Saturday, February 17, 2024

About Books: The Dark Faery Series by Bridget McGowan

 


Sometimes my books aren’t based on what’s running around in my head.

Back when the Twilight saga was about to appear on the big screen – does anyone remember the huge outcry when it was announced that Robert Pattinson was going to play Edward? – I hadn’t yet read the books.

I had, however, read several vampire novels. Some of those, like the Anne Rice novels, were mostly good reads. Others were simply abysmal. One author used the same words to describe his character so many times that if I ever see or hear someone described as having a rictus smile again, I will have to at least maim the person describing it. And the same goes for the word orb.

My nieces introduced the Twilight books to my husband and me. It was nice, light summer reading. And we finished the first two books in time for the opening of the first Twilight movie.

Later in the summer, I was visiting a friend of mine for the weekend. She had a daughter who was about 15. She was enamored of the books – and Robert Pattinson – at the time. She also knew I wrote stories, although I didn’t know whether or not she’d actually read any of them.

During a visit to my friend’s house, the girl and I were having a conversation about what we liked best in the movie and some of the terrible vampire novels I’d read when she said, “I bet you could write a good vampire story.”

I had never considered doing that.

I thought for a moment.

“Well, mine would not sparkle. And no one would have a rictus smile. I’d need to do something unique.”

She agreed, and we went on to discuss other things.

“How about vampire fairies?” I asked sometime later.

“Oh, I would definitely read that!” she replied.

I had my audience. All I needed was my world and a cast of characters.

A little later her mother, the girl, a few of her mother’s friends and I were out exploring and came upon an old graveyard. We decided to explore. As we were walking along, studying epitaphs, I saw the name Teilo on one of the gravestones. I’d never encountered that name before, but I liked it.

Pretty soon, Teilo, who was to be the hero of my story, had a last name: Feather.

By the time I got home, I had a village or four made up of fairies. They lived under bushes, in trees or in the remains of things humans had left behind. But I changed the spelling. They were Faeries. They had a pre-medieval culture, consisting of priestesses and druids to take care of the religious aspects of their lives, and the faeries were divided into clans according to what jobs they performed.

The Celestials were the astronomers as well as the sea-faring clan. They sailed the small sea (a.k.a. the Irish Sea) in craft made of walnut shells.

Occasionally, if the need arose to visit the island across the small sea (Ireland), they might stow away on a Human ship. They could easily hide, and the amount of food they needed would never be missed by the larger beings.

The Cantares were the singers and musicians. They received training in music and went on to entertain or provide music for solemn occasions.

The Mercifuls were the medical people: Doctors, nurses, midwives, apothecaries, and other scientists of similar interest.

The Benevolents were mainly everyone else. They provided the blacksmiths, leather workers, seamstresses, bakers, bankers and so on.

Being born into a clan wasn’t a life sentence. If a child from a Benevolent family was musically inclined, he or she could join the Cantares once basic education had finished. Or a doctor’s child could grow up to become a Benevolent. There was free mingling among the clans.

And then there were the Dark Faeries. The priestesses had an uneasy and only occasional relationship with the Dark Faeries. They knew what the Dark Faeries were: Vampyres.

The only reason there was any relationship between priestesses and Vampyres was that a plague had spread through the Light Faery population. It had decimated the Light Faeries. And the Dark Faeries required blood. So there was a truce agreed to between the priestesses and the Dark Faeries that the Vampyres – except for the renegades who answered to no one – would leave the Light Faeries in peace and feed on Humans, instead.

This was beneficial to both. Humans wouldn’t be hurt or killed by being bitten by a Dark Faery. It was no worse than a mosquito bite, if it was noticed at all. While their blood wasn’t as tasty as Faery blood, they didn’t need to be bitten on the neck. Their veins were large enough for the Dark Faeries anywhere on a human body. The only danger to the Dark Faery who attacked a human was that it might be squashed if the Human happened to feel the bite.

This also saved the Light Faery population from being further depleted by Vampyre bites. Only those who ventured out into the deepest woods at night had to fear the renegades.

Enter Shauna Faun. This is a musical band. Their music is sought after by the young Light Faeries, who look for concerts given by the band. But parents have heard non-specific whispers about the band, that they have some evil about them.

The truth is, Shauna Faun is a band made up of Vampyre Faeries. These Dark Faeries have sworn an oath not to attack concert-goers, and the youth flock to them, despite the condemnation of the band from the priestesses, because no one has told the young people that these band members are Dark Faeries.

Now, with my world created, I was ready to write the first novel in the series: Dark Faery: The Benevolents.

 

No comments: