Here's a blurb from Goodreads:
Elloren Gardner is the granddaughter of the last prophesied Black Witch, Carnissa Gardner, who drove back the enemy forces and saved the Gardnerian people during the Realm War. But while she is the absolute spitting image of her famous grandmother, Elloren is utterly devoid of power in a society that prizes magical ability above all else.
When she is granted the opportunity to pursue her lifelong dream of becoming an apothecary, Elloren joins her brothers at the prestigious Verpax University to embrace a destiny of her own, free from the shadow of her grandmother's legacy. But she soon realizes that the university, which admits all manner of people—including the fire-wielding, winged Icarals, the sworn enemies of all Gardnerians—is a treacherous place for the granddaughter of the Black Witch.
As evil looms on the horizon and the pressure to live up to her heritage builds, everything Elloren thought she knew will be challenged and torn away. Her best hope of survival may be among the most unlikely band of misfits…if only she can find the courage to trust those she's been taught to hate and fear.
Now here's Laurie!
WRITING
THE BLACK WITCH
About
eight years ago, the last thing you would have found me reading is fantasy
fiction. I’d never sought out the genre, and preferred to read non-fiction
almost exclusively. I was finishing up a series of non-fiction books about
Afghanistan when my then pre-teen daughters started putting HARRY POTTER in front of me.
“No thank you,” I told them,
humoring their dogged efforts. “Those are kids’ books, but I’m glad you’re
enjoying them.”
They refused to give up.
Finally, after watching them devour
the books, dress up like characters in the books, style birthday parties around
the books and get so excited about the movies, I broke down and cracked open
the first book.
I read through the entire series in
a less than two months.
I was instantly hooked. And stunned that
J.K. Rowling was able to tackle so many serious
issues so effectively (and
inspiringly) in a metaphorical/fantasy way. I started to read every YA fantasy
book my kids handed me, and then some.
During this time, as I was immersing
myself in vivid stories of dragons and werewolves and witches and wizards, a
dramatic, real-life story was going on around us here in Vermont – the fight
for marriage equality. My husband and I were involved in supporting marriage
equality, which was a surprisingly hard battle. Prejudice I never knew existed
came out of the woodwork against LGBTQ friends, completely blindsiding me.
This
real-life story did have a happy ending - Vermont legalized marriage equality
in 2009. But the darkness I had witnessed reverberated in my mind. It set me mulling
over prejudice in more general terms (religion-based, gender-based, etc.) as I
was reading THE GOLDEN COMPASS
series. The spark of a story lit inside me - a fantasy story where people with
wings are rejected by pretty much every religion/culture for no sound reason
save tradition. On a lark, I started writing that first scene down and found
myself as instantly hooked by writing as I had been by fantasy fiction (it felt
like magic). My fledgling story rapidly found its own trajectory and rapidly veered
off into pure fantasy territory.
That
first year of writing was a fertile, breathtakingly exciting one. I wrote
almost every day and at the end of the year I had a 1,200 page book (which was
later to become Book One and Book Two of the upcoming BLACK WITCH CHRONICLES). I joined a writing group. They loved my
hot mess of a rough draft and pushed me to consider publication (which, at the
time, I thought was pie-in-the-sky ridiculous). About a year later I landed my
wonderful agent, Carrie Hannigan at Hannigan, Salky & Getzler. And the
rewriting began.
Over
the span of about eight years I re-wrote the manuscript well over thirty times
with countless revisions of sections. About 400 pages of material were thrown
out and about an equal amount was added. And there were rejections from
prospective publishers - a lot of them (and it was a good thing as the story
wasn’t ready and I had a lot to learn about writing). I joined a second group
of writers/beta readers. I joined the Burlington Writers’ Workshop.
Advice
for new writers? Try to write every day. My favorite writing quote is “the muse
can’t resist a working writer” and I think that’s very true. If you show up,
your muse will show up. Read as much as you can. And do the things that inspire
you – movies, museums, listening to conversations in coffee shops, going to
plays, meandering in the forest – whatever those things are that set your
imagination firing. And after that – join a writing group. You’ll have as much
fun watching other people’s novels take shape as you will seeing your own book
come to life.
It’s
a magical journey – and you’ll come up with a story you could have never
predicted. The thrill of discovery is half the fun of it. Enjoy!
You can find Laurie at:
Laurie has generously offered an ARC of THE BLACK WITCH for a giveaway. To enter, all you need to do is be a follower (just click the follow button if you’re not a follower) and leave a comment through May 20th. If your e-mail is not on your Google Profile, you must leave it in the comments to enter either contest.
