Paula Brackston is the author of the new novel The Little Shop of Found Things. Her other novels include The Witch's Daughter and The Winter Witch. She lives in Wales.
Q: How did you come up with
the idea for The Little Shop of Found Things, and is this the start of a new
series?
A: I have always loved
delving around in antique shops or attending auctions. Sometimes you can get a
really strong sense of the history of an object just from holding it. I can’t
help being curious about its story.
I heard about the gift of
psychometry a while back and thought it would make a perfect way for a
character to explore those stories. Psychometry allows a person to detect
hidden information about an object when they touch it.
Yes, this is Book I in what
is planned as a continuing series, so the story and the characters will go on
in the next book.
Q: What kind of research did
you need to do to write the novel? Did you learn anything that especially
surprised you?
A: I decided I really had to
spend some time exploring Marlborough and the county of Wiltshire. This meant I
was compelled to go on several gruelling research trips, staying in gorgeous
manor houses or country cottages, eating in ancient inns, walking in the
beautiful countryside. Tough work!
I’m used to writing
historical fiction, so I’m comfortable researching the eras specific to my
story, in this case the early 1600s. The Witch’s Daughter was partly set in
1627, so I was familiar with how people lived in that time.
What I did have to spend some
time learning about were the complicated politics of the era and ever-changing
laws regarding religion. What one decade kept you in favour, the next could get
you locked up as a traitor. I wanted to give a sense of what it would have been
like to live in such a state of flux.
And people’s lives were hard.
The gap between rich and poor was keenly felt. These were the times that gave
rise to the civil war later that century, after all.
And then of course there were
the antiques. My OH took some convincing that I needed to keep going into
antique shops and actually buying some of the fascinating things I found, but
he understands how much that helps inform my stories. Sadly, my budget didn’t
stretch to a silver chatelaine like the one featured in The Little Shop of
Found Things!
Q: Did you know how the book
would end before you started writing it, or did you make many changes along the
way?
A: As this is the first book
in a continuing series it was important that I planned well beyond the end of
the first story. This meant I had to have a fair amount of certainty about how
this one would end.
Of course, that doesn’t mean
things didn’t change as I went along. I find the writing process - however
tightly you think you’ve mapped things out - has a way of taking you off at a
tangent, or throwing up new ideas.
Some of these have to be
firmly shouted down, while others are just too good to be passed up on, and
have to be worked into the original plan somehow.
Q: What do you see as the
right blend between the magical and the realistic in your writing?
A: This is something I spend
a great deal of time working on in all my books. My aim is to make the magic
easily acceptable as an authentic part of the story. I love it when readers get
in touch about my books and say they don’t usually read fantasy but in my stories
it didn’t feel “unreal.”
That’s what I’m aiming for:
that sense of magical things happening in a way that is not only plausible but
almost expected because of the way the characters and their stories have been
crafted.
The key is to make plot
developments, actions and magical happenings fit the world you have created. As
long as you have set things up convincingly, readers will go with you.
My own mother insisted one of
my books didn’t have any magic in it until I pointed out that one of the
characters transforms into a hare! It had felt so “normal” within the story it
hadn’t stood out as magical in a made up sort of way.
Q: What are you working on
now?
A: Book II! I’m just putting
the finishing touches to it. This one picks up the story where Book I left off,
so people wanting to discover what happens next will be able to find out. It
should be available in October 2019. I am also mapping out Book III.
As there are mysteries and
puzzles that go beyond the reach of a single book, I need to work some of these
out while they are fresh in my mind, and so that clues can be put where they
need to go. I’m really enjoying being able to stay connected with the
characters in The Little Shop of Found Things this way.
Q: Anything else we should
know?
A: Like many authors, I write
under more than one name. Readers might be interested to know that I write
comic-crime-historical-fantasy novels, starring Detective Gretel and set in
1770, under PJ Brackston.
In addition, I have a new
work coming out in April 2019 - my first venture into literary fiction. It is
called God’s Children and I am using the pen name Mabli Roberts. It is mostly
set in 1891 Siberia.
Also, I now have my own
little YouTube channel! I make videos telling people about my books and my
writing processes, as well as ones giving advice about Creative Writing. I also
run giveaways. You can find me here or on Facebook or my website.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
A lovely interview!
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