Happy Wednesday Everyone! Today I’m excited to have debut author Diana Pinguicha here to share about her YA fantasy, A Curse of Roses. It’s based on a Portuguese legend and is a historical fantasy, which makes me excited to read it.
With just one touch, bread turns into roses. With just one bite, cheese turns into lilies.
There’s a famine plaguing the land, and Princess Yzabel is wasting food simply by trying to eat. Before she can even swallow, her magic—her curse—has turned her meal into a bouquet. She’s on the verge of starving, which only reminds her that the people of Portugal have been enduring the same pain.
If only it were possible to reverse her magic. Then she could turn flowers…into food.
Fatyan, a beautiful Enchanted Moura, is the only one who can help. But she is trapped by magical binds. She can teach Yzabel how to control her curse—if Yzabel sets her free with a kiss.
As the King of Portugal’s betrothed, Yzabel would be committing treason, but what good is a king if his country has starved to death?
With just one kiss, Fatyan is set free. And with just one kiss, Yzabel is yearning for more.
She’d sought out Fatyan to help her save the people. Now, loving her could mean Yzabel’s destruction.
Based on Portuguese legend, this #OwnVoices historical fantasy is an epic tale of mystery, magic, and making the impossible choice between love and duty…
Purpose: To share and encourage. Writers can express doubts and concerns without fear of appearing foolish or weak. Those who have been through the fire can offer assistance and guidance. It’s a safe haven for insecure writers of all kinds!
I'm going to skip the optional question. I have a favor to ask. FYI, if you read my post on Monday, you've already read this.
If you like Literary Rambles and find it helpful, I would appreciate it if you would nominate my blog
for Writer's Digest 101 Best Websites. They are doing it differently this year, and you need to fill out a form to nominate a blog or website. In the blog post announcing the call for nominations, they say that you can nominate yourself and ask your followers to also nominate you. FYI I nominated myself in the everything agent category, which seems to fit my blog the best.
This is the Writer's Digest post that contains the nomination form. The deadline for nominations is December 18, 2020.
I am asking this favor not because I want the recognition, which is gratifying I admit, but because it will give Literary Rambles more exposure to writers who may not know about it and who can benefit from my author interviews and agent spotlight interviews. My mission here is to help other aspiring writers and debut authors on their publishing journey. Being named a 101 best website would really help with this goal.
Thanks so much if you decide to nominate Literary Rambles. I really appreciate your help. And consider nominating The Insecure Writer's Support Group. I just did! It's a fantastic group, and I am grateful for all you do to support writers and authors.
Interview with Diana Pinguicha
Hi Diana! Thanks so much for joining us.
1. Tell us about yourself and how you became a writer.
I always
wrote because I genuinely enjoy it. But after being in Engineering classes and
spending them writing rather than paying attention, I realized I was stubbornly
denying myself what I wanted to do: WRITE. I’d gone in for Engineering thinking
it was the easiest way to get myself into video game development and game
writing, and I plowed away at programming while it sucked out my soul. I was on
my 4th year when I took the Proficiency in English Exam and my
teacher, Harry, read some of my short stories and essays and urged me to change
courses.
I kept on in
Engineering because at that point, might as well finish my degree. But Harry’s
words stuck and I kept on writing on the side and trying to get published.
It was when I was between books with my former agent. I was debating ideas, and thinking, “What’s a
story that’s unique to me and not many people outside of Portugal have heard of?” And my mind immediately went to Isabel of Aragon, who’s a central figure in my hometown. We have a statue of her, and my high school is even named after her!
So I decided
to try and do a re-telling of her story, but making it my own.
I didn’t do
much research in the legend, per se. I’d heard about it all my life and could
quote the whole thing from memory from a very early age.
What I DID
have to research was Isabel’s life, as well as her joint ruling with Denis I. I
also went into a deep dive on the Moor occupation, and the Reconquest (I hate
that name) and came to learn that what
actually happened was very different from what we’re taught in history
classes. I owe Archeologist Cláudio Torres a debt of gratitude for that.
I also read a
lot of Moura legends—turns out we have several, and they were a joy to
discover. Also pretty frustrating, because 99% of them involve a Moura dying by
suicide over a man. Which… ugh.
The plotting
process was mostly sound in the beginning and end. I knew I wanted to end with
the Miracle of Roses, and that I wanted to begin with Yzabel finding and
meeting Fatyan, an Enchanted Moura. It’s… remarkably easy to plot a book when
you know your characters and you know what you want to say.
