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Restoration (Verity Fassbinder #3) by Angela Slatter (Guest Post) @quercusbooks @AngelaSlatter #restoration #angelaslatter #guestpost #trilogy #complete #quercus #fantasy #thriller #amwriting #bookblog

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10.07.19 / Jo Fletcher (Quercus) / Fantasy / Paperback / 400pp / 978-1784294380


About Restoration

‘First-class imagination and first-class storytelling’ Jeff Vandermeer, bestselling author of the Southern Reach trilogy

Walking between the worlds has always been dangerous – but this time V’s facing the loss of all she holds dear.

Verity Fassbinder thought no boss could be worse than her perfectionist ex-boyfriend – until she agreed to work for a fallen angel. The angel is a jealous – and violent – employer, so she’s quit working for the Weyrd Council and sent her family away.

The angel has tasked V with finding two lost treasures. That would be hard even without a vengeful Dusana Nadasy on her heels. And Inspector McIntyre won’t stop calling: the bodies of Normal women who disappeared decades ago are turning up, apparently subjected to Weyrd magics. Angelic demands or not, this isn’t something V can walk away from.

And the angel is getting impatient for results . . .

Pick up a copy here: Quercus Books / Amazon UK / Amazon US / Goodreads

The Pleasure and Pain of Finishing a Trilogy by Angela Slatter

Write a trilogy, they said. It’ll be fun, they said.
*sigh*
I should start by saying that the Verity Fassbinder series began as a standalone short story. ‘Brisneyland by Night’ was written at Clarion South in 2009 and caught the eye of someone who helpfully suggested it would make an excellent series if I could manage it.
Ignorance is not only bliss but also a kind of protective Teflon coating that blinds you to any real clue as to what you’re about to attempt. I had no idea what structure was, so turning ‘Brisneyland’ into Vigil took me roughly five years. Luckily for me, Jo Fletcher is patient.
Having at last written and sold this weird book – five years of muttering to independently minded characters, ‘What are you doing, aren’t you supposed to be my galley slaves?’ – I had to do it all again. Luckily, by then I’d learned about structure thanks to a friend who’d explained it using Star Wars. I like to think of it as the Art of Scaffolding, and while it didn’t make things easy, it made them easier, and the writing of Corpselight a little less impossible than I thought.
Plus, I’d learned to trust Verity – if she was wandering off the path it meant she (and my subconscious) probably had a clue about stuff I’d already seeded in the earlier book and how it might come to fruition. Some of the other characters were, however, still pretty untrustworthy (I’m looking at you, Bela Tepes) and it was best not to listen to them. Mostly.
Then suddenly Corpselight was done and I was staring down the barrel of Restoration. Though I knew it would be the last book of the trilogy, I don’t think it really sank in that it would be The Last. I was tangled up in writerly concerns like finishing overarching story questions, giving closure to some characters, comeuppance to others and, of course, there was my own fear of not writing a good enough ending for either readers or myself.
However, if I’ve learned anything it’s that sometimes your story knows best. Corpselight isn’t the book I at first synopsised, and thank the dark gods Restoration wasn’t either, as it was a single line about ‘stuff happening’. The back brain has its own plans, and it remembers even if you do not the maze of clues you’ve laid down as you write forward. Sometimes I feel like that’s how I’ve always found my endings: creeping forward wearing smudged glasses on a foggy night guided by a torch with dying batteries.
But finish I did and gave a sigh of relief.
Then a scream of fear.
Time to say goodbye to the world I’d lived in for years, to all those imaginary friends I’d spent more time with than actual humans. In finishing there’s satisfaction and fear, peace and distress. Hope that you might get to visit again, and despair that you won’t get the chance. That’s what finishing a trilogy is like.

About Angela Slatter

Angela Slatter is the award-winning author of eight short story collections, including A Feast of Sorrows: StoriesSourdough and Other StoriesThe Bitterwood Bible and Other Recountings, and Winter Children and Other Chilling Tales. She has won the World Fantasy Award, the British Fantasy Award and five Aurealis Awards. Her short stories have appeared widely, including in annual British, Australian and North American Best Of anthologies, and her work has been translated into Spanish, Russian, Polish, Romanian, and Japanese. Vigil was her first solo novel, and the sequel Corpselight is due out in July 2017. Angela lives in Brisbane, Australia.

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