It is my pleasure to help promote the second book in The Order of the Sanguines Series by authors James Rollins and Rebecca Cantrell!!
Q. You now have co-authored two books in the Order of the
Sanguines series, how did you decide to join forces? How do two prolific minds
work together during the writing process?
Jim: The seed for this series came during a trip
to a museum in Los Angeles, where I found myself staring at Rembrandt’s
painting of “The Raising of Lazarus.”
It’s a macabre and dark imagining of this miracle of Christ, and it struck
me strange how scared everyone looked in the painting. This moment started me down a road of
reflection about early Catholicism, vampirism, and a story began to unfold, a
story that examines the line between faith and science. I knew this could be a
huge and groundbreaking new mythology, a story so epic in scope that I knew I
didn’t want to tackle this alone.
Rebecca:
I met Jim at the Maui Writer’s Conference just before my first novel, A Trace
of Smoke, was published. He was my
instructor in a thriller-writing course and we kept in touch after that. I’d
just put the finishing touches on my fourth novel when he called me out of the
blue about this series with vampires who live on transubstantiated blood. We spent a long time on that call talking
about the world of the Sanguinists and the strigoi. We had very similar visions
of that world, and could see what we each would bring to it. The writing
process involves a lot of talking on Skype, rewriting, and driving each other
generally crazy.
Q. INNOCENT BLOOD is a terrific blend of supernatural, mystery,
and thriller. Which one of these aspects did you develop first in the genesis
of the book?
Rebecca:
All of them at once, I think. We had already created the supernatural world and
the characters that inhabited it, so for the second book we wanted to venture
further afield in that world and more deeply into the psyches of the
characters.
Jim: It certainly had to be all worked out as a
whole, almost like a jigsaw puzzle, every piece had to be examined and turned
until if fit just right. We thought this
was important so that the paranormal elements of the story didn't overwhelm our
characters. Though this series deals
with immortal beings and creatures both light and dark, we didn't want to lose
that exploration of the human condition.
To touch a reader emotionally, the story and characters must be
accessible and relatable. To achieve
that required all the elements of the story to work in harmony and as a whole
tapestry.
Q. Did you face any challenges with writing the second book,
INNOCENT BLOOD, that you didn’t face with the debut in the series, THE BLOOD
GOSPEL?
Jim: During the creation of the first book, it was
all about world building, creating this landscape where vampires existed and
found themselves folded within the cloak of the Catholic Church. It was also about discovering our main
characters, how they were going to engage and react. With that all established, we were free to
build and expand upon that world and more deeply explore our characters. We initially thought it would be easy, since
the groundwork and mythology was already in place, but we quickly learned of a
new challenge.
Rebecca:
The new challenge was figuring out how
the characters had grown and changed as a result of the events in the first
book. They all had strong personalities, but they went through a lot in their
search for THE BLOOD GOSPEL, and they haven’t had time to process it all.
Q. What was the biggest challenge in further developing the
characters that appeared in THE BLOOD GOSPEL, for the second book in the
Sanguines series, INNOCENT BLOOD?
Rebecca:
I answered this one early, didn’t I? Sorry about that. The characters had some
intense experiences in the first book, especially Erin, and that leaves a mark.
She realized that everything she thought she knew was incomplete—monsters
existed in the world and had been leaving their mark on history for thousands
of years. This shook up her intellectual worldview, and I think she’s still
grappling with it. Plus, of course, the nature of her relationships with Jordan
and Rhun changed a lot in the first book, and that makes all of their
interactions more complex and emotionally charged.
Jim: Exactly.
I always dislike books where characters escape great peril with barely a
scratch and have no lasting effect. They
get shot in the shoulder on page 4 and are perfectly fine by page 6. And it’s not just the physical aftermath, but
the emotional aftermath of such
trauma. That’s something we explored
deeply in this second novel. Everyone
was drastically changed by events in the first book, surviving a trial by
fire. Now they have to put their lives
back together, while facing a new and even greater threat.
Q. Christian is such an interesting and dynamic character, is
that why you chose to write a prequel, BLOOD BROTHERS, about this
character? How did this character come to life for you both?
Jim: Christian is first mentioned in passing in THE
BLOOD GOSPEL. Even in that brief
reference in the first book, readers were offered a hint that something was
different about him. We knew we always
wanted to introduce a “younger” vampire into the Sanguinist fold.
Rebecca:
We introduced the older, more experienced Sanguinists in THE BLOOD GOSPEL. Rhun
is hundreds of years old, and his mentor, Cardinal Bernard, has been around at
least since the Crusades. Even as they live forward in time, their thought
patterns and beliefs are based on a very different world. We thought it would
be interesting to show what a modern, irreverent Sanguinist might add to the
mix. Christian was turned in the late 1960s, so he’s part of the same century
as Erin and Jordan. This drives Rhun a bit nuts, which is always fun to watch.
Q. In the INNOCENT BLOOD and its prequel, THE BLOOD GOSPEL, you
introduced elements of a ‘mystical and otherworldly’ nature: religion,
Scriptures, apocrypha, angelology. Has anything in your research completely
shocked you and changed the way you thought about religion or spirituality?
Rebecca:
I was surprised by how easy it was to create the Sanguinist/strigoi mythology
by using references to existing religious documents. I don’t think there is a
vampiric sect in the Catholic Church, for example, but it does dovetail well
with many of their traditions: turning wine into the blood of Christ, wearing
hoods during the day, rules on chastity. It’s endlessly fascinating.
Jim: The basic premise started with a simple
supposition: If vampires existed, how
might have Christ dealt with such a scourge?
How might the early Church have been changed? How might it look today? Rebecca and I attempted to answer those
questions, which was a great deal of fun, and in the end, like Rebecca
mentioned, it was illuminating how much of the trappings of the Church could be
folded into the mythology of vampirism.
Q. In an article published by The Telegraph (UK) few days ago, a
fellow suspense writer (Patricia Cornwell) claims she has uncovered one of
history’s best-kept secrets: the true identity of Jack The Ripper. Is there an
unresolved mystery that you would like to investigate together?
Jim: I always love dabbling into historical
mysteries, those pieces of the past that end in a question mark. In INNOCENT BLOOD, we attempted to explain
the “lost years” of Christ’s childhood, that gap in His chronology between the
Slaughter of the Innocents by King Herod and Christ’s appearance as a young
teenager. Where was He before that? Why
that gap in Christ’s history? During our
research into this topic, we uncovered many suppositions and tantalizing
hints. That’s what I love best about
digging into the past (something I think our main character Erin shares): that continuing quest for the truth.
Rebecca:
Jim’s right. I tend to be fascinated by
ancient mysteries—the Ark of the Covenant, the Holy Grail, the Voynich
Manuscript—and how people have been affected by their quests for knowledge
about these objects.
Q. What’s in store for readers in the next book in the Order of
the Sanguines series?
Rebecca:
I don’t want to give too much away, but the forces unleashed at the end of
INNOCENT BLOOD must be battled, and the power contained in both good and evil
blood will not be easily contained.
Jim: Yes, there are some huge surprises in store both
for the characters and for our readers.
Some of them even shocked us.
Then again, when you’re dealing with the apocalypse, no one should be
safe.
Thank you!!
No comments:
Post a Comment