Thursday 30 April 2015

Eastern European Tour - Prague Vampire Laird For the Beyond Series

Prague
I travelled to this amazing city just before Christmas and as I was writing Demon Lupus at the time, it also felt so magical and mystical. The main square was decked out with a traditional European Christmas market, with handmade baubles and decorations, gifts housed in cute little wooden lodge type stalls. The aromas of smoked sausages and mulled wine wafted around the bustling market and in the centre was a beautiful winter wonderland nativity and ice skating rink. They really know how to make Christmas feel so cosy and wholesome here.



Surrounding the Square were café’s, shops and restaurants and even in the bitter cold one could eat their famous goulash outside on the veranda and soak in the atmosphere with outdoor heater and soft fleece blankets to keep one warm.






I decided that culture was the name of this holiday and we attempted to soak up as much as I could so I attended an classical music recital in a beautiful old public building, complete with grand marble entrance and staircases and huge chandeliers. I also attended a puppet opera of Don Giovanni. Granted it was a puppet show, but it did play it true to the real opera and come on, puppet opera?! Who wouldn’t love it?




I ate at amazing restaurants like the Three Ostrich Feathers and I had the most amazing Ostrich dish ever in opulent surroundings. 











I tried absinthe for the first and only time because it made me feel very tired, but I’d never had it before and so it had to be tried in one of the backstreet absinthe bars. And I decided to dance the night away in a nightclub called Club Lavka, which I used as the name for the nightclub in the first Chapter of Vampire Sorceress 






We crossed Charles Bridge that Tom Cruise went running across in the opening scenes of Mission Impossible when he realised his team of spies had been compromised.








And best of all, I found the Natural History Museum in Wensless Lass Square and as soon as I walked into the criss-crossing staircase, I realised I was on the set of Mission Impossible again. This time it was the scene right at the beginning when Tom Cruise was disguised as some politician at dignitaries some party. I was very excited and the big kid I am I began running around, ducking and diving whilst singing the Mission Impossible theme tune.



Ah, happy days. And although I haven't written Prague into one of my  Books in The Beyond Series yet, I know I will eventually... Maybe in Lemurian Dimension Book 5 in the series...





Thursday 16 April 2015

Romania - More Than Dracula's Homeland The Beyond Series

As a supernatural fantasy author who loves all things vampiric I just had to make a pilgrimage to Romania. In particular Transylvania. As my books would eventually take the reader to Poiana Brasov high in the Carpathian Mountains and then onto Rasnov citadel, I thought it only fair to do the research for the settings. After all, every place I take you to in my Beyond Series, I have actually visited.
Poiana Brasov is a ski resort that wouldn’t look out of place in a Heidi movie in Switzerland.


The Hotel looked like one huge log cabin, although the interior did look like something from the 70’s in décor. The Swimming pool did remind me of a Russian physical education info-mercial. It was incredibly dated – we’re talking 1940’s, or earlier, décor style for a swimming pool and changing areas. The Club Lavka I described in the first chapter of Vampire Sorceress was a disco my friend and I went to a few times whilst we stayed in Poiana Brasov and again the blue velour décor reminded me of roller disco rinks of the 70’s and 80’s. 




Rasnov is a beautiful fortified Citadel with a grisly past and was the perfect location for Amethyst and Michael Romanov to meet their distant relatives Ursula and Abraham who seem to be much more informed on their families illustrious gypsy past than themselves. They also seemed far too knowledgeable of Elemental Demons living in Egypt!





I did sit out on my hotel room balcony too as the mist crept in over the pine tree tops and I did hear dogs howling at night. Whether they were wolves or not, I don’t know, but it was very atmospheric and although cliché, it was the perfect location for my Romanov Witches travel to for answers about their history and for the great Galleano Vampire and his sidekick Lucas to follow them there to spy on them.






Bran Castle was part of a sightseeing tour we went on and as it was the castle Bram Stoker claimed to use for his Dracula tale I did leave it out of Vampire Sorceress, but I may go back to it in my writing at some point as it was a beautiful fairy tale style castle, rather than the dark and mysterious picture painted in modern day films. 

Bucharest was less impressive and it took a very long taxi drive to Nicholae Ceausescu’s palace, which was ridiculously large, floor to ceiling white Italian marble and a ballroom the size of a football pitch. It cost so much money the Romanian people are taxed extra to pay for it! Unbelievable.



The taxi driver took us around a gypsy ghetto as they were forced off the roads and into houses in the 80’s by Ceausescu. My fascination with the gypsy life and history began at an early age. Firstly because they lived in caravans and I used to holiday with my family for one week a year in a caravan and I thought it would be cool to live in one all year round.






I took a trip through the countryside to a typical Carpathian village and was fed by the locals with their famous goulash and polenta dumplings, which I recommend everyone must try if you visit Romania.


My father then moved us to a little village in Cambridgeshire countryside when I was 10. The village was surrounded by apple and gooseberry orchards, which during the summer attracted the travellers for fruit picking work. Forget 'My Big Fat Gypsy Wedding', not all gypsies are that rich. 

Anyway, the gypsy children would briefly attend our village school and I would make friends with them – mainly because the other children bullied me and the gypsy kids for being different, so it felt quite natural for me to hang around with them. And that’s how it all began.


But I digress. Back to Transylvania and I then went to Sighisoara and other old citadel where they claim Vlad the Impaler was born. This reminded me of the city in Chitty Chitty Bang Bang where the child catcher skips through the streets with lollipops.

