Interview with Andrew C. Branham

71CyR95rlCL._UX250_An interview with Andrew C. Branham, author of ‘Anything for Amelia

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I love first-hand accounts, and its what normally draws me to non-fiction. The fact that this is ‘feel-good’ doesn’t seem to fit with what the blurb says about your difficulties! Why did you decide to write the book?

I believe the ‘feel good’ was referring to the end result which was Amelia being adopted by DJ and I. I agree with you, however, that those
may not be the best choices of words. Our adoption process lasted 206 days. How do I know that exact number? Because every day was the most stressful day of my life. Because of the stress, I needed to find some way to vent. For me, writing at the end of each day was therapeutic and allowed the stress to escape my bo
dy. I never intended to write a book until, one day, I started reading through the journal and thought, “Wow, this is not only an interesting story, but we can help so many other people with their adoptions.”  The topics in the book are very touchy. The ‘dark side’ of adoption has honestly never been discussed. I wanted people to know the full truth behind adoption in the hopes they fewer people would be taken advantage of. Also, seeing how badly Sandi treated her own kids, we wanted to do something to help all the foster care children in the United States. To do that, I am donating 20% of my profits from the book to the U.S. foster care system.
 

Andrew, you’re officially the author of this novel. How did DJ feel about the project?

DJ refuses to read the book because we both suffer from a form of PTSD as a result of our 206 day journey. For me, writing was an outlet but for DJ, he cannot bring himself to relive the events again. To him, reading the book would bring back memories that he does not want to relive in any way. He is proud of me for writing the book and is hopeful that it will help other adoptive couples to be more prepared. The other families that adopted from “Sandi” are also unable to bring themselves to read it.  

There’s always another novel in the pipeline to write if the author writes fiction… Do you have another novel waiting to come out?

Funny you should ask that.  My second book is done and it is actually a fiction novel. It is currently being edited for a release next summer. It is an apocalyptic story of a family’s struggle to survive in a world where the Earth has been exhausted of 95% of the fresh water. Many people have asked me to write a sequel to, Anything for Amelia. I will not rule that out, but thankfully we do not have much of a story to tell. Our life is pretty normal now and we are just happy being Dads. As it stands right now, a sequel would be very boring.

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

During the adoption it was the hotel room every night. I would come back so stressed out and so angry that I would type for hours and not even realize how long I had been working. Now, I try to write outside. If I am out in nature, my writing is at its best. We own 40 acres of woods so it is very easy for me to get outside to write.

I can’t wait to get stuck in reading the book. I can’t imagine what the shenanigans that Sandi does might be, but I dread finding out. Should I be worried?

Honestly, even reading the book will not even bring you close to the intentional torture that Sandi put us through every single day for 206 days. The best writer in the world would struggle to put into words what she did to us. If anything the book is very understated. The only other people in the world that can relate to our experience are the other two families that adopted from her. She was just as bad to them as she was us (maybe worse).

As a gay woman, this book was one I never would have passed up. While my partner and I haven’t looked into adoption seriously, its something we might do eventually. Do you think anything about the system will improve?

It is our hope that this book will bring some of the issues to the forefront. 99% of the adoption laws are in place to protect the birth mother. While I agree that these laws are necessary, there are simply far too many loopholes. They need to be fixed and I hope our story gets enough attention so that the word gets out. Otherwise, nothing will change. Many have suggested that it should be a Lifetime movie. My agent is looking into that as we speak. If that were to happen, I think the laws would have to be fixed due to the publicity. If nothing else, there needs to be a dollar limit on how much money a birth mother could get (a cap).  I hope the system improves and I really hope you two adopt.  Having a child is the best gift you will ever receive. 

I feel like many of the questions I want to ask now will be answered when I read the book, when it finally gets to Australia. Do you think that it’s going to be relevant to me despite being in another country?

Absolutely. I have had so many adoptive parents email me from all over the world. While they did not have extreme experiences like we did, we have had many tell us about the abuse of the system. No matter where you live, there are always both good and bad people. 

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

I have a Kindle but I much prefer paper books. I feel the reader connects much more with the book in the paper format but that is just an opinion. 

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

Social media is pretty much paramount to the success of any book now. I find it difficult to keep up because writing is not my day job. To be successful, most authors will have to have a huge social media presence on Twitter, Pinterest, Facebook, blogs, and even Tumblr.  Social media allows you to really connect with your readers. I answer every email I receive and I always intend to that.

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 wish more people would ask me how I feel about not being able to save Sandi’s three kids. I feel a tremendous amount of guilt for not being able to save them despite trying. As far as I know, they are still living in squalor, they are still being abused, and they are still not receiving an education. Even worse, they are still not being loved.  I promised myself and those children that I would help them and I failed. I tried many times to get CPS to get involved but Sandi found a way to even manipulate them. I still have nightmares and dreams about those three precious kids. I am not giving up on helping them but I feel my options are very limited. I also feel very bad for Doug and the life he has lived.

Interview with Norma Jennings

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An interview with Norma Jennings, writer of ‘Passenger from Greece’ 

 

  1. Can you tell us a little bit about the storyline for Passenger from Greece?Screen Shot 2015-10-28 at 4.03.23 PM

A classic tale of love, lust, and criminal behavior, Passenger from Greece tells the story of Olivia Reid, a feisty, resourceful international flight attendant who falls in love with a handsome Greek olive oil tycoon. Olivia gets caught up in a seductive affair that spans the Caribbean, New York City, Crete, and ocean voyages on a yacht called The Adonis.

  1. The book opens with a movie-worthy crash. What did you base these opening scenes on?

I was a flight attendant, and some of my dear colleagues were involved in a plane crash (a mere scheduling conflict kept me off that flight). I went back to them and asked them for descriptions of feelings, thoughts, and misery of crashing into a swamp, which really happened. They described the terror of first experiencing an aircraft crash, followed by the horror of being trapped in a swamp until rescue. So, when I set up a story about international romance and mystery, I thought, what would be more captivating than to introduce the characters to each other in such an intense and terrifying situation?

  1. International drug trafficking is central to the plot. What compelled you to write about this topic?

I had finished writing my first novel, Daughter of the Caribbean, and I was looking for another great story. I read about the Caribbean drug trafficking issues affecting my beloved Jamaica, where my family has an old sugarcane plantation called Twickenham. The headline-grabbing issues made me think about my next novel, which I wanted to be an international mystery. I also like to explore cultural issues and personal relationships about families and love, so I created a conflict that would impact two families in two different countries, each located in different parts of the world.

  1. The book addresses family relationships, infidelity, and mother/father influences. Why did you weave in these themes?

Motivations. I wanted to create flawed characters whose motives and desires were rooted in their familial relationships: a daughter’s desire to please her mother, a son’s desire to please his mother, and a grandmother betrayed by her spouse. I asked myself: What lessons could be learned? What understandings reached? How could I write relatable situations that would draw in readers? Based on the core foundation of any person’s experience, one always comes back to his/her family beliefs, morals, and values.

  1. How are drug trafficking and cultural issues central to the plotlines and themes in your novels?

The illicit drug trade is affecting my native homeland, Jamaica. I wanted to also dispel prejudice and ideas about Jamaicans and other Caribbean islanders. My books always deal with cultural differences though depictions of my own childhood experiences growing up at Twickenham with my grandmother, Sedith, who’s featured in both of my books. She was our family’s matriarch and had a tremendous influence on her children and grandchildren. I brought the stories she told and the lessons I learned in my own life to the pages of Passenger from Greece.

  1. Are you working on a new novel and, if so, what can you tell us about it?

I’ve made good progress on a third book, which is an action-packed historical fiction novel about the brutal colonization of Jamaica by the British, and the barbaric guerilla warfare staged by the Maroons (runaway slaves) against the planters. Raw sexual moments between planter and mulatto slave mistresses, and a sizzling romance between a rescued concubine and a young guerilla chief are weaved into the novel, as it chronicles how ferocious and unrelenting resistance by Maroon men and women led to the abolition of slavery on the island, and ultimately to the country’s independence.

Interview with Ryan R. Reilly

Screen Shot 2015-10-29 at 10.46.53 AM                                     An Interview with Ryan R. Reilly, author of ‘A Deep Dark Pit of Despair’

                                                                

I haven’t read your novel. But you’re going to be promoting a comic! Why would I want to read that instead? From your other published novels, are there some that I should absolutely read?

