Elisabeth Grace Foley

Historical Fiction Author

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Once Upon a Western: An Interview With Rachel Kovaciny

August 9, 2024 by Elisabeth Grace Foley 5 Comments

Today I’m hosting fellow indie author Rachel Kovaciny for an interview, to celebrate this week’s launch of her newest book, Prairie Tales. The sixth book in Rachel’s Once Upon a Western series, Prairie Tales is a collection of short stories—each a retelling of a fairytale, folk tale, or nursery rhyme, and all featuring characters from the previous books in the series. It sounds like such a fun, cozy, altogether delightful collection, with a cover to match! For more about this newest book and the Once Upon a Western series in general, let’s get to the interview:

 

Welcome, Rachel! Tell us a little about yourself, and why you love (a) Westerns, and (b) fairytales.

Hi, everyone!  And thank you, Elisabeth, for having me here on your blog.

The short answer is, I love westerns because cowboys make me happy.  I grew up watching cowboy movies with my dad, and they always left me feeling satisfied and energetic.  Even now that I often watch the more somber westerns as well as the cheerful sort, they still satisfy me in a way no other genre really does.

The longer answer is that westerns provide so much opportunity for variety of characters and settings.  The American West isn’t only mountains or only plains or only deserts.  And the characters can be from any background around the world, really – not only people from the East Coast, or people born in the West, but Canadians, Mexicans, Europeans, Asians, Australians, South Americans, Africans – when the West was being settled, it drew people from every place and every walk of life.  There is no limit to the kinds of stories you can tell when you throw together people of such different backgrounds, beliefs, hopes, dreams, and desires.

As for fairy tales, they are one of the friendliest forms of mythic storytelling, and I gravitate toward myth-based story structure.  Because the Wild West is America’s great national myth, in a way, it makes sense to me to blend the two together.

 

Your first foray into Western fairytale retellings was a Sleeping Beauty story in the multi-author anthology Five Magic Spindles. How soon after that did you get the idea for your next Western retelling, and when did you realize it was going to be a series?

I had actually had the idea of retelling fairy tales as westerns a year or so before I wrote The Man on the Buckskin Horse for Five Magic Spindles, but I never went anywhere with that idea.  While I was doing revisions on Buckskin, the editor from Rooglewood Press I was working with said she thought there would be a real audience for more wild west fairy tale retellings, and encouraged me to consider writing another one.

“Little Red Riding Hood” is a pretty obvious one to retell as a western, what with the wolf and the dangerous journey, so I settled on that one for my next story.  While I was writing Cloaked, I did a little brainstorming and figured out how to make “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs,” “The Twelve Dancing Princesses,” “Beauty and the Beast,” “Cinderella,” and “The Steadfast Tin Soldier” into westerns too.  So the idea of it being a series came pretty early on, definitely before I finished the first draft of Cloaked.

The Once Upon a Western series features stories of all different lengths, from the short stories in Prairie Tales up to short novels. How do you pick which fairytales you want to retell at full length and which will be shorter tales—or do they kind of decide for themselves?

They kind of decide for themselves, usually.  I’ll get an idea for how a fairy tale would work as a western, figure out who the characters could generally be and what the plot line would be, and once I know the basic plot, I know whether it will be a book or a short story.  Usually!  I actually wrote a retelling of “The Seven Swan Princes” last year that I thought was going to be a short story, and it got to be almost 30,000 words!  And it needed to expand more yet.  So, I now plan to turn that one into a full book.

 

I know some of your characters make cameo/crossover appearances in different stories across the series. Is that something you plan out or is it more spur-of-the-moment?

I have planned all along for these books to take place in a shared universe, if you will, and to have them connected to each other in the background while still being stand-alone adventures.  But I don’t always know until I’m planning the next book how it connects to the previous ones.  For instance, there’s a character from Cloaked who shows up in a later book, and I did not expect that until I got about a third of the way through the first draft of that later book.  Suddenly, I was looking at my series timeline and going, “Wait, could this work?  Could this person be in this place at this time?”

