TQ: What would you say is your most interesting writing quirk?
Kalayna: Once upon a time, this would have been a really simple question because when I first graduated from college I was so accustomed to writing academic papers I didn’t use contractions. At all. So after I completed my first novel, I had to go back in and add contractions. I’ve grown out of that quirk, so now this is a much tougher question.
TQ: Who are some of your favorite writers? Who do you feel has influenced your writing?
Kalayna: My list of favorite authors is ridiculously long. If you picked another author in my genre, he or she would probably be on the list because there is a lot of great talent writing urban fantasy right now. To name just a small handful I’d have to say: Ilona Andrews, Karen Chance, Patricia Briggs, Chloe Neill, and Kim Harrison. As far as who influenced my writing, I’d have to point to Laurell K. Hamilton as sparking my interest in the genre back when the genre didn’t even properly exist yet. Since then, the other authors in the genre (and many in outside genres) have inspired me to aim to entertain readers the same way their books have entertained me.
TQ: Are you a plotter or a panster?
Kalayna: I’m a plotter who pantzes a lot. I create extremely detailed outlines before I begin writing a book, but as I write my process becomes more organic and I have to update the outline as I go along. I keep the outline though, because the actual structure rarely changes. I just tend to add in a lot of extra scenes and characters as I see how ideas play out on the page.
TQ: How many books are planned for the Alex Craft series?
Kalayna: Well, right now three novels are under contract in the series, but I have ideas that span beyond those three so I hope I get the chance to continue. Currently I have no definite end planned for the books but I do know where the characters are headed.
TQ: What sort of research did you do for Grave Witch?
Kalayna: Since the world building in Grave Which is based on a magical awakening that occurred when Fae of folklore revealed their existence to the world, I had the opportunity to really indulge my love of folklore in the guise of research. I spent a lot of time reading collections of lore which had been only oral traditions until the late nineteenth century. Most stories were European, but not all were. I also did some forensic and police procedural research
TQ: Do you and Alex Craft have anything in common?
Kalayna: Of course—We both talk to the dead! Er, wait. No. That’s not true.
I think all characters share some aspects with their authors, but it is mostly little things. With Alex, the only big similarities we have are a shared penchant for boots and the fact I gave Alex a breed of dog that is one of my favorites. Her dog, PC, is a Chinese Crested, which if you’ve never seen one, is a small dog with hair only on their heads, paws, and tails. A lot of people think they are hideous and sickly looking, but I find them pathetically adorable.
TQ: Are there any other genres in which you would like to write in addition to urban fantasy?
Kalayna: Before I started writing seriously, I was afraid I’d run out of ideas one day. I no longer have that fear because I have more story ideas queued in the back of my mind than I could write in the next couple of decades. The big contenders outside urban fantasy are a Cyber Punk novel, a YA, and a steampunk idea.
TQ: What's next?
Kalayna: New adventures for Alex and for Kita, the heroine of my Haven series. The Next Novel of Haven will be out the first part of next year, and the next Alex Craft novel is scheduled for summer of next year.
Thanks so much for having me here today, Sally!
TQ: Thank you for joining me at The Qwillery!
About Kalayna's Books:
Alex Craft Novels:
Grave Witch (Alex Craft Novel 1)
Not even death can save her now.
As a grave witch, Alex Craft can speak to the dead-she's even on good terms with Death himself. As a consultant for the police, she's seen a lot of dark magic, but nothing has prepared her for her latest case. When she's raising a "shade" involved in a high profile murder, it attacks her, and then someone makes an attempt on her life. Someone really doesn't want her to know what the dead have to say, and she'll have to work with mysterious homicide detective Falin Andrews to figure out why...
The Novels of Haven:
Once Bitten (Novel of Haven 1)
Kita Nekai, on the run and the smallest of her shifter clan-a calico cat among lions and tigers-is being hunted. She was expected to accept her role as her father's successor whether or not her cat was up to the task of leading the clan. She disagreed. Now she's less than a step ahead of the hunters, bone-tired, cold, and living hand-to-mouth in the city of Haven. And that's the high point of her day. She's also drugged, "accidently" turned into a vampire, and sentenced to death for recklessly creating a rogue shifter who tortures its human prey. She's got seventy-two hours to find the rogue, evade a city full of hunters, prove she's not responsible for the rogue, and keep the vampire council from killing her. All while sorting out an apprentice mage, a married ex-boyfriend shifter-hunter, and the vampire who made her.
