Today, I'm happy to have Emily Ann Hansen as my guest talking about one of my favorite topics--fairy tales. Be sure to check out her new release, Grimm & White, as well as her great giveaway contest at the bottom of this post.
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Why We Cannot Get Enough of Fairy Tales
Fairy Tales are everywhere.
No, Snow-White isn’t going to meet you at the corner restaurant for some apple-brie and Cinderella is not quite ready to let you borrow her glass slippers. What I mean of course is that the popularity of Fairy Tales has grown immensely over the last few years. From television shows to books and movies, the creative industry has been saturated with adaptations and modern retellings of the beloved tales. I say … bring them on. From Cinder to Once Upon a Time, the stories we grew up hearing and reading, have been transformed in the most wonderful of ways.
My novel, Grimm and White, is a tale that takes nuances from the Grimm tales and twists them, blurring the line between adaptation and retelling. When I first started writing the novel, I’m not sure that I knew that Fairy Tales were going to be at the foundation of the world I created. However, once I decided that was the direction that I was taking, the world transitioned from its grainy existence in my brain into a much clearer picture. One second I thought I knew where I was going and the next I was being dragged into the plot by forces out of my control. It was like … magic.
There are hundreds of reasons why people love fairy tales, but below are the top 5 reasons I cannot get enough of them! As a bonus, I matched each reason to a song that I would put on the Grimm and White playlist.
So here they are,
5 Songs and Reasons I Love Fairy Tales:
#5: A Lesson Learned
What I knew yesterday is completely different than what I know today. Every time I wake up, I do so with the understanding that I should go into my day, wanting to fill my brain with all the knowledge that I can. I would like to think that literature and writing are at the center of my journey to understand the world. Fairy tales are more than princes and princesses. They are mirrors into society.
Track #5: Be As You Are – Mike Posner
#4: Magic/Unknown
Let’s talk about the magical and mystical elements of fairy tales. In one story we have a wolf who has swallowed a human being whole and in another, there is a giant. Literally anything can happen! Fairy tales are kind of the best!
Track #4: Dirty Paws – Of Monsters and Men
#3: Dark and “Grim”
The Grimm Stories, as well as many other Fairy Tales, have darkness that coats their edges. When we think of the Little Mermaid, you probably only have Ariel the happy-go-lucky mermaid in your thoughts. If you haven’t read the Hans Christian Anderson version, I would implore you to do so. The Little Mermaid doesn’t just lose her voice. Her tongue gets cut off. Let me tell you, (spoiler alert) she definitely never gets her happily ever after.
Although morose, the dark and grim can lead to some really stellar writing.
Track #3: Follow You Into the Dark – Death Cab For Cutie
#2: Tradition
The Grimm Brother’s weren’t the original creators of many of their tales. They obtained them from oral traditions, which is how stories were once told. There is something comforting in delving into a tale that you are familiar with.
Track #2: Home – Gabrielle Aplin
#1: Love
Even though there was anguish and pain in a lot of the original fairy tales, especially the ones written by the Brother’s Grimm, there was still a silver lining. I’m a sucker for romance.
“The prince said joyfully, "You are with me." He told her what had happened, and then said, "I love you more than anything else in the world. Come with me to my father's castle. You shall become my wife." Snow-White loved him, and she went with him. Their wedding was planned with great splendor and majesty.”
-The Brother’s Grimm
Track #1: I Hate You. I Love You– Gnash
Happy Reading!
Grimm and White
Fairy Tales are everywhere.
No, Snow-White isn’t going to meet you at the corner restaurant for some apple-brie and Cinderella is not quite ready to let you borrow her glass slippers. What I mean of course is that the popularity of Fairy Tales has grown immensely over the last few years. From television shows to books and movies, the creative industry has been saturated with adaptations and modern retellings of the beloved tales. I say … bring them on. From Cinder to Once Upon a Time, the stories we grew up hearing and reading, have been transformed in the most wonderful of ways.
My novel, Grimm and White, is a tale that takes nuances from the Grimm tales and twists them, blurring the line between adaptation and retelling. When I first started writing the novel, I’m not sure that I knew that Fairy Tales were going to be at the foundation of the world I created. However, once I decided that was the direction that I was taking, the world transitioned from its grainy existence in my brain into a much clearer picture. One second I thought I knew where I was going and the next I was being dragged into the plot by forces out of my control. It was like … magic.
