Interview with Sara Pascoe

Sara PascoeAn interview with Sara Pascoe

I’m not going to be reviewing your newest novel, but from your other published novels, is there one that is your own personal favourite?

I wrote this and another novel at the same time, over a number of years, when I was still working as a psychologist. The other novel is coming out in May, 2016–‘Oswald, the Almost Famous Opossum’ is a middle-grade fantasy. But ‘Ratchet’ is my favourite so far, due to all the in depth historic research I did and the complex emotional journey Rachel takes.

Ratchet_the_Reluctant_Witch_coverI both love and hate novels that don’t leave a discrete ending for the reader. Have you ever felt the need to write sequels?

I agree in that you always want to give the reader a satisfying ending. I don’t feel a need to right sequels, I’d like to think, unless the story compels me to do so. For example, I gave, I believe a very satisfying ending to Ratchet’s first journey in this premiere book, but you do really wonder what happens next. I am very fond of these characters, and I too, want to know where the story goes!

There’s always another novel in the pipeline to write… Tell me about it! Does it have even a working title?

Oh, yes. I have too many! My next novel (after the upcoming publication of ‘Oswald, the Almost Famous Opossum’) will be ‘Space Boy’. This is an other middle-grade/young YA novel. IAN, an overweight, geeky teenager, substitutes his clone to escape the bullies at school (“Hey Space Boy – you’re as big as your own planet!”) and misery at home, so he can run away in peace. But The Clone’s ‘teething problems’ force him to stay, and then face how good his life could be… if only he could have it back.

I also have some novels for adults in the works. I’ve been plotting out ‘Sabrina Dastardly’s Blog from the Future’ (working title), an erotic sci-fi story set…obviously… in the future. Then, there is ‘Lucifer’s Librarian’…

Some advice other writers have given is that your first novel is best sitting in a drawer for a while, because then you feel stronger about chopping up ‘your baby’. Do you still have a copy of your first novel? Whether this was published or unpublished, I need to know!

Oh, don’t worry — this baby was chopped up and put in a blender a few times, and is all this better for it! It was a bit different for me, in that I had done quite a bit of academic writing, including editing a book for the National Academy of Sciences (http://bit.ly/1p0rdCY) in my former profession, as well as having written a self-help book for Need2Know books (http://bit.ly/1T69lkQ). So I approached novel writing, I believe, less naïvely than I might have, had I not had lots of red lines through my writing for many years! I’ve submitted my first two novels to many critiques and edits, both by other writers, and professional editors. I kept doing this until I was confident the books were in the best shape they could be. I plan to do this for all my books.

I highly recommend that new writers get a number of other people read their work. And these should be people that do not know or love them! There are websites where writers beta read for each other–give a non-professional, but honest critique of your work. You have to balance this with not bending with every breeze, and changing everything people don’t like. For me, if I hear the same criticism from more than one person, I always take it seriously.

Do you have a dedicated writing space? How does it meet your writing needs?

Yes, I have my computer on a desk raised up so I can use a draughtman’s chair – -much easier on the back! My desk is at a window at the front of our house, so I don’t feel too closed in, and can look out at the green hedges across the road and watch my cat stare up at the dense hedge, waiting for bird to fall out! Luckily he is a very poor hunter.

What is your writing process? Have you ever thought about changing it? Other authors I have interviewed talk about having an outline – post-it notes in an office, or writing in paper journals. Is there something like that in your writing technique? Or is it all digital for you?

I like using a combination of writing with a pencil, usually on large sketch pads, and using the computer. I make copious notes for research, such as all the historic research I did about 17th century England and Ottoman Empire. (And what a fascinating contrast that was! Istanbul was a sophisticated and amazing place in the 1600s, where women had lots of rights, for example, not to mention the running cold and hot water, and many other forward thinking things, compared to the squalid back-water England was during the civil war period). I also write detailed biographies for my fictional characters, character arcs, and I outline the novel in detail using the eight act screenplay structure to help me plot effectively.

How do you know when a novel or short story is finished? How do you know to step away and let the story speak for itself?

It’s a feeling, for me. In fact, one of the first editors I worked with for Ratchet thought the book was ready for publication, but something nagged me. I wasn’t convinced. So I pushed the boat out (doing this properly is not cheap) and found another editor who had worked for one of the major New York publishing houses in Young Adult books, before going freelance. She agreed that it needed more work (actually, more than I had even thought!). But working with her was terrific–like a personal writing tutor. And Ratchet is now the best it can be. I think, having written scientific research articles for dreary academic journals for some years, as well as my other work, all taught me a lot about when something really is at it’s best. I do remember getting research journal submission back from reviewers who just slashed them to pieces and feeling disheartened. But it taught me both how to be a better writer, and how to recognise when something is done. And finally–ask people, as I described above. Investing in professional critiques and edits is the single most important investment you can make in your writing career. If you’re serious-do it.

Do you have a preference for ebook or paperback format? This is for both your own reading and your novels.

I like both. The ebook format is so practical, easy to read at night while not bothering anyone else, and of course good for the planet. But I also love books in their physical form as beautiful objects. At the London Book Fair (12-14 Apr 2016) there was a talk by Oren Teicher, CEO of the American Booksellers Association, and the sale of paper books went up in 2015, as did the number of independent bookstores!

Social media is becoming a big thing. How does managing media outlets come into marketing your brand and your books?

This is very important and critical to sales, so it would seem, and I am learning more about it, to do it more effectively.

You have answered other sets of interview questions, is there something you wish someone would have asked you? Or conversely, something you wish they hadn’t asked?

For once, I don’t have anything to say–unusual for me, eh?! 😉 I can’t think of any interesting questions that has generally gone unasked, except maybe this one, which I don’t know if I’d want to answer: ‘What, if anything would make you stop writing?’

Interview with Paula Margulies

An interview with Paula Margulies

Paula Margulies PhotoThe Tao of Book Publicity: A Beginner’s
Guide to Book Promotion by Paula Margulies
ISBN: 978-09913545-3-5
One People Press
March 9, 2016
Kindle: 0.99; Print: $9.99
www.amazon.com
www.barnesandnoble.com
www.paulamargulies.com

 

1. You have been a book publicist for more than 25 years. What made you finally decide to write a guidebook on promotion for authors?

In the course of my publicity work, I’ve received calls from hundreds of authors, many of whom ask the same questions: When do I start my publicity campaign? How much should I plan to spend? Do I need a website? How do I build a platform? What price should I give my book? Do I have to use social media and, if so, which sites are best? Should I print a hardcover version, or will a paperback suffice? Do I need to enter contests? How can I get more reviews?

TaoBookPublicity-Cover-FINALThese are all important questions, and since so many authors seem to have the same concerns about their books, I decided to share what I’ve learned over the years as a publicist in one convenient, inexpensive resource guide.

2. The Tao of Book Publicity has a Zen look and feel to the cover and title. How does understanding the Tao principles help authors to promote their books?

I chose the Tao as a way of offering authors a practical philosophy on how they might approach book marketing. There are many authors who find promotion crass and time-consuming; a good majority would rather be writing than spending time trying to develop promotional material and schedules for themselves and their work. But I’ve found that book promotion can be a rewarding and fulfilling activity if done with the right perspective in mind.

