‘Daughter of Hope’ nominated for the SSFWA’s Annual Awards

It’s lovely to see Daughter of Hope, first novel in The Siaris Quartet, on the nominations list for the Science Fiction and Fantasy Association of Western Australia’s annual ‘Tin Duck’ Awards, in the Best Professional WA Long Written Work section.  ’Daughter’ is in good company, with two novels by Juliet Marillier, along with novels by Adrian Bedford and Dane Richter. All of us are, or have been, members of the Katharine Susannah Prichard Writers’ Centre Speculative Fiction Group. It truly is a power-house, with many published authors to its credit, and always more up and coming. Yay West Aussies!

My short story Pearl Red: The Hunt of the Unicorn is a candidate in the Best Professional WA Short Written Work section of this year’s awards. Two of my writing buddies from Egoboo WA, Satima Flavell and Sarah Lee Parker, also have short stories in this section, along with stories by Martin Livings and Stephanie Gunn.

The awards will be announced at the end of March at SwanCon 2013. Good luck to all the nominated authors!

More information about this year’s SwanCon and the nominations lists can be found here:

https://2013.swancon.com.au/content/article/38

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Character Column: Meet Riana

Welcome to the new weekly Character Column, a place for writers to bring along the favourite character/s from one of their novels or stories and introduce them to us! A wonderful, varied line-up of heroes, heroines and otherwise (as well as their creators) plan to drop by on Wednesday afternoons, so ‘stay tuned’.

With my new novel Reunion: The Siaris Quartet Book Two to be released in two days, I’m going to start the ball rolling with Riana, one of its lead characters and closest to my heart.

Riana was the first ‘humanlike’ character to walk – or fly – into Siaris, a storyworld that started to take shape during my childhood. Before her arrival, Siaris was the playground of winged horses, dragons and other fantastical creatures, so perhaps it wasn’t surprising that Riana entered on golden wings, with magical powers and a glorious, imperishable body made of light. She was joined by a male counterpart, her twin, and an ever-enlarging family, in this beautiful world. As on Earth, however, the peace could not last forever; high contrast spilled into Riana’s world and sought to over-run it.

Her response to the onset of violent antagonism was brave, idealistic and protective, but it was her attempts to adapt emotionally and mentally to the changes in her life (not always successfully) that endeared her to me. I have walked a very long road with Riana and her loved and not-so-loved ones, and discovered with her exactly what it would take for her to encompass the extremes of her situation, its griefs and joys, in a way that would take her beyond conflict. After all this time, it is still a thrill to travel with her and witness her evolution. Along with a few other key players, she took over the story of Siaris and writes it herself. Glimpses of her path ahead do filter through, tantalizing, and transforming…I’m glad to tag along for the ride of several lifetimes!

Riana appeared on the fringes of the first book in The Siaris Quartet, Daughter of Hope. In Reunion, we fly deep into her heartland. If you would like to know her better, Reunion will be available at Musa Publishing from Feb 8th.

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The Next Big Thing

Thank you to my fellow writer and critiquer from Egoboo WA, Carol Ryles, for tagging me in the Next Big Thing. The game here is that writers answer a string of questions about their work, describing what will be their Next Big Thing and then tag five other writers. Those writers answer the same questions and tag other writers. So here goes:

1: What is the working title of your next book?

Reunion: Book Two of The Siaris Quartet

2: Where did the idea come from for the book?

Now that’s a Big question! The world of Siaris goes back to childhood visions and dreams, and its key characters appeared during my teen years. The material for this particular set of novels was first written between 18-29 years old, but it has needed extensive rewriting to take the leap from dramatized world history for an audience of one to a fully functional novel sequence for public viewing.

3: What genre does the book fall under?

Fantasy with a capital ‘F’; Epic, High, Dark…all of those!

4: What actors would you choose to play the parts of your characters in a movie rendition?

