Interview with GOLD SPUN Author, Brandie June

Today, I’m speaking with Brandie June, author of the forthcoming novel, Gold Spun (out June 8th from CamCat Books). Gold Spun is a magical retelling of Rumpelstiltskin that gives the miller’s daughter of the original fairytale a life, a purpose, and, most importantly, a name. Names, after all, are always powerful….

If Nor can’t spin gold, she can always spin lies. When seventeen-year-old Nor rescues a captured faerie in the woods, he gifts her with a magical golden thread she can use to summon him for a favor. Instead, Nor uses it for a con—to convince villagers to buy straw that can be transformed into gold. Her trick works a little too well, attracting the suspicion of Prince Casper, who hates nobody more than a liar. Intent on punishing Nor, he demands that she spin a room of straw into gold and as her reward, he will marry her. Should she refuse or fail, the consequences will be dire. Desperate for help, Nor summons the faerie’s aid, launching a complicated dance as she must navigate between her growing feelings for both the prince and faerie boy and who she herself wishes to become.

Susan: I loved this story! It’s beautifully written with engaging characters and a page-turning, unique plot. What inspired you to retell the story of Rumpelstiltskin?

Brandie: I’ve always loved the darker, older versions of fairytale, so I tend to incorporate a lot of fairytale or mythology elements into my writing. I also love to flip tropes. I initially wrote a short story about Rumpelstiltskin, making him the hero instead of the villain. That inspired Gold Spun. I gave myself the challenge of fleshing out the characters, especially the miller’s daughter. In the original tale, she doesn’t even have a name, and I wanted to give her a lot more agency. In Gold Spun, she now drives the action as a con artist who is really responsible for people thinking she can spin gold.

Susan: Nor has a difficult life filled with much suffering and loss. Were you ever tempted to give her the perfect happy ending? You know, to make up for her childhood?

Brandie: I don’t believe in a perfect happy ending, because there is always the day after, and as long as you are living your life, there will be challenges. Nor’s story is still ongoing. If she gets a ‘happy ending,’ it will be because she is a fighter, and willing to save those she loves.

Susan: If you could be one character from a fairytale, who would you be and why?

Brandie: Great question! I think the princess from The Six Swans. She goes through some pretty awful trials, weaving shirts out of nettles and taking a vow of silence while doing it, but I like that she drives the action to save her brothers.

Susan: You write exquisitely of royal balls and beautiful gowns. Where did you get this eye for royal detail?

Brandie: It was a combination of research, reading stories with royal characters, and my theatre background. I spent a lot of time on Pinterest and doing online research for clothing that was loosely set in late Medieval/early Renaissance, while still allowing myself to makeup elements (as this is set in a fantasy world). My best friend is an amazing costume designer, and I consulted her. She even hand painted my three main characters, which really helped them come alive. I also think my experience as an actor helps me imagine how things would look, so I fantasize about a scene and then write it down.

Susan: The faeries are beautiful but wicked creatures. I love that contrast. Do they have a legitimate gripe against the humans or are they just kind of nasty?

Brandie: Depends on the faerie! Just like humans, some are kind and some are nasty. The faerie queen believes the humans have done the faeries great harm. I don’t want to give anything away, but I wanted to create a world where someone can empathize with both sides. And there may be more to their history that gets revealed later on… *wink*

Susan: Who is your target audience for Gold Spun? (I think it should be anyone aged 8-108, but that’s just me.)

Brandie: Since Gold Spun is YA Fantasy, it’s primarily targeted for teens 13 – 18, but I think it also is a great read for anyone who enjoys YA Fantasy. Personally, I never stopped reading this genre.

Susan: If you could spin Gold Spun into an empire, what form would that empire take? A movie? TV series? Video game? Fashion line?

Brandie: I would love to see Gold Spun as a movie or TV series. I’m watching Shadow And Bone right now, adapted from the amazing YA books by Leigh Bardugo, and I’m loving seeing the characters come to life in another medium. I also think a fashion line would be awesome! I could totally see some of the royal ballgowns transformed into gorgeous prom dresses.

Susan: What’s next for Nor? Prince Casper? Pel?

Brandie: I don’t want to spoil anything, but I promise there is a lot of story left for all three of them. I’m currently working on the sequel, and I will say readers get to find out a lot more about the faeries.

Susan: Where can readers find you online?

