My Widbook Interview!
Remember
when I told about an interview that I was asked to give because of my story
Bloody Witch?
Well, here
it is! I posted here just like it is in widbook's blog. And I have to say that
the widbook team posted everything that I said to them through our e-mail
conversation (okay, they cut of two sentences but who cares...! XDD ).
You can also find it at:http://blog.widbook.com/interview-stella-zografou-talks-about-dreams-and-challenges/
June 27,
2013
Interview: Stella Zografou Talks About Dreams, Challenges and the Greek Publishing Industry
Greek writer Stella Zografou just finished high school and one of her books was chosen as the ebook of the week by the Widbook team. We had a conversation via email to learn more about the author writing “Bloody Witch.” She dreams of becoming a famous writer. Get to know the 18-year-old girl behind the “blackink” pseudonym:
WIDBOOK –
Hi Stella! Congrats on your work. When did you know you had a talent for
writing?
STELLA
ZOGRAFOU – When I was in junior high (middle school) many of my Greek teachers
told me that my writing was good but I never thought of it that much. In my
first year in high school I started writing in Greek, my memories of being
bullied for a project that my ancient Greek teacher had told me to do in order
for the teachers to learn more about bullying and to help me surpass all the
bad feelings I had. Since then, I participated in our school magazine and I
started writing a fiction thriller in Greek, which later I stopped because of
the big amount of homework I had. A year ago I discovered many sites in which I
could read English stories and then I decided to write my own ones in English,
too. Some of my stories are scripts from my comic and manga series that I am
about to start working on soon.
WIDBOOK –
What is your favorite style of book?
STELLA - I
mostly prefer fiction books, teens and young-adult ones, as a young adult I am.
I prefer mostly books that make me feel different emotions at the same time. I
want something with action and adventure. I am not that much into just plain
romance. It’s something that I can’t explain well.
WIDBOOK –
What is most difficult for you when writing?
STELLA - I
try to keep my readers interested. I am trying to write each story in a
different way and to work on each character the best I can. It’s difficult
because there are still many things that I don’t know how to write in English –
English is not good in Greek schools, we learn only the basic things. I also have
a problem with the “male” point of view, feelings and behavior, but I am
working on it. Like other people, many times I have no idea on how the story
will flow. Sometimes I have some main parts that I am trying to connect and
develop, and many times things don’t go as I was thinking. When I am writing
and designing the only thing that I do is to grab a pencil (or whatever else)
and start working (my hand leads me).
WIDBOOK –
Your book “Bloody Witch,” which was chosen as the book of the week, talks about
witches and vampires. Where do you most get inspiration and where do you hope
to take the book?
STELLA –
For example, in the book “A Discovery of Witches” by Debora Harkness, the main
heroes are a witch and a vampire. Witches and vampires are nothing new. For my
story, I first thought of a girl who discovers that she comes from a very
ancient witch family. There is the church, as always, to try to stop her
research and burn her alive. I thought of the vampire idea as a funny threat.
Vampires are supposed to be enemies with the church so it is funny that even
though they are in war they both want her dead. Everyone believes that witches
are bad and the reason of many great disasters, but our heroine and her future
witches’ friends are coming from the good ones. It will be a very different
story from all the others that I have written, both story and the way of
writing. Through that book series (yeah, there will be at least three books)
readers will travel in many different countries following the heroine as she
tries to discover her family secrets and hidden treasures. There will be
adventure, magic, action, trips, history and a split of romance decided by the
“evil fates.” Many of my stories come from my dreams, (yeah, very weird
dreams), others just pop! I may read a word and behind it create a whole new
adventure. So I would say that I don’t have something specific as an
inspiration in my life – maybe that’s because I’m a moving inspiration too.
What can I say, there’s a reason everyone calls me “real life cartoon or
anime.”
WIDBOOK –
What is your goal as a writer?
STELLA - I
would like to see my stories published and on sale. I would love one day to
meet them on a bookstore’s shelf. So, yeah, I would like to work as a writer
too. I would love it to have lots of people liking and enjoying my stories,
just like I do with other writers’ books too.
WIDBOOK –
Which books are you reading at the moment?