I also knew I
wanted Yzabel to be good because… she was good. Incredibly so,
and generous and pious to a fault. I wanted to explore those things—how you
should be selfless, but not to the point you neglect yourself. I also wanted to
explore her faith, and how the Bible relies largely on interpretation, and she
was taught to interpret it in the most horrible, self-flagellating ways.
So the story
didn’t really change much. The middle is what I struggled with the most, and
after 3 failed attempts, I settled for what it is now.
I learned a
lot of things! My writing, obviously, became better with each book that failed.
Failures are hard, but they’re not necessarily bad if you learn from them. With
each book, I understood pacing better, as well as how to be economic with
language rather than going on 3-paragraph rants to drive home a point.
Readers are
smart—and I learned that too. It’s a disservice to your audience when you treat
them like they can’t understand or internalize aspects of a book if they’re
said just once.
I also
learned patience. It’s FINE if you take longer to finish a novel. It’s a
marathon, not a sprint. And if you think it can be better, take your time to
make it so.
I got my
agent through an irregular path, and this is not your typical journey.
I had another
agent prior to that who signed me for another book, who read ACOR and said it
was Adult Fantasy, and that she couldn’t see a way to make it Young Adult. She
no longer represented Adult Fantasy and felt it was best if we parted ways.
That stung. But as I read her e-mail, I realized there was no point in arguing
with her, because I could immediately think of ways to make it skew more YA,
and that she couldn’t think of them or even ask me told me a lot. She was nice
about giving me referrals, but none of them panned out.
So, I queried
agents. I got a record of full requests (upwards of 30, plus 20 partials) and
they all came back rejections. A lot were forms. Some were borderline ableist
(my MC feels too much? Seriously? Nice thing to tell a neurodivergent author
who’s heard that all her life about herself). Some were just… *eye roll*
I was ready
to give up when my now-editor reached out after PitMad. They didn’t promise an
offer, but they said I’d get feedback regardless. I thought, well, what do I
have to lose if I submit to Entangled? So, I did. Weeks later, I was notified
it would be taken to acquisitions (!!) but that I should rewrite the first
chapter to make it stronger. Which I did in two days! That week, it went to
acquisitions, and I had an offer!
Problem is… the contract was, well, a contract. And while I’m smart, I don’t
have experience in negotiating. Some friends helped, and I was ready to go in
agent-less. But I still nudged everyone who still had the book, and sent out
some queries with the offer. An author told me I’d never get one with an offer
from Entangled because “they’re a bad publisher” and compared them to
Month9—this is to highlight that you’ll get advice, and it might be good, or it
might be bad. That was bad advice. In NO WAY is Entangled like Month9, and I
was sure of that, especially after talking to other Entangled Teen authors.
That’s when
Mia Segert (who wrote JERKBAIT and SOMEBODY TOLD ME—which you should read if
you can!) referred me to Travis, who was closed to queries at the time. Then
Travis offered, and that was that!
Mostly, I
learned to listen. If your editor brings up an issue, trust them, even if you
might not agree with it. If you agree, great! If you don’t (and it’s fine!)
take a couple of days to ask yourself why, and if you still feel strongly, talk
it out. Don’t be afraid of your editor, since they want the same thing you do:
make the book the best it can be!
One of the
reasons I chose Entangled (I had another offer of publication, actually!) was
that they had good distribution through Macmillan. I’d seen Entangled books in
brick-and-mortar stores, and they were also available at online retailers
everywhere. So I knew my book would get that same treatment—and distribution is
a really important thing authors should pay attention to. Especially since most
of my friends are abroad, and I wanted them to be able to order it too!
With the pandemic,
it’s probably easier for me, actually! Silver linings, I guess? I already have
some events scheduled with booksellers in the US, as well as bloggers and
podcasts.
If the
pandemic hadn’t happened, who knows? But I was actually planning on flying to
the US and making my own book tour happen—I am shameless in that way, and very
thrifty when it comes to travelling. Perks of having friends whose couches I
can use all over. I’m still a bit miffed I won’t be there in person, and I’m
especially miffed that I won’t get to do my book launch in Minneapolis, where
my best friend in the whole world is. I really wanted her there with me ☹
I’m now
currently working as a ghostwriter to pay the bills as my day job, and
slowlyyyy re-plotting and revising my previous YA Fantasy book about chaotic
pansexuals and mental illness (I think I just hit a breakthrough on that one!)
I’m also
slowly researching the 1383-1385 Crisis in Portugal for another YA Historical
about the legend of the Baker of Aljubarrota and the story of Leonor Teles, who
was done SO DIRTY in our history lessons.
And then
there’s also my super long Adult Fiction WIP that’s a blend of science fiction
and fantasy, fueled by my really missing my grandmother that’s passed, and who
was magic herself. Like grandmothers often are, you know?
Website: https://pinguicha.wordpress.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Pinguicha
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pinguicha/
Giveaway Details
If you mention this contest on Twitter, Facebook, or your blog and/or follow me on Twitter, mention this in the comments and I'll give you an extra entry for each. You must be 13 years old or older to enter. This giveaway is International to anywhere that Blackwells ships to.
Monday, December 14th I have a guest post by debut author M.L. Tarpley about marketing and school visits during COVID-19 and a giveaway of her MG contemporary Malie and the Maize
Wednesday, January 6th I have an interview with debut author Olivia Chadha and a giveaway of her YA dystopian Rise of the Red Hand and my IWSG post
Monday, January 11th I have an interview with debut author Caroline Gertler and a giveaway of her MG contemporary Many Points of Me
Monday, January 18th I have a guest post by debut author Dana Swift and her agent Amy Brewer and a query critique giveaway and book giveaway of Dana's YA fantasy Cast in Firelight
Hope to see you Monday!
A wonderful post and a great interview with Diana,
ReplyDeleteA good read to start my day Natalie ....thank you.
Yvonne.
Great read and an intriguing take on the legend. Thank you!I shall fill up the nomination form for the Writer's Digest. I think it's on the IWSG facebook page.
ReplyDeleteHi Natalie. I nominated Literary Rambles. Thanks for all you do. Great interview. I love that Diana went from engineering to writing.
ReplyDeleteI just nominated Literary Rambles. Your interviews are well written and inspiring. I wish you the very best of luck!
ReplyDeleteThank you for co-hosting the December IWSG blog-hop
Lynn La Vita blog: Writers Supporting Writers
Diana's book sounds wonderful! I love books based on folk lore and legend. And I adore Literary Rambles. Off to nominate . . .
ReplyDeleteWill do! Your blog is worthy of such a honor!
ReplyDeleteBest of luck with the nominations! I added yours and a few others.
ReplyDeleteNow she doesn't have to fly here! That worked.
ReplyDeleteI nominated you the other day.
Thanks for co-hosting today!
Love the sound of Diana's book - full of the very best kinds of complexities. A Curse of Roses is also a great title!
ReplyDeleteOff to nominate!
I never thought of the pandemic making a book launch easier, but you're so right. Congratulations, Diana. I hope you have great success and lots of fun.
ReplyDeleteDefinitely voting for you Natalie, I mean Literary Rambles.
ReplyDeleteDiana's A Curse of Roses sounds awesome. I would love to win a copy.
Hi,
ReplyDeleteThank you, Natalie. I have just sent in my vote for you. I sincerely hope you get listed.
Wishing you a Merry Christmas and a safe passage into 2021
Shalom aleichem,
Pat G @ EverythingMustChange
I love the title and cover of Diana's book. Literary Rambles certainly does deserve an award, so nominated you and IWSG. You're right. The award will bring attention to the great resource you have put together for authors. Thanks for co-hosting!
ReplyDeleteA Curse of Roses sounds fascinating! So was your interview.
ReplyDeleteA Curse of Roses sounds fascinating! And, yes, I'll hop over and nominate this blog right now! @samanthabwriter from
ReplyDeleteBalancing Act
Thanks for co-hosting today! I loved your interview and hope you get lots of exposure for your blog. I’m a new follower now! :)
ReplyDeleteGreat blog today and I entered Literary Rambles in Writer's Digest contest.
ReplyDeleteThanks for cohosting this month. Good interview.
ReplyDeleteYou can sign a contract without an agent (as us small to mid-range publishers do that all the time) but you should have an entertainment law or similar lawyer look it over before signing.
ReplyDeleteLove the title and the basis for Diana's story. It sounds so intriguing. And here's to your success, Natalie! I know you'll make the cut and be included among the 101 best. I'm doing my nominations this week for sure.
ReplyDeleteA curse of roses seems to be an interesting read.
ReplyDeleteDone, Natalie. I also nominated myself. lol No harm in trying, right? :)
ReplyDeleteForm filling? I can do that. :-)
ReplyDeleteAnna from elements of emaginette
I'm more than happy to nominate Literary Rambles, Natalie!
ReplyDeleteThank you for co-hosting, and a very Merry Christmas to you ;-)
Got my nomination in! Hoping for the best for you!