Hmm….juicy question.  Off the top of my head, youthful versions of French actress Emmanuelle Beart or Cate Blanchett as Riana (the heroine), Jason Isaacs as Xereth (he played Lucius Malfoy/Captain Hook), Alan Rickman as Skain (leader of the ‘fallen gods’)…oh, Johnny Depp has to be in there somewhere. Okay, he can play Maeran/Maegren, Riana’s ‘lost love’.  Angelina Jolie as Sirene (who jilted Xereth with poor results), Kristen Stewart as Sitia (Xereth’s daughter), Orlando Bloom as Aeron (Riana’s brother), Matthew McFaddyen as Ravin (the only viewpoint character who is actually human) and Salma Hayek as Lenea (the immortal Guardian he loves).

5: What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book?

Otherwise known as a tagline: Immortal love was never meant to be broken, but the road to restoring it is beyond imagining.

6: Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency?

Reunion will be published by Musa Publishing (USA) on February 8, 2013 ie; very soon! Musa published the first book in the quartet, Daughter of Hope, last June.

7: How long did it take to write the first draft of your manuscript?

It’s impossible to say, as the first draft was written for my own enjoyment over many years in bits and pieces. The first revision into ‘publishable novel’ form took about 8 months to write.

8: What other books would you compare this story to within your genre?

I can’t think of any obvious comparisons, but one reader of the first novel, Daughter of Hope, likened it to a meeting of Harry Potter and Avatar. Another reader likened the creation of ‘atmosphere’ in it to Juliett Marillier’s novels.

9:  Who or what inspired you to write this book?

Visions of a vast world, dreams of angels, and large doses of Tolkien set the ball rolling. As far as Reunion and The Siaris Quartet itself goes, the  inspiration came from finding a few hundred pages of the story in an old packing case, and the realization that it could be worked into a state where other readers might find it beautiful and/or fruitful.

10: What else about the book might pique the reader’s interest?

For readers with a passion for feathers, wings and immortals, this is the book for you! For those who dream of conversations that run like silent strings of pearls, you’re in the right place. For lovers of deep world-building and characters with heart, Reunion is for you too, with love.

Reunion: Book Two of The Siaris Quartet will be available from Musa Publishing from February 8, 2013.

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If you’d like a taste test, Daughter of Hope: Book One of The Siaris Quartet can be found here.

Now to tag. To the next five, it’s your turn: Sharon Ledwith, Clarissa Johal, Liz deJesus, Author Lauren Hunter and Keith Yatsuhashi.

KSP Mini-Con coming up on Sunday September 9

The Speculative Fiction Group at the Katharine Susannah Pritchard Writers’ Centre in Greenmount, Perth (just two streets away from me) is hosting a day-long Mini-Convention on…guess what…Speculative Fiction on Sunday, 9th of September. For anyone in the vicinity who is a writer or fan of spec fic, I’m sure it will be a great day, with panels on a variety of topics, kaffeeklatches (I’ll be giving one on the subject of my first novel, Daughter of Hope, published recently by Musa Publishing), food, beverages and general good cheer.

You can find a comprehensive guide to the Mini-Con’s programme here. See you there!

Tuesday Quote

“Revam is my home. Alen is my home. And you are my bedrock. I haven’t once thought of leaving, not even in the time you’ve considered cutting my mindlink, and not even all these years in the firing line of Vaen’s jealousy.”

Isereina speaking to Sier, Daughter of Hope

‘Daughter of Hope’ and her origins…

Editor and publisher, Dario Ciriello, has interviewed me about Daughter of Hope, the origins of this novel and how it is situated as part of The Siaris Quartet. Thanks for the awesome rave, Dario…and for all your advice and encouragement during Revetia’s journey to publication…no one could ask for better!

You can read the interview at Dario’s blog.

Oh My Gods (and Guardians)!

Revetia flies free today with the release of Daughter of Hope by Musa Publishing. You can follow her fortunes in her quest for freedom in this first novel of my epic fantasy The Siaris Quartet. Happy travels in the big wide world, sweetheart.

Blurb

The fate of an entire world will be decided by the actions of one young girl.

