Interview: Tanya Pell and Her Wicked Roots

Today, I am joined by the fantastic Tanya Pell to discuss her upcoming novel, Her Wicked Roots, which will be out on October 7th! Since we both have forthcoming works inspired by Nathaniel Hawthorne’s story “Rappaccini’s Daughter”, I thought it would be fun to chat with Tanya and geek out over the Gothic. You can catch my Hawthorne-inspired novelette in my collection Cyanide Constellations, out on October 21st.

Tanya Pell is a narcoleptic horror author who drinks bougie coffee and lives in the American South. She is the author of Her Wicked Roots, Cicada, and several short stories featured in anthologies like Fever Dreams, Mother Knows Best and OBSOLESCENCE.

Sara Tantlinger: I am so excited to read Her Wicked Roots. So excited in fact that I almost pre-ordered it twice! That cover and the foiled edges look spectacular. What drew you to using “Rappaccini’s Daughter” as inspiration?

Tanya Pell: Thank you!!!! Yes, they definitely spoiled me with the sprayed/stenciled edges. I thought I might get lucky to get sprayed. Artists are magical. And I had always wanted to work with Marcela Bolivar (artist) so when they asked if I had any idea who I wanted for the cover artist I knew exactly who and she was kind enough to accept.

I used to teach “Rappaccini’s Daughter” in the before time as a HS teacher and it was part of my Gothic fiction unit. It’s one of my favorite short stories and scrolling through Twitter one day I saw someone ask why nobody had ever reimagined the story before and it was honestly one of those, “WHY NOT?!” moments. I think I had a full outline by end of business day? The characters were just sort of there. And I knew I wanted it to be a sister story as much as a lust story.

Sara Tantlinger: I love that! And what a fantastic story to have taught. Do you have any other favorite works by Nathaniel Hawthorne? “The Birth-Mark” is one I think about a lot. It has so many similar themes to “Rappaccini’s Daughter” in which a man thinks he knows better and tries to transform the woman in his life through chemicals and strange botany. But surprise, surprise, she dies. Yet, Hawthorne’s depiction of women’s suffering is often tender and sympathetic.

Tanya Pell: “The Birth-Mark” is one I think about a lot, too! This poor woman who submits to her husband’s experiments because he finds her less than perfect. Her one flaw becomes so irritating to her husband that she would literally rather die than cause him distress! I think it is interesting how Hawthorne is most known for these anti-patriarchal stories (most notably The Scarlet Letter) that show the women suffering socially, emotionally, and physically, and yet there is always this vein of misogyny running through them. You get a sense of him saying, “Oh, sure, the women are suffering and isn’t it upsetting, but look how sad the man is by it all! He feels terrible for his part in it and will do better.”

It is one of the reasons I wanted Her Wicked Roots to be a story featuring a mother rather than a father; who perverts her own Eden out of her loathing for the patriarchal system she was born into. I wanted the women to fight back rather than just be victims we empathize with. The problem, of course, is what that ends up looking like. So you have Hawthorne’s underbelly of “fight the patriarchy” with this house full of women, but they’re not exactly any better once you get in there.

Sara Tantlinger: Yes! It’s so interesting to me how Hawthorne gave us these female characters who seem so perfect to take things a step in directions he probably never would have dreamed of. That balance of what was progressive for his time versus what he was too deep in the patriarchal system to see is really intriguing to dissect.

I love that Her Wicked Roots is a queer retelling, too. In Hawthorne’s original story, Beatrice Rappaccini is very much the “other” and is seen as something both monstrous and alluring—the things that make her “forbidden” are also the traits that entice others toward her. I’d love to hear more about Her Wicked Roots and the queer inspiration we can find in the story. Did the otherness of Beatrice inspire your original characters?

