First Love Author Interviews – All of them

First-Love-KindleOver the last few days, I’ve been running interviews on this blog with all my fellow First Love authors, discussing their contributions to the eponymous romantic fantasy anthology from Dragon Soul Press.

My short story is entitled Papercut, and it concerns a lonely teenage boy living with his ultra-strict Jehovah’s Witness mother. One night a mysterious girl made entirely of paper appears in his dreams, taking him on a mysterious and magical journey that I won’t spoil here.

Whether you fancy reading about the dreamscapes of the religiously oppressed, or love stories involving forest nymphs, mages, selkies, Native American mythology, or, as one of my fellow writers pitched her story to me, “Bridget Jones meets Morgana Le Fay”, this is a must for those who like their romance with a fantastical twist.

For ease of reference, here are links to all of the afore-mentioned interviews (including a separate interview with yours truly):

Meg Boepple interview

Story: Message in a Bottle.

Story tease from the interview: “Boy meets girl on the beach. It’s instant attraction… but he’s already promised to wed the daughter of his king even though he’s never met the future bride… Meanwhile, the pretty girl looks at this handsome dude with a ring on his finger and assumes she’d never be in his league even if he were available… and just to add a twist, he’s pretty sure she’s a siren out to break his heart and destroy his life.”

Sofi Laporte interview

Story: Chestnut Woman

Story tease from the interview: “Imagine falling in love at first sight in a really mundane place: the crowded, stuffy metro. What would you do? My heroine, shy, introverted Pamela, can’t muster up the courage to make the first move. At home she runs into her superbly aggravating, gossiping neighbour, Mrs Schmid. Who is not at all what she appears to be. Mrs Schmid gives her three roasted chestnuts that will change Pamela’s life forever. Is she going to have a second chance with the mysterious, smiling stranger in the subway?”

Kathryn St John interview

Story: A Season’s Time

Story tease from the interview: “Whilst on a summer visit with his grandparents, a young man meets a strange young woman in a nearby forest. Over the course of the season, their feelings blossom into love, but there’s an obstacle looming in the distance that threatens to separate them. Is their love doomed from the start, or will they manage to find a way around their difficulties and remain together?”

Zoey Xolton interview

Story: Once in a Blue Moon

Story tease from the interview: “My story Once in a Blue Moon is about a girl called Faith. She is an orphan on the cusp of womanhood who comes face to face with her death, and salvation in the space of a single night, when she discovers vampyres not only exist, but rule over their small, Victorian harbour town!”

Melinda Kucsera interview

Story: Caught in a Glance

Story tease from the interview: “Ours was a friendship for the ages–an abused mage just trying to raise his younger brother and a gray-clad enigma who hides beneath a cloak and veil. (That’s me, Shade, your narrator for this interview.) We didn’t know it but the day Sarn and I met, we took the first step toward a perilous friendship that would unleash a demon and earn the ire of an angel. From the mines under Mount Eredren to the Gray Between life and death, follow the twisted paths friendship takes. Only one will survive when adoration turns to obsession. But not even death can sever some bonds.”

AR Johnston interview

Story: Twin Flames

Story tease from the interview: “Dragons, young love, and curses that need to be broken. Will fate tear them apart or will love be enough to keep them together?”

AM Cummins interview

Story: Savage

Story tease from the interview: “My story is a dramatic recreation of a family legend that was told to me by my grandfather. He was proud of his Native American heritage.”

Edeline Wrigh interview

Story: Of Seals and Storms

Story tease from the interview: “When a storm threatens the lives of several local fishermen, Elizabeth’s best friend – a selkie and the girl she’s in love with – comes up with a plan to save them. But there’s one little caveat: she has to return to the ocean for the rest of eternity. Assuming they can find the skin her father hid from her before he drowns, of course. Of Seals and Storms is a love story about hard decisions, sacrifices, and trusting fate.”

DS Durden interview

Story: Lonely Oni

Story tease from the interview: “An exiled woman in a futuristic city finds hope and love where she never expected.”

AD Carter interview

Story: A Forbidden Union

Story tease from the interview: “The story is about a young prince name Zander who sees a woman and instantly falls in love with her, but her fate is sealed. Now Zander must make a decision that could very well change the course of history for his kingdom as well as himself.”

Galina Trefil interview

Story: The Rusalka of the Murashka

Story tease from the interview: “The murder of an innocent spawns a seductive creature which stalks a Ukrainian village for centuries.”

Simon Dillon interview

Story: Papercut

Story tease: See earlier in this article.

First Love is out now, as a paperback or e-book, here (in the UK) or here (in the US).