STELLA -
Well, now that I finished high school I have a lot of free time and I am
reading many books at the same time. I just finished the ebook version of “Up
In Flames” by Williams Nicole. I started a month ago the book series “House of
ComarrĂ©” by Krinsten Painter and right now I’m on the third book. I just also
finished “Lonely Werewolf Girl” by Martin Millar and I am reading Victoria’s
Hislop newest book, “The Last Dance.” I am very eager to find out what people
from other countries think of us Greeks. I am also reading “The Circle” by Sara
Bergmark Elfgren and Mats Strandberg. I’ve got many more to talk about but I
think that’s enough.
WIDBOOK –
You are from Greece. How it is the publishing industry doing there?
STELLA -
That’s a very difficult question. If you are a young or new writer things
aren’t so good. Because of the economical crisis, many Greek Publishing
Companies have decreased their work a lot. Due to my own research I can tell
you that in the last two years the biggest publishing houses have made an
announcement that they are not going to give any money to publish a new
writer’s book. The writer will have to pay everything and the company will just
give in the book its publishing logo (company’s label name). Smaller or newer
publishing companies, on the other hand, accept to read your work and according
to what they believe they will cover everything - half, more or less of the
book’s publishing money. The readership is something unstable. It’s true that
the economical crisis increased the amount of Greek people reading. The prices
of books, though, do not help at all. An English fiction book in the United
States costs $9, its translated version in Greece costs twice or even three
times up the actual price. I’ve found very few books being only two Euros up
from its actual price and it was from small publishing houses, Harlequin
publishers and thriller publishers. Most readers, mostly teens and young adults
and some few older adults, prefer just like me to buy the English version of a
book instead of the translated one. Many teenagers prefer to download books
through some apps, free from the Internet or just buy the audio book. The
government does not help at all. For example, in Germany the government pays
some money in order for books’ prices to be low or share some discount coupons
in students and families. They try to promote books (translated only) as much
as they can. No matter how the Greek School is trying to promote reading books
to all students, things are not very good. Most of the teen readers are
females, too.
WIDBOOK –
Who are your favorite Greek authors?
STELLA - To
tell you the truth, it’s kind of difficult to say. There are mostly old ones.
Some of them (very few) Adonis Samarakis, Manolis Anagnostakis, Miltos
Saxtouris, Takis Sinopoulos, Evgenios Trivizas, Marios Hakkas, Tatiana Gritsi
Miliex (her story “A story of a resistance” even though has been published in a
very old magazine, is really amazing…). It’s really difficult because all Greek
writers are very special people and their writing makes you feel amazing things
(every one of them is similar to how we talk about Shakespeare, that special).
It is really difficult for me to explain.
WIDBOOK –
How do you like Widbook?
STELLA -
Well, I am enjoying it a lot. I’ll have to admit that two weeks ago I was still
trying to understand how everything works. I like the presentation of the whole
site and how the books are being represented. I found the collaboration thing
very clever, in other sites you don’t have that, even though I am not going to
collaborate in my stories (sorry guys). I’m still discovering the whole site.
WIDBOOK –
Where does your artistic name “blackink” come from?
STELLA -
That’s a really weird story. A year ago when I started writing in English, I
started dreaming, like all teen girls do, of becoming a famous fiction writer.
Back then I was thinking about fantasy stories, vampires, witches, demons,
angels… “Dark side” fiction as we called it in Greece. So I thought of a name
that would create some kind of a mystery and would be connected with the whole
dark thing. It could also represent the most ancient tool that was used to
write books, the black ink. Since I create my own comic and manga I thought
that it was a good name for my artistic self too. It was also something small
and easy to remember, catchy, so I like it a lot. The first idea of blackink
was the comic-like image of a girl dressed in sassy black dresses with a little
bit of gothic Lolita too. I could say that it just popped in my head.
WIDBOOK –
You are a designer as well. How important are covers and illustration in a
story?
STELLA -
Very important. Book covers are the first thing people usually notice, then
next is how famous or how many copies it has sold and the description. For book
illustrations it’s the same, too. Of course there are times where the cover is
better than the story and we should not judge a book by its cover but it’s just
the nature of our brain. Like in advertising or products’ packages,
presentation and looks are very important. The same goes usually for books. I
believe that the cover should be well-worked and chosen according to the story.
It should represent the story.
WIDBOOK –
Thank you Stella. Much success to you!
That's it! Hope you found it interesting!
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