{A70B75E9-B6AF-425B-A375-6B62B9DA656A}Img400Actually, I’m making a fully animated cartoon! It’s based on the first chapter of the book, and was originally supposed to be part of my pre-release marketing. Sadly, I bit off a bit more than I can chew with this one! I’ve made some short cartoons in the past, but the Pirate in Theory cartoon is practically feature-length by comparison. If all goes according to plan (that can happen, right?), the animated short will be out by the end of November.

As far as other published novels go, A Deep Dark Pit of Despair is it. I’m hoping to follow my debut up quite soon with another finished book I have, as well as a sequel that I’m still working on.

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 kind of agree with you. I used to have a “rule” that I would not read any book in a series that was not finished yet, because I didn’t want to have to wait for the next installment to come out. That code lasted until 2004 when I picked up the second book of Mercedes Lackey & James Mallory’s Obsidian Trilogy, and waiting quite impatiently for the third book to come out! Now I’m doing it again with Patrick Rothfuss’ series. I’m afraid I don’t ever learn!

As for myself, I committed to writing a standalone book several years ago, and I think I’ll try to give that one another go at getting it out into the world. Honestly, though, I love series, and hope to have my own sequel finished by the middle of next year.

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

There are two, actually! I feel I have to finish the next PiT book while this one has any momentum. It’s called Out of the Pit, Into the Fire, and it builds on the events of Book 1 and takes our characters into foreign territory, as well as expands on the magic system that was introduced in the first book. In addition to that, I started a zombie/vampire story just before the bottom seemingly dropped out for both genres, but I still hold out hope for my tale. It’s called Afterdead and unlike my fantasy ventures, it focuses on real locations in Chicago and the surrounding area. Hopefully I’m not too late with this one!

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 actually still have all the notebooks I wrote my first several stories in! So many unfinished works clutter various spots in my house, and I refuse to ever toss them out. Some might call me a pack rat, but I say I’m simply nostalgic.

My first finished novel was to be the first of a trilogy (here we go with another series!) called The One Warrior Saga. This first installment was titled the Warrior’s Heart, and I lost the first draft to a hard drive crash! I was devastated. Fortunately, the whole thing was printed, and I was blown away by the fact that my scanner could actually convert the pages into Word documents. This was 2002; I felt like I stumbled onto secret government tech for an episode of CSI! (The turn of the century was a simpler time)

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 a cluttered desk that can barely be seen beneath a pile of post-its, notecards, printed stacks, and CD-Rs! To anyone else, it’s an absolute mess; to me, it’s home.

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 used to always have a notebook handy to jot down whatever came to me, but now it’s either whatever scrap of paper I can get my hands on, or simply the memo app on my phone. My process when I sit down to write, however, hasn’t really changed for years. I sit at my computer, turn on a fairly mellow playlist, turn off all the lights except one small desk lamp, and then I spend the first twenty minutes or so just messing around on the internet (read: killing time on Facebook). My fingers are typing, my tea is steeping / coffee is cooling / beer is sadly getting a bit warm, and I slowly come to this relaxed place where I can start writing and simply lose myself for hours. This process used to always take place in the middle of the night when I could really get rid of all distractions, but now I have to be an adult and go to work in the morning, so the time I carve out to write has changed.

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

I only joined the modern age two years ago when I got a Nook reader as a gift, and though I’ve got a few books on there, I just prefer having the real deal in my hands. Even with my own book, yes, it is available in digital format, but I had to make sure that it could be acquired in paperback as well. I’m that way with music, too; I’d rather have the physical CD with the booklet and artwork than just an album download. Old soul, perhaps.

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

It means I better get serious about Twitter! I’ve had an account for years that I barely use, but that’s starting to change. I think social media makes it easier for independent artists—whether it be writers, musicians, filmmakers, you name it—to get their work in front of people. Do most of us even know how to use it? I don’t think so, but the interfaces are making it easier to bridge that gap. I ran a Facebook ad for a couple days just to test it out, and the data that you get back from that is incredible! I’ll definitely be ramping up my presence on social media.

Interview with Seth Dickinson

Interview with Seth Dickinson

Q1. So I’ve read The Traitor, and while others are giving it greater than 5 stars, I settled for 4 stars. I have a feeling that’s because I read it as an ebook – I felt rushed to finish it and perhaps didn’t get into it as much as I could have. What are your feelings on a paperback vs and ebook?

I’m sorry you felt rushed! That’s no go25615297od. But maybe the book just wasn’t a perfect fit foryou! If we all reacted to books the same way, books would be a solved problem, and we’d all read books written to a single optimal recipe.

I like ebooks a lot! I spend a lot of time reading on the train, where the compactness and one-handedness of ebooks is useful. Sometimes I even think that the smaller number of words on screen changes how my eyes scan, and keeps me more focused on the line by line writing.

But that’s just me. I’m scared to try my own book as an ebook — I don’t want to see all the paragraphs changing shape and altering the rhythm!

Q2. You have a fascination with prose that isbreathtaking. It made me want to keep reading, no matter what happened! Perhaps the phase that stuck in my mind the most though was ‘using your flimsy allocation of nerveâmeat’. Just that one quote alone highlights the fragility of single humans. Do you think it’s always about the bigger whole?

You read my interview in Apex! I’m really flattered.

And I think you’ve hit on something fascinating here. When you talk about the ‘bigger whole’ — whether that’s the entire novel, or the entirety of human society, or the universe — you’re talking about something vital, something we have to understand. How do we write a good book? How do we organize a just civilization? How does the universe work?

All of these wholes are built out of subunits. Books are made of words and sentences. Civilizations are built of people. The universe is built of fundamental particles and fields.

And the properties of those little quanta shape the whole…but so too does the architecture of the whole shape each individual, each person. The same word can mean many things, depending on the story it lives in.

So there’s this tension in how we understand big things, right? How much do we try to reduce them to the individual unit? Are civilizations unjust because people are unjust? Is a book good because the prose style is good?

We might say, well, these units are relatively powerless—what matters is the big structure. That’s where we can do the most good. The plot matters, the high-level legal and economic architecture matters. Or we might say, no, all the power lies in the basic unit, and in how those units relate.

Which is part of the tension in THE TRAITOR. Can one person change something vast? How much can we shape our civilizations, and how much are we shaped by them? Where does a civilization’s personality come from, and can it be rewritten?

Baru is convinced that she alone can liberate her world. But she does it by grappling with huge forces, and so she risks neglecting the people around her.

Q3. You certainly don’t write about comfortable topics! My reading area is progressively becoming more ‘alternative’. Your novel has been picked up by Tor, and I’d personally consider them a forefront of fantasy, not of queer fiction. What made you choose Baru’s sexuality, or did she choose for herself?

N5760737o, I don’t write about very easy things.

I’m interested in how to solve the problems we face today, so in this book, I chose to write about those problems. Specifically, I wanted to push back against the argument I sometimes hear, that you can’t write about certain people in certain times because they’d be ‘too oppressed to be interesting.’ To hell with that!

That wasn’t how I settled on Baru’s sexuality, though — when I wrote the original short story, I started with the premise, then I knew Baru was the protagonist, and then I needed a close relationship for the story to work. It would’ve played out just the same if she were a straight woman or a straight man, but she was lesbian, and she hadn’t ever doubted it.

Later I chose to write a character who was targeted by intersecting forms of social oppression, but who found ways to claim agency and power, to be dashing and exciting and uncomfortable and dynamic. A character built on defiance and revolution. (Which isn’t to say that this is the only way to be narratively interesting! But it’s what I wanted to write here, as a specific argument.)

I don’t think that queer experience should be isolated to a specific submarket. Good writing reflects the full range of humanity, and it helps normalize the statistically skewed picture of the species to which we’re exposed right now. This isn’t about putting on selective goggles, it’s about taking them off.

Q4. Would it be correct to say you love an ‘ambiguous ending’? You’ve mentioned that you enjoy writing them – I hate to read them unless I know there is something else coming! Even if I do have ‘a little thought and imagination’ on my side…

I only like to write ambiguous endings that I think can be solved in a specific, satisfying way! Or at least I hope they can. I

I love thinking hard about a story and landing on a reading that casts it in new light. That was one of my goals with THE TRAITOR, to reward multiple rereads and discussion — that’s why there are so many veiled plots happening around Baru, so many characters with concealed loyalties and so much implied history in the world.

