It’s been a while since my last fairy tale author interview, so I’m happy to be able to post this new one with Lucy Tempest! (Join me for a moment of superciality as we admire her glamorous selfie…)
Her Fairy Tales of Folkshore series starts with Thief of Cahraman, an Aladdin retelling that sounds so fascinating. Here is the blurb:
The Selection meets Aladdin
You have been summoned to Sunstone Palace to compete in our search for the future Queen of Cahraman.
After years on the run, Adelaide thinks her lonely and dangerous life as a thief is finally over. But her world is upended when a witch steals her away to a faraway kingdom, to perform an impossible heist. If Adelaide fails, her newfound family would be sacrificed to a beast.
To complete her mission, she’s forced to assume the role of a noblewoman and enter a royal competition. The prize is the hand of the elusive Crown Prince. Elimination means certain death.
As the witch’s literal deadline approaches, Adelaide has one last gamble to save the day, and to escape to a new life with Cyrus, the handsome and mysterious fellow thief who stole her heart.
But everything falls apart when the prince finally reveals himself…
And now for the interview:
Turns out your real life is actually a fairy tale retelling. Which fairy tale is it? (And which character are you?)
If mythology can count as fairy tales, then Hades & Persephone, where I become Queen of the Underworld.
Your fairy godmother gives you an extra, distraction-free hour every day but you’re not allowed to use it to write. What do you do with your extra hour?
Catch up on one of the shows I lost track of, or never finished, because I got sidetracked by work.
First ten things you do after waking up in the morning:
- Take off my retainer
- Brush my teeth
- Feed the cats
- Check up on my mom
- Make tea
- Eat breakfast
- Check my email and start on replies
- Check how my books are doing
- Take care of small, work-related things like drafting newsletters
- Settle down and start writing
What was your inciting incident as an author? Share the moment or catalyst that made you say, “Okay, I’m doing it. I’m going to write a novel.”
When I was ten years old, my English teacher showed my composition copybook to our organizer and she called me in and asked me to participate in a writing competition. I wrote a short story about three aliens that were stranded on Earth and had one chance to take a portal back to their home-world, but missed it so they could take down a super villain terrorizing their town.
I won first place, and the rest is history!
What fairy tale sidekick do you need in your life?
The wooden doll from ‘Vasilisa the Beautiful’ seems like such an asset.
Current writing music:
For my last book, I listened to a lot of moody, atmospheric music like Jaymes Young, Florence + the Machine, Hozier and AURORA. I post my book-playlists on my Instagram!
Favorite songs/artists to listen to when…
Writing action scenes: up-tempo rock music Fall Out Boy, Panic! at the Disco and My Chemical Romance
Writing romantic scenes: Taylor Swift and Carly Rae Jepsen are a given
Editing: I put my music on shuffle so I get everything
What’s your go-to beverage while writing?
Fruit-flavored tea!
If you weren’t writing fairy tale retellings, what genre would you be writing?
Either high fantasy or urban fantasy
What advice would you give to someone who wants to become a writer?
Don’t expect too much from your first draft. The important thing is that you finish it, and anything else—even a complete overhaul of the plot—can come later.
Describe your approach to fairy tale retelling. How you decide where and how to twist the original or keep it as is?
I keep the timeless, or iconic parts, and the general skeleton of the story. But I try to flesh it out differently, either by incorporating elements from other tales and mythologies, that I think would suit the fairy tale or by creating scenarios that would get the most out of the concept.
How did you come up with your fairy tale fantasy world? What details were the most fun to write about?
I started out with the idea that I wanted to retell Aladdin and Western European fairytales and some from Greek mythology, so I needed to create a map that could host countries that correspond with each culturally and got to creating the world of Folkshore.
Are there any “Easter eggs” in your books that readers should keep an eye out for?
Yes! There are Easter Eggs in each book hinting at the coming retellings, especially the last story that will wrap up the series.
What NON fairy tale fiction books (or series) are you loving right now?
When I’m in between books I like to read the furthest thing from what I write, so I have been making my way through H.P. Lovecraft’s Cthulhu Mythos.
The last story I read was The Thing On the Doorstep.
Share a writer meme that made you laugh recently:
And now I can’t get 500 Miles out of my head.
Thanks for the awesome interview, Lucy!
You can connect with Lucy on her website, Facebook, Instagram, or Twitter.