Tanya Pell: When I thought of Beatrice’s isolation, I thought of what that might really do to a person. And what if there were two? So it became a sister story and I wanted to look at how might they have been affected by this isolation and upbringing. What lessons take root and which don’t? It’s a story about the dichotomy of women in a lot of ways, which I think Hawthorne sort of neglects. Beatrice was, like you said, alluring and monstrous, but her otherness makes her a sort of prize that Giovanni ultimately rejects. He despises what she is without caring about who she is. With Her Wicked Roots, I wanted to actually make the otherness feel like home for a character who has always felt othered herself. Here, among these women–some of whom are queer like her or orphaned like her or xyz like her–she may find acceptance. Or she may find something else entirely!

Sara Tantlinger: I love what you said about Giovanni ultimately rejecting the prize he had chased after. That’s something I tackle in “The Revenge of Rappaccini’s Daughter” in my fiction collection (Cyanide Constellations) and I have to say, it was satisfying to give Beatrice both the power to embrace her beautiful monstrosity and to use it in an unforgiving way. Women are always expected to be kind and forgiving, which is a ridiculous double-standard. Sometimes the girlies just want revenge!

Botanical/nature horror seem to be themes that we both are drawn to. It’s such a vast playground of inspiration. Some of the most beautiful and horrifying things that exist are found in nature. When combining nature and horror, what are your favorite elements to play around with? Do you have any advice for writers who want to infuse more nature into their horror works?

Tanya Pell: We’ve been anthropomorphizing plants for thousands of years. The Ents, the burning bush, dryads, Jubokko. Humans are great at making things more like us. But also, like you mentioned before, other. They aren’t us. Perfect conditions for a horror.

I love the book The Hidden Life of Trees and research regarding how plants communicate with each other, protect each other, or sometimes starve their siblings out of existence. It’s all part of a bigger system and I think we all know that, but it is easy to sort of forget? But when you sit with it and look at roots and compare them to veins and consider what a plant needs to survive compared to what a human requires and you think, huh. There’s a juxtaposition you can really play with balancing beauty and horror using nature.

Sara Tantlinger: Absolutely. That juxtaposition is endlessly fascinating and such a rich source for inspiration (both beautiful and horrifying). And finally, if there’s anything else you’re working on or have coming up, please feel free to let us know and drop any links here to your socials or books.

Tanya Pell: Oh boy.

Her Wicked Roots releases Oct. 7! I have a short story called “It Has Eyes Now” I coauthored with Christopher Golden for the anthology Fever Dreams out Oct. 14. Three of my previously published stories will be releasing in an ebook anthology of 101 Horror Stories: Shortwave Publishing Collected Stories out in September. And I have a new story in Twisted Tales to Tell in the Night: A Halloween Horror Anthology releasing Sept. 16.

I think that’s all I’m allowed to say for now? Haha! Hoping to make a couple more announcements soon, but you know how that goes.

The easiest place to find me is on Instagram @tanya.pell or on my website tanyapell.com which has links to all my socials, books, and events.

Thank you so much for having me!!!!! We love a Goth girl and I’m so glad to be part of the Goth Girl Renaissance!!!!

Cyanide Constellations: ToC

We are only two months away from the launch of my debut collection, Cyanide Constellations and Other Stories! The collection can currently be pre-ordered through Dark Matter Ink here!

I’m so excited to get this book out there in the world. I thought I would do a little promo today with the above mood board and a brief look into the table of contents!

“The Viridescent Dark” opens up the collection and it’s a story I originally had published in The First Five Minutes of the Apocalypse, edited by the wonderful Brandon Applegate. I loved writing this story. It’s a somber piece about looking up to the once familiar moon and seeing it covered in a destructive algae bloom. I also named a cat Walt Whisker in this one, which seems important to note.

“As Humans Burn Beneath Us” made its first appearance in Field Notes from A Nightmare: An Anthology of Ecological Horror — such a fantastic anthology edited by Alex Ebenstein. It continues with the theme of Nature vs. Humans, but is told entirely from the point of view of clouds as they drift away during Earth’s final days.

“The Bones He Planted” was part of Seasons of Severance and is a very heavy grief story that focuses a lot on nature and our bodies returning to nature, though maybe in an unconventional way. I love stories where people morph into weird things, so creating an alien tree inspired by the Bullhorn Acacia and its symbiotic relationship with aggressive ants was a delightful way to experiment with grief, love, and the circle of life.