Brandie: My site is www.brandiejune.com and I’m on most social media:

Facebook: The Original Brandie June | Facebook

Instagram: Brandie June (@thebrandiejune) • Instagram photos and videos

Twitter: Brandie June (@brandiejune) / Twitter

TikTok: Brandie June (@brandiebooks) TikTok | Watch Brandie June’s Newest TikTok Videos

Susan: Where can people buy Gold Spun?

Brandie: Pretty much anywhere books are sold online, such as CamCat Books and Amazon, or Barnes and Noble. Plus, I’m offering some sweet book swag for anyone who preorders Gold Spun and fills out my form: BOOKS | brandie (brandiejune.com)

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Add THE WAYWARD SPY to Your Summer Reading List

Many thanks to Shayda Windle for reviewing and recommending THE WAYWARD SPY for Middleburg Life’s summer reading list.

Stay tuned – this week I will link to the official announcement that THE WAYWARD SPY won “best thriller” in the 2021 Independent Publisher Book Awards!

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Interview with Author Michael Bradley

Today, I’m speaking with Michael Bradley, author of DEAD AIR, a psychological suspense novel (CamCat Books, 2020). 

Three can keep a secret, but only if two are dead. No one knows that better than Kaitlyn Ashe, who has been running from a childhood secret her whole life. Until now. Crowned the top-rated radio DJ in Philadelphia, she is finally ready to settle down with her fiancé and new friends who know nothing about her past. When a sudden flood of anonymous letters threatens her seemingly charmed life, she realizes that someone out there knows. But who? As the threatening letters escalate, Kaitlyn’s life spirals toward a reunion in the one place she’d hoped to never visit again: The Shallows. Isn’t her secret buried with the dead? From the Philadelphia skyline to the rural suburbs of New Jersey, DEAD AIR weaves a suspenseful tale of past misdeeds and present malice as Kaitlyn plays a deadly game of cat and mouse with a mysterious killer who will stop at nothing to get revenge.  

SusanDEAD AIR has earned multiple publishing industry accolades:·        
  • A finalist for the 2020 Foreword INDIES Book of the Year Awards·         
  • A 2020 Notable Indie by Shelf Unbound magazine·         
  • A finalist for the 33rd annual IBPA Benjamin Franklin Award

Did you ever imagine such success so early in your fiction career?

Michael: Not at all. This year has been amazing, as well as humbling. I’m the kind of person who doesn’t always accept compliments very well. I always feel like people are just being polite. My first response to the news about these awards was, “there must be some mistake.” It took a little time for it to sink in as being real.

Susan: You have worked in radio for a long time, which lends authenticity to your story. Kaitlyn, your main character, is stalked by a listener. Has that ever happened to you?

Michael: I can’t say that I’ve ever had a stalker like Kaitlyn does in DEAD AIR. I’ve had one or two callers that made me want to check that the building door was locked. I recall, very early in my broadcast career, receiving calls from a woman, who I will call Betty to protect her identity. I was doing the midday show (10a-3p) at a very small station in New Jersey. The broadcast studio was in a tiny building on the outskirts of town. The station’s business office was located elsewhere so I was usually on my own. Betty would call every day to request a song, and to chat. I’d put her on speaker phone and let her ramble about her day while I pulled CDs and queued up my next song. A few weeks into these calls, Betty’s ramblings got increasingly strange. She once mentioned that Michael Jackson, during a recent television interview, had spoken directly to her to express his undying love. A few days later, Betty calls stopped. When she finally called again a month later, I found out that she’d been admitted to the nearby psychiatric hospital. I eventually became an expert on predicting when Betty had stopped taking her medication and would be re-admitted to the hospital based on how bizarre the conversation would get.

Susan: Wow! Were any other incidents in DEAD AIR based on events in your life? Any deep, dark, long-buried secrets you’d like to share?

Michael: Sorry to disappoint, but there are no long, buried secrets in my past. There is, however, much in the book that is based on real life. Some of the settings in the book are based on real places. There is a small lake that is central to the book’s plot that is based on a real lake in New Jersey. The trail where Kaitlyn runs every day actually exists, as do many of the streets and landmarks. And, although I don’t mention the school by name, Kaitlyn attended the same high school that I did. As for other real life events, there are a couple anecdotal radio tales from my life inserted into the book. Most of them are casually mentioned in passing. If I ever write a “tell-all” book, one of those stories that is certain to be included will be from the time I worked for a top forty radio station and returned to the studio after a late night live appearance only to find myself coming face-to-butt with a naked woman who was running away down the hallway. I’d apparently interrupted the woman’s nocturnal visit with the overnight DJ, who, I might add, seemed a bit disheveled when I stepped into the broadcast studio.  