Critical discussion of media is really, really rewarding and I try to write to encourage it. I weighed and reconsidered a lot of specific choices in the novel until I had it tuned just the way I wanted it.

Q5. Once you have the idea for a story, you write it in a big burst. Do you have any specific routines or rituals you go through?

Oh, god. Nothing healthy! Shock doses of caffeine work as a kind of forcing function — I either erupt into thousands of words of productivity or collapse into anxiety and depression.

In general I try to enter a flow state, where I can produce quality prose without constant, conscious effort. That means gathering a few supplies before I begin, including some interesting sensory details, an idea of the scene’s blocking, and a stock of names I can use if I need a walk-on character. I try to remove obstacles to the flow.

I find it very hard to write with placeholders or skips. I need to understand the shape of someone’s name to build good sentences for them. I need to know what happened last in order to choose what happens next.

Then I spend a while in drafting, tearing through sentence by sentence and tweaking everything. Every day I begin by rereading yesterday’s work and editing it, and with luck that puts me back into the flow.

Q6. 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? On your blog you’ve said there’s still some prose you’d like to fix in The Traitor, do you think you’d actually ever do it?

It’s never finished. I step away when I’m exhausted. If I come back a few months later and don’t find much I want to change, I know I’ve done a good job.

I’ll try not to meddle with THE TRAITOR any more — but, slyly, I went into the page proofs and tweaked that sentence that I’d made an example of on my blog. So it’s better, at least!

Q7. Twilight and Fifty Shades of Grey have turned to writing from other characters’ perspectives to milk more from the one story. Do you ever think you’ll want to go back to that first book and write it from say Muire Loâs perspective? Or are you content with writing a sequel and reading fan-fic. Personally I’d love to see those alternative endings you worked up for The Traitor.

Oh, that’s fascinating. I love that narrative parallax. I have to finish Baru’s story right now, but yes, I absolutely want to see those stories…even if I don’t get to write them. (I think fanfiction is important for its ability to explore these angles!)

I did at one point think about writing two sequels to THE TRAITOR, each one branching from a different choice at the end of the first book. And my current plan for the next book is going to add some new perspectives, people who see the world very differently from Baru.

I thought of this book as a scalpel — very sharp, very precise. I want to open up more emotional range in the next one.

Q8. Seth, you work with students – how rewarding do you find it? Do you struggle to relate to students, or do you remember that own time of learning for yourself?

It’s the most rewarding! It’s really great to provide support, both for writing skills and just, well, life. At Alpha we try to teach how to be a writer — but also how to be happy in your life, until you find a time and place when you’re prepared to write.

In many ways I feel like I can relate to students better now that I’m 26. It’s easier for me to look back on the problems I had at age 17 and understand where they came from. And now I actually feel like I have some results to back me up when I give advice.

Q9. 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 loved the question about other characters’ perspectives! I thought you did great, and I couldn’t ask for more.

You can find Seth on a range of platforms:

See my review of The Traitor here
Find it on:
goodreads_icon copyAmazon-Icon-e1335803835577-300x294 copybookdepository_icon copy

Interview with Sarah Vincent

Interview with Sarah Vincent 

  • downloadI read and reviewed ‘The Testament of Vida Tremayne’ after another author suggested it. ‘Witchcraft Couture‘ and ‘The Testament of Vida Tremayne‘ are very different novels, but both strike me as very literary. If you didn’t have to come up with a straight publishing house genre, what would you call it?

Um, what about ‘Paranormal Page-Turner’? No, that sounds terrible. Some books just defy definition, which is often a reason for publisher turning down great novels and a real shame. TOVT does fit quite by accident into the ‘Psychological Thriller’ category I guess. But you could pre-fix that with ‘Literary’, and yes there’s an element of the paranormal. Sigh. I hate categories!

  • 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?

I’m not a fan of sequels, although they tend to fit with Fantasy, Y/A and Crime genres. They don’t really work for adult literary fiction, which is usually a one-off narrative. I certainly wouldn’t envisage a sequel for TOVT. That story has been told.

That said, my Y/A trilogy seemed to lend itself naturally to sequels, with my three girl protagonists confronted by the ghost of a different historical character in each book: Henry VIII, The Witch finder General, and the poet Byron. The sequels there were purely accidental, at the request of the publisher and in no way pre-planned.

  • I hear there’s another novel you’re writing. Tell me about it! Does it have even a working title?
    tovt

I’m a firm believer in the old writing adage:  ‘If you talk it, you won’t write it.’
Let’s just say I’m setting aside my editing and consultancy work for a couple of months in order to write. I do have a working title: Lark Lure. But that will undoubtedly change.

  • You have two pen names. Tell me about why that was important to you, and whether it says something more about the genres of fiction you choose to write in.

So many writers now are using pen names. Mainly this is to free themselves from being pigeon-holed into a genre. The pen name Sarah Vincent is simply because I’ve left Y/A behind and am writing for a different market. It’s interesting how a new name brings a whole new energy with it. It can be liberating, having a chance to re-invent yourself. In fact the pen name feels more ‘me’ than my real name nowadays. One snag is that I’ve published a lot of short fiction under my real name. The plan is to bring out a new collection in Sarah’s name, quite soon I hope.

  • I hadn’t ever heard of your YA fiction before reading another interview you’ve given. What am I going to like about it? Should I put it on my to-be-read list?

You’re welcome to put my Y/A titles on your TBR list if you wish. The books are called: The Henry-Game, Delilah and the Dark Stuff, and Mad, Bad and Totally Dangerous.

All three were described as ‘wickedly funny’ in ‘The Ultimate Teen Book Guide’. The second book ‘Delilah’ was the one which really spooked readers the most, so if you like to be spooked, you could start there.
Find them here on goodreads

  • 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 think that was a big part in finally getting ‘Vida’ published?

First thoughts are never the best, and you need a good break from your work in progress to see it objectively. Hence the famous drawer. I’ve never had a problem chopping up my babies. If you get too precious about a novel, it will never see daylight. Simple as that. Not that I’d recommend my approach with ‘TOVT’ to other writers. It spent several years in the drawer, and went through several incarnations. I was lucky to have top quality editorial advice in the latter stages, firstly from the insightful Katherine Price at Cornerstones and then from my agent, the brilliant Nelle Andrew at Peters, Fraser, Dunlop. The end result was completely unrecognizable from my first tentative scratchings.

  • Do you still have a copy of your first novel, Curious Connie and Fanny Fanakapan? I’d love to see the original binding.

WP_20150804_002Aha, my debut novel. Yes, I wrote it when I was six or seven, and still have it in a folder. The knitting wool binding is a bit frayed now and the tissue thin papers are faded. Here’s the cover and an inside illustration!WP_20150804_005

  • A converted coal shed sounds cold, despite the previously cozy contents. I need to know what colour it is. Do you have colourful post-it notes on the walls? How does it meet your writing needs?

It does get a bit cold in winter, despite the electric heater. Picture me typing with a blanket over my knees, feet encased in cosy slipper socks. Not a sexy image but you can’t write with cold feet! Apart from that it’s lovely and bright in the ex-coal shed, with yellow painted walls and two big skylights for the sunshine to pour in. Yellow is good for stimulating brain cells apparently, so I live in hope. No post-it notes, just heaps of manuscripts everywhere, my own and those which I read for clients. Also loads of books. There are books all over the house, but I keep the special ones in my office. I collect art and esoteric books, also collections I’ve had stories in and novels written by friends or past clients. There are quite a few of these and it’s lovely to think you’ve played a small part in helping someone along the way.

WP_20150527_001One downside of the coal shed is that it’s such a narrow space with high windows, so you do get this feeling of an Anchorite’s cell at times. A small vase of flowers from the garden; lilac, or sweet peas or roses on my desk, is a must.

 

  • You’ve mentioned that you keep a journal. Does it contain such secrets that someone who discovered them would want to write another novel about them?

Oh, no one’s ever asked me that question before. I’ve given orders that my journals should go on the bonfire when my time comes. Not that they contain anything juicy. It’s mainly writing related stuff, novels in progress, the ups and downs of my career, just to keep a track of things. I do find writers’ journals fascinating to read though and I have several collections on my shelves, including Sylvia Plath and Virginia Woolf. Mine are nothing like as high-flown or interesting I’m afraid.

  • This is the second time I’ve heard an author describe the need to write as an ‘itch’. Can you tell me more about that feeling?

The writing itch is very hard to explain. For me it’s really quite nebulous, that vague sensation that a story or novel idea is trying to surface. You have to write something, anything to find out what it is.

