1. What is the working title of your book?
“The Scholar, the Sphinx and the Shades of Nyx” is the finalized
title (although the working title for years was “Kidnapped Through the
Curtain,” but this sounded too much like a mystery thriller rather than a young
adult fantasy adventure). I’m currently working—very slowly—on a sequel
currently titled “The Scholar, the Sphinx and the Hunt for Fenrir.” Where the
first novel focuses on Greek, Japanese and Native American mythology, the
second will have elements of Norse, African and [possibly] Australian Aborigine
mythology.
2. Where did the idea come from for the book?
It actually was first a short story I submitted for a
contest, but it was so different back then—the basic premise about a young man
being abducted by a gypsy caravan, which is led by a mythological creature,
remained the same, but the characters themselves transformed over time (the
creature changed from a small wyvern to a sphinx) and the plot changed
drastically to include the goddess Nyx as well as various world mythologies.
The main character, David Sandoval, is inspired heavily by my own David (my
husband) and how he was when he was 16 years old—although honestly I don’t
think much has changed about him since then. *wink*
3. What genre does your book fall under?
Young Adult Fantasy (yes, I jumped on that bandwagon), with
a little historical fiction mixed in as well.
4. Which actors would you choose to play your characters in
a movie rendition?
My husband, being an aspiring filmmaker, has had many a talk
with me about this...and honestly, I don’t know if I ever liked the thought of
celebrities being in the roles. Funny enough, I had definite choices for voice
actors who would voice the CGI creature characters, such as Yofune Nushi the
Japanese sea dragon (Ken Watanabe
from “The Last Samurai” movie). And maybe Tom Hiddleston (Loki from “Thor”) as
the bad guy, Nico the Teumessian…if he can pull of being a humanoid
fox-creature.
But I know who I would want to direct this…Julie Taymor, no
question!
5. What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book?
In 1852, a young Spanish boy crosses paths with a gypsy
caravan headed by a living Grecian Sphinx, and he is taken through the Curtain
into the realm of myth and folklore to help stop the night goddess Nyx from
using her Shades to destroy the denizens of the unseen world, including the
Sphinx herself.
6. If you plan to publish, will your book be self-published
or published traditionally?
The first book (and hopefully its sequel) will be published
by Knox Robinson Publishing , a small traditional publishing house in London, to be released in
May 2013.
7. How long did it take you to write the first draft of your
manuscript?
A little under a year, I believe—about 9 or 10 months? And I
wasn’t working on it every day.
8. What other books would you compare this story to within
your genre?
I believe I started writing it when “Percy Jackson and the
Olympians” was new and a bit hit. Thus why this book is also
mythology-oriented.
9. Who or What inspired you to write this book?
As I mentioned before, my husband David was a main source of
inspiration for the main character. Where the rest came from, it’s hard to
pinpoint it. I’ve just always been drawn to folklore and myths. Oh, and I was
sick and tired of vampires in everything (still am!) so I purposefully chose a
mythological being that doesn’t show up in too many novels.
10. What else about your book might pique the reader’s
interest?
A shape-shifting badger…an otherworldly inn full of self-eating
zombies…a dragon battle…our hero gets caught in a buffalo
stampede…confrontation with a primordial goddess…
Any of that sound interesting?