The Guardians of Siaris have been warring for thousands of years, torn apart by betrayal and lost loves. Xereth waits patiently for his chance at revenge. The only thing standing in his way is one of his own offspring.

As Xereth’s daughter, Revetia’s destiny is to help him destroy Siaris and those who wronged him, but Revetia’s will is strong. With hope and help, she might be able to break free from Xereth’s tight and treacherous grasp, but at what cost?

Sier has always tried to stay out of affairs that threaten his family’s safety. When Revetia asks him for help, she forces him into a position that could cost his family, the elden, and humans their lives. Is he prepared to put those he loves and protects in jeopardy?

With the fate of Siaris resting on Revetia’s shoulders, will her actions trigger a war between gods, slaves, and Guardians?

Excerpt

The baby blinked, trying to clear her eyes. The dim space around her lay in a chilled hush.  A strip of light filtered across the torn covers surrounding her, over an expanse of pale skin flecked with red. A long growl sounded from outside the room’s curved walls.

Wind, the baby named it.

She’d heard it – and other things – from inside her mother’s belly. Now it sounded much louder, and unfriendly. She wanted to reach for the expanse of flesh beside her, but couldn’t yet control her limbs. Her mother didn’t move. The silence of the room, the gale’s rush at the chamber, grew frightening. She shivered, a naked bundle of feverish heat and ice. She began to cry. The wind fought her voice, but she needed someone to come. Anyone.

Time dragged. The light around her stuttered and grew dull. Her hearing picked up a new sound, cautious steps husking along the hall outside the turret-room, until they came to a halt. A seamed face peered through a rectangle of darkness. Fingers clutched at the edge of a wooden frame, then jerked back as if they’d been stung. The fingers fluttered down over a worn tunic, shaking. The sound of rough breathing met the baby as a woman stepped into the room and edged closer to her.

The woman’s face shrivelled into deeper lines, her gaze roving across the bed. The picture in her mind reflected into the baby’s vision in all its blood-soaked destruction.  An elden woman lying on the shredded velvet cover, the ragged vestiges of beauty still visible through the contortion of her features. Smoke coiling in wisps from her hips and thighs, hanging thick on the air. The baby saw herself curled in a pool of light. Already, despite being so tiny, the sheen of power that had killed her mother during birth glowed out across the bed.

The baby noted her own skin was different to her mother’s. Blue. She felt the word fit itself to her…that this was her natural shade. But even so, couldn’t the bent figure creeping closer see her shock, the crisis gripping her body with shudders?

The intruder’s breath hissed. Her stare now settled on the glittering wings that rustled against the baby’s back, the downy feathers catching in the rumpled bedcover. The baby studied her, and saw that she was elden too, but diminished, improperly aged. The silence grew longer, the gale’s voice harsh. The baby huddled desperately, and fought to focus her mind on this person who still hadn’t come to her side.

She formed a question in her head, and forced it to cross the gap. Who are you?

“My name is Amya.” The woman’s voice sounded strangled, as if her throat had jammed shut.

Are you my – the baby searched for the word – nurse?

Amya didn’t reply. Her damp gaze had shifted back to the body on the bed.

Daughter of Hope can be found at Musa Publishing.

Snapshot Interview 2012

Thanks to Kathryn Linge for posting this interview with me here, as part of the Snapshot 2012 series, which focuses on published Australian speculative fiction writers.

Snapshot 2012: Interview with Joanna Fay

Joanna Fay is a writer of fantasy novels, short stories and poetry. Her first novel Daughter of Hope: The Siaris Quartet Book One, launches on Friday June 8th as an e-book through Musa Publishing. Joanna lives in the Perth hills, Western Australia, with her teenage son and a menagerie of small pets of the furred or feathered persuasion. You can find Joanna at: http://joannafay.me/, http://egoboo-wa.blogspot.com/, facebook, and twitter.

1. Congratulation on the imminent publication of ‘Daughter of Hope’, the first novel of the ‘The Siaris Quartet’! Can you tell us about the book, and also about your story-world, Siaris?

