Showing posts with label Skyler White. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Skyler White. Show all posts

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Guest post: Skyler White

*Super big thanks to Skyler White for putting this together for us! These are gorgeous photos and I am anxious to start this book. Enjoy!

In Dreams Begin, in pictures.


In Dreams Begin” is a time travel/secret history story, written around the poet William Butler Yeats and his thirty-years-long, fruitless pursuit of the Irish freedom-fighter Maud Gonne who claimed to be part faery. From his poetry, to the occult rituals they both practiced, to the book I wrote about them and Laura Armstrong, the modern woman whose mind is stolen away on her wedding night and channeled into Maud’s body, “Dreams” has been inspired by, researched with and written in words. So I thought today it might be fun to go visual.
Because my goal was to write my fiction inside the facts without popping them open at the seams, my first task was the meticulous plotting of when and where the actual historical figures had been. Even though I took them out of the manuscript, every scene in the book is set on a specific date and in a definite place. The words of “Dreams” will have to suffice to illustrate the “when,” but I went to Ireland, England and France to photograph the “where,” so here’s a largely language-free recapitulation of the first half of “In Dreams Begin.”



1.

The Yeats Family home. 3 Blenheim Road, Bedford Park.

Chapter One: Ida waits “in the barren London suburb of Bedford Park with its no-longer fashionable Aesthetic Movement houses and winter-starved gardens.”

2.


The Reading Room of the British Museum (I didn’t take this picture; the reading room was closed for renovation when I visited, but I stood just outside it. And I bought a book of postcards.)

Chapter Two: Ida meets Yeats here, where “even the Kama Sutra in translation [was] locked away. Forbidden to women, of course, its simple, mysterious proximity still contributed to the deep erotic song in the silent air. How much was likewise hidden here? Every forbidden secret, in its original Sanskrit or antique Latin, every true answer waited somewhere on the open shelves ringing her, or in the catacombs and archives underneath.”
(Actually, considering the way I had written about the room, I guess it makes a sort of sense that it was closed to me. ;0)


3.

Will Yeats’s symbol cards (bottom row, center) in the National Library
(I didn’t actually take this photo either, as cameras aren’t allowed in the exhibit, but I sat on the floor in front of this particular display for close to an hour taking detailed notes on the cards that were so important to Yeats, although he never made mention of the little leather case he carried them in. I loved “discovering” it, and being separated by only glass from things his hands and eyes had lingered over often and long.)

Chapter Three: Will uses the cards to force Laura to recognize who she is, and that she has another life in a different time in addition to the one she has then with him. “The vibrantly painted shapes on the uneven, heavy cardstock look crudely cut out and pasted on. He turns over each symbol the way you’d pull a brush through hair, strength and tenderness in the gesture. He loves these designs and patterns beyond their individual beauty and grace. They resonate for him. They pack years of meaning into such a small pace, time into material, and whisper, as he turns them over, one-by-one in his beautiful hands would it would take even poetry hours of language to say.”

4.


Glasnevin Mausoleum, (distance shot not taken by me) and detail shot (taken of me by my daughter)
I couldn’t find a family name on this structure, but it was too wonderful not to use. There’s even a below-ground door that opens onto a lower level behind it.

Chapter Four: Ida hides in her family’s mausoleum to watch the funeral procession of Parnell. “From her damp hiding place, Ida allowed herself a rusty smile at the elegant layers of cruelty. Parnell’s heart had done him in, but the funeral wreaths said “killed by priests,” as if the people knew any mouth that has the power to bless can curse just as well. But Ida knew neither his heart nor their priests, but Beauty alone killed Ireland’s uncrowned king. And now his people came carrying his body toward her to Glasnevin Cemetery, Glas Naíon, “stream of the infants.” And Maud, whose beauty had cursed her infant son just as surely, came with them.”

5.


Crypt of Georges Silvère, Maud’s infant son, buried in Samois-Sur-Seine, France.

