ROSHANI CHOKSHI’s latest novel, The Swan’s Daughter, is a new standalone young adult fantasy with a fairytale twist. We caught up with the author to find out what she’s reading and what books she’d bring with her to a desert island.
What are you reading now?
Speak Memory by Vladimir Nabokov
If you were stranded on a desert island and you could only have five books – what would they be?
Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell by Susanna Clarke
The Diving Bell and The Butterfly by Jean-Dominique Bauby
The Oxford-English Dictionary
Where is your favourite place to read?
Rocking chair
Do you read one book at a time or multiple?
Multiple
Do you use a bookmark or fold the corners of pages?
I am abominable to my books and do neither. I flay their spines and scatter them on every surface.
What can you tell us about your novel The Swan’s Daughter?
It is a fairytale, but not in the way you might imagine. It is a fairytale in the sense that whimsy lives alongside woe; what is dark is also delightful; what is moving is also macabre. It is silly and solemn and sweet. I wrote it because I needed to reacquaint myself with wonder.
What did you find most rewarding or challenging about writing this novel?
The world was both the most rewarding and challenging. It is a true secondary world. I needed things to exist for a reason and that meant that small details needed to do the heaviest lifting.
What do you hope readers will take away from this novel?
I hope they take away a sense of wonder and delight. I hope it briefly brings them back to childhood.
What book character would you be, and why?
My character, Kamala, from The Star-Touched Queen. She’s a flesh-eating demon horse. Theoretically, a dastardly foe. In practice, a delightful fool.
If you could meet one author (living or dead) – who would it be and why?
The Pearl Poet. Why did they write Sir Gawain and The Green Knight as they did?
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