As I describe in the book, most book publicity comes from a place of not-knowing; there are people we approach, for example, for reviews or interviews, but we cannot strong-arm those individuals into giving us what we want. Instead, we take the time to think about what our message is, who we are targeting with that message, and how to propose it in the most succinct, relevant, and motivating way we can. We then present our message (what most in my business call our “pitch”), and then follow-up with persistence to try to get a yes response. Our results are never guaranteed – it is up to the reporters or editors we contact to decide if the message we’re sharing is right for them. But when we come from a place of humility and unattachment, we tend to do a better job of both preparation (in which case, we usually achieve the goals we’re attempting) and managing our expectations.

3. What other aspects of book publicity to do you cover in the book?

I provide how-to explanations for developing publicity material, including front and back cover text, press releases, Q&As, media and blog tour queries, and newsletter and media lists. I also cover topics such as social media, book pricing and sales, book tours and media interviews, and author websites. In addition to explaining how book publicity works, I also discuss practical topics such as publicity costs, timing, and considerations when hiring a publicist; I’ve found that many authors want to know upfront about fees for services and what steps they should have completed before they contact a publicist like me.

4. If you have one piece of advice for new authors, what would it be?

That’s easy – write a good book!

Of course, that’s easier said than done. I’ve found that oftentimes authors, especially those who have chosen to self-publish, are in a rush to get their books out. In their hurry, they forgo important steps like workshopping the book, spending time on revision, hiring a professional editor and cover designer, and developing their platforms. As a result, many of their books, sadly, don’t sell. If authors want their books to be well-received by booksellers, the media, and (most important) readers, they must take the time to carefully edit, polish, and package them well – there is no substitute for these steps in the publishing process.

5. Can you describe how an author might use this book as a guide to his or her own publicity plans?

Authors can read the chapters in any order they like (each chapter is designed to be read as stand-alone unit) and see what sounds as if it might be a good fit for them and their books. If something doesn’t sound right, they don’t have to use it. The information in the chapters is there to provide guidance and insight into what I believe are the common practices of most book publicists, but none of what’s there is meant to be a hard-and-fast prescription for any author’s individual book publicity plans.

6. Are you working on another book? If so, what can you tell us about it?

In addition to this latest book, I’m also the author of the short story collection, Face Value: Collected Stories, and two novels: Coyote Heart, which is a modern-day romance about a married woman who falls in love with a Pala Indian man, and Favorite Daughter, Part One, a first-person retelling of the life story of the famous Native American legend, Pocahontas. I’d like to get back to writing fiction and plan to spend the next year completing Part Two of Favorite Daughter.

Interview with Jaclyn Moriarty

Moriarty Jaclyn med

An Interview with Jaclyn Moriarty, author of The Colours of Madeleine trilogy.

I’m going to be reviewing three of your novels from The Colours of Madeleine. From your other published novels, are there some that I should absolutely read?

Are you mad?  All of them!  (Well, if you like comedy/friendship/romance/letters, then the first two, Feeling Sorry for Celia and Finding Cassie Crazy might be good.  If you want to read a murder mystery about the least popular girl in the school, Bindy Mackenzie makes sense, and if you’re drawn to ghost stories, Dreaming of Amelia might be best.  Finally, The Spell Book of Listen Taylor is a strange and fantastical book about a shy girl who finds a book of spells.)

I both love and hate novels that don’t leave a discrete ending for the reader. Have you ever felt the need to write sequels for specific novels, other than this set?

I think it’s VERY important for a novel to be complete within itself, even if it’s part of a series. As long as there is some kind of story arc that has been completed, I don’t mind if there’s more of the story to come – that makes sense when it’s part of a series – and I don’t even mind if there’s an unexpected twist at the very end that creates a kind of cliffhanger.  But I can’t stand it when you turn the page and the story’s suddenly, unexpectedly over and the characters are just in a room looking at you blankly.  As if you’re in one of those chain-story games where the person next to you needs to take up the reigns.

There’s always another novel in the pipeline to write… Tell me about it! Does it have even a working title?

I am working on few different books.  One is about a girl whose parents have run away to have adventures with pirates (the working title of that one is, ‘pirate book’, so it’s not even really a working title); one is about a woman who joins a self-help course which claims it will teach her to fly (the working title is The Effort of Pleasure but I’ve also got a title in mind that I love and don’t want to say it in case anybody dislikes it); one is a new Ashbury-Brookfield book about Emily’s younger brother (working title is, Killing the Hummingbird); and one is about time travel.

Also, I want to write a book about my great-grandmother whose name was Keziah.  So that just has the working title: Keziah.

Some advice other writers have given is that your first novel is best sitting in a drawer for a while, because then you feel stronger about choppingup ‘your baby’. Do you still have a copy of your first novel? Whether this was published or unpublished, I need to know!

I wrote my first (illustrated) novel when I was seven and it’s a minor masterpiece about talking dolls that is extremely reminiscent of Enid Blyton, and it earned me a dollar.  My dad used to commission us to write novels.

Do you have a dedicated writing space? How does it meet your writing needs?

In the mornings I work in a cafe.  My favourite is the chocolate cafe, which meets my writing needs in the following ways: it is small and quiet; they play great music yet the music is not distracting; every now and then people come in and have interesting conversations and it’s easy to eavesdrop and take notes; they give you chocolate with your tea.

In the afternoons, I work in my study at home which meets my writing needs in the following ways: my window looks out onto the courtyard so I can watch people come and go from their apartments and, if I don’t know what a character is wearing, I just steal the clothes of one of those people; there is a computer on the desk; my kitchen is down the hall and it provides tea and chocolate.

What is your writing process? Have you ever thought about changing it? Other authors I have interviewed talk about having an outline – post-itnotes in an office, or writing in paper journals. Is there something like that in your writing technique? Or is it all digital for you?

In the mornings, I use notepads and coloured textas and pencils in a cafe.  I draw pictures and scribble notes, plan chapters and do research.  In the afternoons I write the chapter on the computer, or half the chapter, or a paragraph of the chapter, or a sentence.

How do you know when a novel or short story is finished? How do you know to step away and let the story speak for itself?

I don’t know.  I always think I could keep rewriting and reworking forever.  It’s usually the fact that the deadline has passed or I’ve run out of money that makes me send the manuscript out into the world.

Do you have a preference for ebook or paperback format? This is for both your own reading and your novels.

Paperback, but I don’t mind people reading ebooks.  One day I will try one…

Social media is becoming a big thing. How does managing media outlets come into marketing your brand and your books?

People tell me I need to use more social media and I try for a minute, in a chaotic, helpless way, and then I stop, and then it happens all over again.

You have answered other sets of interview questions, is there something you wish someone would have asked you? Or conversely, something you wish they hadn’t asked?

I wish somebody had asked: ‘Would you like some chocolate?’

 

This interview is as part of the A Tangle of Gold Blog Tour by Macmillan Australia – I will be reviewing all three novels in this series over the next couple of days, so check back in!