Susan: Umm, hahaha. I’ll leave that one right there. What inspired you to create a female protagonist? Did writing from a woman’s perspective pose a challenge? (Kaitlyn is a completely realistic character – If I read the story without knowing the author’s name, I wouldn’t be able to tell if it were written by a man or a woman.)

Michael: I enjoy writing with alternate points of view and my books usually include two protagonists; one male and one female. I find that writing the female perspective is sometimes easier than writing a male protagonist. I knew, going into this book, that I wanted a female protagonist at the center of the plot. I couldn’t visualize this story with a male protagonist. There are some stories that just work best with one or the other as the main lead. DEAD AIR only felt right with Kaitlyn as my main character.

Susan: How much research into law enforcement techniques and protocol did you need to do?

Michael: When writing my novels, I tend not to focus on procedures and focus more on the characters and events. I don’t get into the details of how the forensics officer searches for hair fibers in the carpet. I’d rather focus on how a tragic event impacted my protagonist and the police. Luckily, I was able to use some research I had from a previous novel, as well as spend some time in 2019 speaking with an FBI liaison about crime scene procedures.

Susan: Favorite suspense/thriller author?

Michael: This is tricky because it changes frequently. Right now, Lisa Unger is at the top of the list, particularly her books CRAZY LOVE YOU and INK AND BONE. She writes one hell of an unreliable narrator.

Susan: What other types of novels do you like to read or are you a thriller addict?

Michael: I love a good mystery or thriller, but I’m not opposed to reading outside of those genres. I’ve been known to pick up the odd science fiction novel, and I’m open to reading non-fiction, particularly if it is about an odd or unusual topic. I also love reading some of the classic works from the likes of Wells, Conan Doyle, and Verne. I dabble in noir with Chandler, Highsmith, and Charteris. I read fantasy, but only if it is by Terry Pratchett. I’m currently working my way through the Adam Dalgliesh series by the late P. D. James.

Susan: If you weren’t an author, what would you be?

Michael: I’d be very sad. Honestly, I’ve wanted to be a writer since I was in high school. I stumbled onto some of my earliest writing a year or two ago. Straight from high school. Even on dot matrix paper, the side strips with the holes still intact. It was bad, really bad. I had no idea about plot, dialogue, and characterization. All of my characters were based on my friends, and, to make things creep, the love interest in my stories was always the girl I had a crush on. Oh, and I was always the hero. Writing is so ingrained in my blood that I can’t imagine what I’d be without it.

Susan: What can your readers expect from your next book?

Michael: I’m finishing up my next novel now. It is the first book in a planned series. The new book is called THE SIN EATER, and focuses on a modern-day killer who includes elements from the 18th century religious practice of sin eating in his murders. It’s up to a small-town newspaper journalist and a faithless minister to discover the truth. 

Susan: Sounds fantastic! Where can readers find you online?

Michael: My website is always open at www.mbradleyonline.com. I’m on Twitter at twitter.com/mjbradley88 and Facebook at Facebook.com/mjbradley88

Susan: Where can people buy DEAD AIR?

Michael:
Amazon – https://www.amazon.com/Dead-Air-Suspense-Michael-Bradley-ebook/dp/B088HDTQG6/

Barnes & Noble – https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/dead-air-michael-bradley/1136292265?ean=9780744300017

Audible – https://www.audible.com/pd/Dead-Air-Audiobook/B08DDBNQZR

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Breaking News: Book 2!

I have signed a contract with CamCat Publishing for RELUCTANT MARTYR, the second book in the Maggie Jenkins spy thriller series. Find out what happens to Maggie, Warner and others (no spoilers!) after THE WAYWARD SPY.

Publication date is March 15, 2022. Stay tuned!

Haven’t read THE WAYWARD SPY yet? Buy it now – available in all formats here.

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Local Coverage of THE WAYWARD SPY

Many thanks to Andrea Gaines at The Blue Ridge Leader for the nice writeup about The Wayward Spy:

Don’t you love the title … The Wayward Spy. Gives me goosebumps. The Wayward Spy, a new – and first – novel by a Loudoun woman named Susan Ouellette, was released on March 2. It is really special when someone as talented and insightful as Susan Ouellette decides to make Loudoun County her home, and publish her first book from here…. “She has walked the halls of the House Intelligence Committee and the CIA and knows those institutions as very few novelists do,” says Dr. Mark M. Lowenthal, former CIA Assistant Director for Analysis and former Staff Director at HPSCI.