  • You’re very active on social media. Where does maintaining an online presence and social media outlets come into marketing your branch and your books?

Funny, you should say that, as I’ve never thought of myself as active on Social Media. I’m not even on Facebook, only Twitter and an occasional foray into Goodreads and that’s it. I think it’s probably better to use one platform well than try to spread yourself too thin. Twitter has proved interesting, but I do take long breaks, and love going off-grid for days at a time. As regards sales, yes I’ve met lots of lovely people on Twitter and picked up quite a few readers, which is great.

  • Out of the interviews you have given, is there something you wish someone would have asked you? Or conversely, something you wish they hadn’t asked?

I was a writing child, and it would be nice if someone asked about that, as you have about my very first book. It’s also good to be asked about reading, those books that have inspired me over the years. So far, nobody’s come up with a question I’d rather not answer. Give it time!

You can find Sarah on a range of platforms:

 

You can find more interviews with Sarah:

See my review of The Testament of Vida Tremayne here
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Interview with Andrew Joyce #1

Andrew Joyce1) What inspired you to start writing?

One morning I went crazy. I got out of bed, went downstairs, and threw my TV out the window. Then I sat down at the computer and wrote my first short story. It was soon published in a print magazine (remember them?). I’ve been writing ever since.


2) What advice would you give a new writer just starting out?

Read . . . read, and then read some more. Read everything you can get your hands on!

3) Who is your favorite author and why?

John Steinbeck and this is why:

“The afternoon came down as imperceptibly as age comes to a happy man. A little gold entered into the sunlight. The bay became bluer and dimpled with shore-wind ripples. Those lonely fishermen who believe that the fish bite at high tide left their rocks and their places were taken by others, who were convinced that the fish bite at low tide.”— John Steinbeck, Tortilla Flat

Have ever read anything as beautiful? Well, I have and it was all stuff Steinbeck had written.

4) What comes first, the plot or characters?

When I start a book I have only the first sentence and the last paragraph in my head. Then all I have to do is come up with 100,000 words to fill in the blank space between.

5) Tell us something about your newest release.

Molly Lee is about to set off on the adventure of a lifetime . . . of two lifetimes.

Molly-Lee-800 Cover reveal and Promotional (1)It’s 1861 and the Civil War has just started. Molly is an eighteen-year-old girl living on her family’s farm in Virginia when two deserters from the Southern Cause enter her life. One of
them—a twenty-four-year-old Huck Finn—ends up saving her virtue, if not her life.

Molly is so enamored with Huck, she wants to run away with him. But Huck has other plans and is gone the next morning before she awakens. Thus starts a sequence of events that leads Molly into adventure after adventure; most of them not so nice.

We follow the travails of Molly Lee, starting when she is eighteen and ending when she is fifty-six. Even then Life has one more surprise in store for her.

6) What is the hardest part about writing for you?

Marketing! The prevailing wisdom is that you have to be on Twitter, on Facebook, LinkedIn, Pinterest, Tumblr, and Instagram to name just a few.

If I’m posting on all those sites, then I’m not writing. How many times can I tweet that I’m a genius and that you should buy my books? And what else is there to tweet? Who cares what I had for breakfast. And I really don’t care what is “trending” and couldn’t care less about commenting on it. The same goes for the rest of those social media sites.

I’ve given up on trying to sell books on social media. Instead, what I do is beg book bloggers for reviews. And believe me, it ain’t easy. For my last book, REDEMPTION: The Further Adventures of Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer, I had to go through a list of 3,500 bloggers. After visiting each blog individually (3,500!!!) to read their review policies, I found 300 that would maybe give me a review. Thirty responded. It only took two months of eight to ten-hour days, but it worked! Sales were good because of the exposure I received from those initial reviews, and the book—two years later—is averaging 4.5 stars from 300 reviews (132 on Amazon). And has hit #1 status twice on Amazon.

I can’t wait to stop marketing Molly and sit down at the computer and bang out my next book. I already have half of it written in my head.

 

7) What is your work schedule like when you are writing?

I like to write in the early morning hours when things are quiet. I usually get up around 2:00 a.m. and go to work. The commute is not long . . . only a few steps to my computer.

8) What did you want to be when you grew up?

I never wanted to grow up, and I believe I have succeeded.

9) How do you do research for your books?

This is my favorite question. I research my butt off. I write (for the most part) historical novels. I must know about the era; the nomenclature . . . everything. I’m presently researching women’s undergarments of the 1890s. If there is anything you need to know about pantalettes, just ask me. As to the how . . . I must admit that I’ve gotten lazy. I used to go to the library; now it’s all on line. Google Scholar rocks!


10 What group did you hang out with in high school?

I had no friends in high school. Sill don’t . . . come to think of it.

11) What would we find under your bed?

The monster that lives there.

12) What is something that you absolutely can’t live without?

Oxygen . . . vodka is a close second.

13) If you could spend a day with anyone from history, dead or alive, who would it be, and what would you do? What would you ask them?

I’d love to spend some time with Jesus. I’d take Him sailing (I live on a sailboat) and ask Him so many questions, He’d probably get out and walk home.

14) Do you write in multiple genres or just one?

I have 142 short stories that cover everything from the detective genre to science fiction and everything in between.

15) Is there a writer you idolize? If so who?

John Steinbeck.

16) What are your favorite TV shows?

I do not own a TV.

17) Do you have any other books on the horizon?

Yes I do, but right now my attention is riveted on a big, tall, frosty glass of vodka and cranberry juice (with extra lime). So I’ll have to go now. It’s been a pleasure. Thank you.

You can find Andrew and his novel Molly Lee on a range of platforms:

 

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Interview with Amanda Hocking

3486415Q1. Before I was asked by Pan Macmillian to read your novels, I had never heard of them. I haven’t read your original Trylle series – why would I go back and read them after this trilogy?

Bryn’s story in the Kanin Chronicles has more world-building and delves into the history of tribes and what it’s like to grow up in that world. But Wendy’s story in the Trylle Trilogy tells the story of a changeling and what it’s like to find out about this world from an outsider. Wendy has vastly different experiences and insights because she comes from such a different place and ends up as royalty.

Q2. What are you currently working on? Are you going to continue publishing in both ebook and paperback format? What do you think could happen if you’re driven to write something that your ‘traditional publishers’ don’t want to publish?

I’m currently working on a standalone paranormal romance novel set in the 1980s called Freeks. It should be sometime in 2016 with my publisher. I think that I’ll always publish ebook and paperback, whether I’m with a traditional publisher or self-publishing. It just makes sense, since people like to read in both. So far, my publisher has been really supportive of everything I’ve pitched, but if there was something that I was really passionate about that they didn’t want, I’d either shop it around to other publishers or self-publish it.

Q3. ‘I once heard the definition of insanity is doing the same thing and expecting different results.’ So you’ve applied this to your self-publishing, but what about your own novels? You say that you turned away from your original darker novels, and went to paranormal romance. Would you ever revisit the genre?

I don’t think so. They were bad psychological thrillers, and I think that genre is something I don’t excel at. I love writing about fantasy elements, so far now, I plan to stick with paranormal and horror.

Q4. I’m pretty excited for there to be a movie of Switched. It seems to me like you are trying to put things out there that anyone can enjoy – regardless of whether their preference is an ebook, a paperback, an audiobook or a movie. What drives this conscious/unconscious decision?

It just makes sense to me that if I’m creating something that I want people to enjoy, I want to give them as many options to enjoy it as possible. I’m also a big movie buff, so just seeing any of my books on the big screen would be thrilling.

Q5. Your writing habits are of the ‘binge-and-purge’ kind of writing. Red-bull keeps you awake into the wee hours of the night for a couple of weeks, and BAM, at the end you have the backbone of a novel. Have you ever thought about changing your writing process?

I actually have changed my writing process a bit. It’s still a little “bingey” but I was getting burnt out and couldn’t sustain writing at the speed I once was. I also got married about six months ago, and I have a stepson now, so the “staying up until five in the morning” routine wasn’t really working with a family. So now I usually write during the day, starting around ten in the morning, until the evening. I used to do marathon sessions of writing that would last a few weeks, but now I pace myself and it takes about three months to write a novel.

Q6. 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 extensively before I start writing. I start out taking notes by hand, but my outline is typed up. As I’m writing, I usually jot down notes and ideas on post-it notes to remind myself to change something or look something up.

Q7. You’re officially a ‘college dropout’. You say that you wish you had been able to finish college – what is stopping you now? Are the stories in your head too busy pushing themselves out for you to head back to ‘traditional’ education? What do you think you would get out of returning to college?

The main reason I haven’t gone back to college is that I don’t know what I’d go to college for. I’ve considered it, because there are things like that I would to learn, particularly about history, zoology, and practical effects in the film industry. But I don’t know if I’d pursue any of them as a career, since I like being an author, so I don’t know if it’s worth spending so much time and energy on getting a degree that I won’t use.

Q8. I totally get the way you feel about paper-back novels, and I do a similar sort of thing myself – buying my favourite authors in paperback. Is it the draw of being able to physically hold the book to read it, or something else that keeps you buying them?

I like having tangible things on my shelf, especially if I really love them. I’m the same way about movies and music (although now I buy records instead of CDs). I just like knowing that there’s something I own that can’t just disappear, even though I know that everything online is backed up in clouds and is actually probably more secure than the physical products.

Q9. It seems like you have answered many, many sets of interview questions, is there something you wish someone would have asked you? Or conversely, something you wish they hadn’t asked?

Not really. I always enjoy getting questions I haven’t gotten before – and you’ve asked a couple here – but I don’t have any specific questions I’d like to get. Once when I was in England, a boy asked me if I like mushy peas, and that was fun.

You can find Amanda on a range of platforms:

You can find more interviews with Amanda:

See my review of Frostfire and stay tunes for more reviews
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Interview with Josef Smith

Author Interview with Josef Smith

Q1. Would you still have written this book if it had not been an assignment from your therapist?

FSOT cover 4A: That is an interesting question.  During one of our sessions I made an offhand comment to my therapist that maybe I should write a book about my life, so perhaps the seed of an idea about actually doing that was already in me.  She ran with the idea, and suggested that writing it down could be a valuable clarification in helping to understand my life, so I began writing it all down.  She felt the experience could be very cathartic for me, and help me let go of a lot of anger and cynicism about the world that I had grown up with.  The book may still have found it’s way into the world without my therapist’s encouragement, but I don’t know.

Q2. What would you like readers to take away from your book?

A: The idea that our lives, and every experience we have, is valid and worthwhile in what we can learn from it.  The more difficult and challenging something is, the more potential there is for soul growth, and everything about life is about growth.  It does not mean our lives should be difficult.  Far from it.  It just means that we should embrace difficulty, because fighting it only makes it harder, and why would we consciously want to do that to ourselves?  We are given exactly what we need in life, but what we need is not always what we want.  When we can open our minds beyond seeing ourselves as the center of the universe we explore a greater sense of being within the dissolving of earthly hurts and troubles.  Living outside the prison of my urges and desires is helping me to see and experience that.

Q3. Are you planning on writing another book?

A: I have thought about it.  I wrote Fifty Shades of Truth as an exercise and it was a very valuable one.  As I wrote more and more I began feeling subtle changes in my own sense of self.  I felt washed clean by the tears of pain and remorse that flowed while writing, which has given me a clearer mind beyond the anger I had lived with all my life.  I do feel there is something more I’d like to say, but only time will tell whether or not it is said in a book.

Q4. Did you develop any strange writing habits?

A: No, I don’t think so, lol.  I think I had some strange writing habits right from the beginning.

Q5. What would you say to others who are going through this same experience right now?

A: What I would say are the things I might say if I wrote another book.  I’m not being secretive.  It’s just that every day now my life becomes clearer and as it does I see more about what I’ve learned from my experience and it’s not 100% clear yet.  At this point I would tell them to find someone they can trust, and talk to that person.  A therapist is a good person to start with but even finding the right one is not as easy as looking in the phone book.  The first therapist I spoke with got nothing from me because she was useless and I knew that as soon as she opened her mouth.  It may not need to be a therapist but that is how I found my opening to then talk to some close friends.  I chose my friends well and have trusted them with my life.  If you can find the right people to talk to it is extremely supportive in that you are no longer alone.  The friends I told are people I’ve known for 30 years.  They actually love me more now so I definitely chose well, and I have no doubt that they will take my secret to their graves.  Telling friends is all or nothing though, because telling the wrong person would be an absolute disaster and I’m not suggesting it is important to even tell any close friends.  Start with the right therapist and see how it unfolds. Essentially you need to be totally honest with yourself and truly looking for a way out, and to be patient in how you go about that.

Q6. Do you feel that writing this book helped you move past the things in your book?

A: Definitely.  Writing Fifty Shades of Truth was the hardest thing I’ve ever done in my life.  Forcing yourself to re-live emotional depths of despair and entanglement is a difficult journey, but doing it consciously, rather than as victim of urges you cannot control, provides a very different view, painful as that is, and looking at it rather than being it, helps to develop a sense of identity separate to it all, which provides a foundation for true change to begin.

Q7. What was the hardest thing about writing this book?

A: Just the book itself was very hard because of the need to re-live/feel the experiences I was writing about.  It bought all my old feelings and urges to the surface in a storm of desire, which at times almost saw me contacting someone, for a session of something.  But shining the spotlight on the way I cheated on my wife was definitely the hardest part.  It is very difficult to think about her at any time, but doing so within the context of my enormous infidelity and writing about it was incredibly painful.  At times it was simply too difficult and I couldn’t keep writing, and only able to come back months later and try again.

Q8. In your opinion, is the BDSM community correctly portrayed in the media?

A: Not at all.  Every single person (and the media are people) who cannot accept BDSM as a part of life does so through ignorance, fear and judgement, so that will tell you how much value they offer in their portrayal.  I’m not saying people should be walking their bitches (men or women) around the streets on dog collars.  The BDSM community respects the general conventions of society and that respect should be reciprocated.  The media could do a lot more to help people get over their fears and balance the equation.

Q9. What is one thing people would be surprised to learn about massage parlors?

A: How beautiful some of the women are.  I’m talking about the ‘deeper than skin’ kind of beauty, although some of them are gorgeous looking as well.  Some of the strongest, most honest, and loveliest people on Earth are working in massage parlours.  I will always cherish the time I spent with them, with a heartfelt gratitude for what I learned about life.

Q10. What writing advice would you give someone thinking about writing a memoir/autobiography?

A: Tell the truth, even if it hurts or you think people will judge you for your life.  But if you lived a life like mine, use a name like Josef to write it…..unless your name really is Josef!

Q11. What has been the most positive outcome of writing this book?

A: Being able to live an honest life and not having to constantly lie.  For 60 years I had wished to be the person everyone thought I was, and now I don’t have to pretend.

Q12. What famous person would you love to have as a fan of your work?

A: Bill Clinton.

Q13. If you were stranded on a deserted island and you could have ONE character from a book on the island with you, who would it be and why?

A: Nelson Mandela.  Mr Mandela knew more about forgiveness than anyone from the last century or so.  If I could learn the art of forgiveness and apply it to myself I would be completely free.  That would be a beginning to understanding and knowing true love.

Check out Fifty Shades of Truth yourself.
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Interview with Robert Eggleton

Interview with Robert Eggleton

Q1.How did you start your writing career?

A: In the 8th grade, I won the school’s short story contest: a redneck semi truck driver became so obsessed with the conflict between Jewish vs. Christian theology that he lost concentration on the road and caused a terrible accident. I decided that I wanted to be a writer and dreamed of getting rich. As it often does, life got in the way.

During college, I wrote poems on scraps of paper. One was published in the state’s 1972 West Virginia Student Poetry Anthology. Another was published in a local zine. After college, I focused on children’s advocacy. I got so involved in this emotionally charged work that for the next forty years, I supplanted my need to write fiction by writing nonfiction: manuals, research, investigative, and statistical reports about local children’s services systems and institutions, many of which were published by the WV Supreme Court where I worked from ’83 through ‘97. 

In 2003, I became a children’s psychotherapist at our local community mental health center. It was an intensive program for kids with very severe emotional disturbances. One day at work in 2006, during a group therapy session, I met the real-life role model for my fictional protagonist. Lacy Dawn had been severely abused, but was so resilient that it was inspired everybody who met her, staff and her peers alike, including me.

I started writing fiction. Three short Lacy Dawn Adventures have been published in magazines.  My debut novel, Rarity from the Hollow, was released in 2012 by Dog Horn Publishing, a small traditional press located in Leeds. It is may be reprinted sometime this year. In May 2015, I retired from my job as a children’s psychotherapist so that I could concentrate on writing fiction that introduces Lacy Dawn to the rest of the world. 