ReplyDeleteNatalie,I will get my nomination in for you. Your blog is helpful to so many writers.
ReplyDeleteThank you for co-hosting with me too!!!
Done the nomination. Fingers crossed... Also enjoyed this interview; the genre is not one I usually read, but love stories that come from folklore.
ReplyDeleteNatalie - Nominated!
ReplyDeleteGreat interview. I think it's tough how long a book takes to find a publishing home, but it's also really good when a book lands in the right place with the right people.
I nominated your site too. You cover so many writers who would normally not receive any attention. Thanks for your hard work.
ReplyDeleteSo cool to find your blog. I'll nominate you. Happy IWSG Day. Thank you for co-hosting!
ReplyDelete@Diana: your book sounds very interesting. And the cover is gorgeous.
ReplyDelete@Natalie: I'm going to follow your link and nominate you right now.
Wishing you success with Writer's Digest!
ReplyDeleteHappy December, too :)
Happy to nominate Literary Rambles. The interview with Diana Pinguicha says it all in terms of the value of your content. Congrats to Diana on what promises to be a fascinating read!
ReplyDeleteIt sounds like a fascinating book. And it sounds like she's got some interesting books coming up (once they're finished :)
ReplyDeleteNominated!!
ReplyDeleteA Curse of Roses sounds wonderful!
Great interview, Natalie and Diana! I nominated Literary Rambles, Natalie. Your site is amazing!
ReplyDeleteYou have been instrumental to the writing community, Natalie, and lots of us have followed your blog with interest and learned a lot along the way. I especially like your agent interviews.
ReplyDeleteSo, of course, I nominated you. Your site deserves it big time. And, of course, I nominated the IWSG (for two categories, actually), as they totally belong to be part of the Writer's Digest 101 best sites too. :-)
Nominated away!
ReplyDeleteAlways good when you can quote the whole thing by memory. Makes research way easier that way haha
Blog nominated! I love the sound of Diane's story.
ReplyDeleteA thoroughly informative post as always Natalie! I hope your blog makes it into the best blogs! You deserve it!
ReplyDeleteReally enjoyed this interview with Diana and the usual amazing collection of ideas and resources . . . so I nominated you as well. Have a very good 2021.
ReplyDeleteGood luck with the Writer's Digest 101 Blogs! What a fascinating sounding book by Diana. I love twists on history.
ReplyDeleteA great interview thank you.
ReplyDeletemarypres(AT)gmail(DOT)com
I love your interviews so much! I nominated! Thank you for hosting this month and Happy Holidays to you and your family.
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed the interview and love the cover! I always enjoy when authors put their own spin on either a fairy tale or some kind of legend that we have all heard of, sounds good!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for the interview and amazing giveaway - I'm so excited for A Curse of Roses :)
ReplyDeleteGFC: Megan S.
Email: megan(dot)clarsach(at)gmail(dot)com
Tweet:https://twitter.com/WordsThatStay1/status/1334583029617061897
Natalie, I've also nominated you - all the very best.
ReplyDeleteThanks muchly for hosting this month & for your support & regular visits.
Great interview. Thanks for co-hosting.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThis book sounds so interesting! Added it to my Goodreads list. Thanks for co-hosting!
ReplyDeleteSounds like Diana is on the right track with her publishing career.
ReplyDeleteThanks for co-hosting and have a very merry Christmas season!
Arlee Bird
Tossing It Out
I really want to read this book after reading the author's note in the sample I got to preview. gumshoe0108 (at) msn (dot) com
ReplyDeleteThat's quite a tale on how you got your agent!
ReplyDeleteThanks for co-hosting this month. Best of luck with your Writer's Digest nominations. Thank for sharing A Curse of Roses, it's just the kind of story I like to discover. I too learn a lot from failure, so Diana Pinguicha's story and process to develop this book was insightful.
ReplyDeleteThanks Cathrina for all your news and giveaway contests. Wishing you a Merry Christmas and lots of writing and inspiration for 2021. Take care.
ReplyDeleteSorry Nathalie .....
ReplyDeleteI'm an email subscriber.
ReplyDeleteThanks for co-hosting this month! Adding A Curses of Roses to my TBR list. Nominated your blog. Good luck and Happy Holidays!
ReplyDeletethis was a great interview! i loved the questions and im super interested in this book now! thank you so much for hosting this giveaway.
ReplyDelete(ccwise02@gmail.com)
Amazing interview! Now I want to read this book even more ahh thank you for this giveaway!
ReplyDelete(awesomemehad@gmail.com)