Read the entire article here.

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Libraries!

Card Catalog – The Original Search Engine

 

As a kid, my favorite place to go was the local public library. I was a voracious reader – Nancy Drew, The Hardy Boys, Agatha Christie, any story filled with suspense. I’d make a beeline for the books on my to-read-list, then head to the card catalog, a wooden cabinet comprised of tiny file drawers full of sturdy, buff-colored cards, each containing information about a particular book – the Dewey Decimal Number, Author, Title, Subject. I’d flip through the cards in search of hidden treasure – an intriguing book that demanded my attention. Eventually, I’d stagger out of the library with an armful of books meant to tide me over until the next visit.

As a college student, I wandered the musty (and rather spooky) stacks of Harvard University’s Widener Library, daydreaming about how to get locked in for the night so I could have the place to myself. So. Many. Books. The stacks are housed on ten floors, including four underground levels and a tunnel (!) to the adjacent subterranean (!) Pusey Library. Some weekends, I’d spend hours at the Boston Public Library, soaking in the palatial architecture and stunning artwork. I’d pour through old newspapers stored on microfilm in search of interesting tidbits that couldn’t be found in any book. Then I’d settle into a chair in the cavernous Bates Hall, the library’s main reading room, a prime spot for people-watching, catnapping, and studying.

Even now, I still love to roam around the local library in search of the perfect read. There’s something about putting my hands on a physical book, getting a sense of what awaits inside the story, that can’t be replicated in an online shopping experience. I love libraries, which is why I’m delighted that five library systems (and counting!) have purchased The Wayward Spy. Three are from places I’ve never been – Cincinnati, Anoka County (Minnesota), and Hennepin County (Minnesota). (Perhaps a book tour to the Midwest is in order?). The other two library systems are much closer to home: Loudoun County, Virginia and Washington, D.C. In May, I am participating in a D.C. Library “Mystery Month” podcast that will focus on Washington, D.C. as a “character” in popular spy novels. I also will be doing an author talk with the D.C. library, and hope to do more of the same with other metro-DC library systems. It’s all very exciting!

To think that someone might be wandering through a local library, stumble upon The Wayward Spy, thumb through it, and decide it might be worth a read…well, that wasn’t something I considered possible back in the days of card catalogs and dusty book stacks. Thank you to all of the libraries!

If you find The Wayward Spy at your local library, send me a note on the contact link on the right. I’d love to hear about it!

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Suspense Radio Interview

A few weeks ago, John Raab and Jeff Ayers of Suspense Radio interviewed me about The Wayward Spy, the CIA, the journey to publishing, and more.

The link to the interview is up – listen here.

Thanks, John and Jeff!

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Washington D.C. Public Library News

The D.C. Public Library is purchasing THE WAYWARD SPY for its libraries (print and e-book). I am a HUGE fan of public libraries, so I’m thrilled!

We will be scheduling a public appearance at the library for me to discuss the book (a virtual event as of now), and they’ve invited me to participate in the library’s Mystery Month Podcast.

Thank you, D.C. Public Library!

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Instagram Book Blogger Tour

Over the next nine days, nine “Bookstagrammers” will review The Wayward Spy on Instagram. You can follow me there @susanobooks.

Check out the blog tour here: https://mailchi.mp/camcatpublishing/happy-pub-day-to-sunset-tomorrow-4770544?fbclid=IwAR2F9nZjsyOWHtpXNfmTB3URXHp2_zomVauPoHaxDTvpjrXaM_8ergAe4NQ

I love the first review (below) from the_towering_tbr because, even though spy thrillers aren’t her thing, she loved the story. Thanks for reading and reviewing it!

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Publication Day!

Today’s the day, the one I’ve been waiting for for a long time. Thank you to everyone who already has purchased The Wayward Spy. I hope that it keeps you up reading way past your bedtime! Once you’ve finished the book, I’d be most grateful if you’d post a review on Amazon (and Goodreads, if you have an account).

In case you haven’t seen it, here’s the trailer for The Wayward Spy:

********* Buy THE WAYWARD SPY at CamCat Books or Amazon **********

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