Tuesday, July 03, 2012

Interview with Gabrielle Kimm & Giveaways ~ The Courtesan's Lover & HIs Last Duchess


I'm delighted to welcome Gabrielle Kimm to The Eclectic Reader. Please make her feel welcome and enjoy the interview. I was captivated by the 1st chapter of The Courtesan's Lover on Gabrielle's website, and I can't wait to read more! Take it away Gaby ...

Thanks so much for inviting me onto your blog, Sheree!

1. Can you give readers a description of your latest novel, The Courtesan’s Lover?

The Courtesan’s Lover has been described as a tale of ‘love and redemption’ (by the Historical Novels Review magazine). It’s the story of Francesca Felizzi, former mistress of the unstable and dangerous duke of Ferrara in my first book, His Last Duchess; Francesca has run away from her former lover and set up home with her daughters in Naples, where she intends to rise to the heights as a courtesan.  She’s beautiful, ambitious and a skilled professional lover – but is perhaps a little complacent about her future.  Then an encounter with an inexperienced seventeen year old boy changes her life dramatically, as she is faced with an unpalatable truth – that despite her many admiring patrons, she’s never actually been loved.  Her glittering lifestyle suddenly seems tawdry and unattractive to her.  And then another unexpected encounter brings with it devastating implications, which plunge Francesca and her two little girls into the sort of danger she has dreaded ever since she first began working the streets all those years ago. 

2. Reading the 1st chapter of The Courtesan’s Lover, it’s obvious you write vividly - lush descriptions of 16th century Napoli, people, clothing, architecture, lifestyle …  how much research goes into your novels? (the opening scene with Modesto preparing Francesca’s lime was fascinating and had me 'googling.')

Golly – the simple answer is that I do masses of research!   It’s a sort of two way process, I suppose.  So far, with my novels, I’ve begun with an idea, and sketched out a basic plot.  Then I’ve started to research, and although sticking to the basic outline, I find that the things I find as I research tend to influence the way the story works.  I discover an unexpected fact, which so intrigues or delights me that I know I’m going to have to bring it into the book, and so everything has to shift a little to allow the new information to take its place.  I really love all the domestic minutiae of past centuries, and researching that is painstaking but fascinating – food, clothes, travel, hygiene (not always very palatable!) architecture, flora and fauna, weather (for example, I found a wonderful Internet site which listed all the solar eclipses over the past seven hundred years, and provided a diagram for each one showing which exact parts of the world were darkened by each eclipse on which exact day!  How on earth does anyone know that??)  Finding out about the lime was a great moment, I have to admit!  I have an etymological dictionary, so I try to check the origins of pretty well every word I use, to make sure it existed in the sixteenth century.
  
With The Courtesan’s Lover, I of course spent a long time researching the lives of the great courtesans, but having steeped myself in the glitter and glamour of their often extraordinary lives, I worried that I might be in danger of over-romanticising my own courtesan (the way we tend to do with pirates and highwaymen etc), so to redress the balance, I also read a collection of writing from contemporary women in the modern sex industry.  What I read was shocking, vulgar, heart-breaking, funny, tragic, outrageous – and it opened my eyes to the motivations and mind-set of my central character.  It was a revelation.

I like to do as much hands-on research as I can, as I find I can write about something more easily when I’ve actually done it myself.  Of course this has its limitations – I’ve been writing about a courtesan, after all, so as you can imagine, there are a fair number of things in this book for which I’ve relied entirely on imagination and reading!

3. Is there anything you find particularly challenging when you’re writing?
I suppose the most challenging thing is coping with my own insecurities.  Like most creative people I’m often beset by doubts – luckily though, I have a wonderful writing group, who are all my most supportive allies, as well as my fiercest critics.  We meet once a month to share work (we are all MA in Creative Writing graduates) and I value their advice and feedback more highly than I think they realise.

4. Are you a plan-the-whole-book-out person or a write-as-it-comes person?
Somewhere in between.  I need a basic structure planned out – like an armature inside a sculpture – but I like to feel free to deviate from that basic structure if that’s how it seems the story ought to go.    The thing with characters in novels is that, although as the writer you know pretty much what your characters are going to do, you don’t always know how they are going to feel about it when they get there.  And those feelings and reactions can change how you feel about the story ahead.

5. What’s next on the table for Gabrielle Kimm?
Well, Little Brown have commissioned a third novel – it’s set in the Italian Renaissance too – though with a totally different cast of characters, and a very different feel to it.  It’s a bit early on to give away much more than that – but I’ll keep you posted!  It’s due out in November 2013, and I’m madly busy writing it right now!

