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The novel- Purchas- has been running a week.

I started off with a single idea. I wanted to explore the life of an Immortal. I decided that my hero(ine) would be a child who swallows the elixir of life by accident.

And that's all I knew when I started to write.

I set myself the task of posting it in daily installments on LJ. The first week's worth are on display now at [livejournal.com profile] purchas. I'm afraid the format dictates that one has to read from the bottom up. Sorry about that. It's rather jerky, but there you go....

The novel is part fantasy, part history. The year is 1482 and all the details are, so far as I can make them (thank you, thank you, Google!) historically accurate.

I know what happens next. Just about. At present I have two or three installments in hand. What happens further on is very, very cloudy. But I trust my characters. They will tell me how their story is meant to go. I have the feeling that the entire saga already exists, in some form, somewhere, and that it's being unveiled to me bit by bit.

I don't know how long I'll keep it up. I envisage the present novel running for 60,000+ words and after that there'll still be 500 years to go. But whether I write the sequels is hardly up to me. If Purchas wants to tell me about her post-medieval adventures she will, and if she doesn't she won't. But I've let her know that I'm very, very eager to learn about her meetings with Cagliostro and the Count de St Germain in Paris in the 1770s...

Date: 2006-01-09 11:56 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] seraphimsigrist.livejournal.com
Yes. It is not well written really. It is
a compendium of reading of stuff from occult
bookstores, and yet... and yet it is fine.
I of course like the bit about "they have
the Eucharist [why do they look for something
else?]" but also the st Germain / Mr Welldone
(was it?) nicely left an ambiguity...
John Dickson Carr's stories I think just once
or twice do that, leave an ambiguity after
Gideon Fell debunks the supernatural hokum.
+Seraphim

Date: 2006-01-09 01:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] poliphilo.livejournal.com
I like it when a window is left open like that.

And the same with a supernatural story where the possibility of a rational explanation is not wholly discounted.

My favourite Dickson Carr is He Who Whispers.

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