Q2. Tell us about your current release.

A: I don’t want to spoil anything for its readers. Rarity from the Hollow is full of contrasts: harsh reality amplifies outrageous fantasy, bitterness blends into acceptance and empowerment, tragedy inspires comedy, and a biography of a victim becomes a science fiction story. It does not fit neatly into a genre, such as romance, horror or even speculative fiction.

This novel was written for an adult audience, but does not have graphic sex scenes, a lot of violence or any of the other similar content that one might assume to be attributable to an Adults Only classification. It is sweet but frank and honest with no holds barred. It addresses the complexities of real life, but presents sensitive topics that might trigger emotional distress with comic relief. My intent was for readers to enjoy the experiences that I created with everyday words and colloquialism, but not to gloss over realism in the way that some YA titles accomplish.

In a nutshell, Rarity from the Hollow is about a little girl who learns to be the Savior of the Universe with the help of her family and friends. It’s up to readers to decide which scenes are dissociative as a result of Lacy Dawn’s traumas and which scenes are pure fantasy and science fiction.

Q3. Who are your favorite authors and biggest influences?

A: I’m not sure that you have enough bandwidth for me to make a complete list of inspirations and favourites, so here’s a few. Ferlinghetti, the poet of the Beat Generation, showed me how to enjoy my anger about political and societal issues. Similarly, Vonnegut’s anger in Breakfast of Champions helped me stay strong as a children’s advocate and as a writer, and how to experiment with my writing style outside of commonly accepted structures and formats. Nora Roberts knows how to get me in a romantic mood. The Lord of the Rings trilogy and the Harry Potter series reinforced my faith in the potential of adolescent morality and the future of the world. Watership Down by R. Adams was such a sweet adventure that some of this element just is a necessary ingredient of even the scariest, saddest, or most erotic story. The versatility in cross-genre and the use of humour by Bradbury had to have been a subliminal inspiration, especially now that I think about it. Dean Koontz has been masterful. Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy by D. Adams and Another Roadside Attraction by Robbins pushed me into the wilder side of writing regardless of censorship, as did the Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers comics. And, Stephen King’s use of everyday horror convinced me that alarming scenes can be created by using almost anything as a prop. Piers Anthony sure knew how to write a goofy pun and has always gotten me to giggle.

Q4. What does your significant other and family think of your writing career?

A: I’ve been married for forty-four years and have a forty-one year old son. They both think that I’m nuts, and, of course, they’re right. Both of them proof read my work, make comments about plot and substance, and my son is an IT specialist who makes emergency house calls to my home to keep my computer alive. My wife is the smartest person I’ve ever met, seriously, so I bug her all the time to bounce around ideas, and she doesn’t complain about it too much. The rest of my family is very supportive, but a few of them don’t like for me to use curse words or sexual content, even if it fits a character’s personality. The passing of my wife’s mother was not only a sorrowful experience, but a big loss to my writing. She was the type of woman who could argue for an hour about which Chicago Cub baseball player had the cutest butt, and she had a serious romance novel addiction. I could always go to her for advice. Whether or not my writing is a second career depends on you, the readers. Regardless, my family just wants me to be happy, and that’s what I want for each of them too.  

Q5. Who are your books published with?

A: Dog Horn Publishing is a traditional small press located in Leeds, a long way from West Virginia and a place that I would love to visit, but am unlikely to ever afford to go. Adam Lowe is the owner. He didn’t charge me a cent to edit, create the book cover, or to print Rarity from the Hollow. I have been paid royalties, half of which have been donated to a child abuse prevention program in my home state. Adam has won a zillion awards (a slight exaggeration, but not much of one) and is very active in the GLBTQ movement in England, about which I’m proud to have an indirect association. He posts some very funny stuff on Facebook if anybody is interested in a giggle. 

Q6. How do you react to a bad review of your book?

A: Rarity from the Hollow has never received a negative review, except for a fake one by a fellow who posted on Goodreads that he was tired of apocalyptic novels. There is nothing remotely close to apocalyptic in this story. I sent him a private message to ask for clarification, probably a mistake and one that I will never make again, but the fellow did not reply. No harm, no foul – whew! My novel has received several reviews, some by expert book critics, and all reviews have been glowing so far. Keep your fingers crossed. A former Editor of Reader’s Digest posted that Rarity from the Hollow was the best science fiction that he’d read in several years. Of course, my story has also been referred to as a love story, horror, social commentary, satire…. I guess that it’s all a matter of what one reads into the story instead of the story itself. I have resolved, however, that if I do get a negative review, I will not complain or argue about it. People have opinions – different strokes for different folks. So, if you decide to read Rarity from the Hollow, and I hope that you will, I welcome your input. I depend on it to become a stronger writer.  

About Robert:

roberteggletonRobert Eggleton has served as a children’s advocate for over forty years. He is best known for his investigative reports about children’s programs, most of which were published by the West Virginia Supreme Court where he worked from 1982 through 1997. Today, he is a recently retired psychotherapist from the mental health center in Charleston, West Virginia. Rarity from the Hollow is his debut novel and its release followed publication of three short Lacy Dawn Adventures in magazines: Wingspan Quarterly, Beyond Centauri, and Atomjack Science Fiction. Author proceeds have been donated to a child abuse prevention program operated by Children’s Home Society of West Virginia. http://www.childhswv.org/

You can find Robert on a range of platforms:

Check out Rarity from the Hollow yourself.
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Interview with John Lauricella

Continuing along in my new interview series today I have been able to interview John Lauricella. I’ve reviewed one of his two novels, the dystopian fiction 2094. Despite not having much love for the novel it pays homage to (1984), this novel was a good one.

45458e7bJMelmoth1. Q: I’ve read your novel, 2094, and loved it a while ago. I was a bit hesitant at first, but really got into it. Why would I read your other novel, Hunting Old Sammie?

A: First, a million thanks for taking a chance on 2094. It’s a novel that nibbled at my imagination for a very long time – possibly since I first read Brave New World and 1984 many years ago – and I’m very lucky to have been able to write it and grateful that a few people have read it.

Hunting Old Sammie you might read if you were in the mood for a piece of realistic fiction depicting some fairly bizarre events – with these happening right next-door! The novel dramatizes what can happen when psychological and emotional stress grow terribly large and paranoia rages day and night. The novel also shows how something can seem comic to one person and tragic to another – not to make sport of varieties of craziness, but to illustrate how different persons are more or less imprisoned by their respective assumptions, prejudices, fear, love, hate, and so forth.

Sammie is set just few years after the 9/11 terrorist attacks in NYC and Washington, D.C., during a very rough and discouraging phase of the United States’ wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. The neighborly conflict that is the novel’s story is pretty obviously a manifestation of how carnage, destruction, and death occurring thousands of miles away distort the perceptions, and the minds, of these isolated characters ruinously caught up in fighting private battles, real and imagined. If most of this sounds interesting to you, you might like to visit GoodReads, where the first 50 pages or so are readable for free, no obligation, no sign-in required, no questions asked. If you enjoy those chapters you’ll probably like the book because it gets better as it goes along.

2. Q: The title of your next book might cause trouble. How am I going to explain to people that I’m not actually studying to become ‘The Pornographer’s Apprentice’?

A: That title has raised eyebrows among the few who’ve seen it. What you tell anyone inquisitive enough to ask, is, “It’s a novel, not an instructional manual!” At that point you might find yourself enmeshed:

— Oh sure. What’s it about?

— It’s about what can happen when immoderate desire cancels good judgment – as well as personal integrity, human decency, and all sense of fair play.

— Huh! Sounds to me like a dirty book.

— It’s not! This author uses sex in all his novels to enrich the characterizations and complicate the story.

— That’s what they all say, all them porn fiends.

— Do I look like a porn fiend?

— Not you. That writer. What’s his name?

[holds up book to show author’s name]

— John … something. Unpronounceable. Whoever heard of a novelist with such a name?

— Never judge a book by its author’s name! You’ll miss out on some really good stuff.

— That’s all right. I don’t care to read smut, myself.

— It’s not smut, it’s thoughtful, well-crafted fiction.

— Imagine you, talking such nonsense and reading smut in public where children can see.

— I’ve told you once, it’s not smut.

— Well then, what’s its redeeming social value?

