Chachic's Book Nook



Interview with Lisa Jensen, author of the historical fairy-tale retelling Beast: A Tale of Love and Revenge

 tháng 7 26, 2018     interviews     No comments   

Lisa Jensen, who I'd spoken with in 2014 about her historical fantasy Alias Hook, has returned to the literary scene with another new twist on a familiar story. The original fairy tale upon which Beast is based should be apparent from the title, but this isn't the familiar Beauty and the Beast story we all know; tweaking the perspective makes all the difference. Opening long before "Beauty" comes on the scene, Beast is seen through the eyes of a young chambermaid, Lucie. Soon after she comes to work at Château Beaumont, home of the handsome chevalier Jean-Loup, a terrible event spurs her to take revenge — resulting in dramatic transformations involving Lucie, the cruel Jean-Loup, and a beautiful young woman named Rose. The story is set in early 17th-century Burgundy, France, and is geared toward mature YAs and up.  Please read on!

Your previous novel Alias Hook took a new look at the story of Peter Pan, while Beast reworks the traditional Beauty and the Beast fairy tale in new and creative ways. What appeals to you about recasting old stories in a different light?

It usually arises out of my dissatisfaction with the original, and my craving as an author to rewrite it! I always found Captain Hook far more interesting than Peter Pan, so in Alias Hook, I wanted to explore what it must be like for a grown man to be trapped eternally in a world run by beastly little boys.

In the same way, I always adored the Beast character in Beauty and the Beast. But the moment all thinking women dread is when the magnificent, noble Beast turns into a bland, boring handsome prince in the end. Beast does all the work of wooing Beauty. It's Beast she falls in love with. Why should the Prince get the girl?

I thought Beast, in all his soulfulness and sensitivity, deserved to be the hero in his own tale.

While Beast is set in France’s Burgundy region during the reign of “Henri Quatre,” it also successfully conveys the timeless nature of the fairy-tale realm. How and why did you choose the historical period?

Beauty-and-Beast tales (and many other so-called Animal Bridegroom tales) have been around at least since the Greeks. But this particular fairy tale is very French in origin. The first version to be written down was by a French authoress, Mme. de Villeneuve, and published in 1740. It was a bit long and rambling, but the essence of the story was there. A shorter, streamlined adaptation was published by another Frenchwoman, Mme. de Beaumont, in 1757. This is the version of the tale we recognize today.

I had spent some time in the Burgundy region of France, so that was the area I picked. I discovered that everything in rural France looks like a fairy tale, even today! And I decided to use the Henri Quatre period (short window though it was), ca. 1600, because I wanted my book to take place at least 100 years before those other published editions. I think of mine as the origin story from which all future versions of this tale might have evolved.

How did you research the historical setting and locale?

Backwards! I started out with the date, working backwards from the publication dates of those first two version of the story. Then I studied up on what was going on in France around that time. Eh, voila — Henri the Fourth, quite an interesting character in his own right. I decided that my Prince character, Jean-Loup, Chevalier de Beaumont, had earned his knighthood fighting with Henri, then the Prince of Navarre, against the Spanish invaders. And since I was already familiar with the villages and churches of Burgundy, that's where I chose to place the enchanted chateau.

Servants can make insightful narrators; they can observe everything around them while their behavior and feelings often go unobserved by people from the upper classes. At what point during the writing process did you realize that Lucie the chambermaid, rather than Beauty/Rose, had to be the heroine for the story you wanted to tell?

My idea was always to create a heroine worthy of Beast, another woman on the scene who had the sense to fall in love with Beast as he was. So it couldn't be the Beauty character, who is so willing to forget the Beast she says she loves and waltz off with the Prince, a complete stranger! And I always knew the story would be told from Lucie's viewpoint, my protagonist, as we watch her evolve from lowly servant into heroine.

In my story, Beauty (Rose) is more like the antagonist. When she comes to the chateau, the traditional fairy tale plot kicks in. Her appearance interrupts the relationship beginning to develop between Lucie and Beast, and when Lucie realizes Rose has the power to break the spell that created Beast — that Lucie might lose him forever — she'll do anything to try and stop it!