Twice Dead (Novel of Haven 2)
Newly undead shifter-turned-vampire Kita Nekai is coming to grips with the reality that her cat has not awakened since her change.
What she needs is a little time to adjust to her new liquid diet and the increasingly complex attraction to her sire, Nathanial. What she gets is a headless harlequin. With the body count rising, Kita is dragged into a dangerous game of vampire politics. Her involvement draws the attention of an ancient vampire known as the Collector who has a penchant for acquiring the unusual - like a pureblood shifter-turned vampire.
Kita still has unfinished business of her own and finds herself deeper in magical debt.
It's a bad time to be a kitten who can't slip her skin.
Kalayna Price's debut novel, ONCE BITTEN, earned rave reviews and reached #1 on Amazon.com's "Fantasy Bestseller List." TWICE DEAD returns readers to a dark, seductive world where magic rules and ancient loyalties collide with modern challenges..
Third Blood (Novel of Haven 3) will be released in 2011:
Going home after five years is difficult. It's harder still if you've changed species in the interim.
Kita Nekai, once the smallest shifter in Firth but now the newest vampire in the city of Haven, has no intention of returning home or informing her father and clan what she's become. Not that she has a choice. When the mage who holds her death certificate in his hands demands Kita return to Firth as his errand runner, she has to comply. Of course, there is no leaving her sire, Nathanial, behind. Which means introducing daddy dearest to the man—well, vampire—she may be falling for and confessing that she's lost the ability to shift. Talk about awkward.
Her homecoming goes from bad to worse when an attempt is made on her life, and Kita finds herself facing an unknown threat in a hostile world she never fit into in the first place. Can she survive long enough to complete the judge's task, stand trial before the elders for the rogues she created while on the run, and help defend her father's territory from an encroaching band of misfit shifters? Or is this cat down to her last life?
About Kalayna:
Kalayna Price is the author of the Alex Craft Novels, a new dark urban fantasy series from Roc, and the author of the Novels of Haven from Bell Bridge Books. She draws her ideas from the world around her, her studies into ancient mythologies, and her obsession with classic folklore. Her stories contain not only the mystical elements of fantasy, but also a dash of romance, a bit of gritty horror, some humor, and a large serving of mystery. She is a member of SFWA and RWA, and an avid hula-hoop dancer who has been known light her hoop on fire. To find out more, please visit her at www.kalayna.com.
The Giveaway:
What: A copy of Grave Witch (Alex Craft Novel 1).
How: Leave a comment telling The Qwillery which author from the past you would talk to if you had the power to talk to the dead?
You can receive additional entries by:
1) Being a Follower of The Qwillery.
2) Mentioning the giveaway on Facebook and/or Twitter. Even if you mention the giveaway on both, you will get only one additional entry. You get only one additional entry even if you mention the giveaway on Facebook and/or Twitter multiple times.
3) Mentioning the giveaway on your on blog or website. It must be your own blog or website; not a website that belongs to someone else or a site where giveaways, contests, etc. are posted.
There are a total of 4 entries you may receive: Comment (1 entry), Follower (+1 entry), Facebook and/or Twitter (+ 1 entry), and personal blog/website mention (+1 entry). This is subject to change again in the future for future giveaways.
Please leave links for Facebook, Twitter, or blog/website mentions. In addition please leave a way to contact you.
Who & When: The contest is open to all humans on the planet earth with a mailing address. Contest ends at 11:59pm US Eastern Time on Wednesday, October 13, 2010.
Thanks for the contest!!
ReplyDeleteWhich author from the past you would talk to if you had the power to talk to the dead?
Jane Austen!!!
1) Follower of The Qwillery.
Facebook
http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=630067989&v=wall&story_fbid=155232174510376
Total 3
Misha
mishamary@gmail.com
Great Interview!
ReplyDelete+1 I would like to talk to JRR Tolkien! I think he would be fascinating!
