S.T. Gibson Tours the World, and Her Shelves, with Bazoo Books
with Cassie E. Brown
August 20, 2025
S.T. Gibson is the #1 Sunday Times and USA Today bestselling author of A DOWRY OF BLOOD and other gothic romances and dark fantasies. Her work explores the intersection of the sacred, the sexy, and the mystical. Saint has been nominated for a Goodreads Choice Award and British Fantasy Award, and longlisted for a British Science Fiction Award.
Cassie Brown: It’s such an honor that S.T. Gibson has agreed to sit down with Bazoo Books. Your work is so dark, sexy, and fascinating… I devoured A DOWRY OF BLOOD and haven’t looked back! I just finished ASCENSION (which is Book II of The Summoner’s Circle Series), and am absolutely breathless. Thank you for your time!
S.T. Gibson: Thank you so much for having me! It’s a pleasure.
Cassie Brown: You’ve written in detail about ancient cities across Europe in A DOWRY OF BLOOD. In AN EDUCATION IN MALICE, the college of St. Perpetua’s itself is so lushly described as to be another character. And the Boston of EVOCATION and ASCENSION feels both modern and crowded with secrets. Is there a place you go that consistently fills your cup of writing inspiration? Where do you do your best writing?
S.T. Gibson: Setting is one of strongest inspirations when it comes to writing; many of my books are inspired by places I’ve visited or lived! It’s impossible for me to grasp the shape of a story until I know when or where it’s set. Every new location has its own heartbeat and magic to me, its own stories and secrets, and travelling and learning about history is one of my favorite things, so I’m always glad when I can incorporate those experiences into stories. It’s why EVOCATION is so tied to the personality and seasonality of Boston, a beloved city where I lived after graduate school, and SAVAGE BLOOMS is inspired by the Southwestern Highlands of Scotland, specifically Arisaig Manor in county Argyll. The story was inspired by a friend and I hiking out around there looking for our own legendary cave, and it's also the region my Scottish ancestors are from. So, that setting is especially dear to me.
Cassie Brown: You have given us vampires and sorcerers. But your next novel, SAVAGE BLOOMS, is set in the Highlands, and it seems we will be encountering faeries! Tell us who will we have the pleasure of encountering in SAVAGE BLOOMS!
S.T. Gibson: As the first book in the trilogy, SAVAGE BLOOMS is most concerned with four young people tied together by a web of ancestral sins, faery enchantment, and burning desire that they themselves only partially understand. We follow Adam, an American golden boy with commitment issues who is still grieving the loss of his grandfather, who raised Adam on stories of a mysterious manor home in Scotland. Adam ventures out to the home - Craigmar - to find closure, and his best friend Nicola, an amateur folklorist and children’s book author, follows him out there. The pair spent all of college pining after each other and are both hoping to finally hook up on the trip, but things get complicated when they’re stranded at Craigmar by heavy rain. There they meet Eileen, the capricious and mysteriously eccentric “lord” of the manor, and her devoted groundskeeper Finley, who holds more power in his relationship with Eileen than anyone suspects. The four become embroiled in each other’s mind games - and each other’s beds - quickly, and it’s all gothic melodrama from there.
There are faery creatures in and around (and under) Craigmar, inspired more heavily by pre-Roman folk practices and medieval beliefs than by naturalist Romanticism or the fae lovers of modern romantics. Which isn’t to say that they aren’t sexy or deeply tied to the land, but whatever you’re imagining, they’re probably Worse. And they take center stage as the series goes on.
Cassie Brown: Books, education, and writers feature prominently within your works. You name many poets, alchemists, scholars, and magicians. Whose works do you find have influenced you most who are not fiction writers?
S.T. Gibson: I’m passionate about learning and always have been. I loved college and graduate school, and if I perhaps didn’t have the diligence and focus for longer-term research projects, it was usually because I wanted to get my hands dirty doing experiential learning, or jump to exploring some other topic. Being an author is the greatest fun for me because I’m always basically doing some kind of weird extended independent research project for the sake of telling a tale.
Thinkers who have heavily influenced my work so far are psychologist Carl Jung, occultists Alan Moore, Rachel Pollack, and Caroline Lovewell, folklorists Francis Young, Robert Kirk, and Richard Hutton, philosophers Byung-Chul Han and Simon Critchley, theologians Richard Rohr, Ellen F. Davis, and Saint Ignatius of Loyala, and diarist Anais Nin, just to name a few. And I’m sure I’m forgetting so many more!
Cassie Brown: In ASCENSION, we see Rhys falling deeply into a tragedy of his own making. I am consistently impressed at how you write characters who often make bad choices, engage in toxic behavior, or lean into flaws, while still pulling the reader through with them on their journeys. As a writer, how do you balance flaws and challenges to make characters who are not tidy and neat yet are empathetic and compelling to read? Is that sort of writing skill natural to you, or did you cultivate it?
S.T. Gibson: So many readers always tell me how much they love my messy, toxic characters (they mean this as a compliment and I take it as one) but I see the mess as part of writing characters with depth, characters with big feelings and big ambitions and big desires who swing big for what they want and sometimes miss catastrophically. I love melodrama, in opera or musicals or Greek tragedy or camp movies, so characters doing things that make you gasp is part of the pleasure of writing to me. And I think it makes them human. We all have light and dark within us; none of us are beyond participating in evil and none of us are too far gone to ever decide to do the right thing. I just love to explore the grey area friction point where those two forces meet and demand more of us.
Cassie Brown: The Summoner’s Circle Series has always masterfully woven together three POV characters: Rhys, Moira, and David. You have focused a novel on David and Rhys, each of them dancing with their respective demons. Will we ever get to see Moira’s dark side?
S.T. Gibson: Yes, of course! The next book in the series is Moira’s book, and I’ve been building to her “dark side of the moon arc” as I call it for a while. Sometimes, even the kindest and most giving and compassionate person is exactly so sweet because they’re trying to something their unruly desires or darker emotions like anger or ambition. And sometimes, the only way for a character as love and light as Moira to integrate into a powerful, full force of nature is to embrace her darkness. Besides, she didn’t end up married to cutthroat, Machiavellian Rhys for no reason. Sure, opposites attract, but sometimes like subconsciously attracts like!
Cassie Brown: Thank you again. What a true pleasure! Bazoo Books looks forward to the upcoming release of SAVAGE BLOOMS on October 7th!
S.T. Gibson: This was a blast! Thanks so much for having me, and for your thoughtful questions!
Find S.T. Gibson’s work at Bazoo Books or on Bazoo’s own Bookshop.org site https://bookshop.org/shop/bazoobooks. You don’t have to go far to find all the dark, sexy, and magical things we’ve talked about here. Just support your local independent bookstore!
Connect with S.T. Gibson at @stgibsonauthor or follow her Substack (https://saint.substack.com).












