Thursday, June 4, 2026

"A Treason of Magic"

Melissa Marr writes fiction for adults, teens, and children. Her books have been translated into 28 languages to date and been bestsellers in the US (NY Times, LA Times, USA Today, Wall Street Journal, Publishers Weekly, etc) as well as various countries overseas. She is best known for the Wicked Lovely series for teens and Bunny Roo I Love You for children. She can be found in a kayak or trail with her wife.

Marr applied the Page 69 Test to her new novel, A Treason of Magic, and shared the following:
My page 69 starts a new chapter in A Treason of Magic, so the top half of the page is a quote from folklore, Legends and Romances of Brittany by Lewis Spence [1917]. These epigraphs at each chapter ground the reader in the folklore that the character uses. I last did this in my debut novel, Wicked Lovely, which was originally published in 2007 and was reissued in 2025 (by HarperCollins both times).

After that quote, the start of Chapter 8 in A Treason of Magic captures an aspect of the character’s reality—being the Hunter of monsters means that she will be injured. On this occasion, she has defeated a faery/monster, but has been stabbed. This foreshadows more vicious attacks by the monster murdering travelers in her neighbouring area.
I slip inside the house when the morning is still new with a hush gesture to one of the attendants and tiptoe up the staircase. A shadow inside my room makes me pause, but the woman waiting for me is neither my mother nor sister.

“Clarissa?” I call for her, and like all of Maria’s trained healers, she is ready and waiting. A good Hunter cannot focus on the mission and family, so along with the maids and the like, we travel with a skilled physician. Softly, so as not to risk my voice carrying, I say, “I have need of you.”

“Where?” Clarissa’s gaze sweeps over me from where she waits just inside the doorway of the closet. Next to her is a table with bandages, a lit candle, a basin of water, and assorted cannisters.
This section is not just about the world and about the folklore, but also about another driving force for me in writing this book: injury as inevitability.

I have a chronic illness and heart disease, so medical factors are always something not far from my mind. In fiction, I include medical as a very matter-of-fact aspect of life rather than something to be dramatic over. In A Treason of Magic my protagonist, Gabrielle, lives her life expecting to need medical intervention. It simply is.

This page highlights folklore, setting, and a pragmatic approach to injury/illness. I think it’s reflective of my overall story, albeit also one of the slower pages in the overall story.
Visit Melissa Marr's website.

--Marshal Zeringue