Not to give too much away, but some of the action is seen from the viewpoint of a candlestick. How easy/fun, or how complicated, was it to place her in locations where she could see what was happening?

It was a challenge, but it was also fun! This character narrates the story, in and out of human form, so I had to keep that voice consistently strong from page to page — even during the time the character is inanimate. And the sheer necessity of moving the character around to comment on the action led to some serendipitous moments — as when the silver candlestick is stolen, prompting Beast's enraged reaction! Why does Beast get so angry when the old man plucks a rose from his garden? Now we know!

What was the experience like in writing your first book for a younger audience?

Originally, I wrote this book for adults. I wanted some distance from the fairy tale we all think we remember from childhood, to create a new perspective, a new way of looking at the story. But, as it turned out, a YA editor fell in love with the book and bought it for Candlewick Press. We spent two years editing it to make it age-appropriate (my editor, the intrepid Kaylan Adair, is very thorough). But be warned: there are still so many ways my book is not the Disney Version!

Thanks very much, Lisa!

Beast: A Tale of Love and Revenge was published this month in hardcover and ebook by Candlewick Press.
  • Share This:  
  •  Facebook
  •  Twitter
  •  Google+
  •  Stumble
  •  Digg
Gửi email bài đăng nàyBlogThis!Chia sẻ lên XChia sẻ lên Facebook
Bài đăng Mới hơn Bài đăng Cũ hơn Trang chủ

0 nhận xét:

Đăng nhận xét




Popular Posts

  • Review: The Crown's Game by Evelyn Skye
    Title:  The Crown's Game (The Crown's Game #1) Author:  Evelyn Skye Kindle, 399 pages Published:  March 17th 2010 Publisher:  Balzer...
  • ARC Review: Suffer Love by Ashley Blake
    Title: Suffer Love Author: Ashley Herring Blake Kindle, 360 pages Published:   May 3rd, 2016 Publisher: HMH BOooks for Young Readers Genre...
  • Mini Reviews: The Rocker That Holds Me, Trick, Real, and Damaged
        I’ve been reading a ton of quick little eBook only New Adult romances that won’t really take up a whole day’s worth of a review. So I fi...
  • Thoughts on Philippa Gregory's new saga of 17th-century England, Tidelands
    Enthusiasts of Philippa Gregory’s Tudor novels may call her latest a departure, but the atmospheric Tidelands is more of a return to her fo...
  • Review + Giveaway: Never Missing Never Found by Amanda Panitch
    Title: Never Missing Never Found Author: Amanda Panitch Hardcover, 306 pages Published:  June 28th 2016 by Random House Books for Young Read...
  • Historical fiction award winners from ALA Midwinter 2020
    The American Library Association Midwinter conference took place last weekend in Philly. I'm a bit late in reporting on the book awards ...
  • Gena Showalter's THE DARKEST TORMENT Release Day Launch!
    Gena Showalter’s THE DARKEST TORMENT is now available in paperback! The Queen of Paranormal Romance, USA TODAY bestselling author Gena Showa...
  • Reveiw: Lost and Found by Nicole Williams
      I’m a huge fan of Nicole Williams. From her Crash series to her stand-alone to her mini-series about a seductress, I can’t stop reading w...
  • Make Me a City by Jonathan Carr, an eclectic fictional portrait of 19th-century Chicago
    Carr’s intricately woven debut evokes the history of nineteenth-century Chicago while showcasing important but little-known historical figur...
  • The Daughters of Ironbridge by Mollie Walton, a saga of friendship and class differences in 1830s Shropshire
    This is the debut saga from Walton, a successful transition for the author, who also pens historical fiction under her real name, Rebecca Ma...

Bài đăng nổi bật

A Long Petal of the Sea, Isabel Allende's epic of the Spanish Civil War and its aftermath

Allende’s fluidly written saga conveys her deep familiarity with the events she depicts, and her intent to illustrate their human impact in ...

