Please Welcome to Blood Rose Books Today
Keri Arthur
If there was one author you could co-write
a novel with (they can be alive or dead) who would you choose and why?
There’s actually two I’d nominate and both
are, unfortunately, now dead. They are James Herbert, who wrote some of the
creepiest horror novels I’ve ever read, and Dick Francis, who wrote edge-of-your-seat
first person mysteries that I could never put down. Either one of them would have been brilliant,
as they’re both masters of their craft. (And I still want to be able to write
like Dick Francis when I grow up)
You were one of the authors who I would say
was ahead of the craze of the Urban Fantasy and Paranormal genres becoming extremely
popular, with well-known authors from other genres now deciding to write in
this genre. How do you think the genre has changed since you started writing in
it? What do you think you do differently to try and stay ahead of the ever
growing crowd?
Yeah, I was well ahead of the trend--I was
getting urban fantasy and paranormal romances rejected in the 90s because they
were ‘unsellable’. For what it’s worth, the publishers are starting to say that
again, even though urban fantasy has seen a huge upswing in the self-published
market.
I’ve actually started stepping away from urban
fantasy. While I still have the ongoing Souls of Fire series, The Outcast
series is more dystopian fantasy with some common urban fantasy elements thrown
in, and the new series I’m writing is straight fantasy. I’m also considering a
step sideways into thriller novels, although I wouldn’t even start that novel
until next year--I have the 5th Souls of Fire and the last Outcast
to write before then.
You have written quite a few series now
(Riley Jenson Guardians, Soul of Fire, The Spook Squad ect) and have ended some
of them as well (probably most notably is your Riley Jenson series), why did
you choose to end them? Was it hard to do so? (I know as a reader I become
really attached to characters)
I tend to end series when I can’t think of
where else to logically take the characters. I’d rather end on a high, and have
people constantly asking for more than write for the sake of writing, and let
the series fade into obscurity. As to it being hard--it is, but it’s also
something of a relief. I love creating new worlds, and being able to torture
brand new characters.
What do you think would be the hardest or
most challenging genre to write a novel in and why?
All genres are hard. I get so annoyed when
I hear people foul mouth romances as being easy to write. They’re not--I’ve
tried it, and failed miserably! All
genres have their conventions and expectations, and that’s what makes it hard
to create something fresh and new, no matter what you’re writing.
Your newest series, Outcast, was released
earlier this year, can you tell us a bit about the series and how many books
are planned for it?
City of Light (Outcast 1) was a book of the
heart, just like Full Moon Rising, the 1st Riley Jenson, was. I
started that book in either 2010 or 2011 (can’t remember now) but it absolutely
died on page 80. I had no idea where to take it, despite loving the characters
and the world. It wasn’t until the World Fantasy Con in Brighton UK in 2013
that (after a discussion over a couple of drinks with my agent and a friend) it
came to life. I finished it 6 weeks after that. :)
The series is set just over a 100 years after a race war has torn the fabric of the world apart. Shifters and humans live in vast cities lit 24 hours a day to protect them from the vampires and the “Others”. Our heroine is the last of her kind, a genetically designed super-soldier, who saves a child and unwillingly gets involved in stopping a plot to destroy the world. There’ll be 3 books in total--a short series for me :)
The series is set just over a 100 years after a race war has torn the fabric of the world apart. Shifters and humans live in vast cities lit 24 hours a day to protect them from the vampires and the “Others”. Our heroine is the last of her kind, a genetically designed super-soldier, who saves a child and unwillingly gets involved in stopping a plot to destroy the world. There’ll be 3 books in total--a short series for me :)
Your novel City of Light has some darker
theme elements in it (racism and caste system ect) what appeals to you about
the darker aspects of human nature and culture?
Everyone has light and shade in them.
Everyone has the possibility to do good or bad. I think the characters who most
appeal in fiction are the characters that reflect these shades--the ones who
acknowledge both sides of their nature and attempt to do something about it. Or
not, as in the case of bad guys. And
fiction is also a very safe way of exploring some of the darker aspects of
everyday life.
Tig has become one of my favourite new
female characters, how would you say she differs from the other heroines in
your other series?
I wouldn’t say she’s all that different
from many of my other heroines--they’re all reasonably kick ass, take no
nonsense type women. It’s the situation that’s very different for Tiger--if her
presence becomes common knowledge, she dead, and that makes her involvement in
the search for the missing children all the more dangerous.
The Déchet are a mix of multiple species of
DNA, if you could create a DNA sequencing for yourself, what would you mix
together and why?
I’d love to be taller, thinner, and be able
to eat as much chocolate and cake as I wanted, without putting on damn weight!
Do you have any information on upcoming
works or events that you are able to share?
Winter Halo, the 2nd Outcast
book comes out in December, and Ashes Reborn, the 4th Souls of Fire
novel, comes out in July 2017.
Only one? Damn, that’s mean!! I guess I’d
have to nominate the granddaddy of all fantasy--or at least he is in my eyes,
given it was his books that drew me into the fantasy sphere--and that’s J R R
Tolkien. I know his writing is somewhat old fashioned these days, but I still
absolutely adore Lord of the Rings.
I want to thank Keri once again for taking the time to do an interview with me. Keri truly was an author that was well ahead of the curve on the urban fantasy train and I think that is why she is sought after by readers now. Though I am really interested to see how she would do a thriller novel or series. Keri has very nicely offered to do a giveaway to go along with her interview. Fill out the rafflecopter app below in order to win some awesome books.
I want to thank Keri once again for taking the time to do an interview with me. Keri truly was an author that was well ahead of the curve on the urban fantasy train and I think that is why she is sought after by readers now. Though I am really interested to see how she would do a thriller novel or series. Keri has very nicely offered to do a giveaway to go along with her interview. Fill out the rafflecopter app below in order to win some awesome books.
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