First Love Author Interviews: Sofi Laporte

SofiToday’s interview with my fellow contributing authors on the romantic fantasy anthology First Love is with Sofi Laporte. Her short story can be pitched as “Bridget Jones meets Morgan Le Fay”, but I’ll let her tell you more.

What drew you to the First Love anthology?

Honestly? The cover! Isn’t it pretty? I totally choose books based on their covers. Then, of course, the challenge of writing a short romance story that includes elements of first love and fantasy. I enjoyed the challenge and had fun writing Chestnut Woman.First-Love-Kindle

Give us a little tease for your short story for First Love

Imagine falling in love at first sight in a really mundane place: the crowded, stuffy metro. What would you do? My heroine, shy, introverted Pamela, can’t muster up the courage to make the first move. At home she runs into her superbly aggravating, gossiping neighbour, Mrs Schmid. Who is not at all what she appears to be. Mrs Schmid gives her three roasted chestnuts that will change Pamela’s life forever. Is she going to have a second chance with the mysterious, smiling stranger in the subway?

Do you prefer your romantic fiction to end happily-ever-after, happy-for-now, tragically, or does it depend on the story?

It depends on my mood. Most of the time I prefer happily ever after, but if I’m in the right mood I don’t mind reading heavy, steamy tearjerkers.

What fantasy elements (if any) do you use in your First Love story?

A reference to Arthurian mythology and the sorceress Morgana Le Fay. Her cat Arthrapax who insists he’s in reality a dragon. Three magical chestnuts.

What major theme(s) are you exploring in this story? 

The main theme seems to be love, but actually it is loneliness. It can be excruciatingly lonely to live in a big anonymous city, not knowing what your life’s purpose is. Then there is the theme of self-fulfilment: having the courage to break out of the drudgery of every-day life and to follow your dreams. Then there is the theme of appearance versus reality: finding your true self and seeing the true self of others – neighbours, colleagues, your boss, even animals. What is fantasy? What is reality? Maybe there’s more to the aggravating gossipy old neighbour than meets the eye. What if she’s in reality a powerful sorceress? Deep stuff, this.

What inspired your story? 

Many little things. My cat as she looked at me with those green eyes of hers. A neighbour, when she gossiped in the hallway with an excruciatingly strident voice. A boring subway ride home where a man actually read a book instead of staring into his cell phone.

To what extent are your characters based on you or people you know?

Annoying Mrs Schmid is indeed based on a former neighbour of mine who liked to gossip to no end. Pamela, who may have been a younger version of myself. And the cat. I have a very arrogant black cat like Arthrapax so of course she had to be put into a story.

Do you know your ending when you write, or do you start and see where the story or characters take you?

Usually I have an idea of where I am going, but sometimes the ending is vague and reveals itself to me as I write.

What is the best thing about being a writer?

I like the pre-writing part when you get to daydream your story. When you just stare off into space and have this inner movie that unwinds. I love that moment.

What is the worst thing about being a writer?

When it doesn’t come out like your awesome daydream and you ask yourself for the gadzillionth time why you ever wanted to be a writer.

To what extent (if at all) do you agree with the statement “write what you know”? 

It is certainly possible to write about what I don’t exactly know. That’s why we utilise two things: imagination and research. On the other hand, if I do know certain things maybe it would add a layer of depth or a certain something that my work wouldn’t have had otherwise.

Are you promiscuous or monogamous with your genre of choice? 

I am all over the place! I write chicklit, YA, Romance, children’s, paranormal, historical, you name it. Except horror. But who knows, I might try that too, one day.

Which writers inspire you?

The one and only Astrid Lindgren has been my biggest inspiration since I was a child. I just read The Brothers Lionheart aloud to my younger son. It’s not just a children’s story.  I marvel at the language, the story, the voice. Every single word sits perfectly. The way she grips you and pulls you into the story just fascinates me. Maggie Stiefvater (vision, depth, fantasy and plain awesome writing), Julianne Donaldson (romance in its purest form), Viennese writer Ursula Poznanski (for some of the most gripping YA thrillers out there), Robin McKinley (best fairytale rewrites) and many, many more!

What other books or short stories have you written?

This is my debut as an author! Many more stories and novels to come.

What is your current work-in-progress?

I am working on a YA paranormal fantasy/fairy tale.

What advice would you give someone who tells you they want to be a writer?

Just listen to yourself and have faith in your stories and in your own voice. The stories you want to tell are deep inside you and only you can tell them the way they need to be told.

Please come visit me at my Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/sofilaporteauthor

website: www.sofilaporte.com

twitter: @Sofi_Laporte

Thank you for this interesting interview, Simon!

To pick up a copy of First Love either in paperback or on Kindle, click here (in the UK) and here (in the US).