Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Q&A With Vampire Author Viktoria Faust! (Part 1)

With great reviews for her latest novel, Beauty Of The Beast, Viktoria Faust’s work has been labeled “captivating”, “a fantastic story”, and “a five-star page-turner!” In this in-depth two-part interview, author Viktoria Faust opens up about the creation of her vampire novel and her fascinating life story in Croatia.

Hi Viktoria, we’re honored to have you here! Can you summarize the book Beauty Of The Beast?

First of all, this is a book about vampires. I love vampire legends since I am a kid. This book is, however, also about how quickly one can lose his or her humanity. It’s about not giving up and fighting against all odds to overcome life’s hardships. It’s about a girl and a boy with ambiguous personalities.

Where did you find inspiration for the character Viktoria?

I guess I found it in myself; that’s why I gave her my pen-name. The book was written two years after the war in Croatia and I projected my own feelings of despair in it. I was trapped in a small town during wartime, not knowing if there would be a future for me. I was young, in my early twenties, and I wanted to do so much in life. So my female character feels the same as I was back then: She wants to escape. She is looking for the way out. Therefore, when opportunity presents itself she grabs it, no matter what the cost.

Who is your favorite character from your book and why?

Christopher. He is a tragic figure. He is boy who wanted everything and when he got it, he realized it has its cost. He is the one who deserves to be loved, but he was betrayed constantly during his life, and also during his after-life.

How about your least favorite characters? What makes them less appealing to you?

Dreyfuss. He is a weak character but he thinks the world of himself. He does not hold back to reach his goal, even if it means destroying things he knows nothing about. He is deus ex machina (term from old Greek plays meaning: when something unexpected happens that changes the course of the story) in my novel, his actions trigger events that others want to push back.

When you’re writing, do you use any celebrities or people you know as visual inspiration for the characters? If so, have you got any examples?

I create my characters using Victor Frankenstein’s way – I’m taking bits of people I know and create someone new. I never had a character who is exactly like someone I know, but there are bits of people from my life in all my characters. I guess in every character there is little bit of me.ImageViktoria_Faust

Give us an interesting fun fact about the creation of your book.

I wrote it anew three times. The book was narrated twice in the first person and once in the third. Only the characters and Yolanda’s story remained the same after each draft. I wrote the first version of the novel in 72 days. I rewrote it until year 2000 (first version was written in 1994) when it was first published in Croatia. It was a long novel, about 260 000 words. For the English version I shortened it – now it’s “only” 165 000 words. I tend to overdo when I like characters, so I decided the story would be a serial. I’m writing the third part right now, and the fourth part is yet to come.

If you could change ONE thing about your novel, what would it be? Why?

Oh, I hope I’m done changing it! This book has been with me 21 years now, and I consider it adult, mature. It’s time to come to terms with its mistakes.

What was your journey to getting published?

You must know someone who knows someone. Only then people listen.

What is the biggest myth about being a novelist?

That it will make you rich. After 30 published books and 30 years of experience I still have my day job and I write only when I have some free time. To have pocket money from my writing is a rare commodity.

Who influenced you as a writer?

There are a number of great Croatian writers. Old ones like Zagorka and I.B. Mazuranic were female writers when it was strange for woman to be a writer. I like Jules Verne; no one should spend his or her childhood without reading Verne’s work. My first reads were vampire stories from LeFanu, Stoker, Byron… Some people say that my vampire characters are like Ann Rice’s, even though I read the Interview with the Vampire after I wrote my book.

What's next for Viktoria Faust?

Writing the third part of my vampire serial (half done, in progress, depending on free time). I am also writing a sequel of a children fantasy serial (also half done, and also in progress). I also have three other books that I started; they are waiting for – free time!

