I’d like to welcome Rachel Pudelek and her new release FREYJA’S DAUGHTER to Daring Debuts today!

“Well behaved women seldom make history, but they still end up as the monsters in folklore.

Faline Frey is a bounty-hunter, more comfortable relying on perp files and handcuffs than using her huldra powers to take down a suspect. No sense in catching the unwanted attention of her local Hunter authority, a group of holy soldiers born to police the supernatural and keep Wild Women—huldras, mermaids, succubi, rusalki and harpies—in check.

All that changes the night she heads out for a date, hoping to get lucky. Instead, she gets screwed.

Now her sister is missing, along with Wild Women from all over the country. The Hunters are on her tail and the one person offering to help is her ex-lover, Officer David Garcia, who has just enough ties to the supernatural world to hang her with. To unite her enemies against their common foe, Faline will need to convince the Wild Women to do the one thing she fears most—exhume their power buried deep beneath centuries of oppression. That is, if she can keep them from killing each other.”

FREYJA’S DAUGHTER is the first in a feminist fantasy series and introduces Faline Frey, a bounty hunter and member of the Washington huldra coterie, who must unite the succubi, harpies, mermaids, and rusalki to rescue her sister and escape the clutches of the Hunters, the mysterious men who have been controlling the Wild Women for centuries.

[bctt tweet=”Well behaved women seldom make history, but they still end up as the monsters in folklore. ~ Rachel Pudelek @rachelpud” username=”sharonbwray”]

SHARON: Welcome, Rachel. I love the premise of your debut novel. Where did you get the idea?

RACHEL: While researching ancient goddess-worshipping cultures I noticed how mythology about goddesses and folkloric females shifted as women became more oppressed due to political and/or religious changes. I wanted to tell a similar story, about folkloric women who used to be wild and free and powerful, who were told lies about their very existence, that their wildness must be contained due to its uncontrollable nature. Until one huldra stumbles upon the truth when her own containment cracks open and her wildness flows freely.

SHARON: What a fascinating idea. What is the story behind the title?

RACHEL: Each book in the Wild Women series is based on a goddess of each Wild Women group. The first book concentrates on the huldra, and their goddess/creatrix is Freyja, so that’s why I call it FREYJA’S DAUGHTER. I came up with it and both my agent and my publisher loved the title so it stayed.

SHARON: It’s a perfect title. No spoiler, but can you tell us something we won’t find out just by reading the book jacket?

RACHEL: Each of the different Wild Woman types were created by a different goddess who breathed her life and abilities into her highest temple priestesses before her temple fell to patriarchal invaders. This backstory is touched on throughout the book (more will unfold as the series progresses) and is the basis for the Wild Women’s belief systems and moral codes as well as differing values.

SHARON: I can’t wait to learn more about the different goddesses. Do you have a favorite character?

RACHEL: I love the main character Faline, but the funnest character to write was Marie, the succubi leader. She’s morally ambiguous, says what she thinks, and just sees life itself as a play thing. I love that about her.

[bctt tweet=”The funnest character to write was Marie, the succubi leader. She’s morally ambiguous, says what she thinks, and just sees life itself as a play thing. I love that about her. ~ Rachel Pudelek @rachelpud” @ username=”sharonbwray”]

SHARON: If you could spend a day with one of your characters, who would it be and what would you do?

RACHEL: I’d pick the brains of the rusalki, ask them about everything spiritual. The rusalki in Freyja’s Daughter are a group of Wild Women whose power has a lot to do with divination. They’re odd (think adult, recluse Luna Lovegood’s from Harry Potter) and speak mostly in riddles, but spending a day learning their secrets sounds like fun to me.

SHARON: Are your characters based on real people, or do they come from your imaginations?

RACHEL: My characters are based on real folklore, except for the Hunters, I made them up by tying bits and pieces of groups who oppressed others throughout history and mythology. Each group of Wild Women is from legend. Each goddess they worship is from ancient mythology/belief systems. Their personalities, though, I absolutely fabricated.

