About
Alexis
Alexis
Masters, lifelong mystic, scholar and kriya
yoga practitioner, holds a bachelor of arts in transpersonal
psychology from Antioch University, where she also pursued
graduate work in feminist theology and comparative religion.
A great lover of world travel, her research in ancient
religion and Goddess spirituality has taken her to the
far reaches of the Mediterranean. Alexis lives with
her husband, Christopher Gilmore, in Northern California,
where she is hard at work on her next novel, the sequel
to The
Giuliana Legacy. Envisioned
as the second volume in a trilogy, Giuliana's
Challenge chronicles more of the adventures
of the Giardani family and the Goddess they serve.
An Interview with
Alexis
Can
you tell us where you come from?
I
was born in the heart of San Francisco's Haight Ashbury
and I graduated from high school during the Summer of
Love, a time of enormous exuberance and vision, especially
for those of us who didn't get caught up in the drug
scene. Free love wasn't my scene either, but I suspect
"All you need is love" instantly became my subconscious
mantra, and in a sense, still is. I've spent most of
my life right here in the Bay Area, where I've been
blessed with ready access to the Human Potential and
Goddess Spirituality movements since the 1970s. All
of this colors my writing, dousing it with the qualities
that characterize the era--optimism, innovation, mysticism,
alternate realities, and concern for our environment.
I've traveled abroad quite a bit in recent years and
have never found a more beautiful region than Northern
California. The stunning loveliness of Tuscany, where
my novels about the Giuliana Legacy are set, may be
the one exception. Tuscany is physically very like California,
only less environmentally exploited and overdeveloped.
The more I come to know it, the more I love it. My husband
and I plan to spend a good bit of time there in the
years ahead.
How
did you become a novelist?
I
began writing early in life but seldom shared my work
with others. After my first trip to Greece in 1982,
I was determined to write a book exploring the Goddess
Aphrodite. I pursued intensive research on the Goddess,
plowing through countless archaeology reports, studying
ancient writers and modern scholarship, visiting some
fifty ancient sites of her worship all over the Mediterranean
Basin. I now know I was searching for something that
couldn't be found in books or reports--call it the mystical
kernel of her meaning to the people of ancient times,
a meaning I sensed was very different from the shallow
one we are taught today. But this knowledge didn't jel
and my writing didn't really take off until I found
the right genre for my voice. In 1990, when I started
the novel that became The Giuliana Legacy, I
told my self it was "only for fun," a little rest from
my "real" work in history and theology. Immediately,
though, I discovered an essential truth about myself:
I am essentially a storyteller, not a social scientist
or theologian. This discovery was very exciting,but
it still took an act of will to call myself a writer,
and several more years of hard work and perseverance
before I finally felt comfortable calling myself a novelist.
This year, with the release of The Giuliana Legacy,
I became a published novelist. I can assure any aspiring
authors reading this that it was well worth the work
and the wait!
What
books have most influenced your life?
I
have always been an avid and voracious bookworm, and
I'm sure there are countless books that have influenced
my writing. In fiction, I work in the tradition of Charles
Williams, who wrote classic "metaphysical thrillers"
during the 1930s and was one of the original Inklings,
along with C.S. Lewis and Tolkein. Marion Zimmer Bradley
also influenced me, especially with The Mists of
Avalon, as did the extraordinary novels of Dorothy
Bryant and Elizabeth Cunningham. The philosophers of
Western philosophy played a huge early role in shaping
my writing. During my twenties, esotericists like Annie
Besant and Dane Rudhyar, the renowned astrologer and
"modern Renaissance thinker," influenced me powerfully.
In my thirties, feminist scholars and theologians expanded
the philosophic and political base of my worldview.
However, the largest single influence on my work has
been Paramahansa Yogananda. From the perennial bestseller
Autobiography of a Yogi to the more recent God
Talks With Arjuna, the writings of this ecumenical
World Teacher and devotee of Divine Mother have illumined
my path and brought me the most profound and lasting
sense of personal transformation. Yogananda also helps
me to write more deeply and honestly and it was he who
inspired me to break the mundane rules of fiction in
creating Julia/Giuliana, a unique and uniquely spirited
heroine for our new millennium.
What
music do you listen to while writing?
I love music--the Classics, the Beatles, Dylan and Baez,
folk and ethnic music of all sorts, even some electronic
compositons like Stephen Halpern's and Brian Eno's--but
I find listening far too distracting when I write. I
usually need silence to work effectively. Unless, of
course, I'm writing a scene in which music is essential.
There were some of those in The Giuliana Legacy,
one in which the villain, Gregor Danilenko, recalls
Katchetourian's Masquerade Suite and several
inspired by devotional Cosmic Chants. There is
one especially thrilling musical scene I'm working on
now for Giuliana's Challenge, volume two of the
Giuliana Legacy trilogy. Yatri's Crystal Spirit,
Original Improvisations on Glass Armonica is in
my CD player most often right now. This haunting music
is the inspiration for the scene I mentioned above,
which is set on a moonlit night in the majestic city
of Florence. It's a spine-chilling scene I can hardly
wait to develop, because it is taking me farther into
the Renaissance years of the Giuliana Legacy than I've
ever been before.
What
books are you reading now?
The books I'm reading now are mostly non-fiction research
materials for Giuliana's Challenge and for The
Lady Giuliana, the third book of the trilogy. My
reading stack is tall and includes several works by
Renaissance philosopher, Marsilio Ficino, and his contemporaries,
books on pregnancy and midwifery, especially Jacqueline
Marie Musacchio's The Art and Ritual of Childbirth
in Renaissance Italy and Peter Kingsley's work on Empedocles, primarily In the Dark Places of Wisdom and Ancient
Philosophy, Mystery, and Magic: Empedocles and Pythagorean
Tradition, along with Women in the Classical
World edited by Elaine Fantham et alia, Etruscan
Life and Afterlife, edited by Larissa Bonfante,
Ancient Astrology by Tamsyn Barton, and a delightful
new book by Frances Bernstein called Classical Living,
Reconnecting with the Rituals of Ancient Rome. In
fiction, I recently finished Anita Diamant's The
Red Tent, which I enjoyed immensely and strongly
recommend. I've never read any of Stephen King's fiction,
but I have to say that his new memoir, On Writing,
is probably the funniest book I've read in years!
I found it hilarious--I mean laugh till it hurts hilarious.
At the same time I found it poignant, articulate and
brilliant--a totally unexpected delight!
Is
there anything you'd like to add to your remarks above?
I
would like to thank those readers of The Giuliana
Legacy who have taken the time to share their reactions
to my first novel. And I'd like to invite the rest of
you to leave me a note or simply a greeting in Giuliana's
Guestbook. I enjoy hearing from readers. Like most
authors, I've often felt that writing is a very isolating
occupation, yet when I read notes from Giuliana's audience,
I feel the loneliness of this work is a small price
to pay, because people are really getting the story
in a very intimate way. I absolutely love that!