How about a snippet from your book?Cover_Viktoria_Faust

Here are few pages:
Eventually he found a way to trick me into his games. He caught me in a moment of weakness and took advantage of it. But first I must tell you something about what I felt for Damian’s victims.
I was afraid of them. They were living and walking death. Death that made noises, laughed, made toasts with expensive wines from Damian’s cellar, doing whatever Damian wanted them to do. They were an everlasting reminder: Look, this is what awaits you.
I never tried to approach any of them. They were his and they were condemned…. I always fall in love so easily. I was falling in love with trees, stars and clouds. I was falling in love with books. With the little melodies Damian’s fingers dragged out of the piano. He was breaking my heart saying: This is Christopher’s composition. Once we played this together. Come and sit with me, he said. Let’s try it together.
I was falling in love with dead things, because everything that was alive died and I was doomed to suffer. I did not want to suffer. I did not want to feel.
I was calling them ‘the things’, those doomed, mortal lovers of his. The things. Things that had nothing to do with me, that can’t feel and did not seek compassion. Things that you could ruin and never think about twice. Things to possess and do whatever you want with. Things that can’t say thank you, or I love you, because they are things, dumb and deaf. Things.
But because I was afraid of them, I hated them. I hated them because they were things. So weak and fragile and dumb. Those feelings unfolded in me unknown cruelty. I wanted to hurt them, to prove that they were things or to prove to myself that I was not one of them and that I have power over them. I knew I could do whatever I wanted. Damian wouldn’t mind. Damian would be… on my side? Oh, Damian was always on my side, feeding my little wickedness, and the merciless ideas of my little mind, which had already developed considerably, and had become a sophisticated criminal mind, you know? Damian thought this was amusing.
But nevertheless I did not hurt anyone. At least not in the beginning.
But then I started to watch them. With yearning. They were like soap bubbles glistening with the light that danced on their surface. They were so close, only to be gone in the next moment. Like flocks of angels fluttering though old attics. Flighty likes shadows of ghosts. I was trying to reach for them to stop them, but they would disappear every time. Oh, how much I wanted to touch them! But it was like I lived in one world and they in another. I needed some link to bridge our worlds. And, I guess, most of all…
I was so terribly alone.
It happened in the oval salon, where anybody rarely lingers. It was beautiful. It looked like some castle-cathedral, with a mosaic stone floor, with an ornament in the middle. The walls and the dome were painted with scenes from Greek mythology. In cavities’ in the ornate pink, yellow and blue walls stood four white marble statues of Apollo, Aphrodite, Athena and Hades. Between each one of them was a massive door of ornamented walnut wood.
The salon ended with a strong crest and dome. In the high of the first floor there were balconies, and on the one of them, that night, I turned up to be.
I don’t really remember why I was there. The balconies could be approached from the first floor. They had white marble fences and were closed from the rest of the house with green velvet curtains. I pulled the curtains and entered.
He stood there, turning around just like he was standing in an empty cathedral, staring at the statues of the saints. He could not see me; I was standing in the shadow. But I saw him so clearly. I had that feeling… Like I was the hunter prowling on his prey, watching it, knowing that it couldn’t see or hear him, and so he loiters for a second to relish in the moment, to embalm it in his memory. To save it for later, when he would remember the power he had over his prey.
He was young, maybe my age, maybe younger, I could not really tell. I cannot even remember his face. I know that he had long, blond hair, colored, it seemed. His eyes were brown. That is all I can remember. And as I try to recollect how his kisses felt it is something I have a hard time remembering. Like it happened to someone else, and not on account of me, and that lover was just an image I dreamed in some feverish dream. Unreal.
The first thing I noticed and surprised me was that he was wearing Damian’s clothes. But he did not really look like Damian, although they were the same height and were similarly built. He was like someone who had put on a costume for a show, in which he would play the role of some mythological hero.
I watched him for a long time. He walked around the auditorium, gazing at the painted scenes, coming closer and then pulling back, touching the sandal clad feet of the god statues, looking up toward their stone faces like they were miraculous healing statues. I watched him almost bewitch, like a spider, crouched at the corner of its net, watching the fly struggling and twitching and dangling in the silky threads. As I watched him, hidden in the shadow, leaning with my hands on the fence, I felt so lightheaded that in the end it seemed to me that the gallery was moving and trembling, and me along with it. There was some familiar and intimate flavor in the air…
“Quid iuvat aspectus, si non conceditur usus.”
