Yes and no. The main arc of the series ends with War Storm, and I’m so pleased with where the characters ended up. That particular ending was very important to me. I’m really glad I got to do it. But for those of you who want a little more, either with the characters who survived or the world itself, I wrote BROKEN THRONE, a collection of short stories and world information. It’s got glimpses into the past of RED QUEEN as well as the future of surviving characters, alongside maps, histories, family trees, diaries, and more.
Are you Marecal or Mareven?
I believe the finished series makes my position clear. 😉
Where do you get your inspiration?
It honestly depends. I’ve found stories or catalysts for stories in everything from a plain old brainstorming session at my desk to a museum exhibit in another country. But largely I ruminate on what I love and what I don’t love – how can I embrace the former and shift the latter? And this is a tactic from my screenwriting education, but I like to distill stories into easy, pitchable parts. Something I can say that another person would automatically get. It’s this meets that. For example, for Red Queen, I say it’s Game of Thrones meets X-Men meets Hunger Games. That usually works best, and quickly, to communicate what the story is to potential audience.
Why write YA? How do you define Young Adult?
Obviously, age is a factor. You need characters who are, you know, young adults. For me that means anyone between the ages of 15-19ish, with 19 being on the cusp and story-specific. I also think there’s wiggle room based on say, inhuman characters. But a key has to be some sort of coming of age/realizing who you are, and choosing who you want to be. It’s something all teenagers struggle with, and it unites us in that time period. Characters need to reflect that. That has to be a major question of the story. Who am I? Who am I becoming? Do I like it? Can I help it? Can I stop it? And so forth.
What have been the biggest challenges so far?
Personally, I’m a straight, white, cisgendered, and well-educated woman in a field that favors all those things. Not to mention I have a very supportive family structure. So I was already playing the game with a big leg up. My obstacles existed, but they were far from terrible. Many of them are in my head. But that’s not a small thing either. Self-doubt and mental health are huge for us, as is the ever present impostor system. The best I can do is tell myself I’m not alone in thinking everything is about to fall apart, or that I don’t deserve my career. I’ve largely been in a position where if I put my head down and do the work, good things have followed. I know that’s nowhere near the norm, and perhaps not helpful, but I think it’s important to be upfront about this kind of thing. The biggest challenge has been believing in myself and my work, and sometimes that can be insurmountable. But we push through, don’t we?
Any tips for aspiring writers?
Figure out your weaknesses. Play to your strengths. Know what you’re good at. Absorb stories in all their forms, from novels to action movies to Greek plays to reality television. Learn audiences, figure out what they want, figure out what audience you want to write for and how you want to do it. Writing is such a personal artform – it requires bravery and honesty and sometimes a thick skin. But most of all it requires life. Live, experience. And most of all, put the words on the page. There is no substitution for doing the actual work.