A Tangle of Gold_Blog_Tour_Dates_160404

Interview with Valerie Davisson

ValerieDavissonPortraitAn Interview with Valerie Davisson, author of Shattered* and ‘Forest Park’. Stay tuned for my review of ‘Forest Park’ coming soon! *Here’s the link for my review of Shattered

I am reviewing your current set of novels. From your other published novels, are there some that I should absolutely read?
This series is my first! Each book is a new adventure for me as well as my protagonist, Logan McKenna. My other books are non-fiction and poetry.

I both love and hate novels that don’t leave a discrete ending for the reader. Have you ever felt the need to write sequels for specific novels, other than this set?
If I had a standalone novel, I’m sure I would want to know what happens next with the characters – as long as we’re alive we have room for growth and change.

There’s always another novel in the pipeline to write… Tell me about it! Does it have even a working title?
Ahh…yes! I just sketched out the main points for Logan Book 3 and am digging into the research. This one takes her back to Jasper, her home town on the Southern California coast. All I can say now is that it involves sea otters, seduction and salty dogs…

Some advice other writers have given is that your first novel is best sitting in a drawer for a while, because then you feel stronger about chopping up ‘your baby’. Do you still have a copy of your first novel? Whether this was published or unpublished, I need to know!
Great question! SHATTERED: Logan Book 1 is not only my first novel in the series, but my first novel ever! I wanted to see if I could write one. Once I make up my mind, I just do it. I had no idea what I was doing, so went to a writers’ conference in La Jolla, found some experienced people to show me the ropes and off I went. It’s been a roller coaster ride ever since. Why leave something sitting in a drawer?

Do you have a dedicated writing space? How does it meet your writing needs?
I do – it’s an open loft area in my home. I’ve got a drafting table with a large monitor on the top shelf, a comfortable chair in the corner where I can curl up and read drafts sometimes. When I’m in the final writing stages – that final 1,000-words-a-day push, I lock myself in up here, put on headphones, crank up a Tchaikovsky violin concerto or 2 Cellos and everyone knows the “Logan light is on!” I need quiet to juggle all the plot lines in my head, or try to get a line right. I can do white noise – coffee shops are fine – I just can’t carry on a conversation or listen to music with lyrics and write at the same time.

I also find myself working at the kitchen table if no one is home or I’m too lazy to walk up the stairs. It’s closer to the refrigerator…

What is your writing process? Have you ever thought about changing it? Other authors I have interviewed talk about having an outline – post-it notes in an office, or writing in paper journals. Is there something like that in your writing technique? Or is it all digital for you?
This question brings to mind my first attempt at plotting. I taped several large pieces of chart paper together and used different color post-it notes for each character, placing them along the arcs of the story. Needless to say it got too complicated, so I gave it up. But it looked really cool. Made me feel very official.

I next tried Excel to keep track of dates, plot lines and characters – who’s doing what when. Excel works for me once the story gets going.I am the Excel Queen!

In the initial stages, I write and sketch ideas on blank paper-mind mapping, jotting down thoughts as they come to me. Once I decide one thing, everything starts rushing into my head and I have to write fast to get it all down. I can always change it later if something doesn’t work, but I feel lucky that so far the ideas come easily – the patience and skill is in weaving them together.

How do you know when a novel or short story is finished? How do you know to step away and let the story speak for itself?
I read somewhere that a mystery novel should aim for about 65,000 words. So, I had that in the back of my head, but really, it just seems to work itself out. When it’s done, it’s done. I like resolving some big issues, but also leaving room for the characters to continue living their lives, even if we never see them again. But, of course, we will see SOME of them again…

Do you have a preference for ebook or paperback format? This is for both your own reading and your novels.
I was always a person who loved physical books – the feel of a book in my hand or on my lap – wandering through bookstores, selecting books off the shelves with great pleasure. But…in the last few years, almost all of my reading is done on my kindle. It’s lightweight and doesn’t keep my husband up with a bright book light I used to have to use. Also easier to travel with.

Social media is becoming a big thing. How does managing media outlets come into marketing your brand and your books?
Because I did a blog as part of a non-fiction book about conversation salons I wrote a few years ago, I was somewhat familiar with WordPress, so when the publisher wanted me to do an author website and Facebook page, it felt pretty natural. I enjoy posting – just wish I could clone myself. Sometimes it’s hard to find time to write your novel AND your blog posts.

You have answered other sets of interview questions, is there something you wish someone would have asked you? Or conversely, something you wish they hadn’t asked?
One of my favorite questions is which character is my favorite – and it’s usually a toss-up between Tava’e, the massive, Samoan Chess Queen who owns the coffee shop down the hill from Logan at the beach, and Iona Slatterly, the feisty head of security at the Otter Festival in SHATTERED: Logan Book 1. She was modeled after a woman I saw while serving jury duty years ago. Tiny woman marched in wearing skin-tight, hot pink jeans with matching nails and lipstick, over-bleached blonde, towering beehive and drawn on eyebrows. Cigarette dangling out of her mouth. I never got to talk to her, so I reinvented her as Iona in my first novel. She was a kick to write! Lived by her own rules. Heart of gold. Rough around the edges.

Interview with CC Hogan

review-request-jancc-hogan-sketch
An Interview with CC Hogan, author of the Dirt saga (which is filled with dragons!)

If you want more information about his world, go to www.aworldcalleddirt.com

I’m not reviewing your current set of novels. From your other published novels, are there some that I should absolutely read?

Dirt is a bit of a never ending story, but I released a book earlier last year called The Stink. I was brought up in North London in the mid-seventies, a time of much industrial unrest and a time also when attitudes changed.  Young people started to reject the restrictive tenets of their parents and created their own ideas, their own philosophy. If the sixties were a time of protest, the seventies were a time of reinvention.  It was the true time of the teenager as well. Although the teen was invented in the 50s, it was not until the seventies that we got it right.  I suppose it was in the seventies that the modern teen was created.  Look at teens now and they are no different to us back then; we listen to the same type of music, even the same bands, go to the same festivals, drink the same drinks and get into the same sort of trouble.

And then, into the middle of this, landed 1976 – the longest hottest summer ever! We were sixteen, we had finished our exams and were let our of school early, and we had ten weeks to kill.  The Stink is a comedy about one group of five who start a band. It almost goes right, but during the summer, they have to grow up, face racism, homophobia, anti-Semitism, ridicule, love and even a murder. It is not just a caper, it is a little tip of the hat to my own youth too and perhaps it is, in its own way, a letter to my old town.

I both love and hate novels that don’t leave a discrete ending for the reader. Have you ever felt the need to write sequels for specific novels, other than this set? 

I will write one for the Stink, but I haven’t left a cliff hanger.  Dirt, obviously, is full of them.  At up to twelve books long, I need to give people a reason to read the next, but The Stink ends properly – I ain’t going to tell you how, though! I will say that the sequel will be set two years later when the kids are now all eighteen years of age.  They are older, ruder and probably a lot naughtier, and I am going to put them and their band on tour with a pile of punks.  It will be a comedy again, but I am going to make sure that you do not have to read the first book to enjoy it, though it would help.

