E L Croucher featured on RAGING BOOK REVIEWS

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Let’s meet the author of a new (soon-to-release) dytopian novel with a very unique synopsis, Horned Winged Blessed:

E. L. Croucher

 

 

 

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Tell us a bit about what inspired you to create a post-apocalyptic, all female run government concept? 

The main concept came from wanting to create an ironic world that swaps the patriarchy for the matriarchy. Women predominantly in charge, rather than men. Women controlling how men use their bodies, rather than men telling women whether or not they can get an abortion. It’s a topical and rather “taboo” topic at the moment – which is exactly why I chose it as the setting of my dystopian novel. It’s dark. That allows me to use it as the perfect platform to make a social commentary and set up a post-apocalyptic world.

The reason behind setting Horned Winged Blessed in a post-world war III time period was because war is something that my generation have no idea about. We’ve heard about it in History lessons at school, but that’s it. I’m using the fear of the unknown to start out with a certain element of gloominess.

Which character in your latest novel are most like you? And why?

This is 100% the antagonist, haha! Simone Wood, the mother of the protagonist. I actually based the character around the type of parent and woman that I don’t want to become.

When starting the novel, I was going through my own dark times – my ex left me because I couldn’t give him biological children. That in itself remains to be a theme throughout Horned Winged Blessed, albeit very subtly and delicately.
Simone Wood is the character of who I wouldn’t want to be as a mother. Joan Wood, the protagonist, grows to despise her. She is always drunk, and prioritises work over her daughter. Simone is everything I want to avoid becoming, but she’s still based around me.

If you could be re-spawned as any creature (real or imaginary), what would it be and why did you choose it?

It would have to be a butterfly. The symbolism is too great for me to say anything else! ^^
I’m a transgender woman, and the process that a butterfly goes through, from caterpillar to chrysalis, is just so similar to what we also go through. I’ve always been a butterfly on the inside, my body just now reflects that.

When you write your novels, what are 3 must-haves in your writing space?

  1. Notepad and pen.
  2. Steaming black coffee.
  3. Candles burning around me.

Give us the book-track of your life. List a book you loved as a child, young adult and currently.

I’m afraid none of these are going to be ground-breaking or special.

I grew up with books all around me, as my mother was a big reader. I went to sleep at night with Harry Potter under my pillow. Another favourite of mine was the ‘Wicca’ series, by Cate Tiernan.

In my teens I started reading books like The Handmaid’s tale, To Kill and Mocking Bird and other classics. I also spent a lot of time reading about Wiccan and Pagan lore, if I’m permitted to add non-fiction books to this list!

As a young adult I loved A Song of Ice and Fire. Dany is my idol and I love her. My favourite quote of all time is her line “If I look back, I am lost.”

These days, I keep in the dystopian genre. I’m re-reading Divergent. Another non-fiction book on my list is Pure, White and Deadly… as I’m cutting out all processed sugar.

Want to know more about E.L. Croucher? Here’s a brief background:

E L Croucher is a young author, living in London. She started writing over two years, with her first novel The Butterfly on Fire, which she published on Amazon. Alongside her career as a writer, she works as a Japanese translator and interpreter for a well-known Japanese gaming company, after studying Japanese at university and living in Tokyo, Japan.

Her latest novel, Horned Winged Blessed is an ironic look into a world in which gender roles are swapped, and minorities are forced into labels that they did not choose. With a mix of feminist views and a pro-LGBTQ+ stance, E L Croucher writes to further her dream of a world free from prejudice, hate-crimes and bullying.

Follow her story on her website or find her on social media:

Website | Facebook | Instagram
ELCroucher.com | Emi Louise Croucher| @emi13230

About The Book
Follow Joan on her adventure of discovery, as she learns the hard way that her post-apocalyptic utopia isn’t always full of rainbows and Merlot.
Yes, she lives on the nicer side of the settlement, as the daughter of the Mother Founder. But after a life-threatening attack on her home, she soon realizes that many out there are against the Silver Party regime.
Horned Winged Blessed is the story of one girl fighting against a tyrannous government, elected to power amidst the unending chaos of World War III. Heavily enriched in their pagan values, the Silver Party are to thank for pulling Broken Britain up from the brink of a depression, but at what cost?
Will Joan decide to take down the Silver Party from the inside…
…or will she go on to fight alongside the rebel faction that allures her so intensely?

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Title: Horned Winged Blessed
Author: E L Croucher
Category: LGBTQ+ Dystopian Fiction
Publication Date: 29th November 2019
Publisher: Amazon
Editor: Jake Ratcliff
Cover Artist: Dawn M Larder
Buy Links
Amazon UKAmazon US

E L Croucher featured on BOOKS TEACUP AND REVIEWS

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#AUTHORINTERVIEW #SPOTLIGHT : E. L. CROUCHER, AUTHOR OF HORNED WINGED BLESSED

For the full Blog Post, check out this URL

AUTHOR Q&A

Can you tell readers little about your book, Horned Winged Blessed? What they can expect from the book?

The world is built around a post-apocalyptic Broken Britain, and sees an all-female, all-wiccan government in power. The story follows the protagonist Joan, who is daughter to the leader of the above government, as she realises that the world her mother has built isn’t always rainbows and Merlot. There is a serious issue in how gender is “labelled” against the people’s will, and Joan is faced with the choice of either joining the rebels that plot against her mother’s government, or trying and take it down from the inside.