Được tạo bởi Blogger.

Tìm kiếm Blog này

Lưu trữ Blog

  • tháng 2 2020 (1)
  • tháng 1 2020 (7)
  • tháng 12 2019 (6)
  • tháng 11 2019 (5)
  • tháng 10 2019 (7)
  • tháng 9 2019 (7)
  • tháng 8 2019 (9)
  • tháng 7 2019 (6)
  • tháng 6 2019 (5)
  • tháng 5 2019 (6)
  • tháng 4 2019 (7)
  • tháng 3 2019 (8)
  • tháng 2 2019 (7)
  • tháng 1 2019 (8)
  • tháng 12 2018 (7)
  • tháng 11 2018 (7)
  • tháng 10 2018 (7)
  • tháng 9 2018 (9)
  • tháng 8 2018 (8)
  • tháng 7 2018 (6)
  • tháng 6 2018 (9)
  • tháng 5 2018 (14)
  • tháng 3 2018 (1)
  • tháng 2 2018 (2)
  • tháng 1 2018 (4)
  • tháng 12 2017 (2)
  • tháng 10 2017 (1)
  • tháng 9 2017 (6)
  • tháng 8 2017 (2)
  • tháng 7 2017 (2)
  • tháng 6 2017 (3)
  • tháng 5 2017 (2)
  • tháng 4 2017 (6)
  • tháng 3 2017 (8)
  • tháng 2 2017 (5)
  • tháng 1 2017 (7)
  • tháng 12 2016 (3)
  • tháng 11 2016 (5)
  • tháng 10 2016 (5)
  • tháng 9 2016 (5)
  • tháng 8 2016 (7)
  • tháng 7 2016 (7)
  • tháng 6 2016 (8)
  • tháng 5 2016 (11)
  • tháng 4 2016 (14)
  • tháng 3 2016 (7)
  • tháng 2 2016 (11)
  • tháng 1 2016 (10)
  • tháng 4 2014 (3)
  • tháng 9 2013 (2)
  • tháng 8 2013 (13)
  • tháng 7 2013 (12)
  • tháng 6 2013 (1)
  • tháng 5 2013 (12)
  • tháng 4 2013 (7)
  • tháng 2 2013 (7)
  • tháng 1 2013 (16)
  • tháng 12 2012 (12)
  • tháng 11 2012 (9)
  • tháng 10 2012 (9)
  • tháng 9 2012 (9)
  • tháng 8 2012 (7)
  • tháng 7 2012 (11)
  • tháng 6 2012 (11)
  • tháng 5 2012 (8)
  • tháng 4 2012 (1)