There’s always another novel in the pipeline to write… Tell me about it! Does it have even a working title?

There are two, or is that three? I want to right a conceptual love story.  Actually, it is just an excuse for me welding together a pile of poems with some self-indulgent passages.  However, I have another book or two in mind.  The Stink, and its potential sequel, are both in a file called The London Novels.  I was brought up in that mad city and I love it.  I worked there for many years in the media business, mixing with crazy people and doing some crazy things.  I would never write an autobiography because, firstly, I am not famous.  More importantly, to make the book interesting, I would have to take the mickey and be insulting to people from my past who were friends.  I am not prepared to do that. But it is a rich source of stories.  So I have both a fake autobiography planned, written by a pretend rock star who is passed his sell-by date, and another book, set around the dives and bars of Soho.  Not sure of a title for either of these yet, but I have a large pile of notes that are staring at me invitingly.

Some advice other writers have given is that your first novel is best sitting in a drawer for a while, because then you feel stronger about chopping up ‘your baby’. Do you still have a copy of your first novel? Whether this was published or unpublished, I need to know!

I have several, not quite finished, sitting up in the loft.  One is around 120,000 words long and is a fairy tale, for adults, set in pre-Christian Russia.  I also have a part written kids story, set on the moon, aimed at 12-year-olds. Oh, and a cartoons series.  Although abandoned, they are not forgotten and were part of my decades-long learning process.  All three, well two of them, are really strong ideas and one day, I will return to them and finish them. It may take another ten years, but I will get there. I have caught the bug now, you see, and in the last couple of years have written over a million words. It is an addiction; it may even be problem!

Do you have a dedicated writing space? How does it meet your writing needs?

I double up as a musician, so unusually for a writer, my computer has three huge monitors for my music software.  My desk is covered with Mexican rugs and I have candles and guitars everywhere.  An espresso machine sits on my right, a bottle of plonk on my left with a bowl of olives, and I always have a bottle of rum somewhere.  Seeing that I am currently writing the second series of Dirt, the three monitors are emblazoned with wallpaper of the main continents of Dirt, so I can’t escape it.  I open Word in the middle screen, Onenote on the right and Photoshop on the left. I also have a big, ancient Wacom tablet. This is an artist’s room. There are paintings on the wall, books on the shelves and it oozes fun and story telling.  I love it.

What is your writing process? Have you ever thought about changing it? Other authors I have interviewed talk about having an outline – post-it notes in an office, or writing in paper journals. Is there something like that in your writing technique? Or is it all digital for you?

I am very digital because I am very computer literate.  I design all my own websites, for instance, with a content management framework called ProcessWire.  My primary tool is Onenote.  Dirt is incredibly complicated.  The story is set over 1000 years and harks back in time 12,000 years. Just to write the novels, I have had to create maps, timelines, family trees, histories, and religions.  I have had to research longbows, hitching up carts, how fast horses travel, how fast ancient boats travel and work out how quickly a dragon can fly.  The result is notes and research that are almost novel length in their own right.  I dread to think how that would have been on paper.

Before I write, I make sure I plan everything, and then when I am writing, and inevitably think of lots nice extra bits, I constantly update my notes.  On the Dirt website, are a list of all the characters so far in the first four books; all taken from my notes.  However, I do plan slightly differently from others.  I like to waffle, so when I create a character, I never put in my notes, “five foot six, c-cup, blond, blue eyes….”  I write, “Silvi is right pain in the arse and though a bit on the short size, is quite able to shove her face up to anyone that annoys her.”  That is a much better character and who gives a damn what her hair colour is!  Anyone who says they can write freeform without planning, is fibbing – probably to themselves. 

Having said that I am digital, if I manage to get a bigger work room at some point, I think I want to buy blackboards or whiteboards to help. I am very expressive and just a little eccentric.  When I write, I speak out loud and when I read back, I often prance around the room performing the book.  Dialogue is very important to me, so I need to make sure that it works and performing is the only true way to do it.  The idea of scribbling on a huge board really appeals!

How do you know when a novel or short story is finished? How do you know to step away and let the story speak for itself?

I don’t!  Well, I know when the story is finished because I normally run out of notes or full wine bottles.  But just because I have written FIN, does not mean the work is over, and as they say, anything might happen in the rewrite! To be really honest, I hit publish when I am exhausted with it!  Trouble is, I really fall in love with my characters and I have big problems letting them go.  Some of them I have had to kill off, just to give me some sleep.

Do you have a preference for ebook or paperback format? This is for both your own reading and your novels.

I always loved paperbacks – never hardbacks as I like to abuse my books and I felt I had to be careful with hardbacks.  Then, several years back, I had problems with my eyes and I gave up reading for fun.  It was nothing terrible, I was just getting headaches and couldn’t seem to get the right glasses.  Buying a tablet, brought me back to books again.  For me now, I don’t really have a preference and for publishing, I will go for whatever people want, within limits. I am not quite up to hand-written illuminated manuscripts!

Social media is becoming a big thing. How does managing media outlets come into marketing your brand and your books?

At the moment, it is vital.  I am an author; therefore, I am poverty stricken. I cannot afford advertising, so social media is my lifeline at the moment. As part of that is the world of the book blogger.  You are an amazing group of people and a couple of you have gone way out their way to help with no returns.  I suppose that is why I like doing things like this interview.  I am a writer, so if I can make this a bit more interesting, even a bit of fun, then we all get something out of it.  That is the secret of good marketing. 

You have answered other sets of interview questions, is there something you wish someone would have asked you? Or conversely, something you wish they hadn’t asked?

My favorite food? First girlfriend?  Actually, not as crazy as it sounds.  When I wrote The Stink, one of the characters, the drummer, is a crazy Irish girl whose nickname is Aroma.  Well, it is called The Stink! It was only when I had finished the book and was drawing the cover that I realised she was my first girlfriend – right down to the hitting the bloke she had fallen in love with and wouldn’t admit it.  I don’t know where she is now as I lost contact in about 1977, but she was really cool and I have some very warm memories of messing around in the park doing everything we had been told not to.  Oh, the food thing.  Did I mention I am also a cook?

Interview with Piers Platt

I’m hosting an interview with Piers Platt – author of RATH’S DECEPTION!

I’m not reviewing your novel for this tour. Why would I want to? From your other published novels, are there some that I should absolutely read?

Rath’s Deception is a thrill-ride, with lots of action, and some awesome twists along the way. It’s very accessible sci-fi – I’m not a fan of tons of technology descriptions and exposition about physics and space travel. I like digging into characters and seeing them grow and overcome substantial odds. I would definitely check out my Iraq War memoir, “Combat and Other Shenanigans” – it’s a humorous take on the military genre. And I’m giving it away for free right now for anyone that signs up for my mailing list at www.piersplatt.com/newsletter !

I both love and hate novels that don’t leave a discrete ending for the reader. Have you ever felt the need to write sequels for specific novels? 

Yeah, I already wrote book 2 and 3 in the Janus Group series! They’re coming out over the next two months. And I feel you: I hate it when books end mid-stream. I wrap things up neatly in this series, there are no loose ends.

