ABOUT
PATRICIA BURROUGHS
Then, however, I got lured over to the dark side—screenwriting.
My first script landed an agent, director, stars, everything needed for the movie to get made but financing. Later scripts [action comedies, romantic comedies, science fiction and fantasies] continued the string of “almosts” until the years 2000 and 2001, when I became the only screenwriter in the history of the Nicholl Fellowships in Screenwriting competition to be a Finalist twice, with two different scripts, and won the second time around. Uncredited but paying work followed, and I was happy with my Hollywood dreams.
Until one day I woke up with a new story rooting itself into my heart, a story that couldn’t be told in a script but needed many more pages to spread out, flex its muscles, and take wing. I returned to novels for this story and am thrilled to see the publication of This Crumbling Pageant, Volume One of the Fury Triad.
I am happily-married ever-after to my high school sweetheart, and we still live in our hometown of Dallas, Texas with our rescue dogs, Jake and Weasel.
ABOUT
THIS CRUMBING PAGEANT
Title: This Crumbling Pageant, Volume One in
The Fury Triad
Publisher: Story Spring Publishing
Release date: May 6, 2014, hardcover, trade and digital
Persephone Fury
is the Dark daughter, the one they hide.
England, 1811.
Few are aware of a hidden magical England, a people not ruled by poor mad
George, but the dying King Pellinore of the House of Pendragon.
The Furys
are known for their music, their magic, and their historic role as kingmakers.
When Fury ambitions demand a
political marriage, Persephone is drugged and presented to Society--
Only to be abducted
from the man she loves by the man she loathes.
But devious and
ruthless, Persephone must defy ancient prophecy, embrace her Dark magic, and
seize her own fate.
Be swept away into
the first book of a dark fantasy series combining swashbuckling adventure,
heart-pounding romance, and plot-twisting suspense.
GET
TO KNOW PATRICIA
MAUREEN: Where do you most
like to read and how often?
PATRICIA: I have a comfy chair with a ratty old footstool to put my feet on. It’s probably my favorite place to read, but you know what? I’m more likely to read in bed. Of course, I also have a Kindle and read standing in line at the supermarket, in waiting rooms, on storm chases with the Resident Storm Chaser [aka husband], at stoplights…
MAUREEN: What’s your
favorite kind of story to get lost in?
PATRICIA: Make me bleed. Make me laugh. Make me
gasp. Make me sigh. I want to feel something—everything—when I read. If the
book is set in England? That’s sheer perfection!
MAUREEN: Where in the world
would you most like to visit?
PATRICIA: I’m embarrassed to admit—England. Why is that embarrassing? Because I’ve been five times, and people always tease me about not going anywhere new. This year we went to Ireland! Loved it! And loved Wales and Scotland, too. But still… England. I feel at home there. I breathe more easily and sleep more soundly, and my soul feels like it’s at home there. Okay, I want to go to the Greek Isles, someday, too.
MAUREEN: What are you
working on now?
PATRICIA: The Dead Shall Live, Volume Two of the Fury Triad.
MAUREEN: What’s the best
vacation you’ve ever been on?
A photo of Cornwall from Patricia's trip |
MAUREEN: Oh, that looks beautiful! Cats or dogs?
PATRICIA: Dogs!
MAUREEN: Hiking boots or
high heels?
PATRICIA: BOTH.
MAUREEN: What was your
favorite book when you were twelve?
PATRICIA: A Wrinkle in Time, by Madeleine
L’Engle.
MAUREEN: What turns you off
like nothing else?
PATRICIA: Bigotry.
MAUREEN: What sound or
noise do you love?
PATRICIA: Surf on the beach, especially outside my window when I’m going to sleep. [In Cornwall!] ← Okay that really doesn’t surprise you, does it?
MAUREEN: :) What’s your
favorite kind of cheese?
PATRICIA: Brie. Cheddar.
Double Gloucester. Wait, why just one? Stilton. Feta. Mozzarella. Wait, don’t
stop me, I have more! Parmesa— Okay, I’ll stop. Resentfully, but I’ll stop. ;-)
MAUREEN: What’s the coolest
thing you’ve ever done to research a book?
PATRICIA: In general—travel. Especially the trips to the UK. But more specifically, I was taken down into a hidden smuggler’s hideout beneath a 500-year-old inn on the coast of Cornwall. I toured the manor house, complete with moat, that was the inspiration for the Furys’ home in The Fury Triad—after I’d already written the first book. It was like stepping into my dreams. And I drove on the left side of the road! [Okay, that wasn’t research in itself, but it was so fun!]