6. What are you reading now?
I’ve just started reading ‘What’s Eating Gilbert Grape’ by American writer, Peter Hedges.  It was made into a film a few years ago, with Johnny Depp and Leonardo di Caprio, and it’s gentle, quirky and absolutely delightful.  “ ... an elegy for those outsiders and misfits who find themselves sidetracked from the American Dream”, says the New York Times. 

7. Favourite historical fiction authors & authors who inspire you?
I grew up reading Rosemary Sutcliff’s wonderful historical novels for children – she revels in the domestic minutiae of past centuries which so enchants me, and there is something very tender and charming about her writing.  As far as contemporary historical fiction authors – those I rate most highly would be Sarah Waters and Rose Tremain, I reckon, along with Deborah Swift and Hallie Rubenhold.   Other authors – oh, I do find it so hard to pick individuals out of the whole.  I read SO much, and fall in love with one author after another.  I suppose I must be very fickle.

8. If you could be dropped into any book as a character, who would you be and why?
What a great question!  I’m not at all sure how to answer it.  I’m tempted to say I’d be Elizabeth Bennet in Pride and Prejudice, because then I could get close to the ever-adorable Mr Darcy (how predictable of me!) but the child in me would love to get a chance to spend a term or two at Hogwarts, I reckon.

9. Do you have a guilty pleasure?
Chocolate.

10. Describe yourself in 3 words
Enthusiastic, inquisitive, anxious.

Free choice?
People often ask me (as they do most writers) what you need to do to be a writer.  So here are a couple of thoughts about that, to finish off with.  I think that the first and most important piece of advice to any aspiring writer would be to read.  And read a bit more.  And then read again.  Read widely – in the genre you want to write, and outside it.  Read the shortlists for the big prizes and read them like a writer – work out for yourself HOW they’ve achieved their effects.  Also, be observant.  Observe all the time.  Observe the world around you and the people in it, and record what you discover – it’s those observations, translated into images in a novel, which stick in the reader’s mind and make a book memorable. Does that make any sort of sense?

Thank you so much for having me on the blog, Sheree – it’s been a pleasure talking to you!

Likewise Gabrielle ... thanks so much for taking the time to answer my questions. I can't wait to get stuck into The Courtesan's Lover! PS. I wanted to name my kindle Mr Darcy but someone beat me to it, you aren't alone in your Mr Darcy admiration :)

Connect with Gabrielle Kimm on her websiteblog or twitter


Synopsis:
When sixteen-year-old Lucrezia de' Medici marries the fifth Duke of Ferrara, Alfonso d'Este, she imagines life with her handsome husband will be idyllic. But little does she know that he is a very complicated man. The marriage is fraught with difficulties from the start, and, as time passes, Lucrezia becomes increasingly alienated. For Alfonso, the pressure mounts as the Vatican threatens to reclaim his title should the couple remain unable to produce an heir. Only his lover Francesca seems able to tame his increasing fury. But Alfonso's growing resentment towards his duchess soon becomes unbearable, and he begins to plot an unthinkable way to escape his problems. Originally inspired by a Robert Browning poem, His Last Duchess gorgeously brings to life the passions and people of sixteenth-century Tuscany and Ferrara. It is a story you are unlikely to forget for a long time.

Synopsis:
Francesca Felizzi, former mistress of the Duke of Ferrara, is now an aspiring courtesan. Astonishingly beautiful and ambitious, she revels in the power she wields over men. But when she is visited by an inexperienced young man, it becomes horribly clear to Francesca that despite her many admiring patrons, she has never truly been loved. Suddenly, her glittering and sumptuous life becomes a gaudy facade. And then another unexpected encounter brings with it devastating implications that plunge Francesca and her two young daughters into the sort of danger she has dreaded ever since she began to work the streets all those years ago.


GIVEAWAY:
1 copy of THE COURTESAN'S LOVER & 1 copy of HIS LAST DUCHESS

If you'd like to win a copy just leave a comment or question for Gabrielle (she'll be popping in) and don't forget your email address. Yes it's INTERNATIONAL :) 


EXTRA ENTRIES:
+2 tweet giveaway and leave a link

Giveaway ends 21st July and the winners will be announced on my blog. Good luck everyone!


