F.C. Malby, Author TAKE ME TO THE CASTLE |
Welcome
F.C. Malby who joins us to talk about her recently-released book TAKE ME TO THE CASTLE. Malby wrote her novel to
inform people about “a time in history which has shaped much of Eastern Europe" -- February 1993 in the newly formed Czech Republic. Malby has personal experience with the turbulent times following the fall of communism. She taught English there as a teenager.
Originally from East Anglia, UK, Malby has travelled extensively and taught English in the Philippines and London in addition to the Czech Republic. She was a wedding photographer and teacher before becoming a writer. She likes to bake and experiment with recipes, which help to inspire her.
Originally from East Anglia, UK, Malby has travelled extensively and taught English in the Philippines and London in addition to the Czech Republic. She was a wedding photographer and teacher before becoming a writer. She likes to bake and experiment with recipes, which help to inspire her.
Q: What caused
or inspired you to write TAKE ME TO THE CASTLE? Where did you get the idea?
F.C. Malby: I spent
several months teaching English in the Czech Republic as a teenager just after
the walls came down and it was an experience that will never leave me. The
changes were rapid and many people were afraid of the freedom that they had
been given and afraid of the changes in their lives and their country. There
was a security in having 100% employment and in knowing the rules but I found
it unsettling.
Q: One of your reviewers said, “F.C.
Malby has managed to bring history to life through the eyes of her well-crafted
characters” Did you create your characters to tell a story, or did your setting
drive your characters?
F.C. Malby: The setting definitely drove the
characters. I
wanted to write about the Velvet Revolution and the fall of the Berlin Wall and
to look at how those changes impacted the lives of ordinary people.
Q: How do you make your characters engaging?
F.C. Malby: You have to get inside their heads
and to think the way they do. Engaging characters often have character flaws or
are driven by a particular need and it is important to keep this in mind.
Q: Do you have heroes and villains?
Or are your characters some of both? What are the characteristics of heroes and
villains?
F.C. Malby: I think both and neither. The
story has a wider arc of good and bad set within a very complex time in
history. The narrative is more about what a situation will drive a character
into without their willingness to actually go there.
Q: You have
traveled extensively. Does travel help you envision stories?
F.C. Malby: Absolutely.
Setting is key to a good novel and you have to know a place, whether it be real
or imaginary. If you are using a real location, you really need to know the
details: the feel of the place, the sights, sounds and smells which the reader
needs to be able to experience through your words alone. Without this the story
is only two-dimensional.
Q: Do you write
to entertain, inform and/or influence?
F.C. Malby: I would say
hopefully to inform and influence, but writing has to be entertaining to engage
the reader. I wrote TAKE ME TO THE CASTLE to give people an idea about a time
in history which has shaped much of Eastern Europe. It is a period about which
very little fiction has been written and I believe it is an important jigsaw
piece in a distant landscape. Prague has changed almost beyond recognition.
When I was there in the depths of winter, you didn’t hear a single western
voice and there were no vegetables, just meat, dumpling and wonderful cake. Now
Prague has become very westernized.
Q: What is your
ultimate goal as a writer?
F.C. Malby: To grow, develop,
and to continue to bring fresh ideas into print. When someone emails or
contacts me to say that they loved the book it makes the hard work worthwhile.
I write because I love to write and I want to be the best that I can be so it
takes work. I will continue to read and learn the craft.
Q: When you’re
not writing, what are you doing?
F.C. Malby: I ski when it’s
cold enough. I am also a photographer and an artist. I love to paint and to
travel and take photographs. I also enjoy film and theatre which inspires my
writing. It is important to take time away from work, especially if you work
from home. I bake and experiment with recipes. That is often when the next idea
strikes.
About F.C.
Malby
F.C. Malby grew up in East
Anglia, in the UK, and has taught English in the Czech Republic, the
Philippines and London. She gained a First Class BA (Ed.) Honours Degree in
Geography and Education, and became a teacher and a wedding photographer before
beginning her writing career. Her first novel, TAKE ME TO THE CASTLE, published
in December 2012, has been nominated for The People's Book Awards. She is
currently working on short stories and further novels.
About TAKE ME TO THE CASTLE
The door opened slowly, and she could see the
outline of five men standing in the corridor. Her room was far enough away from
the figures for no one to notice her nose pressing into the door frame. She was
aware of her own breathing and tried to slow it down, slow down her heartbeat
until she was invisible. The idea in these moments is to be completely
invisible. There were a lot of invisible people in Prague, doing invisible
things to other invisible people.
What would you do to secure your own freedom?
February 1993. Walls between East and West
have dissolved, following the Velvet Revolution of 1989. It is a harsh winter
in the newly formed Czech Republic, but the nation celebrates. Arriving in
Letovice, Jana is trying to escape a personal loss and come to terms with the
changes in her country and in her own life. She stays with the Martineks and
meets their son, Miloš. When he leaves Letovice and she travels back to Prague,
she encounters a deep and shocking betrayal. Jana meets Lukas, a conservator
working on the restoration of a mosaic at the Cathedral of St Vitus. But who is
he and what is he hiding?
An evocative portrayal of life during the
fall of communism: It is a sometimes heartbreaking tale of deception, distrust
and the need for redemption in the aftermath of a regime in which no one can be
trusted, not even someone you thought you knew.
Links
Twitter @fcmalby
Website http://fcmalby.com
Book trailer
Sounds like something I'd really enjoy. Thanks for the introduction.
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ReplyDeleteI found your great blog through the WLC Blog Follows on the World Literary Cafe! Great to connect!
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