+1 Follower
+1 If this counts: http://lusbookblog.blogspot.com/2010/10/win-on-wednesday.html (it is my blog)
chidoryx AT hotmail DOT com
I agree with Lu! I'd love to talk to JRR Tolkien! I love his work!
ReplyDelete+1 GFC follower
vicky.vak8(at)gmail.com
Hi :)
ReplyDeleteThank you for the interview with Kalayna & thanks to Kalayna for sharing here. It was great to get a peek into her writing process.
I also enjoyed the inclusion of her books at the end of the interview.
All the best,
RKCharron
PS - Shakespeare would be amazing to talk to, don't you think?
I'd like to talk to H. P. Lovecraft. I think his mind must have been a very strange place and it would be fascinating to delve into the psychological source of his Cthulhu mythos. (And also to get his take on pronunciation)!
ReplyDeleteI would love to talk to William Shakespeare and get the answers to all the questions I have!
ReplyDeletek_anon[at]hotmail[dot]co[dot]uk
gfc follower
I'd love to talk to Bram Stoker.
ReplyDelete+1 I'm a follower
Skk25@aol.com
I'm still exploring urban fantasy so I don't have many authors under my belt but I have enjoyed Ilona Andrews and Patricia Briggs immensely. I have my eye on works by Chloe Neill and Kim Harrison though.
ReplyDeleteI'd have to go with Jane Austen. I adore Pride and Prejudice and the whole dynamic between Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth. It'd be a lot of fun to have a conversation with her and get into her head.
I'd love to talk to the Bronte sisters.
ReplyDeletehewella1 at gmail dot com
Which author from the past would I want to talk to? Bram Stoker. Of course! ;)
ReplyDeleteNon supernatural bookwise...The Brothers Grimm. Probably cheating on the "non-supernatural" part, but oh well!! Would LOVE to talk to those guys!!
+1 Follower
2 total
jessbess2505[at]yahoo[dot]com
I would love to talk to HG Wells.
ReplyDeleteglitterbeamsunsheen@gmail.com
First of all, thanks so much for hosting this interview! :)
ReplyDeleteAnd for the giveaway of course.
Hmm, If I really had the ability to talk to one deceased author, I think it would be... Jane Austen.. I know I am such a cliche, but even though I mostly read Crime Fiction and Urban Fantasy now, books like Pride and Prejudice and Persuasion are among the first that made me love reading! :)
I am a follower! :)
I twitted the contest: http://twitter.com/yllektra/status/26585085138
Kelly / yvantis@hotmail.com
hi nice intrview and giveaway.
ReplyDeletewhich author from the past i would to talk to if i had the power to tail to the dead? is Jane Austen..
i am a follower
http://twitter.com/home
http://www.facebook.com/?ref=home#!/profile.php?id=623309617
http://www.blogger.com/post-create.g?blogID=3006241108549757779
my e-mail is ersy_nurse@hotmail.com
I would talk to Jane Austen or Edgar Alan Poe.
ReplyDeletethanks for the contest.
+1 comment
+1 blog follower
Littopandaxpress(at)yahoo(dot)com
I can't wait to read Grave Witch.
ReplyDeleteI think I'd like to speak to Shakespeare.
follower
tweeted
http://twitter.com/#!/elaing8/status/26588661262
elaing8(at)netscape(dot)net
If I could talk to an author from the past, I think I would pick Robert Heinlein because I've always loved his books and he would be fantastic to talk to.
ReplyDeleteI'm looking forward to reading Grave Witch, it sounds fabulous.
Thank you for making this international! :)
ReplyDeleteFollower GFC
I think I would like to talk to Shakespeare. Hehe, could be interesting!!
Tweet: https://twitter.com/frozencampari/status/26594210197
sine_home@gmx.net
I think Shakespeare.
ReplyDeleteI am a follower and would love to be entered.
robin [at] intensewhisper [dot] com
I would love to talk to Alfred Lord Tennyson or W. B. Yeats I love their poetry!
ReplyDeleteOld follower.
Twitter: http://twitter.com/jmspettoli/status/26628778176
spettolij AT gmail DOT com
+1 I think I would like to talk to Charles Dickens and find out what his take would be on the modern world as compared to the one he wrote so much about.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the giveaway.
+1 I am a Follower via GFC
Carol T
buddytho {at} gmail DOT com
I think I'd like to talk to J.R.R. Tolkien.
