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Timestamp: 2019-04-19 16:57:46+00:00

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Maria V. Snyder is the New York Times bestselling author of Poison Study, Magic Study, Fire Study, Storm Glass, Sea Glass, and Inside Out. Her books have made it onto the Book Sense Pick list and the Locus recommending reading list. They've also been RITA and ALEX award finalists, and they’ve won the Compton Crook Award, the Salt Lake County Reader’s Choice Award and the Editor’s Pick Award from Audible.com.
Matthew Peterson: Welcome back. You’re listening to The Author Hour: Your Guide to Fantastic Fiction, which can be found at www.TheAuthorHour.com. I’m your host Matthew Peterson, author of Paraworld Zero.
My next guest is Maria V. Snyder, New York Times bestselling author of Poison Study, Magic Study, and Fire Study and also of Storm Glass and Sea Glass. Her books have made it onto the Book Sense Pick list, Locus recommending reading list, they were RITA and ALEX award finalists, and they’ve won the Compton Crook Award, the Salt Lake County Reader’s Choice Award and the Editor’s Pick Award from Audible.com. Thanks for being on the show today, Maria.
Maria V. Snyder: Oh, well thanks for having me.
Matthew Peterson: Now I met you many moons ago at the 2004 World Fantasy Convention.
Maria V. Snyder: That’s right. Yep.
Matthew Peterson: That was the first convention I’d ever been to, and what’s interesting is that I think you were one of the very first authors I had ever met. We were both infants in the publishing world. I was just starting and you had just finished your first book and gotten a publisher.
Maria V. Snyder: Right, yeah. I had a contract and I had a date, but I didn’t have an actual book out yet. So yeah, that was the year before where I was trying to feel my way in the new world, type a deal, like you.
Matthew Peterson: Yeah, so it’s kind of fun, though, to see, ‘cause you were really one of the first, I think you were the very first author I actually got like a card from, you know. [laughs] I was like that’s really cool.
Maria V. Snyder: Oh, wow. Wow! I’m honored now.
Matthew Peterson: So I’ve looked at your career, you know, throughout the few years now and it’s exciting to see how you’ve progressed: New York Times bestselling author now and several books out.
Maria V. Snyder: Yeah, it was really exciting. I mean, when you first start out, you have no idea if anybody’s going to buy your book or read your book or even like your books. So it’s really uncertain. And to get a following going and then having it increase each book is really what authors really want.
Matthew Peterson: So when you were at that convention, had you been visiting lots of different conventions before that?
Maria V. Snyder: Well, I think it was one of my first World Fantasy Conventions. I had gone to a few WorldCons, the World Science Fiction Conventions. They’re huge, like have thousands of people show up and thousands of authors and all. And I definitely like World Fantasy better because it is a smaller, more relaxed atmosphere.
Matthew Peterson: Yeah, I went to that one just almost as a fluke. “Hey, you know the World Fantasy Convention is just right around the corner in my own home town. Maybe I’ll hop over there.” And I hopped over and I didn’t know anybody. I mean, I didn’t even know what any authors looked like other than maybe Stephen King. You know, ‘cause he was on a commercial once.
Maria V. Snyder: You weren’t really hounding her for anything, and she was just having a conversation. That’s great, though.
Matthew Peterson: Yep. So that’s how new I was in the industry. So that’s why I like looking at your books. Let’s talk about your first book, Poison Study. I didn’t know anything about it at that time, ‘cause it hadn’t come out yet. But I have read them. I mean I’ve listened to them on audible.com. Your main character’s name is Yelena. Tell us a little bit about Yelena and what she has to go through during the series.
Maria V. Snyder: Well she starts out in a pretty rough place. I mean, she’s in a dungeon waiting to be executed because she was convicted of murdering a general’s son. Now the world itself is a military dictatorship, well, the world of Ixia where she’s at. So the generals are sort of like the lords and ladies of the land. And that was a pretty bad crime that she did. So she’s in that position, and she gets offered a choice. Does she want to become the commander’s new food taster or does she want to be executed? The commander is kind of paranoid someone’s going to try and poison him, so he wants to have somebody sort of taste his food, and if she died in the line of duty, well, oh well, doesn’t matter, she was going to die anyway.
Maria V. Snyder: So the commander ended up being not quite your stereo-typical military dictator in this world. So that’s her first introduction, you know, to the commander and to Valek, who’s the security chief in charge of all the security. She’s determined, she’s got this chance of living and she’s going to try and make the most of it. So she’s stubborn and you know, very proactive and she tries to get out of her situation.
Maria V. Snyder: Valek, he’s a great character. I have a lot of people who email me how much they like Valek. He’s your typical assassin-type person, but he has layers to him that you don’t really realize in the beginning.
Matthew Peterson: And the book continues. The first one’s Poison Study and then the next one’s Magic Study.
Maria V. Snyder: Magic Study, yes. As she goes along, she has these magical powers that she can’t control. They kind of spring up in Poison Study, so in Magic Study she’s trying to learn how to control them and use them. And of course, then she’s in the world of Sitia, which is the southern lands, and that’s more of a . . . not quite a democracy, but they have clans that have council members and so it’s a different type of world. And she’s not used to that, which is interesting. She’s used to the military way of dealing with things. So in Magic Study there’s a rouge magician who’s out there and seems like he’s got his sights set on Yelena, so she kind of gets involved in that as well as trying to study for her . . . for the magic.
Maria V. Snyder: So I keep things hopping.
