Aurora: What was your inspiration behind your most recent novel?
Chloe Gong: My novel is a Romeo & Juliet retelling, so of course the story is heavily Shakespearean inspired, but it is also my love letter to Old Shanghai, and the history of the city in the 1920s. I wanted to write about a blood feud, about the thin line between love and hate, and the more I thought about how this would play out, the true history of gangster-ruled Shanghai immediately jumped into my head, and voila. As soon as I put those components together, the inspiration was enough to pull the rest of pieces in!
What character do you most relate to and why?
It’s probably cliché to choose my own main character, because duh, that’s why she ended up being the main character, but Juliette. She’s nothing like me if we zoom in on personality, so there’s no self-insert business going on here, but her fears and her goals are all constructed from my experiences and so she’s the embodiment of the sort of character that I needed to see when I was a teen. I started writing mostly because I wasn’t seeing myself on the shelves no matter how much I adored some of the existing protagonists, so when I wrote, I wanted to fill in the gaps on what was missing.
Why do you feel books with powerful and relatable characters are so popular and have such a voice right now?
I think we’re hitting a beautiful point in the evolution of young adult literature where characters—female characters especially—are allowed to be flawed and real, and it’s making for more gripping and entertaining stories. There was a time where characters would be slammed for being too physically powerful, and there was a time where characters would be slammed for not being physically powerful enough. I’ve been reading in this category of books since the late 2000s, so in these past few years, it’s fascinating to watch the industry shift around when trying to cater to the target audience. I was in the target audience of young adult literature only two years ago so I still think of myself as part of it, and right now, readers including myself desperately want to be able to hold characters close to our hearts and root for them to the end of the world, which powerful and relatable characters are capable of achieving.
Please describe the content of your latest book and what can readers expect from the read.
These Violent Delights is a Romeo & Juliet retelling by way of The Godfather, set in 1920s gangster-ruled Shanghai. When mysterious deaths tear through the city, eighteen-year-old Juliette Cai, heir of the Scarlet Gang, must work with her first love-turned-enemy, Roma Montagov, heir of the White Flowers. Their two gangs have been locked in a blood feud for generations, but rumors whisper of a monster causing these deaths, and if Roma and Juliette cannot set aside their grievances to find the truth, then their beloved city will bear the cost. Readers can expect a glittering atmosphere, betrayal, and bloodshed.
What’s next for you in the bookish world?
I’m hard at work on the sequel to These Violent Delights, making sure this Romeo & Juliet duology finishes with a bang ;). After that, I’m planning to stick around in the Shakespeare retelling realm for some time. He has so many plays, I could be here for a while!
Who is your favorite writer right now and why?
This question is so hard because I read so much and I have so many favorite writers. My immediate reaction right this moment is S.J. Kincaid, who wrote The Diabolic trilogy. I loved The Diabolic when I read it in high school and when the final book The Nemesis came out last month, I was so happy that the series only got better and took the story to whole new amazing heights. It’s a space sci-fi of sorts, about Nemesis, a girl created to be a weapon, and she’s one of my favorite heroines of all time.
As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.