MAUREEN: Who’s your
favorite villain?
PATRICIA: Severus Snape. Norman Bates.
Maleficent.
MAUREEN: Oooo. Good ones! What’s the most
romantic thing anyone ever did for you?
PATRICIA: I was sixteen. He was eighteen. When I thought
he didn’t even like me, he took a cigarette out of my hand and said he never
wanted to see me with one again. He cared! Fist pump! [Reader, I married him.]
[Eventually.] [Still married.]
MAUREEN: If you could
interview one person (and it doesn’t have to be a writer) who would it be?
PATRICIA: Angelina Jolie.
MAUREEN: What was your
favorite subject in school and why?
PATRICIA: Theater. [You have to ask? I am the
original drama queen!]
MAUREEN: Did you belong to
a clique in high school? Which one of the standard high school stereotypes did
you best fit in to?
PATRICIA: Remember My
So-Called Life, and how Angela is kind of all over the place, not sure who she
is, with a foot in every group? Yeah. That.
MAUREEN: Oh, me too! Do you read
reviews of your books? If so, do you pay any attention to them, or let them
influence your writing?
PATRICIA: I do read reviews. I do pay attention
to them. I love reviews, and knowing that somebody cared enough about something
I wrote to take time to say something about it. I read every single review, if
I know it exists. And I do try to
learn from of them, though sometimes the only thing to be learned is that not
every book can be every reader’s cup of tea.
MAUREEN: What does it mean
to love someone?
PATRICIA: To love them not just because, but to
love them even though.
MAUREEN: What color would
you make the sky if it wasn’t going to be blue anymore and why?
PATRICIA: Purple! Because,
well, purple! OMG, what a question, and now I am longing for a purple sky!
MAUREEN: What’s your idea
of a perfect Sunday afternoon?
PATRICIA: The Dallas Cowboys
winning the Super Bowl. Again. ;-)
MAUREEN: Which era would
you most like to have lived in and why? Least?
PATRICIA: I have thought about this for several days, and there is only one answer. Today. I love living today. I love living in a time with Kindles and internet and cell phones [even when you’re tramping along the coastal paths in County Cork, Ireland]. I love that this world has gotten smaller, that I have friends who range in age from teens to 80s, and it doesn’t make any difference that some of us live in Australia and others in Greece and others in Japan, because online we are all the same in our shared love of the same books, characters, ideals. I don’t even want to go back one year. The world just keeps getting more amazing, and I am thrilled to be part of it today.
FOLLOW PATRICIA
PATRICIA ASKS READERS
Have you ever bought a book—or refused to buy a book—strictly because of its cover?
Welcome to GLIAS, Patricia. Cornwall sounds lovely.
ReplyDelete~Angi
Thanks for the welcome, and for allowing me to visit. We found out quite accidentally that the tiny village we stayed at in Cornwall was my ancestral home from over 300 years ago. Now. How could I not believe in magic?
DeleteHi Patricia!
ReplyDeleteIt's so exciting to meet you. I've heard so much about you. This was a fun interview. Yes, I have bought a book for it's cover. More than once. Sometimes it paid off. Sometimes not.
I can't wait to read your book, This Crumbling Pagent. You're a fabulous writer. I dashed over to the big Brunhilda, er, Amazon, and got a copy.
Loved the picture of your Cornwall trip. I'm a bit jealous - I want to go under that inn and see the smuggler's cave. So can you share the name of the inn?
My big dream is to get to England one of these days.
Glad you visited at GLIAS!
We didn't stay there but they gave me a tour and it has a fabulous view and great food in the pub/restaurant downstairs. I told them I was a writer and the owner took me down into the cellar! The steps were amazing... I could imagine all the feet that had trod up and down them and what might have been carried in and out!
Deletehttp://www.tripadvisor.com/Hotel_Review-g2468045-d1105137-Reviews-Old_Success_Inn-Sennen_Cove_Cornwall_England.html
Oh, this is a much better site:
Deletehttp://www.oldsuccess.co.uk/
Thank you !!! I Hope to go there someday soon!
DeleteFun interview. Won't read the blurb if I don't like the cover
ReplyDeleteYou're so right! If the cover doesn't work, who bothers to click through or if you're in the store, pick up the book? Good point.
Delete