There are hundreds of reasons why people love fairy tales, but below are the top 5 reasons I cannot get enough of them! As a bonus, I matched each reason to a song that I would put on the Grimm and White playlist.
So here they are,
5 Songs and Reasons I Love Fairy Tales:
#5: A Lesson Learned
What I knew yesterday is completely different than what I know today. Every time I wake up, I do so with the understanding that I should go into my day, wanting to fill my brain with all the knowledge that I can. I would like to think that literature and writing are at the center of my journey to understand the world. Fairy tales are more than princes and princesses. They are mirrors into society.
Track #5: Be As You Are – Mike Posner
#4: Magic/Unknown
Let’s talk about the magical and mystical elements of fairy tales. In one story we have a wolf who has swallowed a human being whole and in another, there is a giant. Literally anything can happen! Fairy tales are kind of the best!
Track #4: Dirty Paws – Of Monsters and Men
#3: Dark and “Grim”
The Grimm Stories, as well as many other Fairy Tales, have darkness that coats their edges. When we think of the Little Mermaid, you probably only have Ariel the happy-go-lucky mermaid in your thoughts. If you haven’t read the Hans Christian Anderson version, I would implore you to do so. The Little Mermaid doesn’t just lose her voice. Her tongue gets cut off. Let me tell you, (spoiler alert) she definitely never gets her happily ever after.
Although morose, the dark and grim can lead to some really stellar writing.
Track #3: Follow You Into the Dark – Death Cab For Cutie
#2: Tradition
The Grimm Brother’s weren’t the original creators of many of their tales. They obtained them from oral traditions, which is how stories were once told. There is something comforting in delving into a tale that you are familiar with.
Track #2: Home – Gabrielle Aplin
#1: Love
Even though there was anguish and pain in a lot of the original fairy tales, especially the ones written by the Brother’s Grimm, there was still a silver lining. I’m a sucker for romance.
“The prince said joyfully, "You are with me." He told her what had happened, and then said, "I love you more than anything else in the world. Come with me to my father's castle. You shall become my wife." Snow-White loved him, and she went with him. Their wedding was planned with great splendor and majesty.”
-The Brother’s Grimm
Track #1: I Hate You. I Love You– Gnash
Happy Reading!
*~*~*
Grimm and White
Heartless
Book
1
Emily
Ann Hansen
Genre: Fairytale/ Urban Fantasy
Date of Publication: January 26th,
2016
ISBN: 978-1522860259
Number of pages: 287 kindle
Number of pages: 245 Print
Word Count: 89,000
Cover Artist: Murphy Rae
Book Description:
How far would you go to save your
own life? Would you kill the one you love?
I want you to put your hand over
your heart. Press down against the skin, meld your fingers into the flesh, and
listen to the beats. Can you hear how that one organ is keeping you alive? One
pump. Two pumps. Three.
Alice White Cabot would consider
you lucky. She can press down in that same exact spot and she would feel …
nothing. She is under the curse of the Heartless, and on her nineteenth
birthday she will have to rip out the heart of the one she loves or she herself
will die.
Kallin Grimm is a regular
nineteen-year-old guy from the Chicago suburbs. He’s completely normal, except
for the strength he can’t explain. Not to mention, Kallin is in love with a
girl that he has never met. The only means of communication between the two of
them is through an enchanted journal. Whatever is written in one can be seen in
the other. For the past year Allie and Kallin have shared their secrets and
their souls, which is why Allie knows they can never be together. It is the
only way to keep his heart safe.
Enter the dark world of curses,
secrets, and a history as old as time. The novel opens on Allie’s eighteenth
birthday. With one year left, she, along with her best friend Miles set off
from California to find out more about the curse, her past, and to stay as far
away from Kallin Grimm as she can. Their first lead is in Chicago. Maybe this
curse is stronger than she thinks. Tick-Tick-Tick.
Who would you choose?
Prologue:
“Happily Never After”
On Lighthouse Avenue, inside the house at the
end of the street, lives a girl with no heart. This is not to say she is cold
or unloving, but it is literal and true. If you peeked inside her pale skin,
peeled back her veins and muscles, you would find a cavernous hole of sorts.
Her name is Alice White Cabot, and she is
eighteen-years-old today.
