Jaffareadstoo is delighted to be hosting today's stop on
The Silent Fountain Blog Tour
Hi and welcome to Jaffareadstoo, Victoria and thank you for spending time with us on your blog tour.
When you were planning The Silent Fountain what came first the
idea or theme, the plot, place or characters. Did you base any of the
characters and places on people and places you know?
Italy came to me first. I had always wanted to set a book in Italy,
in particular the Tuscan countryside surrounding Florence, and I knew, for this
book, the setting would be key. I wanted somewhere with a very definite
atmosphere. As soon as I decided on Italy, I could picture the crumbling,
dilapidated Castillo Barbarossa. I could imagine the overgrown gardens and
tangled rose bushes; I could smell the lemon groves.
The Silent Fountain is a bit of a ghost story, so I liked the idea
of events unfolding in a rundown, but once very grand, mansion. This led me to
the character of Vivien Lockhart, a one-time movie star, who herself was once
very grand – until a shocking family secret made her too afraid to step out of
the house. I like the idea of faded glamour both in settings and characters,
because it begs the question: What happened here? What changed? What befell
these people, to turn their lives upside down? The fountain at the front of the
Barbarossa was once its glittering centrepiece. Why, then, hasn’t it been used
in decades? And why does its owner insist on keeping it filled?
It’s strange, when planning, how one notion can lead to the next. Once
I had Vivien at the Castillo Barbarossa, I started thinking about the events
that had brought her there: an Italian love affair, a scandal buried deep in
the past and a tragedy that would change everything. We first meet Vivien in
the 1970s, and it isn’t until close to fifty years later that she finally faces
the truth she’s been hiding from. Also hiding is Lucy Whittaker, my
contemporary lead, who escapes London in the wake of a shattered romance. Lucy
finds work at the Barbarossa – and a lot more besides. Strange sounds come from
the attic. Vivien will never meet her in person. She glimpses a woman by the
fountain, but when she goes to confront her no one is there…
I haven’t based any of the characters on people I know (although
there’s probably a bit of me in Lucy). I have, however, been inspired by some
of my favourite set-ups in literature: the glamorous first wife in Rebecca; the
terrible love triangle in Jane Eyre; even the dark, irresistible danger of
Heathcliff in Wuthering Heights (even if my Heathcliff is Sicilian). I love to
explore the friction between duty and passion.
The Silent Fountain is my seventh book and it’s definitely different
to the stories I’ve written before – my previous novels have been high-octane
blockbusters set in the celebrity whirlwind. But the important things remain
the same: powerful female leads, enticing, escapist settings and plenty of
drama and romance. I hope readers will step straight into Italy every time they
open the book – but that they’ll be glad to step out of it again, back into the
real world, leaving the ghosts of the Barbarossa far behind.
You can find out more about Victoria and her writing on her website by clicking here
Find on Facebook or Follow on Twitter @VFoxWrites
Blog Tour runs 1st - 9th March #TheSilentFountain
My thanks to Victoria for answering my question and for sharing her thoughts about The Silent Fountain.
Thanks also to Olivia at Midas PR and the publishers HQ for the invitation to be part of this blog tour.
You can find out more about Victoria and her writing on her website by clicking here
Find on Facebook or Follow on Twitter @VFoxWrites
Blog Tour runs 1st - 9th March #TheSilentFountain
My thanks to Victoria for answering my question and for sharing her thoughts about The Silent Fountain.
Thanks also to Olivia at Midas PR and the publishers HQ for the invitation to be part of this blog tour.
~***~
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