Interview with Anna Finch, Author of Voiceless: A Mermaid’s Tale
08 Dec 2020
Say you’re the host of a literary talk show. Who would be your first guest? What would you want to ask?
My first guest would probably be Louis Lowry because I found the way she presented the concept of memory and utopia as dystopia in The Giver fascinating. A world completely devoid of emotion and societal memory, ruled by logic and precision in all things immediately grabbed my attention. I would love to ask her about her writing process and what motivated her to write The Giver in the first place.
What’s your favorite thing about writing? My favorite thing about writing is watching the story unfold in ways that are completely different to my initial plan and discovering the people my characters become by the end. What is a typical day like for you? I actually work as a teacher full time in English and Humanities so my typical day is actually lesson planning, marking assessments and face-to-face teaching. But on weekends and school holidays I set aside time to work on my next novel, reading new books (desperately trying to get through my TBR) and making videos for my YouTube channel ‘Finch Press Publishing’. What scene from Voiceless: A Mermaid’s Tale was your favorite to write?Ooh! That’s a tough one. Without giving too much away, it’s a tie between Moriah’s first official meeting with the Sea Witch and when she was pushed to the edge towards the end of the novel. Both of those scenes were fun to write. The first official scene between the Sea Witch and Moriah (the mermaid) was fun to write as I inserted little jokes in what was supposed to be a serious situation – it didn’t help that I was listening to ‘Poor Unfortunate Souls’ on repeat. The second scene is where Moriah is at her lowest – she knows that she’s outmatched and outgunned (or outmagiced rather) – and she knows that she can’t win in a fair fight. She is desperate and needs to choose between – the right and moral thing to do or casting away those morals and do whatever it takes to win. It was one of my favorites because in real life people sometimes have to make decisions that aren’t right or moral in order to ensure their safety.
Do you have a motto, quote, or philosophy you live by? Yeah, I actually included it in the front of my book in the epigraph section. One of my favorite quotes is ‘Prefiero morir de pie que vivir de rodillas’ or translated into English ‘I’d rather die on my feet than to live on my knees.’ I didn’t actually know who said until I went searching for the exact wording and found out it was Emiliano Zapata. I try to live by it because it’s important that we stand up for what we believe in, to fight for what is right, because staying silent and being a bystander when something is wrong or atrocities occur right in front of you is just as bad as being the perpetrator.
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