There’s always another novel in the pipeline to write… Tell me about it! Does it have even a working title?

“Rath’s Gambit” is book 2 in the series, followed by “Rath’s Reckoning,” Book 3. Working on that trilogy has kept me busy enough, so that’s as far as I’ve gotten so far!

Some advice other writers have given is that your first novel is best sitting in a drawer for a while, because then you feel stronger about chopping up ‘your baby’. Do you still have a copy of your first novel? Whether this was published or unpublished, I need to know!

I agree…I’m not sure it ever gets easier to “chop up your baby,” but some time/distance definitely helps you see the flaws more easily. The first version of “Rath’s Deception” was a bit longer, and I made some choices that were ill-considered, in retrospect. I still have digital versions of it on my hard drive, but luckily I paired up with an excellent editor who showed me that the book was stronger with some elements left to the imagination.

Do you have a dedicated writing space? Do you have colourful post-it notes on the walls? How does it meet your writing needs?

Yup, a seat on the commuter rail! I still have a day job, but I put my commute to good use…I wish it was a little more private, but headphones work wonders. I haven’t tried the post-it thing…but somehow I think that would be frowned on 🙂

What is your writing process? Have you ever thought about changing it? Other authors I have interviewed talk about having an outline – post-it notes in an office, or writing in paper journals. Is there something like that in your writing technique? Or is it all digital for you?

I outline pretty thoroughly, but it’s all digital. I like to know what the characters arcs are going to be, and how everything is going to end, at a minimum. I’ll hop between Word and Excel to get things plotted out…whichever is working for me at the time.

Do you have a preference for ebook or paperback format? This is for both your own reading and your novels.

If I’m traveling, it would have to be an ebook – just so much more portable and versatile. But I still like reading paperbacks, and there’s nothing like getting that first proof copy of your work in the mail.

Social media is becoming a big thing. How does managing media outlets come into marketing your brand and your books?

I find email a much better way of interacting with my readers – I do have FB and Twitter accounts, but I don’t use them all that much, honestly. Emails feel more personal to me, and a better way of connecting with people.

You have answered other sets of interview questions, is there something you wish someone would have asked you? Or conversely, something you wish they hadn’t asked?

I get a lot of questions about writing process…which is cool, I think it’s helpful to know how other authors work, definitely. But I like questions about hobbies outside of writing. I’m an avid scuba diver, and I could talk for hours about my favorite dives. My last dive: fixing the drain plate on my father-in-law’s pool. In late October. In New York. 0/10, would not dive again. 😉

 

Title: Rath’s Deception
Author: Piers Platt
Publisher: Piers Platt
Pages: 350
Genre: Sci Fi/Thriller

On the cut-throat streets of Tarkis, orphaned teens like Rath end up jailed … or dead. So when the shadowy Janus Group offers Rath a chance to earn riches beyond his wildest dreams, he seizes it. But the Janus Group is as ruthless as the elite assassins it controls. Rath will have to survive their grueling, off-world training, and fulfill all fifty kills in his contract before a single cent comes his way. And ending so many lives comes with a price Rath can’t anticipate. It’ll certainly cost him what’s left of his innocence. It may well cost him his life.

For More Information

  • Rath’s Deception is available at Amazon.
  • Discuss this book at PUYB Virtual Book Club at Goodreads.

 

 

 

 

 About the Author

Piers Platt is the New York Times bestselling author of “Combat and Other Shenanigans,” a memoir of his year-long deployment to Iraq as a tank and scout platoon leader. Piers grew up in Boston, but spent most of his childhood in various boarding schools, including getting trained as a classical singer at a choir school for boys. He joined the Army in 2002, and spent four years on active duty.

When he’s not writing or spending time with his lovely wife and daughter, Piers works as a strategy consultant in New York city.

His latest book is the sci fi/thriller, Rath’s Deception.

For More Information

Interview with Iain Reading

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          Ian Reading

I feel like I should ask you about your most recent novel that I read, The Dragon of the Month Club, but perhaps it would be more interesting to talk about the novels you have already written. Why would I go backwards and read those as well?

After I finished writing the Dragon of the Month Club it occurred to me that it had one thing very much in common with my earlier series, the Kitty Hawk Flying Detective Agency. Both book series take the reader through different worlds, one after the other. In the Dragon of the Month Club those worlds are the worlds of the various books scattered around Tyler’s bedroom, whereas in the Kitty Hawk series the worlds are more down-to-Earth, in fact they are different places right here on our own beautiful planet. One country and culture to another, all the way around the world.

Both book series give you a chance to explore the world(s) from the comfort of your own living room, and hopefully inspire people to go out and see and read about those worlds for themselves.

I’m pretty obsessed with dragons, as my blog name would attest. What made you want to write about dragons instead of flying adventures?

It all started with a title: The Dragon of the Month Club. This came to me one Saturday afternoon and I knew I liked it, but it wasn’t until the next day that it finally clicked in my brain what that title meant. And once those floodgates were opened, I couldn’t think or write fast enough to keep up with it.

What aged reader would best enjoy this book? I admit that the cover artwork made me think of a middle-grade novel, and I almost skipped the opportunity to read it.

If I had to limit myself to just one single age group, I would have to agree with you and say middle-grade. But I think the book is far sophisticated enough to appeal to much older readers as well – from young adult to super adult.

I love your idea with letting fans come up with alternative dragons (I confess I checked out the webpage right away). Do you have any pictures of the finished products?

The Dragon of the Month Club website (www.dragonofthemonthclub.com) has a “Dragon Archives” section where you can check out some of the past Dragons of the Month that have been submitted by readers.

Do you start feeling like you are the characters in your novel as you are writing them?

Sometimes yes, sometimes no. I suppose it all depends on whether you can lose yourself to the point where you almost become them. Funnily enough, it’s almost never the main characters. It’s always some minor character in the book that I tend to fall into and start thinking I am them. That said, however, for the briefest of moments as I wrote the Sherlock Holmes section of the Dragon of the Month Club, I found myself almost becoming the Tyler character.

You said your goal was to have the Kitty Hawk be 13 books long. Have you given up writing those? Do you have any other books in the works?

I definitely have NOT given up on the Kitty Hawk books. We’re still on track for a total of 13 books eventually. My problem this past 8 months has been too many ideas and too much trying to do too many things. When the year started the next Kitty Hawk book was based in Egypt. I got a few thousand words into that one with most of the ideas all fleshed out. I have puzzles made and hanging on my walls. There is even some nearly finished cover artwork. And then I started thinking about the NEXT book, which takes place in Tanzania, and started thinking about that one as well. And then the most amazing thing happened. I was standing in Istanbul, looking up at the sky and minarets, and a red and white seaplane flew right over my head as it came in for a landing on the Golden Horn. I couldn’t believe my eyes. It was a sign. A sign that the next Kitty Hawk book will take place in Venice and Istanbul. So now there’s puzzles for that one hanging on my
wall and I’m a few thousand words in.

You’re also a musician. Would you suggest to people to listen to your songs at the same time as they read your novels?