Nhãn

  • #boutofbooks
  • 18+
  • 2 Stars
  • 2011
  • 2012
  • 2012 Release
  • 2013
  • 2014 book release
  • 2016
  • 2016 book release
  • 2016 reading challenge
  • 2018 book release
  • 2018 reading challenge
  • 3 Stars
  • 4 and 1/2 Stars
  • 4 stars
  • 5 Stars
  • A Second Chance Series
  • Abandon
  • Abandon Trilogy
  • Abbi Glines
  • Abibliophobic
  • Addicted to You
  • Addicted Series
  • Addicted to You
  • Adrian
  • adult
  • adult books
  • Adult Fiction
  • Adventure
  • Aime Carter
  • Aimee Carter
  • Aliens
  • Alison Cherry
  • Allegiant
  • Ally Condie
  • Alyxandra Harvey
  • Amanda Hocking
  • Amazon Gift Card
  • Amazon.com
  • Amie Kaufman
  • Amy Tintera
  • Andrea Cremer
  • Angels
  • Anna Banks
  • Anna Panks
  • apocalypse
  • ARC
  • Atria Books
  • Audible
  • audiobooks
  • author
  • author interview
  • authors
  • Avoiding Commitment
  • Avoiding Series
  • B. Alston
  • Back to blogging
  • Balzer + Bray
  • Barclay Publicity
  • Bared to You
  • Beaufitul Disaster
  • Beautiful book 1
  • Beautiful Creatures
  • Beautiful Disaster
  • Because of Low
  • Becca Fitzpatrick
  • Becca Ritchie
  • Beckie
  • Berkley
  • bibliographies; visual previews
  • Birthday
  • Blog Awards
  • blog tour
  • Blogger
  • Blogger Designs
  • blogger updates
  • Blogiversary
  • Blood Promise
  • Bloodlines
  • Bloodlines Giveaway
  • Bluefields
  • book blast
  • Book Blitz
  • book covers
  • Book Depository
  • book event
  • book giveaway
  • book meme
  • Book Promo
  • book release
  • book release 2017
  • book review
  • book reviews
  • book spotlight
  • book teaser
  • book to movie
  • Book Trailer
  • Booklist
  • Boutofbooks
  • Breaking the Spine
  • Breathe
  • Breathless
  • Bridget Zinn
  • Brodi Ashton
  • Cage York
  • Carole's Review
  • Carrier Of The Mark
  • Carrier Trilogy
  • Cassandra Clare
  • Cedar Cove Series
  • Challenges
  • Chameleon
  • Character Interview
  • Chick Lit
  • Cinder
  • City of Ashes
  • City of Bones
  • City of Fallen Angels
  • City of Glass
  • City of Lost Souls
  • CJ Redwine
  • Clash
  • Clockwork Angel
  • Clockwork Prince
  • Clockwork Princess
  • Colleen Hoover
  • College Romance
  • coloring book
  • coloring book review
  • Come Away With Me
  • Coming of Age
  • Consume
  • Contemporary
  • contest
  • Cora Carmack
  • Covenant series
  • Cover Reveal
  • Cover Reveals
  • covers
  • Covet
  • Crash
  • Crave
  • CreateSpace
  • Crossfire Novels
  • Cyborgs
  • Daemon
  • Daemon and Kitten
  • Damaged
  • Dark Triumph
  • Darkness Becomes Her
  • Defiance
  • Delacorte Books for Young Readers
  • Demigods
  • Demons
  • Disney Hyperion
  • Disney-Hyperion
  • Disney/Hyperion
  • Distopian
  • Distopian Fiction
  • Divergent
  • Dominion
  • Down London Road
  • dragons
  • Dragonswood
  • Dream Cast
  • Dutton Juvenile
  • Dystopian
  • e-books
  • E.L. James
  • eARC
  • Easy
  • EBook
  • eBooks
  • Ed Westwick
  • Emily Snow
  • Emma and Gaylen
  • Entangled Publishing
  • Entangled Teen
  • Erotica
  • Erotica.
  • Etiquette and Espionage
  • event
  • Everbound
  • Everneath
  • Excerpt
  • Faeries
  • fairytale retelling
  • Fallen Too Far
  • Fantasy
  • Favorite Books
  • Feb 2013 YA release
  • February 2013 YA release
  • Feiwel and Friends
  • Fey
  • Fiction
  • Fierce Reads