ReplyDeleteI'm a follower.
musmekipi at gmail dot com
I think a conversation with H.G. Wells would be fascinating.
ReplyDeleteGFC follower
comment
+2
caity_mack@yahoo dot com
That question reminded me of Jennifer Rardin and I am still reeling from that loss... I'd probably want her back!
ReplyDeleteI would love, love, love to talk to Dante Aligheri (with translator, of course). The world-building in Inferno (and Purgatorio ...not so much Paradisio) was mind-blowing. Picking his brain about pulling in political examples into the vivid hell he'd created -- yes, I'd like that. :)
ReplyDelete+1 follower
+1 Tweet: http://twitter.com/VampBookClub/status/26674941716
Excellent interview!
Briggs, Chance and Andrews are my favourites too. Not so much with Neill. I got disappointed with her Firespell.
ReplyDeleteI'm an old follower. My GFC name is Cherry.
Twitted about your contest at: http://twitter.com/#!/cherrymischivus/status/26671395377
Got your contest on my sidebar at: http://www.cherrymischievous.com
Cherry Mischievous
I'd love to talk to Louisa May Alcott or Lewis Carroll.
ReplyDeleteI've enjoyed the novels of Haven and can't wait to read this new series!
angela.donner @ gmail.com
Thanks for the contest. I would like to talk to Edgar Allen Poe or Washington Irving.
ReplyDeletehttp://tiny.cc/t8yqx
1 comment
1 tweet
Total 2
midnytereader@gmail.com
Thanks for all the kind words, everyone! It's been fun seeing what authors from the past you would talk to if you could question the dead. Keep them coming!
ReplyDeleteI think I would have to chat with H.G. Wells. Amazing author, before their time.
ReplyDelete- Follower :)
- On twitter - http://twitter.com/MelLHay/status/26702387473
- On blog Side bar - http://melissa-melsworld.blogspot.com/
Thank you!
MyWorldinwordsandpages{at}gmail{dot}com
I know the contest is long gone, I just wanted to say that I loved the interview!
ReplyDelete+1 i would like to speak with arthur conan doyle, love the mysteries he spins, and holmes was based on a person he knew
ReplyDelete+1 follower
+1 sidebar http://angeltyuan.blogspot.com
total: 3
thanks!
ninefly(at)gmail(dot)com
I'm such a LOTR fan, so it would have to be Tolkien.
ReplyDelete-follower
-tweeted- http://twitter.com/Heatwave316/status/26893692579
total = 3
heatwave96(at)hotmail.com
I would love to talk to Emily Bronte!
ReplyDeleteTotal: 1
angeldream3(at)gmail(dot)com
As intimidating as it would probably be, I'd love to talk to the Brƶnte sisters :)
ReplyDelete+1 I'm a follower
+1 Tweet: http://twitter.com/#!/Entre_Libros/status/26980662224
Thank you for the lovely interview and congrats on the release!
Sharli
entrelibros_blog at hotmail.com
It would be awesome to get to speak with Margaret Mitchell.
ReplyDeleteI'm a GFC follower.
juliecookies(at)gmail.com
I would want to talk to Shakespeare or Charles Dickens.
ReplyDelete+1 follower
+1 tweet - http://twitter.com/#!/DonnaS1/statuses/27108597501
+1 post - http://donnasbloghome.blogspot.com/2010/10/contest-links-for-1011.html
total - 4
bacchus76 at myself dot com
Oh wow you don't make this one easy...I would say the top three would be Edgar Allen Poe, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and Mark Twain.
ReplyDelete+1 GFC follower (melissa R)
+1 tweeted http://twitter.com/giveawaymommy/status/27180923617
Total 3
giveawaymommy at yahoo.com
I would have to say Jane Austen that would be so cool!
ReplyDelete+1 comment
+1 follower (Mysteriousrose)
+1 sidebar: http://mysteriousrose.blogspot.com/
+1 http://twitter.com/Forceofstars/status/27273315380
Total: 4
forceofstars(at)yahoo(dot)dk
I would love to talk to Jane Austin! I just love her books!!!! :)
ReplyDelete+1 follower!
tiffilulu@gmail.com