Chapter Five: Maud and her married French lover met here on Halloween night, 1893, hoping to reincarnate their son (and that’s history, by the way). I imagined Ida there as well. “The tomb’s rich, under-earth smell of graveworms and mushrooms crept over Ida. Maud had been too frightened of tonight to eat, but when they entertained together, Cook would serve duck in whiskey sauce, or salmon with morels.
The candles blazed like a birthday cake, dancing in the drafts admitted through the glassless windows and the open grate in the door. Possibly too from the colder metal doors in the cold stone floor. Maud sat on the provisions box, wordlessly taking her wine like the poison or medicine it was.”

6.


Castle Island, Lough Key, Roscommon, Ireland

Chapter Six: Visiting the future president of Ireland, Douglas Hyde, here for a few days in the spring of 1895, Will Yeats became obsessed with renting this strange “island almost all castle” as a sanctuary for his new generation of Irish heroes, men and women creating a New Ireland through the arts, politics and ritual magic. “They had boated out onto a larger lake that afternoon, with Mr. Yeats and Dr. Hyde, to an island almost entirely covered by an abandoned castle. Ida had wandered the barren rooms like a restless ghost while Will dreamed of an Irish Renaissance, and Maud of revolution. And Douglas Hyde fished. Each floating his own freedom.”


7.

Interior: Castle Island, Lough Key, Roscommon, Ireland

Chapter Seven: Will returns to the castle at night with Laura, and makes love to her for the first time. “I follow him through the dense, overgrown yards between the bare rock edge of the island and the castle’s looming walls. I don’t want a tour of the ridiculous, turreted structure. The whole thing is embarrassing and a little bit dangerous, but he leads me through the empty castle, up spiraling wooden stairs and onto a wide balcony on the second floor.”

There are more pictures from my research trip on my blog here, and a story about what it took to get the picture of Georges’s little crypt here. Also, I had so much fun with this, that I may do the second half on my website once the madness of launch week dies down, so pop by soon!


Skyler White is the bestselling author of dark fantasy novels ‘and Falling, Fly’ (Berkley, March 2010) and ‘In Dreams Begin’ (Berkley, November 2010). She lives in Austin, TX. Visit her on the web at http://www.skylerwhite.com.

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Review: IN DREAMS BEGIN by Skyler White

IN DREAMS BEGIN by Skyler White is in bookstores on November 2nd.  I loved White's debut novel, and Falling Fly, and was excited to read her next book.  This is not the next book in a series, but rather stands alone (though Olivia from and Falling Fly makes a brief appearance).  It is set in Victorian Ireland and follows the journeys of two women searching for love, acceptance, answers and connection.


The story moves back and forth between modern-day and an unspecified year in the past (though I'm guessing around 1899 because the Eiffel tower is mentioned).  One woman, Ida Jameson, is an occultist who seeks to gain as much power as possible, and she accidentally channels modern-day Laura one night through her friend and medium, Maud Gonne.  This begins a decades long quest for Ida, which leads her toward madness, murder, and true evil.

For Laura, her involvement only spans a few weeks.  At first she believes she is dreaming, but quickly learns she is actually being channeled to the past while she sleeps (with her new husband close beside her, yet completely unaware of his wife's night trips).  She begins to question her new marriage and whether or not she is truly in love.  She's met W. B. Yeats in the past, and can she really be in love with him?  How to maintain the connection when the forces of true evil plot to use her for their own means?  The ending is tense and fast-paced—a must-read.

Each chapter is headed by one of Yeats' poems, and the author does a fascinating job at weaving those poems, history, and her story into one.  It made me wonder if Ms. White had in fact lived the history she wrote about and had access to Yeats' thoughts.  No doubt about it, this is a challenging read, but challenging in a good way that presents ideas you may understand or merely accept.  At times it is difficult to stay grounded as you read, but maybe that was the author's purpose, to tether the readers as haphazardly as the characters often are.  The author doesn't assume readers need everything explained and lures us into the events as if we'd just happened upon a seance or couple making love.  Her words and imagery are lyrical, and I promise you won't find a love scene in any other book described so uniquely and yet so perfectly.  It is really worth the read.  And after reading the final page, you'll want to dig out a volume of Yeats' poetry and emerge yourself in his world of the occult, faeries, and timeless love.  The only thing missing was an author's note explaining the characters. Were they all real?  Did Maud Gonne have a relationship with Yeats?  Who was Ida Jameson in the bigger picture?  Would have loved notes on that!