His whisper was tenderer than the flutter of butterfly wings. I felt his breath on my nape and quickly I closed my eyes. For a moment I thought these were the words of some prayer, but then, like through a mist, their meaning touched my mind. I smiled and opened my eyes. Down there, the young man didn’t see us. I turned around.
“Oh? And what is that you are suggesting?” I whispered as gently as he did, just with my breath. He was watching my lips move slowly. His eyes were so sharp and hungry. On his cheek and forehead his veins became visible under his porcelain skin. I raised my head and softly touched those blue marks. He sighed and until then I didn’t think he was breathing. I did not understand the pathways of his pain.
I stepped back, but at the same moment he grabbed me and pulled me closer to him. This closeness was at the same time terrible, as much as it was good. He looked at my lips and my face like he was seeing me for the first time, but he avoided my eyes. He began to scare me. Under half-opened lips his white teeth flashed. I could almost imagine those fangs. I could almost imagine them on my skin.
“Take him,” he whispered and then pulled me even closer to him so I was standing on the tips of my toes, uselessly trying to pull away. His lips were so close that they almost touched me. And his breath, flavorless and unnatural, like the breath of the marble statues in the salon under us, disturbed me more than his touch. His predatory eyes looked like they could see every drop of blood that flowed through my body. They sought it with every flash. His fingers on my arms burned my skin. Dangerous. Dangerous. Dangerous.
“He’s yours…“ I didn’t hear the sound. Only his lips moved. The dark crowns of his long lashes trembled. His grip weakened a little. I dared to inhale.
His eyes slowly closed. Horror was screaming through my veins like they were not part of my body. My lips moved and my voice, strange and shaky, whispered:
“You’re giving him to me? Him, who you yourself want so much?”
A spasm disfigured his face, his smile tensed on his lips. But he did not open his eyes.
“Yes… I do…”
Against my will, the sound of his voice made me shiver. So terrible, wild and implacable was his desire.
Some kind of murmur, like when a cat purrs, passed his lips. He let his head fall forward, his silken hair touched my cheek, so soft and cold that I wished I could run my fingers in it, feeling its fullness. His lips fell on my cheek.
He was whispering fast and feverish. I could not understand the words. He was whispering words in Latin like prayers, like songs and like sweet curses. His hands went up on my shoulders. I was trying to free myself from his grip.
“Damian?”
His fingers wrapped themselves in my hair. His hand was cold and unnatural. Hand of death.
“Damian!”
It seemed to me like he was giving in to some inner insatiable instinct that did not care for rules or laws, because it knew nothing of them. That was what he looked like when his head hastily, but somehow lifelessly, fell down toward my neck, and his fingers pulled my high collar that was covering it.
“Damian!” I screamed. The young man down there looked toward us. The sound of my voice echoed and glided off the walls of the round auditorium. The sound of the footsteps. The door opening… closing…
I was wrestling with him, this strange white statue. I screamed again:
“Damian! Let me go! It’s me. Don’t…”
His arms let me go so suddenly that I lost my balance, lurched and ran into the balcony wall. My eyes were wide open in horror, my face pale, and my breathing jerky. I leaned on the wall, not daring to move. He suddenly turned his back on me, leaned his palms on the wall and hid his face in his upper-arms.
We stood like that for what seemed like eternity. The seconds were oozing like blood drops from an open wound. Pain was hungry. It existed from the beginning of the world, and it’ll exist when there won’t be one. There’s no a cure for it. There’s no nourishment that could satisfy it.
His hand moved, but he was still bent over, covering his face. His fingers reached for the green velvet curtains and slowly push them aside. Light flew in.
“I know it’s you…” his whisper was shivering in the waves of restrained passion. His fingers, so white, crumpled the velvet and the color between them looked poisonous. “Go now,” he said and leaned his forehead on the cold wall, like he was a mortal and his forehead was burning and he wished to cool it down with that everlasting cold stone. “Go. He’s been waiting. Take him like he’s…” his voice broke, the curtain slipped from his fingers and his hand made a motion. “Go, little sister.”
For a few seconds I was not able to move. I was staring at his crooked back. His hair fell down, covering his face, but it uncovered his neck and the vein at the side, terribly blue and pulsating. This was not right, I thought. This was not how it was supposed to be. This was not happening.
I tore myself from the wall, made one step, two, and then looked at him. His left arm was hanging like it was dead beside him. He wasn’t moving. It seemed like he wasn’t even breathing.
I pushed the curtains aside and stepped out.

Stay tuned for part 2! Viktoria will go into depth about her experience with war in Croatia, her creative process, what she discovered about herself as she wrote Beauty Of The Beast, and more!

Viktoria's novel is available here:

Amazon http://goo.gl/HnMQg3

Barnes and Noble: http://goo.gl/kVp1FD

Itunes: https://goo.gl/k1OZ6V

Kobo: https://goo.gl/IUwikU

Cover_Viktoria_Faust

No comments:

Post a Comment

Who is Frédéric Byé?