Interview with Andrew Joyce #2

An Interview with Andrew Joyce

AndrewAndrew Joyce left high school at seventeen to hitchhike throughout the US, Canada, and Mexico. He wouldn’t return from his journey until decades later when he decided to become a writer. Joyce has written four books, including a two-volume collection of one hundred and forty short stories comprised of his hitching adventures called BEDTIME STORIES FOR GROWN-UPS (as yet unpublished), and his latest novel, RESOLUTION. He now lives aboard a boat in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, with his dog, Danny, where he is busy working on his next book, YELLOW HAIR.

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?

Not really. I like them all equally. A lot of blood, sweat, and tears went into each of them. They’re like your children—they all have their different traits, their own personalities.

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?

The endings in each of my three novels can be construed in any way the reader wishes. Is there an opening for the story to go on? Perhaps. But if it doesn’t continue in a future book, all the loose ends are tied up nice and neat. If my readers clamor for more, then I’ll write another story. Not necessarily a sequel, but I’ll use some of the same characters and allude to others. So far, the demand has been there for me to continue with the story in some form. But I want to make it clear that I do not write sequels. All three of my published books are standalones.

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

It’s entitled Yellow Hair. And it’s already written. It is a 144,000 word historical novel. This one took a year to research before I even set pen to paper, so to speak. I’ll publish it after I’ve finished with this marketing tour for Resolution.

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 Whether this was published or unpublished, I need to know!

My first novel was Redemption: The Further Adventures of Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer. It went on to win the Editors’ Choice Award for Best Western of 2013 and it attained #1 status in its category twice on Amazon. I banged it out, secured the services of one of the biggest agents in the country, edited it, and had it published in less than a year. The editing and finding an agent took three times as long as the writing did. And yes, I do have a copy of it.

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

I live on a boat. Consequently, space is at a premium. I sit at the table in the salon and hack away at the computer. It meets my needs just fine. I live alone except for my dog. I have the quiet I want and need unless my dog, Danny, wants to play or go out. Then he lets his wishes be known in a vocal manner. A very vocal manner.

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?

When I have an idea for a novel, I know the first sentence and the last paragraph (more or less). Then I sit down and start to tell the story I had in the back of my head by filling in the space between. But the finished novel is always different from what I set out to write. Sometimes I will take my characters to a place and they will rebel and take off on their own. Then I have no choice but to follow where they lead. During the writing process, I’ll have to stop (sometimes for weeks at a time) to do research. All my books are set in the past, so I have to know the mores, nomenclature, historical facts, etcetera . . .  that come into play in my stories. For Yellow Hair, I had to learn the Dakota and Lakota languages.

I started out writing on paper. But now it’s all digital except for my research notes, they go into spiral notebooks.

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?

As I said above, I start with the last paragraph already written. So when I get there, I know the writing is at an end.

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

For my own reading, hardcover or paperback. I publish in both formats, and the vast majority of my sales come from eBooks.

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

I’m not good with social media. When I worried about it, my agent told me to go with what was comfortable for me. Hence, that is why I’m here today. That and the fact that you were kind enough to invite me.

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?

Not really—either way. I will say this, though: Your questions have made me think. I usually give glib answers in my interviews, but I had to really think before answering yours. Thank you for having me over. It’s been a pleasure.

RESOLUTION

Resolution-800 Cover reveal and Promotional-1It is 1896 in the Yukon Territory, Canada. The largest gold strike in the annals of human history has just been made; however, word of the discovery will not reach the outside world for another year.

By happenstance, a fifty-nine-year-old Huck Finn and his lady friend, Molly Lee, are on hand, but they are not interested in gold. They have come to that neck of the woods seeking adventure.

Someone should have warned them, “Be careful what you wish for.”

When disaster strikes, they volunteer to save the day by making an arduous six hundred mile journey by dog sled in the depths of a Yukon winter. They race against time, nature, and man. With the temperature hovering around seventy degrees below zero, they must fight every day if they are to live to see the next.