29 comments:

  1. Both novels sound great, but I'm really intrigued by Last Duchess. Thanks for the giveaway.
    lcbrower40(at)gmail(dot)com

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  2. Thanks for the giveaway.

    lizzi0915 at aol dot com

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  3. Both of these sound fantastic!

    bippityboppitybook at ymail dot com

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  4. So enjoyed this interview!! I love "What's eating Gilbert Grape"!! The books sound WONDERFUL!!! Thanks for the chance to win!! bmwgirl@cox.net

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  5. Hi Gabrielle, Do you have a connection with Royalty as you seem to write with such conviction.

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  6. I can't wait to get my hot little hands on one of your books!

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  7. We share the same guilty pleasure :)
    Both books sound amazing! I can't wait to read THE COURTESAN'S LOVER.
    Thanks a lot for the giveaway!
    eli_green22 at yahoo dot com dot br

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  8. I'm sure I'd enjoy either one of these stories. Thanks for the chance to win.

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  9. Ohhh international!! :D
    (booksforlife01) (at) (gmail) (dot) com

    Read, read and read. Well at least I got that one down :D
    As for a question..hm, which other genre would you love to try and write in`?

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  10. Thanks everyone for stopping by ... Gabrielle has some technical issues but she's working on them & is hoping to pop in soon :)

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  11. I loved the interview! Thanks for taking the time to talk to us!

    amybrooks0730@yahoo.com

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  12. I love the air of intrigue in both of these books.

    kmccandle(at)yahoo(dot)com

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  13. Nice Interview, That's a great advice for aspiring authors. I want to know when was the moment you said to yourself, "I will be an author"? =) Thanks for the giveaway and for doing it INT!
    Lissette_125 at hotmail dot com

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    1. Tweeted: https://twitter.com/LzzMrtnz/status/221973480722276354

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  14. i'm intrigued by those so thank you a lot for this opportunity to win ( and for opening it to international)

    all the best

    isabelle(dot)frisch(at)gmail(dot)com

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  15. sounds very interesting :)and it´s also really great that it´s international

    Amerikaner92@gmx.net

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  16. :OOO I would love to be Elizabeth Bennet too just for the chance to swoon for Mr. Darcy! I love your book cover, for me is always interesting the story behind the covers. What were you looking for in the covers for you to say "this is the one"
    Thank you for the giveaway! ^^
    Tweeted:https://twitter.com/Gisselle_Alv/status/223258727757791233

    ilepachequin(at)hotmail(dot)com

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  17. Great giveaway! I'd love to be entered.

    Please count me in. Thanks.

    avalonne83 [at] yahoo [dot] it

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  18. Hello everyone - thank you so much for all the comments. I've been battling my technical inabilities, but hopefully this will post, and I'll be able to check in and answer all your questions. Bear with me! xx

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  19. Yay! It worked!! Answers now - firstly to answer dock_ris's ... erm no, I don't have any connection to Royalty! And to Blodeuedd - I think I'd rather like to try writing a murder mystery. That might be rather fun - Gabrielle xx

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  20. Hi again - to Lissette: I really cant remember when I first thought I'd like to write novels, but I think I was about twelve. (It took quite long time to achieve the ambition!) And to Gisele - I'm afraid that with a big publisher like Little, Brown, the author doesn't have that much say in the cover design of a book. It's all governed by Sales and Marketing, who are the ones who really know what sells and why.

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  21. Great interview and a nice way to meet a new-to-me author. I'minterested in reading one of her books!

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  22. These both sound amazing!!! I defintely want to read these! Thanks!

    Margaret
    singitm(at)hotmail(dot)com

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  23. How do you choose the names of your characters? It might seem an odd question but I find that the names are one of the things that makes a story immersive and I wondered whether you research them beforehand. :)

    kate1485 at hotmail dot com

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  24. Thanks for making it open to all. So much, much appreciated.

    mystica123athotmaildotcom

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  25. Hi Jasmine - names are so difficult to explain. So much of writing seems to me to be a case of 'discovery' rather than 'invention', and I find names to be like this. I just find that I know what my characters are called. (I check of course that the names which I've 'discovered' are historically accurate!) Funnily enough, though, Luca, in The Courtesan's Lover didn't get his name easily - it's one of the few I've struggled with!

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  26. Wonderful interview and giveaway!
    I've tweeted, shared on facebook and Pinterest.
    karenaminadra at yahoo dot co dot uk

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  27. Great interview. Very interesting and illuminating

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  28. Thank you for hosting this. I can't wait to read these books, I love being caught up amongst the characters and in another world.
    chix_ta(at)hotmail(dot)com

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