[pondering …] It does what good novels do: shows us that all human beings, even people superficially very different from us, have fantastically rich and complex inner lives that are every bit as real and present and intense and precious to them as ours are to us.

— Huh! Hoity-toity! Think I need some damn dastardly dirty book to tell me that?

— Well it sounds as if you could use some reminding.

“Or you could just say that The Pornographer’s Apprentice is a story about sex and death, art and money, poetry and pornography, life’s brevity and our yearning for permanence.”

3. Q: When you were younger, did you know you would be an author? Did you study at university because it was expected, or because you enjoyed it?

A: I think I knew, or maybe sensed is more accurate, from about age 13 that I was a writer. That’s different than knowing I’d become an author, which I assume we’re defining as a writer whose writing is published by some means and eventually paid for by readers. I never knew, in the sense of, “was certain,” that I’d make it to author status, although I wanted very much to do so, until I discovered it was possible to take control of the publishing part of the endeavor. Up to that point, I was always a writer who was trying to become an author. It was very frustrating; all I could control was the writing, which I believed I could do well – certainly well enough to qualify as an author – and continued to do well without much encouragement and no support whatsoever from agents and editors.

As for university, I attended several degree programs over the course of many years and earned those degrees because I wanted to learn. I was and am greedy for knowledge, some of which finds its way into my fiction.

4. Q: How does writing fit in with your day job? What does your writing process look like? How do you fit it in around what sounds like inevitable other work?

A: Writing fiction is not compatible with working a job. That is my experience and I would be astonished if any novelist claimed otherwise. It’s very simple: every hour you spend on the job is an hour you cannot spend writing. Time-wise, life is a zero-sum game. Everyone knows this. Everyone also knows that money is necessary to live and that the only licit means of getting money is to earn it by doing something someone else considers worth paying you to do. I’ve made a little money from things I’ve written but those were mostly commercial writing projects done on contract. From fiction I’ve earned very little; taken all together, it’s not enough to starve on. So it’s fair to say that my day job helps to keep me alive and therefore facilitates my writing because I cannot write if I am dead.

My writing process is terrifically protracted and insanely painstaking and entirely wonderful. It calls upon pen and ink, several typewriters, and the inevitable computer running Word. A story begins with a sentence; I do not know where these sentences come from but, one day, like something strange in Telly-Tubbie Land, they appear:

“Airpods gleam in the skyways as the century dwindles and men like J Melmoth are amazed to be alive.”   ~ 2094
“Soul-lonely days of stay-at-home plant Luke Robideau in Dad’s old chair.” ~ Hunting Old Sammie

The first sentence of Sammie turned out to be the opening line of the novel’s second chapter but it got the ball rolling.

Usually I compose the first draft with pen on paper. No outline, no notes, no pre-fabbed character sketches, no canned set pieces. Typically there’s some background research to do, just to confirm facts and understand physical settings and other nuts-and-bolts matters, and I might have to fill-in with more of this as the book develops, but for the most part I write and the story grows. I like to think it happens organically but the process might actually be something psychotic. In any case, I rewrite and tinker as I go along and when the number of paper pages starts making me nervous (because paper has a way of getting lost or recycled when that’s not what you wanted), I start typing up the manuscript using whichever typewriter seems appropriate for that story’s mood and texture. I rewrite as I type, all in flow. This business of typewriters is irrational and impossible to explain, especially as the choice of typewriter changes as I transcribe handwritten paper to typewritten pages. It’s a little embarrassing to have multiple typewriters crowded into my little room and to alternate amongst two or three and sometimes four of them during one book but as it hurts no one I just trust it.

A long (sometimes very long) period of composition ensues – two years, three years; more. At some point the stack of typewritten pages starts making me nervous (because paper, etc.) and then I begin transcribing/rewriting the whole thing into a Word document. Then I write back-and-forth from typewriter to computer to typewriter and so forth until the manuscript is complete in terms of beginning, middle, and end, and the whole thing is in Word. Then I commence to rethink, rewrite, revise, copyedit, etc., until it’s polished-up as smooth and gleaming as I can make it. Then I proofread and correct typos; then do it again.

The time required to accomplish all this is dismaying. As you’ve probably guessed, this process does not fit well with that day job, which returns us to the top of the column.

5. Q: Can you tell me about a typical week? Have you ever been on a scheduled writing retreat?

A: My standard week is not interesting, as it’s basically just me in my office, toiling away at my job and wishing I were elsewhere. On a good day, we get through dinner and clean-up by 7:00 or 7:30 and I beat a retreat to my little room and try to coax my mind to go the place where stories live. This effort is not always successful. If it does succeed and everyone leaves me in peace, I can work for two or three hours. At that point the energy’s gone and if I’m lucky I’ve gotten something down that isn’t completely stupid and useless. It’ll almost surely have to be rewritten, or maybe just refined a bit. That’s a very good day. On a bad day, dinner’s deferred and there are chores to do or trips to make or the household is in some degree of relative chaos and I don’t get within ten feet of my desk. Weekends are a bit better but somehow there are always more chores and trips with kids that empty-out the hours. In nice weather there’s golf, which at this point I guess I have to consider a vice because it, too, keeps me from writing.

No, I’ve never been on a scheduled writing retreat – unless we count the two years I spent in the M.F.A. fiction-writing program at Cornell University. It might legitimately be considered a writing retreat scheduled for two years’ duration. It’s a great program and I recommend it. Several very talented and productive fiction-writers have come out of it, namely Lorrie Moore, Junot Díaz and Stewart O’Nan. There are others – Susan Choi, Paul Cody, Julie Schumacher, Melissa Bank, others whose names are eluding me, which is unconscionable – but I guess Lorrie and Junot and Stew are the most well-known.

6. Q: Why did you go for self-publishing? You say you got blocked by some traditional publishers – do you feel comfortable divulging some of the reasons for that?

A: I self-published Hunting Old Sammie in April 2013 because for several years I had been trying to get agents interested in it and felt I had no more time to waste on people who mostly were not responding. I mean they were actually not responding, as in not answering in any way query letters or emails addressed to them, despite advertising themselves as accepting queries. Almost no one was interested reading Sammie, and I’m not sure how many of those agents read even the query letter. Rejection signaled by no-response and based on a query letter is still rejection but it is not a persuasive argument that book itself is a poor piece of work. So, yes, I felt as though I were being blocked – by agents, not by publishers, as no publisher or editor ever saw the manuscript.

The breaking point came when an agent who did read the manuscript telephoned me to say how much he enjoyed it. I was more than ready to believe the best and figured that here at last was my reckoning – because what literary agent telephones an unknown writer whose manuscript he’s picked from the slush pile unless it’s to say that he thinks the book is terrific and would love to represent it? The first part was accurate, even to the point of some very complimentary and encouraging comments about Sammie. I won’t repeat the agent’s praise just I will not state his name because he is not here to confirm; and in the end it was all for naught. Because the next thing he said was, “I’m calling to explain why I can’t offer to represent your novel.”

Oh, why?

“I have no idea where I could sell it.”

Even now, I don’t quite understand. I wanted to say, “If the novel’s so fine, why don’t you try selling it to Knopf? Or Viking? Or FSG?” The problem, as he explained it, was that he had 15 manuscripts in hand that he couldn’t sell, and as he had already committed to those authors, he could not also commit to me. Well, I guess that’s right – he certainly thought so – but it seems to me that a really good first novel usually gets its chance, even if with a small print run of a “testing-the-waters” type. But it seems neither he nor any editor he knew had any interest in a project of that sort.

If I’d had a connection to traditional publishing – someone to introduce or refer or recommend me to a suitable agent – maybe the manuscript would have gotten under the eyes of someone who would have known where he or she could sell it. But I had no one I felt I could ask for such a favor, and so I did not ask. That was my fault; if I’d maintained certain relationships I had at Cornell, one of those authors might have been willing to help me (as they themselves have been successfully published) and together we might have succeeded in getting someone to pay attention to Sammie. Maybe the outcome would have been different, or maybe not. But lacking such assistance, I was, I felt, out of options and so I had to do it myself.

When 2094 was ready it seemed very sellable so I began again to write queries to agents. I wrote and sent maybe six queries, and after roughly a month had gotten no replies. As I began the next round, I realized I did not want to go through this process for another few years or few months or at all. So I stopped trying to pitch to agents and began working instead on designing the book’s interior pages and covers, and in a few months published 2094 as I had published Hunting Old Sammie. For The Pornographer’s Apprentice I haven’t queried anyone. I figured from the start that I’d publish it myself; and in a few weeks, I will.