On the frozen trail, they are put upon by murderers, hungry wolves, and hostile Indians, but those adversaries have nothing over the weather. At seventy below, your spit freezes a foot from your face. Your cheeks burn—your skin turns purple and black as it dies from the cold. You are in constant danger of losing fingers and toes to frostbite.

It is into this world that Huck and Molly race.

They cannot stop. They cannot turn back. They can only go on. Lives hang in the balance—including theirs.

 

You can purchase Resolution from a wide range of sources:
Amazon
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Review: Yeonmi Park – In Order to Live

In Order to Live: A North Korean Girl’s Journey to Freedom
Yeonmi Park

Born and raised in North Korea, Yeonmi was brainwashed to believe the Benevolent Dictator Family could read her mind and that poverty was normal. As a woman, she needed to escape North Korea in order to survive, which included passing through China as a human slave and a number of other atrocities.

24611623Some lines were truly funny, and required sharing with my partner, my workmates, the wider world! But others were thought-provoking and hard to take in. It reminded me in some way of Max – dictators being able to brainwash people into believing anything, including that they are immortal and that they can see inside sinners’ heads. This is a wholly true story though, and that makes it both harder and easier to accept that some people actually are evil.

I am not surprised about the human trafficking aspect, and that Park wanted to hide it from others even as she was being the poster child of successful escape. It’s something that creates shame, even if it is not the woman’s fault. Human trafficking is still slavery, and it’s something that has been around for too long before it started. The Purveyor was my first foray into this, and In Order to Live won’t be my last.

I’ve been enjoying non-fiction biographies/autobiographies quite a lot lately. I had just read a fantastic book before this one, and I couldn’t think about jumping into another fantasy book. This hit the spot for something a bit different to refresh me. I couldn’t put it down.

4star

 

Review: Diane Mae Robinson – Sir Princess Petra’s Mission

Sir Princess Petra’s Mission
Diane Mae Robinson

Princess Petra’s life is complicated. She’s totally up for doing any adventure that comes along. The only problem is that her royal father really hates the idea of her staying knighted… And will come up with any mission he can to stop her.

28329659There’s not much I can really say here, it is such a tiny little volume. I snaffled it up in around a half-hour. The action is fast-moving, and tries to keep your attention that way. I did drift off at points, but I think that’s just me.

I haven’t read the first novel, or the second, but this read perfectly well as a standalone.

Now this, this is good fiction for kids. Easy to get into, has some nice jokes (that aren’t too adult in nature) and to me, I think it’s readable for younglings. I’m giving it 3 stars, just because it wasn’t THAT amazing, but it was pretty darn good. How could I not give at least 3 stars to a book with a dragon in it?

3star

Review: Kit Alloway – Dreamfever

Dreamfever
Kit Alloway

Josh knows, in an intellectual kind of way, that she is the True Dream Walker. Haunted by Feodor’s knowledge, Josh longs to create stability in the Dream that will help her to recapture the power she felt in the first times she walked. Instead, things are complicated by the reappearance of the Royal Princess who hasn’t been around for 19 years…

25663775There’s little bit of swapping between perspectives when they are all fighting in the Dream, which is not highlighted by different chapter breaks. This still works though because it feels like you distinctly stepped between each character in different places.

What I loved about this novel was that although the first book had been a fantastic stand-alone, this book follows on perfectly from where it left off. There isn’t anything that feels out of place, it’s perfect. I’d really like to know what happened to Josh’s original scroll though. Why don’t they keep multiple copies of these things?!?

Josh and Will are finally together! And then they aren’t.  And those stupid scrolls shouldn’t have existed in the first place. Seriously. Prophesies hardly ever go well. Even ones about Death.

Staging is where Dream Walkers can enter someone else’s dreams, and make it seem real – to influence them in a particular direction. There’s people who think this is a fabulous idea (even though it hasn’t worked out very well in the past) and those who want to protect against it. There’s a bit of science brought in here too.