SHARON: That’s probably a good thing. LOL. How long did you take to write this book?

RACHEL: It took me about a month or two to draft this book, but it took many more months of editing and revisions as my agent and I passed it back and forth, before it was ready to go on submission.

[bctt tweet=”What’s your favourite writing advice? Perseverance is key. ~ Rachel Pudelek” @rachelpud  username=”sharonbwray”]

SHARON: What kind of research did you do for this book?

RACHEL: I actually have a list of non-fiction books I read as research for my Wild Women series on my website. I read books, visited museums, listened to podcasts, and watched documentaries on ancient goddess cultures, mythology, and matrilineal and matriarchal cultures.

SHARON: Sounds fascinating. Can you share your writing routine?

RACHEL: I don’t have much of a routine. I do what I call “book work” every week day. I mostly work from my couch, or on particularly distracting days I’ll work in a cubby desk at my local library.

SHARON: I know how important it is to write every day. Do you have any writing quirks?

RACHEL: I’m not sure if this is a quirk, but I have a Costco-sized box of caramel-covered apple suckers that I’m only allowed to enjoy while editing. They help alleviate some of the sting.

SHARON: I’ll have to try those! What do you like to do when you’re not writing?

RACHEL: I love wine tasting and hiking and kayaking–just getting out in nature and enjoying its offerings.

SHARON: Taking walks is sometimes the best way to deal with plot problems. Which book influenced you the most?

RACHEL: This may sound cliche, but The Twilight series by Stephenie Meyer was huge for me. I gave up my passtime of reading and writing when I had my kids. The Twilight series sucked me in in such an emotional way, (even the setting of my home state of Washington acted as balm to my homesick heart) that it reignited my creative side and made me want to write again.

SHARON: I know a lot of writers who started writing because of Twilight and Buffy! What are you working on right now?

RACHEL: I’m currently working on Lilith’s Children, the second book in the Wild Women series, and putting the polishing touches on a paranormal YA.

SHARON: I can’t wait to hear more. What’s your favorite writing advice?

RACHEL: Perseverance is key.

[bctt tweet=” The book you’re currently reading? Right now I’m reading Viking Warrior Rising by Asa Maria Bradley, and loving it. ~ Rachel Pudelek @rachelpud @AsaMariaBradley” username=”sharonbwray”]

SHARON: Fabulous advice! The book you’re currently reading?

RACHEL: Right now I’m reading Viking Warrior Rising by Asa Maria Bradley, and loving it.

SHARON: I adored Viking Warrior Rising and Asa Maria is one of my favorite authors (and one of my lovely Golden Heart sisters). Thanks so much for spending the day with us, Rachel. I wish you great success with your debut.

———————-

Rachel Pudelek is a dog-hugger and tree-lover. Growing up with three sisters sparked her passion for both women’s history and women’s advocacy, which led to her career as a birth doula and childbirth educator. These days she channels those passions into writing fiction. When she’s not writing, Rachel enjoys hiking, attempting to grow her own food, or reading.

Rachel lives in Seattle, Washington with her husband, two daughters, two dogs, a cat named Lucifer, and two well-fed guinea pigs. Freyja’s Daughter is her debut novel.

You can find FREYJA’S DAUGHTER here: Amazon

You can find Rachel here:

Website  |  Facebook | Twitter |  Instagram  | Pinterest  | Goodreads 


Sharon Wray is a librarian who once studied dress design in the couture houses of Paris and now writes about the men in her Deadly Force romantic suspense series where ex-Green Berets and their smart, sexy heroines retell Shakespeare’s greatest love stories.

Her debut book EVERY DEEP DESIRE, a sexy, action-packed retelling of Romeo and Juliet, is about an ex-Green Beret determined to regain his honor, his freedom, and his wife.

It’s available on: Amazon | Barnes and Noble | iBooks | |

And adding it to your Goodreads TBR list is also always appreciated!

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