The very steep downside of self-publishing a novel is the challenge of persuading potential readers that it is a legitimate piece of fictional prose. The assumption, which is not wholly unwarranted, is that self-published novels are generally sub-standard and sometimes (often?) just amateur work, a kind of unsophisticated folk-art. I’ve tried to counter that assumption by making samples of my novels readable for free. Anyone who enjoys the samples, which are fairly substantial, will almost surely enjoy the novels.

7. Q: You’ve commented that 2094 risks being misunderstood. Do you feel that most reviewers are inattentive and perform ‘skim-jobs’? How can you tell the difference between a ‘bad’ review, and a ‘badly thought out’ review?

A: Most reviewers start out with every good intention, I believe, of reading a book attentively and writing a judicious review. Some succeed very well or well enough, others fail more or less obviously. The reasons for failure are probably as various as the reviewers and the circumstances, which sometimes are very difficult, under which they’re working. It does seem, however, that some reviewers either do not read attentively (but think they are) or possibly do not quite understand how to read a novel.

The main problem, I think, is the expectation that within every novel is a character or set of characters who act and speak and think, etc., as the author’s surrogate(s). It’s not an unreasonable assumption and many, perhaps most, readers share it. Many novels do feature a character who seems to represent the author and his or her beliefs, opinions, concerns, world-view, and so forth (I’m thinking of works as dissimilar in other respects as Great Expectations and Moby-Dick). Trouble begins when a reader brings that assumption to a novel in which the characters speak and act only for themselves, as in 2094. In that sort of novel, the author is effaced, invisible, “refined,” as Joyce memorably wrote, “out of existence.” The outstanding recent example of such a novel is Atonement, by Ian McEwan, which also is one of the greatest novels ever. If a reader of Atonement insists on aligning this or that character with the author, his understanding of the story can hardly avoid being skewed dramatically away from the novel’s manifest meaning.

What I call “skim-jobs” typically lead to what I consider “badly thought-out” reviews for the obvious reason that no one can represent any book justly on the basis of a selective, fragmented reading. If you have not actually read the book, you cannot think about the book astutely enough to write a smart, relevant review. Even when a skim-job review cherry-picks details or quotations, it does so in ignorance of the greater context in which those details and lines have their existence and create meaning. Taken in isolation, almost any sentence can be made to seem ridiculous – especially if a reviewer is intent on making it seem so. Every element of a novel needs to be read and interpreted as part of the narrative to which it belongs: the coherent, internally-consistent fictive world that describes and implies a cosmos in small. To pick sentences, characters, and scenes out of context for the purpose of denigrating the novel to which they belong is not just critical malfeasance. It is intellectually dishonest.

2094 risks being misunderstood because it does not deliver platitudes and easy morals through a simple “good guy vs. bad guy” scenario. Its characters are complicated and their motives are often ambiguous and conflicted. The main challenge of reading it is to recognize that the author is not purely aligned with any character or point-of-view. The author is not anyone’s advocate. He is not passing judgment on any character. He is a presenter whose job is to represent plausible characters and actions in sufficient, significant detail for the reader to understand the nature of those characters and actions. The author presents the story. It is the reader who interprets it and passes judgment. Who acts justly? Whose beliefs and assumptions are life-giving and whose are death-dealing? Who demonstrates faith and integrity? Who evinces cynicism, opportunism, and greed? Then, complicating the model, who succeeds and who fails? Who survives and who dies? Yes, the author is responsible for all this but only as a function of pursuing these characters and the various workings-out of their respective stories, not because he is grinding some personal axe. Given the narrative’s specific conditions and observing its outcome, the reader might ask, “With whom do I sympathize? Whose actions do I endorse and whose do I despise? Do I believe that each character gets his just desserts or do I feel that injustice has prevailed?” If the author has presented the story without bias and represented the characters even-handedly, without favoritism, different readers should be able to reach different conclusions about what the novel is “saying” and what it “means.”

“2094 is not an easy book. Maybe it seems simple but, really, it is not. It is not a comforting book. It is a disquieting book that challenges pretty much every assumption a reader might bring to it at the present time. And so it risks being misunderstood – especially by readers who skim it.”

8. Q: I love this quote: “Feeling the need to write is like having an itch,” Fred Busch said. “Scratch that itch.” Can you explain it more to my readers?

A: Fred Busch was my teacher in college many years ago. Sadly, he passed away in 2006. He was a tremendously fine writer, particularly of short stories, and his collected stories have recently been published in hardcover by Norton. His novel, A Memory of War (Norton, 2003), is brilliant and moving and completely wonderful. If you want a quick idea of the kind of man and writer Fred Busch was, just read the dedication to A Memory of War. All you have to know going in is that Judy is his wife.

Fred was respected by every writer I’ve ever met, known, or read about, and with good reason because he was a craftsman in prose, fiercely intelligent, aggressively honest, and purely and deeply committed to reading and writing and other writers, whom he did a great deal to encourage and assist and promote and just plain help.

The quotation I attribute to him was something he said in one of his fiction-writing workshops at Colgate University (the undergraduate college I attended) when I was his student there. He probably said it at other times, in other settings, to other young, wannabe writers, and what he meant was that the desire to write is something natural and real and physically compelling. It’s that last part, physically compelling, that most beginners maybe do not recognize, but when he likened the writing-desire to an itch that needed to be scratched, I completely understood because even then and, really, before then, from the time I was a teenager, I felt this weird need to put words on paper. I ignored it for awhile, tried to, because I did not understand the point or the reason, but the more time I spent ignoring it, the more miserable I felt because something was telling me that I was meant to be writing, that I should be writing, was supposed to write, that writing was in some mysterious way my duty or assigned work. Assigned by whom, I had no idea; nor did I know what I was supposed to write. I was just a kid! A kid with an itch to write, he knew not what.

Fred Busch was encouraging us to get on with it. Just write. Right? That’s the only thing you can control: whether or not you write. Don’t worry what it’s about or what anyone might think. Even you won’t know what to make of it until you’ve worked on it for awhile. So get going. Scratch that itch, it feels good to scratch it and to ignore it, to try to, is torment. So: write. You know? If writing’s what you’re meant to do and you know that or just sense it, to do so lends a beautiful satisfaction to the core of your being.

9. Q: You’ve given only one other interview that I could find, at Smashwords. Where does maintaining an online presence and social media outlets, as well as ongoing promotion of your novels, come into your never-ending hierarchy of mundane tasks?

A: Maintaining a Web presence and promoting one’s books are definitely necessary chores. But they are chores. I do as much of both as I feel is within my capabilities of time, energy (psychic and otherwise), and money. Speaking from my own experience, I’ll say that novel-promotion can be costly and also completely ineffective. Buying a listing from Publisher’s Weekly, commissioning a review from IndieReader or KirkusIndie, paying to have one’s novels listed on BookBuzz by way of offering review copies to potential reader/reviewers are all fine & good but you do not necessarily get what you assume you’re getting and in some cases you get very little or nothing for your money. The worst was the so-called review from KirkusIndie: $425 for 340 words, most of which summarized the plot simplistically and inaccurately, and committed errors of fact. And it was poorly-written.

Social media has been, for me, not hugely effective as a means of selling books. People notice that the books exist but they don’t buy them. I quit Facebook some months back because I began to realize that my posts about my novels’ being published or reviewed, or myself being interviewed, were probably being regarded by the few dozen people who saw them as pathetic self-advertisements and no more important or interesting that the standard sort of post about, “Now I’m eating lunch in a great new deli,” or “Today I bought a cool pair of running shoes,” or whatever. Trivial stuff everyone feels happy to ignore. Now I limit my Web presence to sites whose viewers might be at least potentially interested in the books.

10. Q: Are there any questions you wish people would ask, or wouldn’t ask?

A: Any question that is mainly about the books is fine by me. I’m not so interested in answering questions about myself – autobiographical details, personal background, likes and dislikes, that kind of thing. And people generally don’t ask me such questions, so we get along fine.

For me, it’s about the books – the stories. I, personally, am not important. I’m just the writer who happened to bring certain stories into the world. In 50 years I’ll barely be a memory, assuming my children live that long. But my books might, with a lot of luck, still be alive in the hands and minds of readers.

You can find John on a range of platforms:

See my review of 2094 and go read this book!
Find it on:
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