Hmmmmm. That’s a good question. Some of them, perhaps. Although as a general rule maybe it’s best to NOT listen to music while reading. Songs and albums tell stories too. Maybe it’s best not to try and split your attention between two stories at once?

When you were younger, did you know you wanted to be an author? How long have you been writing? Have you studied writing at university?

I actually studied Science and Engineering in university before I dropped out and worked at McDonalds and Pizza Hut for a few years before moving to Europe. My mom always thought I should be an author. I tried to write a book once and it didn’t really work. I mean, it’s truly terrible. But then Kitty Hawk came along, bless her heart. And she showed me the way.

Do you have a writing schedule? What does your writing process look like? Do you use a special pen or composite notebooks to write in? Are there sticky-notes on the walls of your office?

The walls of my office are actually plastered with cover artwork and puzzles from the various Kitty Hawk books. When I look over I can see the evolution of the artworks from sketches to reality.

My writing process involves walking and thinking and planning, then sitting down and executing it.

Can you tell me about a typical week? Have you ever been on a scheduled writing retreat, or is your self-motivation enough?

I have been on one writing retreat and in fact that is where I wrote the very first chapter I ever wrote from the Dragon of the Month Club. It was the chapter about the Wishing Tree and just down the street from the haunted hotel where I was writing there was a REAL Wishing Tree.

But I have to say that the best writing weeks I’ve ever had were one week I spent on a cruise ship, sitting in the library with a laptop, staring out across the Atlantic Ocean. This was followed by another week in the Bahamas where I spent my afternoons writing instead of sitting around the pool. I finished the book there, in fact, and once I did I was able to celebrate with a milkshake from Johnny Rocket’s.

Is keeping up with your online presence daunting? How do you gauge how successful your social media campaigns are?

Daunting isn’t even in the right galaxy of words as what would describe how challenging it is too keep up on social media. In fact, keeping up isn’t even the right thing to say either. Falling behind and never catching up is more accurate.

It’s difficult to gauge how successful many things are, but you just keep trying and hoping for the best.

Do you believe in ongoing promotion of your novels? It seems like most novels come out as new and if they don’t sell in the first month, then they’re gone. You’re doing a great job with the website, what else do you have in the works?

I have tried a number of different approaches with varying success. Thus far I’m not a millionaire, so I often try and go with the ones I have the most fun with – for example, appearances at Comic Con conventions.

Finally, you’ve given a number of other interviews – are there any questions you wish people would ask, or wouldn’t ask? This could be about anything you want to talk about further.

Actually, I have to say that this interview has been pretty awesome. I love it when the questions are thoughtful and insightful like this. So as far as things I want to talk about further, I would like to say thank you so incredibly much for the opportunity to answer these questions of yours. Thank you.

Interview with Kathleen Duhamel

An interview with Kathleen Duhamel, author of ‘Deep Blue’26192938

I haven’t read your novel yet. Why would I want to? From your other published novels, are there some that I should absolutely read?

You will enjoy reading it because it’s not a conventional romance. The characters are much older, in their 50s and 60s, yet still vital and interested in love and relationships. As you might expect, they have issues – career demands, children, grandchildren, exes. And in Robert’s case, he has to deal with the pressures that come with being a well-known and somewhat controversial musician.

There’s romance, a touch of suspense and a lot of drama.

Deep Blue is my first published novel.

I both love and hate novels that don’t leave a discrete ending for the reader. Have you ever felt the need to write sequels for specific novels?

Deep Blue has a satisfying ending, but I deliberately left the door wide open for a sequel. When I was about halfway finished with Deep Blue I decided that I loved my characters so much that I was unwilling to let them go. After a few weeks I came up with the plot for Deeper, which will be published in March 2016. It’s the second book of a planned trilogy.

Screen Shot 2015-11-11 at 4.45.57 PMThere’s always another novel in the pipeline to write… Tell me about it! Does it have even a working title?

After I finish writing and publish book three (working title Deep End), I might write a novella or two featuring some of the trilogy’s secondary characters. Then, my next big project is a contemporary novel about a group of baby boomers who lose everything in the Great Recession and have to start over.

Some advice other writers have given is that your first novel is best sitting in a drawer for a while, because then you feel stronger about chopping up ‘your baby’. Do you still have a copy of your first novel? Whether this was published or unpublished, I need to know!

Ha! I did a lot of chopping on “my baby” before I ever submitted it to a potential publisher. Deep Blue went through many revisions before I felt like it was worthy of publication.

Do you have a dedicated writing space? Do you have colourful post-it notes on the walls? How does it meet your writing needs?

My writing space is an upstairs bedroom in our house. It’s painted a soothing gray-blue and I have many of my favorite things to inspire me – Native American artwork, some vintage Barbie dolls, a small collection of spirit bears. Overall, it’s pretty uncluttered. I have an antique farm table that I use as a desk, an oversized swivel chair with back support, and another upholstered chair for guests, which usually is occupied by my cat.

What is your writing process? Have you ever thought about changing it? Other authors I have interviewed talk about having an outline – post-it notes in an office, or writing in paper journals. Is there something like that in your writing technique? Or is it all digital for you?

I have a spiral notebook for making notes to myself or writing down pithy bits of dialog before I forget them. Otherwise, everything is on my laptop. I start by writing a synopsis that includes most of the major scenes, then go from there. I don’t usually prepare a chapter-by-chapter outline. Because my work is character-driven, I strive for those moments when the character takes over and dictates what he or she will do. I’m merely conveying their story.

Do you have a preference for ebook or paperback format? This is for both your own reading and your novels.

I must admit it was a thrill opening that first box of soft-cover copies and seeing my name on the cover! Personally, though, I love my e-reader. I bought a kindle paperwhite that I take with me everywhere. If I’m not writing, I’m probably reading.

Social media is becoming a big thing. How does managing media outlets come into marketing your brand and your books?

I have a blog: https://kathleenduhamel.wordpress.com/ and a presence on Facebook. I’m not so much into Twitter although I know I should be. The reality is, unless you’re one of a handful of best-selling authors, you’re going to spend time marketing your own work. I have a background in public relations, so that helps, but I’m always torn between spending time marketing or dedicating time to writing. My goal for next year is to begin searching for an agent.

You have answered other sets of interview questions, is there something you wish someone would have asked you? Or conversely, something you wish they hadn’t asked?

I wish someone would ask, “What’s the best thing a reader can say to you about your book?”

It makes me feel great when someone tells me they related to the characters, felt as though they knew them, and couldn’t wait to find out what comes next.

