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Showing posts with label author. Show all posts
Showing posts with label author. Show all posts

Thursday, 7 June 2012

Interview with Sarah Kernochan - Author of Jane Was Here


Today we are welcoming Sarah Kernochan to Flight of the Dragon. Sarah has won two Academy Awards for her documentaries Marjoe and Thoth. As a screenwriter, she has written many films, among them Nine and ½ Weeks, Impromptu, and What Lies Beneath; she both wrote and directed the film All I Wanna Do as well. Jane Was Here is her second novel after 1977’s Dry Hustle. At present she is writing a memoir of her encounters with ghosts in serial form on her blog. She lives in New York with her husband, playwright James Lapine; daughter Phoebe Lapine is a food writer.

Well, that officially makes you the only person I know to have ever won an Academy Award for anything. You’re also the only person I know to have written a film that actually screened in a mainstream cinema. And you’ve done both! I am officially impressed. I am not easily impressed. Uh, so, on that note, welcome and thanks for joining us today! But we’re not here to talk about your screenwriting prowess, which is evidently considerable, but to talk about your latest book, Jane Was Here. Can you tell us what genre is your book?

I tend to read “literature” and not popular fiction. Incredibly, I had no awareness of subgenres like paranormal romance while I was writing Jane Was Here. I’m a believer in reincarnation, which I used as both a message and literary device in the story: someone committed a crime in 1853. Both the victim and the suspects have been reincarnated to the present day, with no memory of their connection, until the victim starts to remember… When it was due to be published, I had to figure out what family my child belonged to. It seemed she had multiple parentage and I would have to use a lot of hyphens. Finally, to simplify things, I decided Jane was a paranormal-suspense-horror-fantasy-thriller. You can see how good I am at this.

Not bad, just a typical creative type. They don’t like black and white answers. Unlike little lawyer me! Do you have a specific writing style?

Style was the first thing I developed before anything else, when I had just started writing in my teens. I was influenced by iconoclasts like Donald Barthelme, and by Faulkner's rhapsodic sentences without punctuation. Consequently my early work was pretty pretentious. However, my approach has always remained the same: to maintain a musical flow of language. For example, if the moment is slow and deeply felt, I will bring in poetic language. If it’s frantic action, I’ll design a rush of words or staccato bursts. Through it all, a reader should be able to ride along without being aware of the current. Then look up and realize they’ve reached the open sea.

We are all a bit pretentious and pompous when we start out. It comes from trying too hard, I think, or our perceptions of what a writer should sound like – in those early days, before we start learning about things like ‘voice’. What was the hardest part of writing your book?

Writing is kind of easy for me, I hate to say it. Maybe because I’ve been doing it so long. It only gets hard when I’m unwittingly headed down the wrong path and I haven’t faced it yet – my bad choices gum up the works until the car breaks down entirely.

Writing is easy. Editing is hard! Well, at least, it is for me. Did you learn anything from writing your book and, if so, what was it?

I learned from readers’ feedback that a lot of people can’t go forward without a strongly sympathetic character. I tend to create edgier characters with their dark parts hanging out. In the future I think I’ll make more of a conscious attempt to giving them someone to love. I do want them to continue reading, after all.

Absolutely, if the reader can’t empathise with a character, you’re more likely to lose them. My protagonist is an assassin, so I sympathise – but I’ve tried very hard to make her likeable, up to and including a recent workshop on ‘dark heroes’. Or heroines in this case. Is there a message in your novel that you want readers to grasp?

I took up the big question “Why me?” that humans so often ask when suffering. Why did that have to happen? What did I ever do to deserve this? I designed a karmic puzzle in Jane Was Here that showed heaven’s design as perfect: you do deserve what happens to you because of what you did in another lifetime. You don’t understand your fate because you were born without any memory of your prior deeds. You aren’t meant to understand or to remember. Those studies take place in the realm between lives.  

Wow, way deeper than me. I’d just shrug and say ‘there is no why’. Yeah, don’t come to me if you want counselling! Hey, at least I’m honest… If you had to choose, which writer would you consider a mentor?

My first and only mentor was Grace Paley. She was my first writing teacher (at Columbia General Studies in New York) and I was one of her first students. She taught me how to pay attention to people around me, listen, even pursue. Grace focused most of her stories on a specific neighborhood, which she rendered to the tiniest detail. My neighborhood wasn’t very interesting (Connecticut suburb – Cheever had already been there anyway) so I went further afield, scarfing up people’s stories and sometimes going along for the ride. I collected experiences instead of hiding indoors. Grace taught me that.

Hmmm…. So many writers are people watchers. It worries me sometimes, because I’m not. Maybe that’s OK, because I’m dragon-watching instead! Are you reading something now?

My great aunt Anna De Koven, who was a journalist, published a book called A Cloud of Witnesses in 1920. You can find it in Google books. She reports her conversations with her dead sister through a medium over the course of a year. The beginning’s pretty starchy but once the dialogue gets rolling between the two sisters it’s really fascinating. You learn a lot about the education and evolution of souls in the afterlife. And it matches so many other accounts related by people under hypnosis who remember that ethereal phase before they were reborn.

That must be very personal for you. And speaking of which, on to some more personal questions. In addition to writing, do you have a day job as well?

I’ve been a screenwriter since the early 80’s.

Well, that’s kind of still writing. Lucky you! If you were an animal what kind would you be?

Can I have three? Because I have three animal spirit guides: rabbit, snake, and crane. That about sums me up.

You can have as many as you like. I’ll settle for one big dragon. What is the last book you read?