—Michele Hauf for Bite Club

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Dracula Event: Skyler White

I love Van Helsing’s creepy, intimate, evangelical moment, situated in a little lull in graveyard violence, in which he persuades Arthur to drive the stake through Lucy’s heart so that “[i]nstead of working wickedness by night and growing more debased in the assimilation of it by day, she shall take her place with the other angels.”   

Skyler’s twist on the vampire tale is and Falling, Fly.



*From the Bite Club staff: Skyler's latest work, In Dreams Begin will be released on November 2nd, and she'll be stopping by for a guest post as part of her blog tour. This book looks as beautiful as the last and I am anxious to read it.

Monday, May 31, 2010

Introduction to discussion

We've spent the month of May reading and Falling, fly from author Skyler White and for the next 2 days I will post a series of discussion questions for everyone to comment on. This month we also have the added bonus of answering questions that Skyler created herself and posted on her website. I wanted to venture from our beaten path and more thoroughly explore this book, examining not only intent and interpretation as per Skyler, but also the simple nuances that made this such a beautiful book to read.

Reading this book was an emotional journey of discovery for Olivia and Dominic and to do these characters justice, I found myself slowing down for the first time in ages, savoring each word, pondering each idea, and exploring my own thoughts on hope and love, having and wanting, wanting and needing, living or dying. Skyler's next book, In Dreams Begin, comes out in November and I find myself impatient at the thought of waiting that long.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Q&A with Skyler White

    The Craft

    1. What is your writing process like? Do you keep organized notes? Do you designate a set time for writing each day?

    My process is in process. It’s evolving. I do a lot of pre-writing and planning, and I’ve always worked from a list of questions that I ask myself, character interviews etc., which I then hammer into an outline. But I like to read craft books between projects, so each time I start a new project, I have new techniques to try.

    My second book, ‘In Dreams Begin’ (November 2010, Berkley),started with a ton of research, since it’s a time-travel story. I’m getting ready to begin my third book, and I’m trying out a new process with it. I’m constructing the question lists and other prompts into a board game that I’ll then get to play. No idea if it’ll work, though.

    As for designated writing times, I wish! I don’t have a daily routine, writing or otherwise. Maybe one day. Every Sunday, though, I sit down and look at the upcoming week – which kid has what sport, whether we have houseguests, my husband’s work schedule, school vacation days or field trips, the “full catastrophe” of hearth and home – and block out at least ten hours of writing time, ideally in two-plus hour blocks. I try very hard to protect those time slots from other commitments and actually make myself sit down and write.

    1. Do you have music that you listen to for inspiration? If so, what do you listen to? If not, what inspires you?

    I can’t listen to music while I write; I need all my focus for the words. I have a one-hour track of white noise — thunderstorms, actually — that I listen to on in-ear earbuds, and I listen to it on my iPod, so I can turn off the sound on my computer. All a little precious, I know, but I’m easily distracted.

    As for what inspires me, it’s life and art, really. I’m very fortunate to know many interesting people, and they and their stories inspire me. And I love to read and watch movies and plays. No art in, no art out. I need to feed myself on ideas and images.

    1. How do you celebrate finishing a book?

    I go out to dinner with my family. And I celebrate every single stage of finishing: finished first draft, final sent in to my editor, first set of notes, copy edits, type-set edits, you name it! My husband is my first reader, and my kids are old enough to understand what I’m doing, so it’s a big family deal when I hit a milestone like that, and we all enjoy them. I have some hysterical congratulatory cards from my son, who also really enjoys watching the cover art come in.



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    1. Why did you choose the vampire as a character for your book?

    I started writing “Falling” because I was turning forty and needed to come to grips with what that meant for me. I was beginning to see that a lot of what had made me feel sexy as a younger woman was no longer available to me, and the more I thought about it, the less comfortable I was with it in the first place. I was starting to think I actually had no idea what I wanted for myself.