Interview with Susan Squires

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BOOK INFORMATION

TITLE – One With the Darkness
SERIES – The Companion Series
AUTHOR – Susan Squires
GENRE – Regency Paranormal Romance
PUBLICATION DATE – October 6, 2015
LENGTH – 341 pages
PUBLISHER – Independent
COVER ARTIST – Rebecca Poole, Dreams2Media


BOOK SYNOPSIS

New York Times bestselling author Susan Squires invites you into the world of two lovers who share a seductive past and a dangerous desire…

DIVIDED BY CENTURIES

Contessa Donnatella di Poliziano has power, beauty, and—as a vampire—eternal life. Her overwhelming regret is a mistake she made centuries ago when she chose not to transform her one true love, Jergan, into a vampire too. Donnatella’s choice has deprived her of the only true love she’s ever known. But just as all seems lost, the discovery of a 300-year-old note leads her to a gift left by her old friend, Leonardo da Vinci: a machine to take her back in time to rewrite the history of her heart…

UNITED BY OTHERWORLDLY DESIRE

Once back in time, Donnatella’s memory of the intervening years is lost. Yet when she sees the breathtaking barbarian slave, Jergan, from afar, she feels like she has always known him. The instant attraction she feels draws them together. For Donnatella, the romance is tantalizing, awakening a passion that feels both old and new. But as the two fall in love again, a new danger threatens to tear them apart. Now Jergan’s love for Donnatella will be tested in a most perilous way—and if he fails, the two lovers will be separated again…for eternity.


The INTERVIEW

I’m not reviewing your novel for this tour. Why would I want to? From your other published novels, are there some that I should absolutely read?

Well, it’s always more fun to read a good book, and my books are generally well-reviewed (not that you can’t always find a poor review on Amazon—those are the breaks.) But two of my books, Body Electric and One With the Shadows, were named a Best Book of the Year by Publisher’s Weekly, which is pretty hard to do for a romance. And I’ve been a finalist for the Rita on a couple of occasions. I’ve won the Golden Heart for best unpublished Paranormal romance, the Holt Medallion for published romances, BookBuyer’s Best (several times), the Beanpole, and many others. I’ve built my career on producing intense, emotional books with romance, adventure and a satisfying ending that give readers a good ride. Danegeld has a special place in my heart because it was the first  of my books published and the one that got me lots of attention. I think it holds up well even today. I love my Time Travel Series, which  really starts with One With the Darkness (the last of my Companion vampire series). And I love the first book in my current series, Do You Believe in Magic?

I both love and hate novels that don’t leave a discrete ending for the reader. Have you ever felt the need to write sequels for specific novels?

In most of my series, I write discrete stories set in the same world. The Companion series uses the same vampire mythology, The DaVinci Time Travel Series is tied together with Leonardo’s wonderful machine. My Magic Series, however, is the multi-book story of a big family in modern day Los Angeles who have magic in the DNA they inherited from Merlin of Camelot. That series benefits from being read in order, because you get to see the younger members of the family grow up and become who they are when they get their own story. I love the Tremaine family. I’ll be sorry when I finish the series, because I’ll miss them!

There’s always another novel in the pipeline to write… Tell me about it! Does it have even a working title?

The one I’m in the middle of right now is the last (maybe) of the Magic series, called This Magic Moment. It’s Tammy’s story, the youngest daughter. And all the danger of the Clan, and the convergence of magic in the world is coming to fruition, even as Tammy meets the One who will activate her magic gene and give her true love. Unfortunately, there are just a few barriers. 🙂

Some advice other writers have given is that your first novel is best sitting in a drawer for a while, because then you feel stronger about chopping up ‘your baby’. Do you still have a copy of your first novel? Whether this was published or unpublished, I need to know!

That’s good advice. My first book was awful. I rewrote it a lot. It was WAY too long and I didn’t know how to cut it. I cut it, but it needed a LOT more. So I put it away. When I sold Danegeld to a NY Publishing house, the editor asked if I had anything else he could buy. I sent him Sacrament after I cut it even further! I was VERY motivated. I cut sub-plots. I cut entire characters. I tightened it until it hurt, because I’d learned a lot in writing my second and third books.  So Sacrament, my first book, lives. But I couldn’t have been as objective about what it needed, if I didn’t have the distance from it I got by  putting it away.

Do you have a dedicated writing space? Do you have colourful post-it notes on the walls? How does it meet your writing needs?

I have always written in lots of different spaces. Thank goodness for laptops. I had a big job as an executive for a Fortune 500 company for years, and I got so I could write sex scenes in the middle seat of an airplane! If you’re on contract, you produce regardless of the environment. These days, I have the luxury of a study, and a beautiful little escritoire desk. I still like my laptop, though. It also goes to the couch, or the big squishy chair, or outside in the backyard on nice days. No sticky notes. But I like having my favorite paintings on the walls, and a good big bookshelf with all my research books in it (yes, I treasure research books, and don’t exclusively use the internet.)

What is your writing process? Have you ever thought about changing it? Other authors I have interviewed talk about having an outline – post-it notes in an office, or writing in paper journals. Is there something like that in your writing technique? Or is it all digital for you?

I had to change my writing process at one point in my career. I used to write by the seat of my pants, and let the story take me where it would. My editor would get a half page email saying what the book would be about, and he trusted me to produce something good. But I switched to a powerful, and wonderful editor at ST. Martin’s Press. She had read a couple of my books, so she knew what I could do, but all I had to give her on my next project was that half page email. She gave me a three book contract on the strength of that email. BUT she also structured my next contract so I got 50% of the advance on contract, 10% on acceptance of a synopsis, and 40% on completion. Voila! I couldn’t write by the seat of my pants anymore. I actually grew to like writing with a synopsis, as it keeps you from wandering around in the middle too much. As I begin a new project, as I’m thinking about the complex interaction between character and plot, I carry around a beautifully bound little leather book, a new one for each project, so I can write down thoughts and realizations about who the characters are and why they are that way, and what needs to happen to them. That little book becomes my Bible for that project.

Do you have a preference for ebook or paperback format? This is for both your own reading and your novels.

I like research books in paper format. It’s just much easier to page around looking for what you want. But, while I like paper format, digital is just fine for me in most cases. I love the portability of having so many books at my fingertips.

Social media is becoming a big thing. How does managing media outlets come into marketing your brand and your books?

Social media is a primary way of marketing. It’s important that your Facebook page and your website, and your Pintrest or whatever you use, all portray the same message about who you are and what you write. It’s really important, and time-consuming of course. But it’s just expected by your publisher that you will spend that time and energy to support your writing,

You have answered other sets of interview questions, is there something you wish someone would have asked you? Or conversely, something you wish they hadn’t asked?

I’m so glad you didn’t ask me what my favorite book is! Books are like your children, they may be different, but you love them all. One may have been harder to write, but you don’t love it less in the end…. So thank you for not asking me to choose!


BUY & TBR LINKS

AMAZON KINDLE US
AMAZON KINDLE CA
AMAZON KINDLE UK
SMASHWORDS
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One with the Darkness - 3DEXCERPT

“Let me get your property, my lady,” the trader said. They turned to the back of the stall. Three men clustered round the straining barbarian, laughing as he tried to twist away. Blood dripped from his wrists where he had pulled against his shackles. He spat at them. It was his only means of defiance.

Graccus wiped his face and laughed. “Oh, he’ll be a joy to break.”

“I agree,” she said. The three yanked their gazes up, as did the barbarian. He flushed in shame. “Now unhand my new slave, sirs, so I may begin.”

“What? But I am buying him for my brothel!”

