I think of that? I highly recommend it.

Moving on from teen reads, these past two year have brought vampire literature back into the adult corner of libraries. I will mention two books:

 

15- The Passage, Justin Cronin

A 900-page novel, The Passage is the first book in a trilogy. Published in 2010, it is the story of an apocalypse: after a failed experiment in 2018, the human population is decimated by a virus which creates vampire-like creatures. The remaining humans struggle to survive over the next 90 years, desperately trying to find a cure for the virus, which they will find in the shape of a 100-year-old little girl. So, as of now, I am still undecided about The Passage. There are some beautifully written pages, as well as a wonderful main character (Amy, the “little” girl). But there are also huge chunks of the book that I personally think should have been edited/deleted. 900 pages is too long to tell a story that can, in the end, be summarized on a single A4 page. The author spends dozens of pages introducing characters who then just die. He describes settings forever without ever having any action actually happening in these settings. I really loved the first 100 pages, as well as the last 100 ones, but I believe the 700 pages in the middle could have been shortened into another 100 pages, making it a nice, readable and enjoyable 300-page book. But that’s just me.

 

 16- The Radleys, Matt Haig

Unlike The Passage, The Radleys is not long, and it’s a delight to read. It is also quite innovative, as it introduces us to a family of vampires living a quiet life in an English suburb. Published in 2010, the book is a nice change from the usual vampire literature, and I loved the idea of Dracula meets Desperate Housewives.

Still on my reading pile:

–          Lost souls, Poppy Z. Brite

–          Vampire Empire, Clay & Susan Griffith

Any suggestions on vampire books I should read ?