Showing posts with label In The Shadow Of Blackbirds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label In The Shadow Of Blackbirds. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

[It's My Birthday, So We're Partying With My Favorite Book Of The Year]

Guys, did you hear that?  
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Yes, it could have been early fireworks, lit by people who just can't wait till July 4th, but I'm sure that they were for me.  Cause... wait for it...
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Today is my birthday! (but I already told you that in the title of this post...)
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 I'm a quarter of a century old today, so that's kinda weird.  I remember when I thought 25 was old, but here I am, and it doesn't seem so old now.  (Okay, it still kinda does)  But it doesn't matter, because I LOVE birthdays!  So much!  They are some of the coolest things out there, in my opinion! 
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But enough about me already.  Since none of you will be able to attend my party tonight I figured that I'd throw one on here, one that we can all get excited about and I even invited a special guest!  Cause we all know that parties are cooler when you have a special guest, right?  I can't tell you how much I've come to love book blogging.  This little blog started in February and it just keeps bringing the coolest books and people into my life!  So thanks for rocking so much!  Oh yeah, back to the special guest!

Introducing: Cat Winters (author of In the Shadow of Blackbirds and my favorite read of 2013... so far)

(CM) First thank you Cat for stopping by on my birthday!  It's great to have you here!  So let's start this off.  In the Shadow of Blackbirds is set during World War I, what made you pick that War as part of your setting?
(Cat) First of all, happy birthday! Thank you so much for inviting me to be here to help you celebrate.
I picked World War I because I was extremely fascinated by the history of Spiritualism in the United States. The U.S. Civil War and WWI were two moments in time when séances and spirit photography flourished due to widespread grief. I'm more interested in early-twentieth-century history than the 1860s, so I opted to portray the resurgence of Spiritualism in 1918.

(CM) I didn't really know much about The Spanish Flu, but it plays a large role in your book, what made you want to add that element of doom into the mix?
(Cat) When I dug into 1918 history, the flu emerged as a major factor in people's lives...and it added another explanation for the séance and spirit photography craze of the era. When the average life expectancy suddenly drops to the age of 39 in a year, it makes sense that people would have been desperate for comfort. The more I wrote, the more the flu became almost a character in the novel, breathing down my protagonist's neck. When I read personal accounts of 1918, I noticed people were frustrated that this killer flu sprang up right when they were already worrying about the war, so I wanted to portray the disease as a bully that came out of nowhere and made an already bad situation so much worse.


(CM) Spiritualism also has a huge role in In the Shadow of Blackbirds.  What was your favorite part about researching spirit photographers and the like?
(Cat) Researching Spiritualism was both entertaining and heartbreaking. During the WWI era, fraudulent spirit mediums and photographers who claimed to capture the images of departed loved ones were basically illusionists who were out to capitalize on grief. When we look back at the photographs of "spirits" from back then, it's hard to understand how people could have been fooled by these obviously faked photos of paper-cutout ghosts and people hiding beneath sheets. It's easy to chuckle at their gullibility, but it's also extremely sad to think that mourners were genuinely fooled into believing they were viewing photographs of their deceased relatives. My favorite part of the research was learning the tricks the photographers employed long before the age of Photoshop, but at the back of my head, my heart was always hurting for their victims.

(CM) What came first?  The want to tell a ghost story or the want to write a historical novel?

(Cat) That's a hard question to answer. I've been a fan of both ghost tales and historical fiction since childhood. I fell in love with ghost stories around the age of eight, and when I was about nine, I read my first favorite historical novel: Frances Hodgson Burnett's A Little Princess. I'm drawn to reading books that blend history and ghosts, so I suppose it was natural for me to want to write such a novel.

(CM) Mary Shelley Black!  How'd you come up with adding literature and German culture into the story with a simple name?
(Cat) Mary Shelley Black showed up in my head with her name intact. I don't know why, but that's what she insisted on being called, and it's not always easy to argue with her. Before I even sat down to write the novel, I had been studying the violence and prejudice against German-Americans during WWI, and I learned about the frenzied drive to remove German culture and the German language from the United States. I realized a girl who had been named after the author of Frankenstein--a book with a Swiss German title--would have to be careful about her own name if she discussed its origin out loud. I also felt it would be interesting to give her a family of Swiss German origin. As described in the novel, Swiss immigrants like Mary Shelley's family truly did run dairy farms in the western hills of Portland, Oregon, and anyone with a heritage remotely German would have needed to go the extra mile to prove they were "100% American."
I included a few other nods to Frankenstein throughout In the Shadow of Blackbirds. The book is by no means a retelling of the classic horror novel, but Mary Shelley Black's life is definitely intertwined with Shelley's tale of reanimated life and science.


(CM) In all of your research I'm sure you came across a favorite ghost story from WWI, can you tell us about it?
(Cat) Actually, I didn't come across any ghost tales during my WWI research, although the accounts of haunted human beings who experienced the war were far more chilling than any ghost story. I did a quick check of WWI ghost legends after reading your question, and there are indeed several tales of haunted battle sites and WWI cemeteries in France. I've heard firsthand accounts of people feeling a sense of eeriness at Gettysburg here in the U.S., so I suppose the same would be true at other battlefields across the world, especially ones involving a massive loss of lives.

(CM) Out of all of the characters in your book, which one was your favorite to write?
(Cat) Mary Shelley Black, without a doubt. This book would have been extremely difficult and depressing to write if I didn't pick the right narrator, but seeing this dark, horrific world though Mary Shelley's scientific, optimistic, brutally honest eyes transformed the entire story into something almost magical. I have a soft spot for Stephen, of course, and hope he forgives me for what I put him through in this book. I also thoroughly enjoyed writing Jones and Carlos, two side characters who didn't show up in the novel until a later draft. But if I had to pick just one person, I'd say Mary Shelley is definitely my girl. 