Horned Winged Blessed is my attempt at spinning the current patriarchal society on its head, as well as bringing to light the oppression that various minorities in our society goes through every day.

You can expect a dark, thought-provoking and empowering read, as you start to pick away at the paintwork of the world in Horned Winged Blessed.

How did you come up with the idea for your book?

I wanted to start in the realm of a dystopian-style gender swap, to bring an ironic light on what we are currently seeing in society today. The pay gap, abortion rights, the murder of transgender women of colour… there are so many issues that we cannot ignore. So I started by wanting to focus on a dystopian world that mirrors ours. That makes it a lot easier to show the successes and flaws within it.

What inspired you for dystopian setting of Horned Winged Blessed?

I knew I wanted to set Horned Winged Blessed around ten years from now, based on the age of my main characters. From there, I worked backwards until the present day and came up with a plausible chain of events until things get really dark, I.e. Brexit, the next election, nuclear threats. Eventually, without giving too much away, something triggers World War III in the novel. Luckily for the protagonist (and probably the reader!) the novel doesn’t started until WWIII is coming to an end and the government in charge is already paving the way to a new world…

What type of characters do you love and hate to write? What is your favorite quality in protagonists? Does anyone in real life inspired you to write them?

In Horned Winged Blessed, I really liked playing with the age of my characters. My generation have grown to be the middle-aged generation in the novel and I loved writing the characters in that way. That was exciting for me as a millennial. The protagonist, however, is of course a slightly younger generation, so writing her was a lot tougher. Would they speak differently? Would they think about the world differently? My generation has never known war, but for Joan’s generation it is all they know. Those elements were a challenge at times.

As far as real-life inspiration goes, there are of course people that I tend to channel when writing. The love interest in the novel was based on my boyfriend (at the time… we broke up three weeks ago!). However, as above, it’s a lot harder to base the characters on anyone from my real life as no-one I know has gone through a World War that they saw through their friend’s Instagram stories!

What was the most interesting aspect of writing Horned Winged Blessed?

The main theme is the daughter vs. mother, “my-generation-knows-best” divide. It was extremely interesting to write as a daughter that loathes her mother so intensely, when I am so close with mine. In fact, people may think that I based the Mother Founder on my mother, but they couldn’t be further from the truth! I actually based it on me, and everything I don’t want to be as a mum.

Tell us about your journey to publication.

I went down the self-published route, purely because I’m impatient and love having something to do. Marketing my own novel, creating a buzz and hosting a huge launch party are all things I wanted to do. I started writing this novel a year ago, finishing the first draft in around 7 months. It’s been ripped apart and edited since then. Last weekend I posted in on Amazon, and I ordered the hard copies for my launch party tonight. It’s all finally happening!

What are your most favorite and least favorite thing about being an author?

My favorite part about being an author is actually sitting down and writing, but unfortunately that is a shockingly small percentage of what I have found that being an author entails. My fondest memory was jetting off to Peterborough to a small hotel by the side of a river, all on my own. I just wrote and ate for an entire week. It was heaven. However, I of course love the organisation needed in self-publishing a novel. The ultimate reward is when people tell you that they laughed or cried whilst reading my book. It’s the most motivating feeling in the world.

My least favorite part has to be how it’s morphed what and how I read. I can’t just pick up a book and enjoy it now. It becomes research. Research becomes an effort. I start to think to myself “well if you have time to read that, why don’t you also read this”, “oh, that’s a good idea, jot that down”. The worst one is without a doubt “oh, why can’t I write like that!” Once Horned Winged Blessed is truly finished, I can’t wait to read for fun again!

Do you have any writing rituals?

It starts from the night before. I shower, pack my bag in advance and set out my clothes on my counter. Then, I sleep as early as I can. When the morning arrives – often on the weekend – I’m up and getting ready to go out within seconds.

I walk down my road, no further than a couple of streets away to the cutest little independent coffee shop in town. Headphones in, coffee steaming to my left and laptop out.

Heaven.

What is the next project you’re working on?

I wish I had a say in this, but my family have personally asked me to put anything else on hold for a while, so that I can enjoy Christmas with them. How cute!

In the new year I plan to re-write my first novel. It’s going to be a big task, but I’ve developed so much as a writer, than I really want to rework what I did when I first started in this industry. It will take a lot of time and energy, but unlike with Horned Winged Blessed I won’t tell a single soul about it until it’s done!

Can you describe Horned Winged Blessed in five words?

Relevant. Unapologetic. Dark. Empowering. Enlightening.

And the last one, top 3 tips for aspiring authors.

  1. Putting pressure on yourself to write does nothing. Like anything, we don’t want to do what we don’t want to do. Let it flow naturally.
  2. Writer’s block is a myth – it just takes dedications, focus and motivation. When you’re not in the mood, don’t force it and move past that feeling. I found drawing instead of writing helped!
  3. Plan. Plan. Plan. Spend 40% coming up with the world, the story and the characters. Then the other 60% spent actually writing the novel is a breeze.

How can readers discover more about you and you work?

Website Blog Instagram Facebook Goodreads Book Link