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The Mysterious Process of Writing

Posted January 3, 2011 by TokyoSuperFrog
Categories: Author posts | 2 Comments »

Why does a history professor decide to write a novel about witches? It’s a good question!

Writing a novel is a mysterious process and many of my life experiences went into A Discovery of Witches. If you’re here on BookTrib, chances are you’ve always been a voracious reader. So was I, and one of my favorite books as a child was Elizabeth George Speare’s The Witch of Blackbird Pond. The history of alchemy and magic caught my interest as an undergraduate, and I’m still fascinated by these subjects today. And, once upon a time, I discovered a lost alchemical manuscript—although it was not (so far as I know) enchanted.

A Discovery of Witches tells the tale of a reluctant witch named Diana Bishop and her discovery of a long-lost alchemical manuscript at Oxford’s Bodleian Library. There, Diana meets Matthew Clairmont: a geneticist who happens to be a very old, secretive vampire. Witches and vampires are traditional enemies, but Diana and Matthew grow closer as they try to puzzle out the manuscript’s significance. Their search for answers takes Diana and Matthew from Oxford, to his ancestral home in France, to her family’s farm in upstate New York. But they are not the only creatures who want to solve the mystery of manuscript, and their fellow daemons, vampires, and witches frown upon their unorthodox relationship. Are these just old prejudices, or is it something more?

Our culture’s renewed obsession with witches, vampires, and other things that go bump in the night has been fascinating to me as a historian. I’ve gone from needing to explain what alchemy is to having my students all nod wisely whenever Nicholas Flamel is mentioned. Parents have confessed that they’ve been staying up late to read their kids’ copy of the latest Harry Potter. Our reading habits reveal that even grownups need a little magic—with the limitless possibility, unpredictability, and even chaos that inevitably comes with it. My goal with A Discovery of Witches was to write a fairy tale that was mesmerizing but spoke to adult issues and concerns. I tried to create characters who were strange—yet strangely familiar. Many of us will recognize ourselves in Diana, who has so much power but is afraid to use it. Others will empathize with Matthew’s inability to let go of his 1500-year past—even though we have less of a past to worry about! And still more will wonder, while riding the train or sitting in a meeting, if that strange creature opposite just might be a daemon or a vampire.

It it’s magic you need this winter, I hope that you find some in A Discovery of Witches.

ENTER TO WIN A COPY OF A DISCOVERY OF WITCHES IN THIS WEEK’S GIVEAWAY!

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2 Responses to “The Mysterious Process of Writing”

  1. Avatar of nightreader nightreader says:

    Thank you for posting, I’m very impressed with everything you’ve said. How fascinating to actually find a lost alchemical manuscript! To my mind, I think a history professor is perfect for writing a fantasy based on history. I’ve always been fascinated by witches, wizards, brownies, leprechauns, everything whimsical… but although I did watch Buffy the Vampire Slayer, my mind is still stuck with Dracula! I am going back right now to try to win A Discovery of Witches.

  2. Avatar of nightreader nightreader says:

    Oops, I forgot to look at the date of your post. Too late. I’ll put your book on my wish list!

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