I’ll start with Siaris, which goes back to about eight years old, when I remember dreaming of winged people living in a vast, hollow world sustained by magic. At around twelve, I started drawing them, the land they lived in, and a lot of maps. During teens I wrote stories about these people, and they developed as distinct characters with their own languages. By late 20s, I’d written more than 3000 pages of what could best be summed up as a ‘dramatized hundred thousand year history’ that probably meant I’d read Tolkien’s Silmarillion too many times!

Daughter of Hope CoverAfter destroying most of that huge, unwieldy mass of words, I found the last few hundred pages many years later in a packing case six years ago and, for the first time, wondered if it might be readable to anyone other than me. It was quite a vulnerable feeling, putting what was purely personal writing ‘out there’ into a writing group (the Speculative Fiction Group at the Katharine Susannah Prichard Writers Centre in Perth) so I ‘started small’ with a short story – a moment in the development of a daughter of the lead villain in the Siaris storyworld. From that traumatic fragment of young Revetia’s life, a longer story spooled out in a rush and resulted in a novella which I sent off to Dario Ciriello in the USA, who had a call out for speculative fiction novellas. It didn’t suit his anthology, but he gave me a wealth of feedback and encouraged me to take the story up to novel length. ‘Daughter of Hope’ really sits as a prequel in front of an already existing, complex story that my critiquing buddies at WA Egoboo unanimously let me know needed to be a trilogy. So ‘The Siaris Quartet’ wasn’t planned as such in any way, and its evolution has surprised me immensely, as has the amount of work needed to trim, tighten and focus my writing craft! Lucky I came in so naïve, or it might have scared me off.

2. You write poetry as well as prose fiction. Does poetry provide you with an avenue for expression that prose cannot? Do you find yourself addressing the same themes in each form?

Yes and yes. Poetry is condensed, crystallized phrases that carry a lot more ‘space’ than prose, both in form and function. My process with poems is to let a spark of an idea percolate, sometimes for months, and then catch it in a stream of consciousness moment when it’s ‘ready’ (and I learned the hard way not to answer the phone in the middle of that stream). They tend to land on the page as a fully-fledged ‘unit’ which I don’t edit much. This process is, for me, also true of flash fiction and short stories of up to a few thousand words. Of the five (soon to be six) short stories I’ve had published, three of them were written two or three days before submission deadlines. The pressure has worked in their favour, but the same method can’t be applied to epic fantasy novels! The crafting, tweaking and restructuring has been entirely different, complicated by attempting to rework material that was more than twenty years old. By the time I got half way through the third novel, I had the confidence to throw the original work away and write fresh, which is so much easier.

As for themes, the cross-over is always there. The acute observations of ‘nature poems’ find their way into the detailing of Siaris. I have written poetry with overt mythic content; it is also there in Siaris, in more subtle forms. A reader might not say ‘Oh, that’s a reworking of the Isis and Osiris myth’, for instance, but the traces are there. I find it hard not to think in mythic terms of reference and in generating ‘my own’ world, am well aware of the recycling of archetypes and archetypal stories embedded in the collective consciousness.

3. Daughter of Hope’ will be published by a relatively new US Publisher, Musa Publishing. What attracted you to submit to Musa, and are you planning to focus promotion in Australia or internationally?

I have the lovely Tehani Wessely to thank for that. I submitted a short story to her for an anthology last year; it didn’t suit her, but she’d just heard about new US e-publisher Musa and thought they might be a match for me. Pretty hot psychic powers! I sent off a query before they had actually opened their e-doors for sales, and within a month found ‘Daughter of Hope’ contracted, to be released this Friday, June 8th. Musa have just offered a contract for the second book, ‘Traitor’s Game’, to be released on February 8th, 2013. They have been great to work with so far.

‘Focussed promotion’ is still a concept I’m getting my reclusive, technophobic head around. I’ve landed in a good support team at Musa and now find myself with a blog, a Facebook page and Twitter. Goodreads, Manic Readers and an Amazon author page are next. I’m extremely glad not be trying to write a sequel/s while getting to grips with the marketing aspects of being a writer, given my lowly starting point.