Other things, I knew before I started the next book, like Marta Beckmann from My Rock and My Refuge being the cousin of Hauer from Cloaked.  That made obvious sense, since they both have German ancestry.  And there are a lot more connections that get revealed in this short story collection, some quite obviously and some a little more subtly.

 

Do you have a favorite decade or period of Old West history? If so, are most of your stories set in that time or are they scattered across different decades?

I particularly love the classic Cowboy Era of 1865-1885, and this whole series takes place then.  But I am currently writing a fantasy western for a multi-author series called the Cornerstone Series, and that takes place in a magical realism version of 1807 California!  That one’s called A Noble Companion and is set to release November 12.  It has no relation to my Once Upon a Western series, but it IS a fairy tale retelling.  It retells “The Ugly Duckling,” but focusing on some side characters.

 

Can you tell us anything about future plans for the Once Upon a Western series?

I think the next book in the series will be Steadfast, a retelling of “The Steadfast Tin Soldier” set in Texas and involving a cattle drive.  After that will be either a “Cinderella” retelling set on the Santa Fe Trail or that “Seven Swan Princes” retelling I mentioned earlier, which I’ll expand into a book.  I have ideas for a couple more short stories already, too, so I’ve called this new release Prairie Tales: Volume One because I fully anticipate putting out a Volume Two one day!

Thanks so much for this interview, Elisabeth!  This has been so much fun.

You’re so welcome! It has indeed!

Visit Rachel’s website | Join her mailing list | Add “Prairie Tales” on Goodreads

Filed Under: Fairytales, Guest Posts and Interviews, Westerns

Interview With Emily Hayse, Author of “These War-Torn Hands”

July 12, 2021 by Elisabeth Grace Foley Leave a Comment

This morning I’m delighted to welcome fellow indie author Emily Hayse for an interview about her newest release, These War-Torn Hands. I’ve known Emily for some time and have enjoyed several of her books, and I’m immensely intrigued by the concept of this latest one. These War-Torn Hands is the first book in a planned fantasy western trilogy, and what I’m particularly excited about is that it’s also a retelling of Arthurian legend, which sounds like such a cool idea! I’m looking forward to reading it, and I loved getting to quiz Emily about her inspiration for the story, her love for the Western genre and more in this great interview, which I hope you’ll enjoy:

Welcome, Emily, and thanks for doing this interview! Let’s talk first about your writing in general. Most of your books are historical fantasy—would you call that your favorite type of fiction to write? What specially appeals to you about blending speculative elements with settings based on real historical eras?

It is definitely one of my very favorites. The entire reason I got into fantasy in the first place was that I loved history, and when I had a story that I couldn’t find a time period for, I’d make up a world and eventually it happened enough that fantasy became a genre I wrote. What I love about blending the two is the ability to drag in other things like legends and make them real. You can change the stakes and grab readers that otherwise wouldn’t realize they’d enjoy that period of history and show them the beauty of history or the sorts of people that lived then.

Tell us about your relationship to the Western genre as a whole—what do you love about it, and what do you think makes a good Western?

I love so much about this genre. The landscapes and settings have so much variation and potential for danger and beauty. I love the moral complexities it demands because of the lack of structured law. A person was often forced to make a moral stand or at least his own decisions because there was no one else to make him. And honestly, I just love all the horses. A good western, in my opinion, is the marriage of a tough problem, be it man, land, or self, a beautiful setting, some danger, and a hero with the moral character to face it.

Oh, I love that description. How much research on the real American West did you do? Is there anything in the story that readers would be surprised to learn is based in reality and not fantasy?

For this book I did a fair amount of reading, some accurate fiction, and some nonfiction about the western genre and what accurate portrayals looked like, but the American West has been one of my favorite time periods in history so there was a lot of prior knowledge I leaned on. There will be some things in the later books that are based in reality and you wouldn’t think it, but the closest I can think right now is that the isarks are roughly based on pterodactyls. There are some stories where cowboys reported seeing large flying reptiles out in the middle of nowhere and the isarks are an homage to those legends.