  • Fifty Shades Darker
  • Fifty Shades Freed
  • Fifty Shades of Grey
  • Fifty Shades Trilogy
  • Finishing School Series
  • Firelight
  • Firelight Series
  • Forever Too Far
  • Forever Trilogy
  • Freak of Nature
  • freebie
  • Frostbite
  • G.P. Putnam's Sons
  • G.P. Putnam's Sons BYR
  • Gail Carriger
  • Game of Thrones
  • Gena Showalter
  • Georgia Kincaid series
  • Ghost
  • Giveaway
  • Giveaway 4
  • Giveaway 5
  • Giveaways
  • Graphic Novel
  • Grave Mercy
  • Great Exploitations
  • Greek Mythology
  • Grey Eyes
  • Guardian Angels series
  • guest post
  • guest posts
  • Hades
  • Hafsah
  • Half Blood
  • Halloween
  • Happenstance
  • Happy New Year
  • Harlequin Teen
  • HarlequinHQN
  • Harper Collins
  • Harper Collins Publishing
  • Harper Teen
  • HarperCollins
  • harperteen
  • Harry Potter
  • Heather Lind
  • High Fantasy
  • Historical Fiction
  • Historical Romance
  • HM Ward
  • Hollow
  • Hopeless
  • horror
  • Hothouse Flower
  • Houghton Mifflin Books for Children
  • humor
  • Hush Hush
  • Icey Designs
  • IMM
  • In Flight
  • In My Mailbox
  • In Seattle
  • Indie Authors
  • Insurgent
  • interview
  • interviews
  • Ironskin
  • j lynn
  • J Sterling
  • J. Lynn
  • J.A. Redmerski
  • Jamie McGuire
  • Jane Eyre
  • Jennifer Ehle
  • Jennifer L. Armentrout
  • Jessica Sorensen
  • Josephine Angelini
  • Julia Crane
  • Julie Cross
  • July 2012 release
  • June 2013 releases
  • Just for Now
  • K.A. Linde
  • Kami Garcia
  • Kane Chronicles
  • Karen Ann Hopkins
  • Katherine Tegen Books
  • Kathy Evans
  • Katie Ashley
  • Katie McGarry
  • Kelly Hashway
  • Kelly Oram
  • Kiera Cass
  • Kiera Hudson Series One
  • Kiera Hudson Series Two
  • Kiersten White
  • Kim's Reviews
  • Kimberley Griffiths Little
  • Kindle
  • Kitten
  • Krista Ritchie
  • Kristen Proby
  • Last Sacrifice
  • LBGTQ
  • Leigh Fallon
  • lgbtq+
  • Liebster Award
  • Like this
  • Like This Try This
  • Lili St. Crow
  • Lisa Renee Jones
  • Little Brown and company
  • Little Brown Books
  • Little Brown Books for Young Readers
  • live author event
  • LJ Smith
  • Lori Devoti
  • Lori Garrett
  • Losing It
  • Lost and Found
  • LOTU
  • Lucy and Jude
  • Lullaby
  • Lunar Chronicles
  • Lux
  • Lux Novels
  • Macmillan
  • Magic
  • March 2013
  • Margaret K. McElderry
  • Margaret Stohl
  • Marissa Meyer
  • Matched
  • Matched series
  • Maya Banks
  • Medusa Girls
  • Meg Cabot
  • Megan Spooner
  • Melissa Darnell
  • Melody Grace
  • Melody Grace Books
  • Melody Manful
  • meme
  • Merfolk
  • Mermaids
  • Merpeople
  • michelle Madow
  • Middle Grade Fiction
  • middle-grade
  • mini-review
  • Mischief in Miami
  • MJ Abraham
  • Morgan Rice
  • Mortal Instruments
  • murder mystery
  • Music of the Heart
  • mystery
  • mythology
  • NA Giveaway
  • Nawada Files
  • Nawanda Files
  • nerd alert
  • Never Too Far
  • New Adult
  • New Adult Romance
  • New Adult Series
  • New Blog Design
  • Nicole Chase
  • Nicole Williams
  • Nightsade
  • Nightshade series
  • novella
  • Obsidian
  • October 2013 releases
  • Of Poseidon
  • Of Triton
  • On Dublin Street
  • Once Upon a Time
  • Onyx
  • Opal
  • paranormal
  • Paranormal Romance
  • Paranormal Thriller
  • Paranormalcy
  • Penguin Group
  • Penguin USA
  • Percy Jackson
