all the wrong characters in all the wrong stories, then studied English Writing & Rhetoric at St. Edward’s University. She is a lover of witchcraft, tarot, and powerful women with bad reputations, and she currently resides in Houston surrounded by antiques and dog hair. When not at her laptop spinning darkly hypnotic tales, Morgyn writes for her blog on child loss (forloveofevelyn.com), hunts for vintage treasures, and reads the darkest books she can find.
She is the author of YA novels Resurrection Girls and The Salt in Our Blood.
Morgyn applied the Page 69 Test to her new novel, Only Spell Deep, with the following results:
Page 69 of Only Spell Deep reads:Visit Ava Morgyn's website.A scream that my grandfather put there, that my mother fed and the voice honed, that woke up in the park under that bridge and might swallow me alive if I don’t get it out. It is a horrific, caterwauling sound that claws its way out of my throat and into the wires supplying the building. And when it hits the night, the Needle goes black, every light ticking off in a dizzying sequence, dousing the heart of the city in shadow.While I find this passage intriguing and think it makes several very telling points—alluding to the abuse of her grandfather and mother, mentioning “the voice” which was such a significant part of her childhood, discussing the park in which she first met the Fathom, and most importantly describing her power and the effect it has on her as she exercises it again—I think there is just too little here to satiate readers that don’t already know the story. It even mentions “the Needle”, meaning the Seattle Space Needle, which hints at the setting, but without that other word, I don’t know if readers will even pick up on that.
That said, I do think even this tiny passage carries the tone and mood of the book and might be enough to draw a reader solely based on “vibes” if they know they are looking for dark fantasy and moody storytelling.
What I’d really like for readers to get as a teaser of my book is something more like this passage on page 23:Magic is only spell deep, my mother used to say. It is as likely to harm as to heal.This passage is only a small snippet of a much larger, more informative page, but even it tells and tantalizes in ways the page 69 passage does not. We know instantly that our main character is grappling with family secrets and generational trauma, with the silencing of women and with hereditary magic. We even get a glimpse of where the title of the book came from.
Who knows how many other cautionary tales in love and magic populated my storied family tree? And at the simple age of sixteen, I had, in my own way, taken my place among them.
Still, I knew there was more. Things my mother hadn’t told me, things about my grandmother, about her, about our family. Things she’d run from once, only to have to run back. But I assumed that those things lived in the past; they couldn’t touch me.
The Page 69 Test: The Bane Witch.
Q&A with Ava Morgyn.
--Marshal Zeringue