She waved the receipt scroll. “Too late.” Her She turned to the trader. “For the price I just paid, you can throw in a pair of shackles.” The trader nodded and clapped his hands. Slaves appeared with the required bindings. They unlocked the barbarian’s wrists from the poles and chained them behind his back before they released his feet. His ankles, too, were bloodied. Those green eyes stared at her, burning with intensity, as though he was still not sure what had just happened to him. Excitement churned inside her. This was the start of something—she didn’t know quite what. “Come quietly, slave,” she ordered, putting all the force of her personality behind her words, just shy of raising her Companion for compulsion. “You two—see that he does.” Two of Titus’s bodyguards nodded. Each took one of the slave’s arms and dragged him forward.

“You knew I wanted him,” Graccus was saying. The trader only shrugged. He couldn’t have gotten two thousand dinars for a slave bound for a brothel.

They pushed into the market throng. “There you are,” Titus called, hurrying over. Livia saw him frown as he registered the barbarian. “Livia Quintus, what is this? You’ve never purchased this creature!”

“I have, Titus. He was a soldier, therefore skilled in martial arts. He even speaks Latin. He’ll be a perfect bodyguard.”
“Livia, return him at once. This is no slave for a woman.”

Livia turned to her new purchase, seeing him through Titus’s eyes. Bloody and sweating, he looked fierce, with those intense green eyes and all that hair. But he was the one she wanted. She knew that as certainly as she knew her own name. “Once we clean him up you won’t recognize him.”

“He needs more than a bath to make him suitable.”

“You were the one who suggested a bodyguard slave, and now that I’ve meekly done as you ask, you rail at me.”

Titus rolled his eyes. “Meek? I would welcome meek.” Livia gestured her entourage forward. Titus sighed and fell in step. “I just hope you haven’t bitten off more than you can chew.”


AUTHOR BIO

Susan Squires is a New York Times bestselling author known for breaking the rules of romance writing. Whatever her time period, or subject, some element of the paranormal always creeps in. She has won multiple contests for published novels and reviewer’s choice awards. Publisher’s Weekly named Body Electric one of the year’s most influential mass market books and One with the Shadows a Best book of the Year. Time for Eternity, the first in the DaVinci time travel series, received a starred review from Publisher’s Weekly.

Susan has a Masters in English literature from UCLA and once toiled as an executive for a Fortune 500 company. Now she lives at the beach in Southern California with her husband, Harry, a writer of supernatural thrillers, and two very active Belgian Sheepdogs, who like to help her write by putting their chins on the keyboarddddddddddddddddddddddd.

AUTHOR FOLLOW LINKS

WEBSITE
FACEBOOK
TWITTER
GOODREADS
AMAZON AUTHOR PAGE
MAILING LIST


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Interview with Eliot Treichel

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An Interview with Eliot Treichel, author of A Series of Small Maneuvers

– So I’ve read A Series of Small Maneuvers. I guess I should ask you about it, but I’d rather have you give me a reason for why I read your other novels?

A Series of Small Maneuvers is my first novel. My first book was a collection of short stories called Close Is Fine. Those stories are all set in rural Northern Wisconsin, which is where I grew up, and the book received the Wisconsin Library Association Literary Award. Some have labeled the stories as Midwestern Gothic. They’re mostly about broken men who are trying to find redemption in one way or another. The men often fail, but they keep trying.
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– You certainly don’t want your readers to be comfortable! What is going to make this novel different from all the others I have read in YA? River rats sound promising 😉

This is a novel about rivers, grief, and family. Part of what might separate it for other YA novels is the whitewater canoeing and kayaking aspects—the “river rats,” as you mentioned. But, more than that, what early readers have told me is that they find Emma a compelling and authentic character, and that they appreciate how the adults in the book are written as three-dimensional, real people. And while I didn’t first set out to write a book about grief, that’s what came out. This is not a romance-driven YA book, but instead an open and honest look at loss, and it offers no easy resolutions. It doesn’t talk down to teens.

– I both love and hate novels that don’t leave a discrete ending for the reader. Have you ever felt the need to write sequels for specific novels? 

I might write about Emma again, because I think she has more to say to the world, but I don’t know if it will be as a sequel to this book.

– There’s always another novel in the pipeline to write… Tell me about it! Does it have even a working title?

Right now, I’m working on another YA novel as well as some short stories. The novel doesn’t have a title yet, and it’s all still very nebulous. I recently told someone that it was going to be a YA stoner rom-com that will make you laugh so hard you cry and cry so hard you laugh. We’ll see. The book you think you are going to write and the book you actually end up writing are usually very different.

– Some advice other writers have given is that your first novel is best sitting in a drawer for a while, because then you feel stronger about chopping up ‘your baby’. Do you still have a copy of your first novel? Whether this was published or unpublished, I need to know!

All writing should sit in a drawer for as long as possible. I’ll just say that I wrote the first draft of the first story in Close is Fine fifteen years before it was published in the book. I doubt I still have that draft anywhere. A Series of Small Maneuvers took about four years, with lots of drawer time in between each draft.

– Once you have the idea for a story, how do you write it? Do you have any specific routines or rituals you go through?

I tend to write from beginning to end, a draft at a time. In general, I find revision much more enjoyable than first drafts. If I’m stuck, I will sometimes just write a scene that I find compelling in some way and then worry about whether it fits later. As far as rituals and routines go, unless it’s late at night, there’s usually a cup of coffee nearby.

– Do you have a dedicated writing space? Do you have colourful post-it notes on the walls? How does it meet your writing needs?

I have an office at home. Currently, there are three poster-sized Post-its on the wall with notes and ideas and a character list from the novel I’m working on. Other times, I’ll write at the kitchen table, or on the couch, or outside. I think it’s good to mix it up. Mostly what I need from a writing space is utter quiet. Right now, my neighbors on one side of my house are in a death metal band, so sometimes finding that quiet can be hard.

– How do you know when a novel or short story is finished? How do you know to step away and let the story speak for itself? 

It’s mostly intuition. You go through each draft and interrogate each line. When there’s nothing left to interrogate, you’re probably done.

– Do you have a preference for ebook or paperback format? This is for both your own reading and your novels.

I like paper books. I don’t even own any kind of e-reader. But to each their own. I’m happy to share my work in either format.

– Social media is becoming a big thing. How does managing media outlets come into marketing your brand and your books?

Right now, my social media presence is limited to Twitter (@eliottreichel). I also have my website: www.eliottreichel.com. I don’t foresee that changing much. I purposefully left Facebook more than a year ago. I reject the premise that an author has to have a big social media presence to be successful. And I reject the premise that you have to have a social media presence or you’ll be missing out from something. Life is way more interesting offline, whatever your brand.

– Finally, it looks like you are just getting into answering interview questions. Although I might not have the space here to ask you a lot more questions, is there something you wish I had asked? Or conversely, something you wish I hadn’t asked?

I’ll just use this space to say thank you for your interest in my book, and for giving me the opportunity to share some of my thoughts about writing. I hope your readers will enjoy the book, too. One cool question would’ve been, “Do you want a free plane ticket to Australia?” I definitely would’ve answered, “Yes!”