What are your favorite Western books and movies?

Ooh. I do really like some of Louis L’Amour’s books. I read a collection of his frontier short stories that I absolutely loved. Books like Moccasin Trail, San Domingo, and Bound for Oregon shaped my childhood. I also love yours. I will read any western of yours. But I’m always looking for more recommendations in that genre! Some of my favorite western movies are The Magnificent Seven, The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly, Conagher, Stagecoach, and Ride Lonesome.

I am so flattered that you included me here. (I love San Domingo and Moccasin Trail too!) Moving on…I know you’ve worked with horses. How is that real-life experience reflected in your writing?

I think it’s reflected mostly in the small, comfortable details. Being able to get past the surface information, because so many people write horses in books, and add that touch of realism where a horse person would recognize the same feelings or experiences they have around a horse. Things like the way gray grime builds on your hands when you groom a horse, or the tiny things they do to tantrum when you’ve said no to nonsense, or how they snort really long when they’re relaxed.

That’s exactly the kind of detail that always makes me feel that an author really knows what they’re describing. Now, about the Arthurian aspect! Without giving us too many spoilers, which parts of Arthurian legend do you focus on retelling?

This book touches on the setup of the legend. Arthur’s rise to king of Britain, Merlin sort of overseeing it, and Vortigern inviting the Saxons (and a lot of trouble) into Britain. The following books will cover the better-known legends, things that happened in the glory days, the quest for the Holy Grail, and the departure of Arthur.

Do you see These War-Torn Hands as a “fractured” or “twisted” take on Arthurian legend, or a more straightforward classic-style retelling?

I love this question. In a sense, I am trying for a more straightforward telling. By the second book, if you know the legends, you’ll start to be able to name specific Arthurian stories that are unfolding in front of you, and I am writing roughly in chronological order for the legends, so you’ll get the usual progression. However, everything makes sense as a western and I’ve changed up and combined some events and characters to make it fit the world better. So I think it may be possible for someone to enjoy it simply as a western (albeit a fantasy one) without really knowing the Arthurian side of it.

Were you influenced by any specific Arthurian literature or authors?

I was mostly influenced by King Arthur and The Knights of the Round Table by Roger Lancelyn Green, but I also read Rosemary Sutcliff’s King Arthur trilogy and some Sir Thomas Mallory.

You know, I still haven’t read Green’s King Arthur, but I probably should one day since his version of Robin Hood was always my favorite! And now, final question: how is These War-Torn Hands similar to your previous books, and how is it different?

It has the same historical feel, the same sort of prose, the largeish cast of characters that are similar to my other books. I think the scope is wider on this one. It’s my first published series I’ve done, so there’s a lot of setting up and not resolving yet that’s in this book. Also, I have multiple POVs which isn’t something I’ve done much in my other books.

EMILY HAYSE is a lover of log cabins, strong coffee, NASCAR, and the smell of old books. Her writing is fueled by good characters and a lifelong passion for storytelling. When she is not busy turning words into worlds, she can often be found baking, singing, or caring for one of the many dogs and horses in her life. She lives with her family in Michigan.

Get your copy of These War-Torn Hands:

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | The Book Depository | Signed copy (US only)

Filed Under: Guest Posts and Interviews, Westerns

Interview at the Indie Crime Scene

February 26, 2021 by Elisabeth Grace Foley Leave a Comment

This week I had the pleasure of being interviewed by the Indie Crime Scene, a site dedicated to spotlighting independently-published crime and mystery fiction of all kinds. I got to talk about Land of Hills and Valleys and some of the writing process and inspiration for it, the Western genre, writing historical and Western mysteries, and more! It was a really enjoyable interview to do, and you can read it here.

Filed Under: Guest Posts and Interviews, Land of Hills and Valleys

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