“A Haunting of Lawn Ornaments” is one of the brand new stories to this collection and I wrote it to help break up how bleak the collection is. I love pouring my whole being into the gloom when it comes to writing, but having a more lighthearted piece with a twisted sense of humor was a fun challenge for me to write. Within, find garden gnomes and other lawn ornaments possessed by evil spirits as they take some vengeance out on an HOA neighborhood. All those strict ordinances aren’t going to help these folks…

“The Revenge of Rappaccini’s Daughter” is my favorite in the collection and the one I’ve been talking about the most because it was just so fun to take one of my most beloved stories in the public domain and play around with Nathaniel Hawthorne’s characters. It’s easy to assume Hawthorne would hate what I’ve done to this story, but at the same time, he might not. Despite very much being a product of his time (though I hate that phrase) and holding up many traditional roles as a man in the 1800s, Hawthorne also seemed eager to disassociate himself from his great-great-grandfather, a vicious judge during the Salem Witch Trials. There were other cruel relatives of Hawthorne’s (who spelled their last name without the “w”) who Hawthorne never seemed to take pride in being related to. Additionally, Hawthorne often wrote of tragedies befalling women in rather sympathetic and thoughtful ways, so I can’t help that think maybe he would be on board with my version of Beatrice Rappaccini finally getting a little vengeance of her own. Also, stay tuned on my blog because I will later be interviewing the fabulous Tanya Pell about her upcoming novel Her Wicked Roots, a queer retelling of “Rappaccini’s Daughter” — I seriously can’t wait to read that book!

“Cyanide Constellations” made its first appearance alongside the earlier mentioned “The Bones He Planted” (both in Seasons of Severance). This is a weird, poetic little piece that combines nature and cosmic horror in a way that really spoke to my heart. It allowed me to play with point of view, go wild with my tendency to infuse poetic prose into my pieces, and create something sorrowful but hopefully beautiful. I chose this one as the title piece because I think it strongly captures the vibes of poison, nature, complex relationships, and exploring the unknown that this collection focuses on.

“With Radium on Her Lips” is a horrormance story that was first published in Dark Dispatch Issue # 2: Deadly Love. Inspired by the dreadful accounts of what happened to the infamous Radium Girls, this sapphic story focuses on a witch who lost her lover to the poison of the watch factory. Oddly, I think this story has one of the happier endings of the ones in this collection.

“Avian Eyes” focuses on birds because of course I had to have a bird story in here! If you came to our birds in horror panel at StokerCon (which was such a delightful panel), I mentioned I had a story about birds migrating to the moon and it is this piece! I had come across this article in Audubon Magazine that mentioned how in the 1600s, English minister Charles Morton theorized birds migrated to the moon for the winter. It was such a fabulous theory for some fowl inspiration.

“Moonflowers” previously appeared in The Horror Collection: Yellow Edition. It tackles the sorrow of a widow who must deal with her late husband’s obsessive brother, twisted secrets, and a haunting of her own making.

“Acidic Atonement on Sulfur Planet” was written for The Wicked Library podcast and is a longer piece that explores how even if we did find another habitable planet that could provide resources, we’d likely end up exploiting the poor and downtrodden as laborers. The main character in this one is complex, flawed, and entirely human. This piece goes deeper into cosmic horror than I normally write, but I have a soft spot for this story.

“Gardening by Moon: A How-To Guide” is inspired by the Farmers’ Almanac planting calendars. It was fun to play around with format a little in this piece and have a flash story between two longer stories. What are we planting? Well, you’ll have to read that one to find out…

“After the Twilight Fades” was originally published in Apex Magazine, Issue 136, which was seriously a highlight of my career because I’m a huge Apex fan. I’m grateful to have the story reprinted here in my very first collection. This story was inspired by a freelance client of mine who had old journals about hypnotism he wanted typed up since the pages were fading. The journals were written by my client’s late friend, who was a notorious hypnotist in Pittsburgh decades ago. It was neat to draw inspiration about hypnotism from such a unique source.