My outlook, however, has always been international as well as local. Of six short stories, three have been published in Australia and three in the US, which symbolizes my perspective pretty well. My instincts with the Siaris novels are that there are particular non-English speaking markets they could fly in, so my next focus is to connect with a good agent who handles foreign language rights and get them into some specific countries.

4. What Australian works have you loved recently?

While in this highly focussed writing mode with the novels these last few years, I’m afraid I’ve hardly been reading. Intense focus works best for me, but I have amassed quite a TBR list of both Australian and, more recently, fellow Musan authors. I’ve read more short stories than anything else recently, since they are time-friendly. Favourite Australian collections would include ‘Belong’ and ‘Dead Red Heart’ from Ticonderoga, and ‘Winds of Change’ from CSFG.

5. Two years on from Aussiecon 4, what do you think have been the biggest changes to the Australian SpecFic scene?

I’ve only been identifying as a SpecFic writer for three years. I’ve only been involved on the fringes of ‘the scene’ and don’t have a long view of its evolution. But the big change that has swept all genres and the publishing industry as a whole is, of course, the rise and rise of e-books. I know writers who are self-publishing, others publishing with traditional publishing houses, others going with indie press from micro to mid levels. The ground under all this is a moving carpet, and adaptability is called for. Interesting times indeed!


This post is part of the 2012 Snapshot of Australian Speculative Fiction. We’ll be blogging interviews from 1 June to 7 June and archiving them at ASif!: Australian SpecFic in FocusSnapshot 2012 is being conducted by Alisa KrasnosteinKathryn LingeDavid McDonaldHelen MerrickIan MondJason NahrungAlex PierceTansy Rayner RobertsTehani Wessely and Sean Wright. To read the interviews hot off the press, check our blogs daily from June 1 to June 7, 2012.

Rainbows and Feathers!

Wow, I’m really thrilled with the cover for Daughter of Hope (The Siaris Quartet: Book One). Kelly Shorten, cover artist at Musa Publishing, has done a wonderful job working in the elements I wanted to represent this novel. Big thanks to Kelly!

Castles in the Clouds

‘There are no rules of architecture for castles in the clouds.’                                                                                                                           (G. K. Chesterton)

A gloriously true statement, which takes me back to my earliest ‘castles in the clouds’  - sketched in coloured pencil at around 8 years old – in faraway worlds, long ago or far ahead. From the drawn page, these edifices gravitated into stories and began to infiltrate the ‘landscapes of dreams’ …and never stopped. Forty years later, my first novel (Daughter of Hope, to be released by Musa in June) is laced with slightly more sophisticated versions of those childhood creations; a crystal-clad citadel perched on an impossible snow-covered mountainside, sheathed in spells…and a fortress darker than anything my youthful mind could have imagined, locked in a perpetual self-generated storm.

While the castles have no rules of construction, however, it became clear that the magic that supports them needed some serious definition if this world and its workings wasn’t going to have readers saying ‘What?’, ‘How?’ or ‘That’s ridiculous!’ Or even worse, left them so unconvinced – and unseduced – by the internal reality of this faraway world that they would throw the book aside (however one does that with an e-book).

Castle from the film version of 'The Neverending Story'

The Empress's Castle from the film of 'The Neverending Story'

This propelled me to finally nut out the spell-crafted workings of my characters and settings (in terms of type, magnitude, quality, special rules…and special exceptions). And the delight here was that in asking myself these questions – What are the qualities of each variety of magic? What do they draw on? What are the costs (how do they impact the user and the environment)? How are they used, and to what ends? What are their rules of operation,  and what happens if those rules are broken? – I learnt a lot about this world and its people and appreciate the delicate balance they exist in as never before.

To other fantasy writers, where do you start from with your magical realities? Do you build your spell rules in from the outset, or do you grow your understanding of them as your stories and worlds develop? Or do you employ a ‘chaos model’?

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