A light turns on in the shed behind the Cabot
house. Beyond the roses that line the aged rocks on the side wall of the large
house, past the stepping stones, a few feet farther than the toad rot, gundly
flax, and verbena flowers (I’m sure we will get to that later), and finally we
reach a small wooden box. What served as a gardening shed, now is filled to the
brim with papers, maps, pens, various supplies, two pictures, one knife, and
the girl in question.
Allie sits at the window on a small black
stool with the knife in her hand. Her dark hair and blue eyes are the only
vivid colors in the otherwise grey shed. She is absentmindedly cutting her
finger again and again. Three droplets of blood bead off of her fingertips and
fall on to the white carpet. Not flinching, she stares out the window at the
snow falling like feathers from the sky. Allie thinks she must have heard that
somewhere, some time ago. When and where are lost to her.
It’s Christmas and almost time for dinner.
She looks around the ancient space, with its empty flowerpots and cobwebs, and
knows this is the last time she will be in this room that has given her solace
for so many years. When her mother first died she hid under the desk in the
corner and read every book she could find; mostly adventure stories, like The
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and Robinson Crusoe. The ceiling leaked and mice
occasionally set up house, but it was her special place.
The gash on her finger has closed and all
that remains is dried blood crusted on the knife blade.
On top of the cluttered desk is a purple
music box. She gets up from her seat and places the knife on a dilapidated
shelf. She gingerly opens the golden latch. A ballerina springs to life, and a
haunting song echoes throughout the four walls of her sanctuary.
She pulls out a note. On the front of the
folded paper, the words Happy Birthday are scrawled in pretty script.
My darling Allie,
I wish more than anything I could have given
this to you myself, but I know Gram will be there to do it for me. You must
feel the time slipping away like I did. There is so much I want to say and so
much that I, myself, don’t know how to explain. I cannot tell you what to do my
love. Whatever you decide, no matter what, you are my sweet bean. I know you
will choose to be better, to be good. You are so loved and that will never
change.
-Mom
Her face is scrunched up, her nostrils flared
and forehead taut, but she will not cry.
Allie grabs the knife again. She cradles it
in both of her hands for several seconds before she takes the hilt and turns
the blade towards her stomach, so close that the tip digs into her belly
button.
Her breath mingles with dust in the unheated
shed. Allie holds the knife like one would hold a brush or maybe a
spoon—casually, yet calculated.
With no other thought she plunges the weapon
into her stomach, causing blood to immediately pool onto her white sweater. She
makes no sound, not even a whimper. Both eyes are popped open, wide and
surprised, while her other expressions remain suppressed. As quickly as she put
the blade in, she pulls it back out.
Allie drops the knife, and it clatters across
the floor. She raises her hands and clutches them to her stomach, probing the
area gently. 1 … 2 … 3 seconds pass.
“Damn it.”
She lifts her T-shirt revealing a smooth
layer of skin, like the day she was born. The wound is gone; not so much as a
scar to remind her of the pain.
Today, Allie White
Cabot does not feel like celebrating because in one year’s time, she has to rip
out the heart of the one she loves, or she will die.
“Damn it! Damn it! Damn it!”
But, until then she is cursed to breathe and
live and what she doesn’t want more than anything else, she is cursed to love
and be loved.
The curse of the Heartless.
What do I know? I’m just the mirror who
watched the curse come to life. I’m just a mirror who is trapped like the rest
… destined to bend to the will of the curse or break under its power like so
many before.
This is not just
her story, but it is his as well. Kallin Grimm, the boy who loves the girl.
The boy who can
save us all.
Allie walks over and snatches a map of
Illinois from the clutter on the desk. There is a bold red circle around the
city of Chicago.
“See you soon,” Allie says. She opens the
door. A gush of cold air blows inside, causing the music box to slam closed.
The melody stops abruptly. She wonders if that’s what it will sound like when
she dies.
A snowflake lands on her lip and she licks it
off. It will all be worth it. If she can keep him safe.
About
the Author:
Emily Hansen is a writer currently
living in Baltimore City. She grew up in Illinois and will always call Chicago
home. She graduated from Columbia College Chicago with a BA in Fiction. She is
a 9th grade English teacher. She became a writer because she thinks that people
should not have to look far to find magic in their lives. Her obsessions range
from depressing poetry to one or ten cups of coffee a day. Grimm and White is
her first novel.
Facebook: www.facebook.com/City.Writer.Emily
Tour
giveaway:
3 print copies Grimm and White
a Rafflecopter giveaway*~*~*
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