    What turned me on most was being thought attractive. I wanted to be wanted, rather than wanting something in its own right for myself. It was that sense of estrangement from my own desires, and that feeding off the desire of another, that determined Olivia would be a vampire. There’s something both predatory and parasitic about that kind of sexuality, and I needed to ask myself some hard questions about it.

    Olivia can’t feed from anyone who doesn’t fear or desire her, and her body has no ability to feel pleasure or pain. Her appearance alters to conform to the desires of whoever is looking at her, and she can’t see herself at all unless someone else is looking at her. All her power comes from being wanted, so her life depends on the wants and fears of others.

    1. What is easier to write- the hero, the heroine, or the villain?

    They’re like people, really, each difficult and easy in their own ways. I have a lot of fun writing villains, but I have to be careful not to get carried away. It’s way too easy to fall into the hand-wringing cackle. Heroes are wonderful to write, because hey, what better way to spend an afternoon than thinking about everything yummy in men, but it can be very difficult for me to put myself into a man’s head sometimes, and I have to be disciplined about not just staying on the outside enjoying the packaging.

    Opposite problem writing women. I really enjoy my noodle time. I like to ponder stuff, ask myself questions, examine things from different perspectives, and the heroine’s head is the most comfortable place for me to do that. She’s usually the easiest to write, but I have to be careful not to over-indulge because it’s easy.

    1. Favorite character that you have written?

    Ooow, that’s like favorite children. I’m really not allowed to pick one, but Alyx was tremendous fun to write, and Ophelia. Secondary characters are more like your kids’ friends, I guess. You feel better about having favorites there, and you’re more charitable of eccentricities and habits than you’d be in your own.

    1. Do you prefer to use the traditional vampire mythology or do you prefer to create your own myths?

    What I really enjoy is being able to play with traditional mythologies of all kinds. I like the interaction between what is canon and what is invention. To me, you can learn more by unpacking a mythos and repurposing the parts than you can by inventing something completely new (if that’s even possible!). “and Falling, Fly” bumps up against the traditional vampire in the same way it does against Persephone and the Garden of Eden – because I’m interested in what makes those stories still resonant today.

    General Vampire Questions

    1. Looking back in history, who is the one person you'd expect to find out was really a vampire? Why?

    That’s an interesting question! Cleopatra is a little obvious, maybe, but I’m going to go with her.

    2. What would you want to say if you met a real vampire?

    “You wanna piece-a me?” No, I’m kidding. I don’t know. Probably, “Tell me everything!” Either that, or I’d just scream and run away. I’m a bit of a weenie in real life.

    3. If vampires existed should they stay hidden, or reveal themselves?

    Ack! I would never “should” a vampire! I imagine they chose to stay hidden for good reason, not least of which being that what we cannot see often has more power than what we can. Part of vampires’ allure is their mystery. I wouldn’t want them to give that up.

    4. Would you make a good vampire?

    Nope, although I’d love the clothes! I’m too practical, really. And I really don’t think I could do ‘deathless’, although the time to read would be wonderful. I don’t think I could lose my family and friends and keep going.

    Speed Round

    1. Vampires- fangs or no fangs? Fangs! But not the kind that pop out.

    1. Blood- fresh, bottled, or synthetic? Fresh

    1. Romance or Horror? Both, and as mingled as you can make ‘em.

    1. One thing readers would be surprised to know about you? I can make a mean batch of cinnamon rolls and read tarot. Not at the same time.

    5. Favorite vampire book? Movie? “The Vampire Lestat” is my favorite vampire book. And can I take a wiggle on the movie, because there’re a couple I love, and say, instead, the stage play of “Dracula” I saw when I was a kid. It was performed in this amazing old haunted opera house in the town where I grew up and made a huge impression on me.

    Skyler White is author of dark fantasy novels ‘and Falling, Fly’ (Berkley, March 2010) and ‘In Dreams Begin’ (Berkley, November 2010).She lives in Austin, TX.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010