There was also a stately home, Peles Palace in Sainai which was incredibly beautiful and we had to wear special slippers to walk through the palace to preserve the delicate flooring. Although the palace was very beautiful, it was actually the ski resort and hotel I stayed in that inspired me to write my third book Vampire Sorceress



The hotel was incredibly dated in style, but added to a great atmosphere for the beginning of the book. Judging by the interior photos here, I'd say they've finally given The Alpin a bit of a facelift, but still very Eastern European Ski Lodge feel to the place.
All this inspired me to write just three chapters of a book. I didn’t want to overkill the ambience I created for the place, but I think I did it justice. And hopefully I can use the Bucharest and other experiences for some other series or trilogy I intend to write in the future.

Tuesday 7 April 2015

Ayreshire History and Culture


As the Beyond Series of novels constantly go back to a Scottish Highland Castle in the story I have travelled extenively around there for inspirational ideas for one of the Romanov Witches Castles. Here's the best bits.
Robert Burns House – This was a very humble little home that Robert Burns was born in. But I felt very intellectual that day and bought his complete works then read Tam O’ Shanter and Life is Like a Red Red Rose and felt very moved, this was the house he was born and grew up in, as a farmers son and he continued to farm throughout his short life and despite dying young, he did manage to pack an awful lot in, including mistresses, wives and children!


 We had the pleasure of being here on Burns Day (Robert Burns Birthday) They have big celebrations for Scotland's best loved author and poet.

Brig O Doon is in Alloway and this is the beautiful view from the Bridge. The town itself is just stunning to walk around - even the little ctone church is just chocolate box cute!
Isle of Arran and Cwmbrae – Cwmbrae is beautiful and has only one proper little seaside town. The cottages are picturesque and all look over \the beach and bay, directly overlooking another power station on the main Renfrewshire shore. Such a shame because I really could have considered buying a property there and go there for peace and solace to do my writing. Isle of Arran is lovely and we went to a castle and also bought some Arran cheese, chutney and oatcakes in this cute little oldie worlde shopping centre, however some areas of Arran are barren. Bet its bleak in winter.

Loch Doon – What amazing scenery. The waters were completely still to reflect the hills and trees. The peace and quiet was deafening and there was a ruined Castle Doon which made my day. This is somewhere you could come and not speak to a sole for days. Bliss.









Wigtown – Now for anyone who loves literature of any description this is the most amazing town and I’ve never heard of an English version of such a place. The town hosts the Scottish Book Festival every year and despite it being a small town on the very edge of Ayrshire, I do believe there are more book shops per square meter than anywhere else in the world. One shop actually looks like Olly Vanders or some thing from Harry Potter, Marvellous.





Viking Centre – This was interesting, but nothing I hadn’t already seen at the Yorvik centre in York. I’d say for content and realistic village recreation it was definitely on a par with Yorvik and one extra thing they did was the Norse Gods, which was interesting as I studied the various pagan beliefs including heathenry when decided what type of witches my coven would be in Didikai Witch - the first book in the supernatural serieis.




Renfrewshire – Largs - I liked the dated style of the seaside resort. It’s a small personal town with a groovy 1930’s Art Deco Ice cream parlour and tea rooms. I like retro and places stuck in a time warp. Maybe that’s a sign I’m getting old.

All good stories should be set somewhere a bit spooky for me. So it was important to get the right feel for the Scottish Coven's Castle set in a small village of Danestone Glen, in a remote area of the Highlands. I've visited many castles, all over the UK, but these are the ones I remember going to in Scotland.

Broddick Castle is situated outside the port of Brodick on the Isle of Arran, an island in the Firth of Clyde, Scotland. It was previously a seat of the Dukes of Hamilton, but is now owned by the National Trust for Scotland and is more like a Victorian country estate rather than the type of fortification I was looking for) -Culzean Castle -is near Maybole, Carrick, on the Ayrshire coast of Scotland. It is the former home of the Marquess of Ailsa, the chief of Clan Kennedy, but is now owned by the National Trust for Scotland and is too large for the insular magical family I was trying to create- Inverary (A lived in castle to this day and owned by an offshoot member of the Royal family, it watches over the small town below, nestled around forest scenery and a shimmering Loch shore) - Kelburn Castle, (which oddly has been painted with local artists murals all over the outside walls, colourful, but sort of lost it's charm as an oldy worldy ancient fortess capable of protecting a coven of very shy and secretive witches for half a millenia!)



I chose for the books though Lochranza Castle - which is situated in the centre of Lochranza village on the north coast of the Island of Arran. The earliest parts of the castle were built in the mid 1200s for the MacSweens. In 1262, it was granted by Alexander III to Walter Stewart (Earl of Menteith).



It is believed Robert the Bruce landed at this spot on his return from Ireland in 1306 as he began his successful campaign to become king of Scotland. The castle was later owned by his grandson when he became King Robert II of Scotland in 1371. The following years saw it used as a royal hunting lodge. During the 1490s, Lochranza Castle was used as a base from which James IV could attack the MacDonalds (Lords of the Isles). James VI took control of the castle in 1614 and the English Parliamentarian leader Cromwell took control in the1650s. The last owners, the Hamiltons, acquired the castle in 1705. 
Loch Doon Castle - was my back up castle and the barron scenery around the Loch is based on Danestone Glen in the books. The castle was built in the 1200s for Robert the Earl of Carrick. Robert the Bruce’s father gained control of this castle and Turnberry Castle in 1271 after marrying the widow Marjorie (Countess of Carrick). The castle was originally situated on a small island in the middle of Loch Doon. The ruins were rebuilt at the side of the loch in the 1930s to allow the loch to be used as a water reservoir.