(CM) Can you tell us a little bit about your new book?  (You have no idea how excited I am for it!)
(Cat) Thank you for your excitement! That's encouraging to hear as I experience second-book jitters. :) The novel is called The Cure for Dreaming, and it's about a seventeen-year-old girl in 1900 America. Her father is terrified that she's going to turn into a suffragist and a "modern woman," so he hires a talented young hypnotist to remove rebellious, unfeminine thoughts from her head. Naturally, the cure doesn't go quite as planned. The novel will be available from Amulet Books in Fall 2014...and like In the Shadow of Blackbirds, it will contain historical photographs and illustrations.

(CM) Thank you so much for stopping by and helping us celebrate today Cat!

And now, a GIVEAWAY!!!

Seriously, if you haven't read In the Shadow of Blackbirds, you need to go and get your hands on a copy.  Or you can try your luck at winning one here!  That's right, I'm giving away a beautiful hardback copy of In the Shadow of Blackbirds to one of you lucky guys!  I wish I could give you all a copy, but that takes lots of the money...

The giveaway is international, just make sure that The Book Depository ships to you, before you enter.
a Rafflecopter giveaway

Till next year,
Christianna
*throws confetti* 

Monday, June 10, 2013

[Review: In The Shadow Of Blackbirds by Cat Winters]

"In the Shadow of Blackbirds"
Author: Cat Winters
Pages: 387
Genre: YA, Historical Fiction, Paranormal
Date Published: April 2nd, 2013
Publisher: Amulet Books
Format Read: Finished copy from the library

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Summary:

In 1918, the world seems on the verge of apocalypse. Americans roam the streets in gauze masks to ward off the deadly Spanish influenza, and the government ships young men to the front lines of a brutal war, creating an atmosphere of fear and confusion. Sixteen-year-old Mary Shelley Black watches as desperate mourners flock to séances and spirit photographers for comfort, but she herself has never believed in ghosts. During her bleakest moment, however, she’s forced to rethink her entire way of looking at life and death, for her first love—a boy who died in battle—returns in spirit form. But what does he want from her?

Featuring haunting archival early-twentieth-century photographs, this is a tense, romantic story set in a past that is eerily like our own time.
-Goodreads 
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My Thoughts:

I seriously want to put this book high up on a pedestal with an escalator next to it (because I'm lazy) so I can go up and look at it and read it and pet it!  This book was combination of all the things that I love.  It's drenched in history, dread, death, the paranormal and twists that I wasn't even expecting.  Cat Winters did her homework on the world that she created and all of that hard work shows in the details that she added into the atmospheric prose of In the Shadows of Blackbirds.

The most impressive thing about this book is just how deeply rooted int history it is.  I found out some really interesting and disturbing things while reading this book and to me that adds to the reading experience in so many different ways.  As a native Californian myself I was excited that this was a war story set in San Diego.  This book not only touches on World War 1, but also the Spanish Flu (I don't think I'll ever think of an ambulance the same way again), spiritualism and the fear that all of those things brought on.  Though I know a lot about the war I didn't know a lot about any of the other subjects that were covered in this book.

The book is dark.  The tale is dark and the feeling that it leaves you with are ones that makes you just slightly afraid while you're reading it.  It's so subtle that, whispering so softly in your ear that you almost don't know that the fear is there.  That's how well crafted the atmosphere of this book is.  It teases you with all of the info and forces you to see the things that the characters are feeling and seeing in a way that keeps your mind clouded enough that when things are finally revealed you are surprised.

Mary Shelley Black is a strong protagonist and Winters takes her through some ringers.  Seriously, the things that this girl has to deal with were things that a lot of people dealt with in 1918, but seeing it through Mary Shelley's eyes makes it personal.  I loved her internal dialogue and the words that came out of her mouth.  She was a sharp witted, little thing and her lack of fear and curious mind made her someone that you could connect with on some level, if not all of them.  She feared the things around her and yet pushed through that fear to find the truth!

Mary Shelley and Stephan's relationship is haunting (both literally and figuratively).  It's heartbreaking and interesting to watch their relationship between their old letters and Stephan returning to the living world in his own way.  It'll tug at your heartstrings and make you smile all at the same time, while also shedding a tear.

All of the secondary characters were well used.  Both Embers brothers, Julius and Stephan had their parts to play and in a way your heart broke for both of them.  Aunt Eva was a young girl who wasn't ready to have to step up to the jobs of a man and yet she tried the best she could.  Even the smaller characters served their purposes in helping the mystery unfold.  The men rehabilitating in the Red Cross even had a special place in my heart.  

I think one of the other things about this book that impressed me, is that Winters managed to also give us a coming of age tale wrapped in all the other things that I've mentioned.  People were fearing for their lives and loves on a daily basis and yet they still had to go about their business and even the people of German descent had to hide their heritage.  It's interesting to see Mary Shelley survive and thrive in discovering herself in a world that was trying to hide from death and jail and a slew of other terrible things.

If you are a fan of historical fiction and ghosts and things that go bump in the night, then this is the book for you.  Even if you don't enjoy those things, I highly suggest this book.  It's rich and creepy and so well paced that you will be left satisfied and wanting more when you turn the last page!

Side Note: The book is so beautiful and the pictures add so much to it.  AKA get yourself a print copy if you can!

Rating:
               5 Unicorns = Get your hands on this right now!