Matthew Peterson: Yeah, you definitely do, and young adults can read these, I think--young teens. But what is the main audience for these books that you would assume?
Maria V. Snyder: Well, the main audience was adults when I first started writing them. And then when I had Poison Study as nothing but a manuscript, my niece, Amy, wanted to read it. And she was 14 at the time, but she was like a voracious reader, so I thought, “Eh, she’s on the edge. I can give it to her.” Well, she read it in a day and loved it, so then that was the first little inkling that, “Well, maybe this would be alright for young adults.” And then after we published Poison Study I got all these emails from teenagers . . .
Maria V. Snyder: . . . just loving the series. So my publisher went back and put a young adult cover on the books. So they got a new cover again, and they were put in the young adult section, and they’ve been selling pretty well in that section.
Maria V. Snyder: Uh, huh.
Matthew Peterson: You mentioned that I could improve my writing if I added some more senses like smell and taste and . . .
Maria V. Snyder: Oh, yes.
Matthew Peterson: And of course, I was thinking to myself, “Well this is coming from someone who just wrote a book all about a woman who is going to die if she doesn’t use her senses of smell and taste.” But I really took your advice to heart on my second book.
Maria V. Snyder: Oh, well, that’s great. Yeah, because writers, especially newer writers, we tend to rely on the visual.
Maria V. Snyder: You know, what the character sees. But you’re missing out on a whole bunch of other stuff with like smelling and touch and taste and sounds and so on. I try and include more than the visual in my descriptions. And actually, when I look at the Study books, I think Poison Study was on tastes, Magic Study had a whole thing with smells, and then Fire Study was all on touch.
Matthew Peterson: So it’s sometimes hard to remember that even though because you might not have the best taste or smell or whatever, other people do. And you gotta put that in your writing.
Matthew Peterson: I’m grateful that you gave me that little bit of advice.
Maria V. Snyder: Oh, well, yeah.
Maria V. Snyder: Oh, that’s wonderful. Yeah, I have a “Writing Advice” section on my website. Lots of articles on there. And I get a lot of emails from writers who thank me for them, ‘cause they really appreciate them. So I’m glad. I like to help.
Matthew Peterson: Yeah. I actually went to those a few months ago. I thought that was very helpful to see those helps. MariaVSnyder.com -- is that it?
Maria V. Snyder: Yep! Yep!
Matthew Peterson: Okay. Let’s go to Fire Study. So I understand that you did a lot of research for Fire Study. Didn’t you take a class on glass work?
Maria V. Snyder: I did. I did. I took a glass blowing class, which we learned how to, you know, gather the molten glass--it’s in this huge cauldron, in a kiln--and then pull it out and, you know, shape it and try and blow a bubble in it to make like a vase or something like that. It was fun.
Maria V. Snyder: It was a lot of fun.
Matthew Peterson: How did you use that for the last book, the Fire Study?
Maria V. Snyder: Well Fire Study has a character, her name’s Opal. Her and her family are glass blowers, makers; they make glass as their business. And she becomes pretty important in Fire Study as helping Yelena out with the main evil guy. He’s called the Fire Warper. He’s a magician that’s like trapped in the fire. And so Opal becomes a pretty big player towards the end of that book. I don’t want to say, I don’t want to spoil it for anyone. But her whole glass making abilities really sparked an idea for me with doing more with her and her glass magic, ‘cause it ends up she has some magic abilities. So then with her I did a spinoff series, which is the Glass books: the Storm Glass and Sea Glass, using her as the main character. And all that glass blowing experience--I took about 3 or 4 classes--really helped me in getting into Opal’s character.
Matthew Peterson: Well, that’s great.
Tell us a little bit about Inside Out.
Maria V. Snyder: Well Inside Out, I like to use this line on people. You know the book, City of Ember?
Maria V. Snyder: It was recently a movie. It’s like the City of Ember meets Logan’s Run.
Maria V. Snyder: Basically the world is... they are inside. They live in this place called Inside and it’s pretty much an enclosed society. And they have forgotten what’s on the outside. My main character, Trella, she’s pretty much a loner and she doesn’t want to be bothered, but she can’t let this one challenge go by. A prophet in their world has some evidence that there’s a gateway to Outside and that he needs her help. She knows all the pipes in Inside. She’s kind of small and she’s one of the cleaners, because they have to keep the world clean. ‘Cause they rely on their machinery to keep them alive, they keep it clean, so she’s one of the pipe cleaners.
Maria V. Snyder: So she has to go and retrieve these discs that are supposed to have the coordinates for the gateway. And it just sets off this whole, not quite a revolution, but like a whole series of events, ‘cause you know, the main people who run the world don’t want to find this gateway.
Matthew Peterson: Are there going to be more in this or is this a standalone?
Matthew Peterson: [laughs] I was waiting for you to say something like that!
Maria V. Snyder: Yeah, yeah. I know. [laughs] I do that with my titles. You know, like the Study books they all have Study in them, and Glass has the Glass.
Maria V. Snyder: Yeah. So Inside Out and Outside In. That one is scheduled for, I think 2011.
Matthew Peterson: Great! Well, thank you so much, Maria. I’ve been speaking with Maria V. Snyder, New York Times bestselling author of the Study and Glass series. Check out Inside Out, that’s coming out soon. Thank you so much for being on the show today, Maria.
Maria V. Snyder: Oh, well thank you for having me. This is a lot of fun!
Matthew Peterson: Okay, don’t forget to visit www.TheAuthorHour.com to listen to Maria’s bonus questions. After the break, I’ve got Obert Skye. Don’t go away.

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