  • Percy Jackson and the Olympians
  • Percy Jacskon
  • Persephone
  • Persephone Myth
  • Philomel
  • Point
  • Poison
  • pre-order
  • Princess
  • promotional event
  • psychological thriller
  • Quinteria Ramey
  • Quirk Books
  • R.K. Lilley
  • Rachel Vincent
  • Random House
  • Ransom Riggs
  • Razorbill
  • Read-A-Thon
  • reading 2017 reading challenge
  • Reading Challenge
  • Real
  • Realistic Fiction
  • Red
  • Reflected in You
  • retelling
  • review copies
  • Richard Denney
  • Richelle Mead
  • Rick Riordan
  • Rick Riordian
  • Robi LaFevers
  • romance
  • Romeo and Juliet
  • Ron D. Voigts
  • Rosemary Beach
  • Royals
  • Rumour Has It
  • Runaway Train series
  • Rush
  • Sadie and Jax
  • sale
  • Samantha Young
  • Sci-Fi
  • Science Fiction
  • Sea Breeze series
  • Self- Published
  • Self-Published
  • Series
  • Shadow Kiss
  • Shadow of the Mark
  • Shadowhunters
  • Shelly Crane
  • Shey Stahl
  • signed book
  • Simon and Schuster
  • Simon and Schuster Children's Publishing
  • SimonPulse
  • Sins
  • Sirens
  • small press month
  • Sophie Jordan
  • sophie kinsella
  • Spellbound
  • Spencer Hill Press
  • Spirit Bound
  • sponsored post
  • Spring 2013
  • St. Martin's Press
  • Stacking the Shelves
  • Starbound Series
  • Starcrossed
  • Steampunk
  • Succubus Blues
  • Suddenly Royal
  • Summer Reading
  • Summer Wrap-Up Read-a-Thon
  • Summer YA Reads
  • Sunday Meme
  • Supernatruals series
  • Supernatural
  • suspense
  • Swag
  • Sweet Evil
  • Sweet Peril
  • Sweet Venom
  • Sydney Sage
  • Sylvia Day
  • Syrena
  • Tammara Webber
  • Tera Lyn Childs
  • Terri Ann Browning
  • The Awakening
  • The Castor Chronicles
  • The Clann
  • The Coincidence of Callie and Kayden
  • The CW
  • The Edge of Never
  • The Elite
  • The Goddess Inheritance
  • The Goddess Legacy
  • The Goddess Test
  • The Goddess Test Series
  • The Heroes of Olympus
  • The Infernal Devices
  • The Mortal Instruments
  • The Perfect Game
  • The Red Pyramid
  • The Rocker That Holds Me
  • The Selection
  • The Sweet Trilogy
  • These Broken Stars
  • thriller
  • Tidal
  • Tim O'Rourke
  • Time Travel
  • Tina Connolly
  • Too Far
  • Too Far Series
  • Top Ten List
  • Top ten tuesday
  • Top Ten Tuesdsay
  • Tor Books
  • Touch of Death
  • Trailer Reveal
  • Trick
  • Try This
  • Tuesday Meme
  • Twitter
  • Tynga's Reviews
  • Unbreakable
  • Unbroken
  • Underworld
  • Up In Flames
  • Up In The Air
  • update
  • Updates
  • Urban Fantasy
  • Valknut Press
  • Vampire Academy
  • Vampire Diareis
  • Vampire Diaries
  • Vampire Hollows
  • vampires
  • Veronica Roth
  • Vintage
  • visual previews
  • Wait for You
  • Waiting For You
  • Waiting on Wednesday
  • Wake
  • Waking Disaster
  • Walking Dead
  • Walking Disaster
  • Watersong
  • Wendy Higgins
  • Werewolves
  • While It Lasts
  • Wide Awake
  • Wild Child Publishing
  • witches
  • Would You Rather
  • WOW
  • YA 2012
  • YA Book Giveaway
  • YA Books
  • YA Bound Blog Tour
  • YA Fiction
  • YA Giveaway
  • Young Adult
  • Zebra
  • Zombie
  • Zombies

Báo cáo vi phạm

Giới thiệu về tôi

ana012
Xem hồ sơ hoàn chỉnh của tôi

Copyright © Chachic's Book Nook | Powered by Blogger
Design by Hardeep Asrani | Blogger Theme by NewBloggerThemes.com | Distributed By Gooyaabi Templates