If you mention this contest on Twitter, Facebook, or your blog, mention this in the comments and I'll give you an extra entry. You must be 13 years old or older to enter. This is for U.S. and Canada.
Here's what's coming up:
Wednesday, May 10th I've got an agent spotlight interview with Lorin Oberweger and a query critique giveaway
Monday, May 15th I've got a guest post by debut author Erin Beaty and her agent Valerie Noble with a query critique giveaway by Valerie and a giveaway of Erin's YA fantasy THE TRAITOR'S KISS
Monday, May 22nd I've got an interview with Kat Zhang and a giveaway of her new MG THE EMPEROR'S RIDDLE
Wednesday, May 24th I've got an agent spotlight interview with Alyssa Jennette and a query critique giveaway
Monday, May 31st I'll be off for Memorial day
Hope to see you on Wednesday!
Interesting you wrote in a genre you used to never read.
ReplyDeleteIsn't it wonderful how when you open yourself up to new things (reading fantasy) wonderful new things come to you? Congratulations, Laurie!
ReplyDeleteI've tweeted about the giveaway.
Congratulations to Laurie! Love the cover of the book and the quote about a working writer.
ReplyDeleteWonderful that your daughters enticed you into reading and then you in turn began writing fantasy. Must be fun to share your books together. Congratulations.
ReplyDeleteCongrats to Laurie. That cover really draws you in!
ReplyDeleteCongratulations to Laurie! How great that her kids and Harry Potter got her interested in fantasy. And that the fight for marriage equality played a part in her journey.
ReplyDeleteI love that advice, and I think I'll put that quote somewhere, to remind me of how to make myself irresistible to my muse! Many congrats, Laurie, and thank you both for this post!
ReplyDeleteFun guest post! J.K. Rowling pulls everyone' in ;)
ReplyDeleteAnd all those years of reading and revising paid off - congrats on the starred reviews!
ReplyDeleteInteresting story about how you succumbed to fantasy! As to the "write everyday" I set that intention in the morning and hit it almost 90% of the time. Hate it when I can't get at least some words on the page.
ReplyDeleteWhat a great post on the writing of this book. Writing and reading can bring many surprises to the direction your books take. The end result sounds like a great read. Let someone else win as I'm waste deep in MG right now.
ReplyDeleteHarry Potter and J.K. Rowling do seem to have that neat little trick of sucking readers in to the series in a matter of a few pages, as I'm sure most of us fantasy lovers can attest to. Super interview, and I'm certainly looking forward to The Black Witch.
ReplyDelete(Email is TabbieCat576@aol.com)
I'm a follower (email: lindalou (at) cfl (dot) rr (dot) com)
ReplyDeleteAND I tweeted (https://twitter.com/linda_lindalou/status/861919515696877568) for an extra entry.
I loved the Harry Potter books and still do... It carries over as We enjoy going to Universal Orlando (we have annual passes) and immersing ourselves in the HP world there. I love witchy stories!!!!! Thanks for the giveaway!
I originally subscribed to your blog by email, but I also just followed you through Google. Crossing my fingers to win a copy of THE BLACK WITCH! Thanks for the chance. It looks like a good read and another I'd like to add to my personal library.
ReplyDeleteZara Garcia-Alvarez
Yes, when we show up to write every day, the muse starts to hang around and have tea with us, and eventually she sits on the side of the keyboard and helps. However, she's easily offended when we miss ... at least that's my imaginative way of seeing the difference between when I write regularly and when I don't.
ReplyDeleteGreat thoughts on writing! The Black Witch sounds like a great read.
Thanks for the advice for writers. I feel guilty and get down on myself when life seems to take over precious writing time, so I try to do something at least related to writing, including your well-filling ideas. I shared on my tumblr: http://yesreaderwriterpoetmusician.tumblr.com/post/160486246817/laurie-forest-guest-post-and-the-black-witch
ReplyDeleteThe Black Witch sounds like an amazing read!!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the chance to win!
natasha_donohoo_8 at hotmail dot com
Very nice post on writing methods. Thanks for that. Please let someone else win, though. Still buried here.
ReplyDeleteI'd love to check it out! Thanks for the chance!
ReplyDeleteInteresting story idea!
ReplyDeletetaffy.lovell@gmail.com
I'D LOVE TO ENTER! megan(dot)clarsach@gmail.com
ReplyDelete