Literary Prospects

Kelley Vick

Kelley Vick talks to authors and other literary professionals about books, publishing and the writing life.

  1. HACE 7 H

    Kristi DeMeester on DARK SISTERS: Witchcraft, feminine rage, and breaking free from purity culture

    What happens when you weave together three centuries of women's stories, religious trauma, and a curse that won't let go? Author Kristi DeMeester takes us deep into the haunting world of DARK SISTERS—a multi-generational horror epic that explores shame, rage, and the power of accepting all parts of ourselves.  In this episode, Kristi opens up about her personal journey growing up in fundamentalist religion and mega churches, and how those experiences shaped the themes of religious persecution, purity culture, and feminine rage in her work. She also shares her path to publication, from years of querying and rejection to a life-changing book deal, why she fought writing horror for so long, and why the term "literary horror" isn’t her favorite.  In this episode, you'll learn: • How journaling became the foundation for Dark Sisters • How Kristi developed three timelines (the maid, the mother, and the crone) to tell the complete story she needed to tell • Why accepting all parts of yourself means being willing to see what's wrong and apologize—not just blindly accept • How Kristi ended up with a "life-changing" book deal after years of rejection • How horror can offer comfort: even in the most horrific situations This episode is your sign that you don't need permission to write what scares you, and never give up! *To support the podcast and get awesome, bookish merch, check out the Literary Prospects Shop at https://shop.literaryprospects.com  *For books featured on the podcast and other curated booklists, check out our online store at Bookshop.org, Literary Prospects Books: https://bookshop.org/shop/literaryprospects *More good stuff for writers and readers: https://literaryprospects.com   Show Notes: Guest: Kristi DeMeester Books Discussed: •    Dark Sisters (latest novel) •    Such A Pretty Smile (Georgia Author of the Year finalist) •    Beneath •    Everything That's Underneath (short fiction collection)   Topics Covered: •    [00:00] Introduction and welcome •    [00:43] Overview of Dark Sisters and its three-timeline structure •    [04:28] The spark that started the story •    [06:38] Growing up in fundamentalist religion and mega churches •    [08:07] Purity culture and purity balls •    [08:19] How Roe v. Wade's overturning influenced the book •    [10:25] The three timelines and working with Kristi's agent •    [13:38] Writing process: alternating timelines vs. writing them separately •    [15:58] Camilla as the character Kristi might have become •    [17:47] Mary as Kristi's favorite character •    [20:09] Themes of anger, acceptance, and compassion •    [23:38] The importance of accepting uncomfortable truths about ourselves •    [26:13] The lore of the Dark Sisters entity •    [32:03] Coming to writing and horror •    [36:39] The comfort found in horror •    [37:21] Thoughts on "literary horror" as a term •    [39:17] The long road to publication •    [42:06] The life-changing book deal for Such A Pretty Smile •    [49:38] Advice for aspiring authors: don't be afraid to keep going •    [51:27] Theme song choice: Eartha Kitt's "My Heart Belongs to Daddy" •    [52:40] Dream casting for a Dark Sisters adaptation

    55 min
  2. 10 FEB

    From Doom Scroll to Book Deal: Michelle Maryk on found objects and an unexpected path to publication

    Could a random scroll through Instagram turn into a debut novel? That's exactly what happened to Michelle Merrick when she spotted an Etsy ad for a 1920’s martini glass and immediately thought, "What if a person died holding this…and left their energy in the glass?" Four months later, she had a complete manuscript for her debut speculative thriller The Found Object Society.   In this episode, Michelle gets real about the writing life—the good, the messy, and the terrifying. She talks about waking up every morning to face the blinking cursor with a bit of terror, writing 2,000 words before lunch, and trusting her acting improv background to let the story unfold without rigid outlines. Her approach? Write the first draft fast and messy, take notes in your phone constantly, don't overthink it, and never give up. In this episode, you'll learn: •    How to trust your creative instincts even when you don't have it all figured out •    How Michelle wrote a first draft in 3-4 months without burning out (and why messy is better) •    Why attending writing conferences is the single most important thing Michelle did for her career •    How to build genuine relationships in the writing community (even if you're an introvert) •    How to keep going after rejection and use each manuscript as a stepping stone •    How to balance research with momentum so you don't get stuck in the details •    Why your supernatural or speculative idea might be exactly what readers need right now  This episode is an invitation to stop second-guessing yourself, release the pressure to write "the right way," and remember that you don't need an MFA or a perfect outline to build a writing career. *To support the podcast and get awesome, bookish merch, check out the Literary Prospects Shop at https://shop.literaryprospects.com  *For books featured on the podcast and other curated booklists, check out our online store at Bookshop.org, Literary Prospects Books: https://bookshop.org/shop/literaryprospects *More good stuff for writers and readers: https://literaryprospects.com Topics Discussed: •    [0:00] Introduction and book blurbs from Julia Barts, Fiona Davis, and Danielle Tristani •    [2:04] Plot overview: Greta Davenport and the mysterious Found Object Society •    [4:52] The spark: How a vintage Etsy martini glass inspired the entire novel •    [7:16] Character development and choosing historical objects (French perfume bottle, Elton John sunglasses, 1920s cigarette lighter) •    [12:04] Writing structure: Experiencing voyages chronologically with Greta •    [14:17] Research process for different time periods and 1920s slang •    [17:30] Childhood obsession with the supernatural and influence of her father •    [22:23] Themes of privilege, addiction, and wealth disparity in New York City •    [25:17] Daily writing process and using Scrivener •    [29:06] Origin story: From childhood poems to "I Hate Tuna" to short stories •    [31:49] Road to publication: Writing conferences, querying, and signing with an agent •    [37:30] Cover design process and fighting for the perfect visual •    [38:17] Best advice: Get out of the writing cave and attend conferences •    [40:33] Theme song choice: "New York Narcotic" by The Knocks

    42 min

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Kelley Vick talks to authors and other literary professionals about books, publishing and the writing life.