It feels like it is a complete reality, a complete universe. There’s the World is where people live and then there’s the Dream which is where everyone goes when they’re sleeping. I can’t work out whether it’s only nightmares or all dreaming that occurs there. Then there is Death, and that’s where this novel comes into play with different little pockets of reality.

This is 5 stars. I went back and read Dreamfire first, and I couldn’t put it down the second time around either. I can’t wait for the third novel.

5star

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?’

Review: Antonio Simon, Jr – The Gullwing Odyssey

The Gullwing Odyssey
Antonio Simon, Jr

Marco the messenger boy really tries to stay out of trouble. When he is instead swept up into impersonating an ambassador, things in his life get far, far more troublesome than he could have ever imagined.

18310045This novel had some fantastic laugh out loud parts that I couldn’t help sharing with my partner. And then she laughed as well. I really enjoyed it for those moments, and the language twists and the sheer absurdity of the fights that take place.

Light fiction that I just couldn’t put down. I’m not going to profess that it has no ‘deeper issues’, but sometimes you just want to read something to chill and enjoy. This novel is it.

Did I mention that it has dragons? And that they are personified just like humans? And that I love dragons? I felt like I could have done with more from their perspective, but you know what? I was too busy laughing to pay too much attention.

Some of the text just seemed a bit clunky (I feel like this is my favourite way of describing a novel at the moment). The main thing was that some of the storyline elements weren’t wrapped up nicely throughout the novel. For example the contents of the package. I can’t say more without giving anything away… Perhaps this is something that will be explored in the other novels of the Gullwing Series.

I’m giving this 3 stars. Or 4 stars. I can’t decide. It’s not ‘average’, but it’s not ‘outstanding’ either. Undecided.

4star

Review: Hamilton Hill – Legend of the East Road

Legend of the East Road
Hamilton Hill

Peter has just entered the world of Luhonono. Magdalene and Gimbo are waiting for him there, ready to start adventures in an unseen world. Setting out to find a princess and instead finding evil makes this novel roll forward.

26115925This novel was slow. Very, very slow. The first half of the novel happened, and nothing had happened. The princess they set out to see isn’t all that exciting. I thought she might be in peril! And additionally, 2/3 explorers already knew who she was.

I felt overwhelmed at all the detail, often I just wanted the story to happen more quickly! I couldn’t have cared less whether it was Peter or Gimbo who had the fastest eyes – their rivalry didn’t seem real. The relationships did develop, but it was in an awkward manner.

This novel was written by someone who had a real love of African culture and traditions, but wasn’t able to merge it seamlessly into an exciting read. There was so much potential here, but it just didn’t make it in. Chopping out some more dialogue or trimming down the perspectives would make this novel stronger.

For example, a simple discussion of a cubby house is stretched out over multiple pages to include a snake sighting (Chapter 6). I think a simple paragraph with the mysticism of the place would have done a far better job of setting the scene, and there was no need for all the internal dialogue by Mags.

The ending was a disappointment. Just as the pace picked up and things became slightly more enthralling, very quickly they were over and the sorcerer was dealt with. I did finally feel vaguely like reading it at that point, so that meant I could give it 2 stars (I finished it after all).

I’ve seen various things that have proclaimed this a ‘young adult novel’ or the back of the book which says it is ‘middle grade fiction’. Middle grade fiction is what this is. I’m not sure there were any deeper themes explored. However, I’m not sure if it common to middle grade fiction to start talking about the attraction that boys have for girls. Please correct me if I am incorrect – this isn’t usually my genre of choice.

All I’ve seen elsewhere are overwhelmingly positive 5 star reviews, and it seems strange that I can only give this one 2 stars. It’s not the fault of the intended audience, I loved the Dragon of the Month Club. Did I somehow not read the same novel that they did?

2star

Review: Iain Reading – the Dragon of the Month Club

the Dragon of the Month Club
Iain Reading

Ayana and Tyler meet as unlikely friends in a library. Together they stumble upon a book to summon dragons – with the only catch that you have to have specific materials in order to summon some kinds. After an experiment goes slightly awry, Ayana and Tyler will have to use their individual twirks to get things back to normal.

