The world of INCEPTIO glimmered into life several
decades ago. My father, a numismatist, had introduced me
to history, especially the Roman world. So much so, that it seemed perfectly
normal to clamber over Roman aqueducts, walk on mosaic pavements, follow the
German limes, pretend I was a Roman playactor
in classic theatres all over Europe from Spain to then Yugoslavia, from
Hadrian’s Wall to Pompeii.
We were in north-east Spain one holiday. I was
eleven and fascinated by the mosaics in the Roman part of Ampurias (a huge
Graeco-Roman site). There were so many of them. I wanted to know who had made them, whose
houses they were in, who had walked on them.
After my father had told me about traders,
senators, power and families, I tilted my head to one side and asked him, “What
would it be like if Roman women were in charge, instead of the men?” Maybe it
was the fierce sun boiling my brain, maybe early feminism surfacing or maybe it
was just a precocious kid asking a smartarse question. But clever man and
senior ‘Roman nut’, my father replied, “What do you think it would be like?”
Real life intervened (school, university,
career, military, marriage, parenthood, business ownership, move to France),
but the idea bubbled away in my mind and the INCEPTIO story slowly took shape.
Although
I specialised in languages, I was never free of the tug of history. As well as
reading academic books and watching series of documentaries, I grabbed every
historical fiction book that came my way from Rosemary Sutcliff’s The Eagle of
the Ninth via Jean Plaidy and Phillipa Gregory to C J Sansom’s Heartstone.
My
mind was morphing the setting of ancient Rome into a new type of Rome, a state
that survived the dissolution of the Western Roman Empire into the 21st
century, but retained its Roman identity. And one where the social structure
changed; women were going to be leading society. In my daydream haze, my
heroine, Carina, was having all kinds of adventures, saving the world as well
as herself. Of course, she’d be high-spirited, not stupid, but a bit rash and
she’d make mistakes. Some of her conflicts would be personal and romantic - of
course, there would be hero(es) - some
against the establishment of which she was a part.
As
I became an adult, I added in a lover for her, a blood–and-bone Roman; damaged,
thus self-protective, even arrogant. And Carina would have been brought up
elsewhere, just to introduce more conflict. A pleasant fantasy, she and Roma
Nova were at this time firmly caged in my head while real life clunked along.
But one day, about three years ago, they flew out. What
had opened the door?
Every Wednesday, I would go to the
multiplex cinema with my husband on a 2-for-1 offer from our then mobile phone
provider with a warm feeling that we were getting something back from the
fortune they were making from our monthly contract.
None
of the films looked anything special, but we eventually chose one. Thirty
minutes into the film, we agreed it was really, really bad. The cinematography
was good, but the plot dire and narration jerky.
‘I could do better than that,’ I whispered in
the darkened cinema.
‘So why don’t you?’ came my husband’s reply.
Ninety days later, I’d written 96,000 words,
the first draft of INCEPTIO.
Alison Morton
www.alison-morton.com
www.alison-morton.com
@alison_morton
Book trailer: http://youtu.be/NJXrIn7QkiM
Buying links:
3 comments:
What an interesting site this is. I came here via Deborah Swift's most recent post. I love historical fiction. This is a great find.
I have this book on my Kindle - reading this blog interview, I think I had better bring it to the top of the pile - and read it!
Hope you don't mind but I have chosen you and your blog for a Liebster (German for ‘Favourite’) Blog Award.
You will find full details on my blog post here:
http://ofhistoryandkings.blogspot.co.uk/2013/04/exciting-another-blog-award-awarded.html where I have been given the same award.
You may have already been nominated, my apologies if you have. Feel free to take part or not as you choose, and to do as little or as much as you wish. My choices are 11 blogs that I enjoy reading and that I think are well worth a visit. There are 11 questions set for you to answer and a few other things, if you wish to take part (and links on my blog to yours).
Helen
Thanks Helen for the award! And yes, Inceptio sounds like a wonderful read. Beautiful appealing cover too. I'll pop over to your blog and see what it's all about.
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