25033448The synopsis might not set you on fire, but I’d advise jumping right in anyway. The front cover might make you feel like it’s just for cutsie little kiddies, but really it isn’t. There are real issues being explored, it’s just that the backdrop is of fantastic dragons!

This novel manages to inform the reader about a range of other novels, which might whet the reader’s appetite for other novels. I was certainly interested to go check some other ones out! This is a novel written by someone who just loves books.

Some of the dialogue and imagery were a bit clunky, but I think that is just the formula of a middle-grade novel to an extent, to help support beginning imaginations. Certainly the others I have read in this area are heavy on the details. This one (rather than the one I am reading right now) gets the balance almost perfect.

Oh no. Ooooh no. I just went to GoodReads to get my hands on a copy of this cover, and found out that the next novel in the series isn’t even written yet! And that the author has a bunch of other things to write instead (which I already knew from the interview with him I did awhile back). I finished reading this one and immediately wanted the next one.

This is a 4 stars from me, and for the right audience (ie. younger than me), I would give it a 5. There’s enough magic and some literature and some friendship, and a little bit of everything actually so that something will appeal to everyone.

4star

Review: Sarah Cohen-Scali – Max

Max
Sarah Cohen-Scali

Max isn’t born yet. But once he is, he will be the first of his kind – the first of a bred blonde haired, blue eyed Nazi. Self-aware and self-proclaimed as brilliant, this novel follows Max’s growing up in Nazi Germany where he doesn’t know that the Nazi’s are ‘evil’ and knows nothing but his relatively privileged life.

28231016Max’s unique mature mindset makes it possible for the author to expose monstrosities in a matter-of-fact manner that nonetheless touch the reader and leaves them thinking about humans in general. Sometimes it felt like there was too much to absorb.

Something that irritated me about the cover was that there were ‘Two boys, two destinies.’ I spent the first half or so of the novel wondering when the perspective would change to the other boy, but in fact that never happened. The perspective remained with Max, even as his views and understandings changed.

This novel remains readable while also providing insight into an area of Nazi Germany that many people may not know about. It is based around the true story of a facility and breeding project that had been set up in order to breed perfect little Germans who follow the will of Hitler. The beginning of genetics! My favourite!

This novel has been translated from French, and there are no objections here from me. The dialogue and descriptions still flowed seamlessly, and I didn’t even know it was translated until I looked on GoodReads for the cover!

I think I enjoyed Dog Boy (also by Text Publishing), more than I enjoyed this one. While Max was more absorbing (I read it straight through, keeping me up past my bedtime), Dog Boy left me with more to think about. Either way, they are both worth 5 stars.

4star

Review: N.J. Fountain – Painkiller

Painkiller
N.J. Fountain

Monica suffers from chronic pain. Not just chronic pain, but chronic neuropathic pain. Every second of her life is filled with acute pain which breaks through even the toughest and strongest medications. When Monica finds a suicide note that she has written, her mind begins to question what else has happened in a past she doesn’t remember.

28259431Normally I couldn’t tell you the names of half the characters, but the advantage of this novel being pretty much from Monica’s perspective (which is limited to dealing with people as she can’t really go out very much) meant that I got a good solid grasp of them in my mind. When the perspective changes up, you still don’t know the whole story or a truth.

Ooh, this is a twisty one, this is. It wants to portray itself as a potential crime, but in fact it is psychological thriller which just happens to have a bit of ‘potential’ crime involved. Its far more gripping, and not nearly as bloody. Monica might be acting like a sleuth, but in fact she seems to be only just coping.

Its an interesting insight into the world of those with Chronic Neuropathic Pain. I don’t think I would be able to live like that personally. It’s certainly something my girlfriend and I spent some time thinking about! It’s a bit like dementia, but it is drug induced. Monica can hardly remember her own name, let alone who might be responsible for her condition.

I could not put this novel down. I just had to keep reading. I took it to work with me, and just couldn’t stop reading. 4 stars from me now I know ‘who-dun-it’.

4star