Carry The One by Carol Anshaw.

I wasn’t familiar with that one, so I looked it up – the story of a group of friends after they hit and kill a girl on the way home from a wedding. It sounds intense!

Thanks so much for joining us today, Sarah, it’s been a pleasure. 

For anyone interested in Jane Was Here, here's a bit about the book:

A mysterious young woman called Jane appears in a small New England town. She claims a fragmentary memory of growing up in this place, yet she has never been here before in her life. Searching for an explanation, she arrives at the unthinkable: that she is somehow connected to a beautiful girl who disappeared from the town in 1853. Is she recalling a past life? Jane becomes convinced of it. As she presses onward to find out what happened in this town over 150 years ago, strange and alarming things begin happening to some of the town's inhabitants. A thunderhead of karmic justice gathers over the village as Jane's memories reawaken piece by piece. They carry her back in time to a long-buried secret, while the townspeople hurtle forward to a horrific event when past and present fatally collide.

If you’d like to know more about Sarah or would like to buy Jane Was Here you can find them in a multitude of places:


If you enjoyed this post, please feel free to check out my previous posts if you haven't already. If you're finding yourself here often, you might like to join as a member, sign up to the blog through RSS or email, or subscribe to my newsletter.

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Tuesday, 29 May 2012

Interview with Shawn Wickersheim: Author of The Penitent Assassin

Today we are welcoming Shawn Wickersheim to Flight of the Dragon, one of my very favourite Tweeps! Shawn lives in historic Woodstock, Illinois with his wife and children. You'll have to excuse me if I gush a little (and I'm not usually prone to gushing) because Shawn's book, The Penitent Assassin, is the best book I have read all year. Seriously.  

Thanks so much for joining us Shawn (long emphasis on the so - gushing, remember?). What genre do you consider your books? 

Fantasy. 

No, really?

Should I narrow that down a bit? I've been told The Penitent Assassin is 'dark' fantasy. Others have called it 'high', while still others have suggested 'low'. Some have claimed it to be an 'epic'. Eventually, it will become a part of a series, though it is a stand-alone book. Let me explain. I intend on writing a variety of fantasy novels all set in the same world and all connected to each other one way or another. Some will be "Mallor" books (Mallor is the main character in The Penitent Assassin), others will not, however when I'm finished there will be a completed story arc encompassing all of the books. I'm working on a series title right now and will likely reveal it when my next books are released.
Oh, I stumbled across the term 'scoundrel' fantasy last year after reading Joe Abercrombie's The First Law trilogy. I like that term, but honestly, beyond 'fantasy', I don't mind what people want to label my books, as long as they are reading them (and hopefully enjoying them!).

Oh, I'd just call it 'high' - or even 'epic' . I believe epic refers to the scale of the conflict and not, as is the common misconception, the number of books... oh wait, we're here to talk about you, not my genre definitions. It looks like you have more than enough opinions already! (Psst! As for scoundrel lit, the Bloody-Nine wasn't all that bad... No, really!).

Have you ever hated something you wrote? 

All the time. I am incredibly hard on myself when it comes to my writing. I often have to remind myself that it's okay for first drafts to be crappy. In the past, I used to suffer from writer's block after reading my horrible first drafts. I saw no way to make those early drafts better. But I pressed on. Now, I embrace the editing process. I love editing. I realize those crappy first drafts are just the means for me to get the basic story ideas out of my head so I have something to work on. I know, some people are probably reading this and thinking, "DUH!", but I had to work past the idea of having to get it right the first time and just focus on getting it out. I truly love writing, but the real magic comes from the editing.

I'm not sure if we have the same problem or not. Possibly, but I think I take mine in a different direction - compulsive editing! 

What are your current projects? 

In The Rush of Betrayal, life should be good for foreign ambassador, Lord Ian Weatherall. He's rich, he's married to the local princess and their young son is heir to the throne. But all is not as it should be. Friends have mysteriously died, others have been financially ruined and his marriage is falling apart. There are rumors that many in the city are unhappy with the racial mix of their future king and some are calling for his removal. Suddenly, Lord Ian's business ventures sour too. Is this all the work of one man bent on seeing him and his son destroyed, or is it a conspiracy by many to incite war against his native land? Will Lord Ian be able to uncover the truth in time, or will he fall victim to the worst kind of betrayal? Discover the answers when I release The Rush of Betrayal: Book One in June 2012 and Book Two later this year.
If you've read The Penitent Assassin, you'll likely guess all is not as it seems and these books will also have quite a few twists and turns and surprises in them. (And if you haven't read The Penitent Assassin yet, you still have a little time before the new books come out!) After these two books are released, I plan to begin work on a direct sequel to The Penitent Assassin. 

If you haven't read The Penitent Assassin, you should go forth and read it immediately! Beg, borrow, or steal a copy (or even buy it, Shawn might prefer that), just read it! Say, where did this sword come from? Ahem *hides sword behind back*. 

You're a tease, Shawn, waving the hint of two new books under my nose, like freshly-baked muffins recently gone from a room.... And I still find it ironic (or maybe it's just convergent evolution) that my first book has betrayal in the title, and your second does, while your first has penitent and my second does! But Shawn's are published and mine are not, so anyone reading this shouldn't waste anytime looking for mine. Just go read The Penitent Assassin.  

What books are you reading now? 

I just finished Scott Lynch's "The Lies of Locke Lamora". I've been aware of this book for a while and it sat in my mental 'to read' pile for a good year and then in the span of a week, I had three or four people insist I read it. I'm glad they did. I truly enjoyed the world and characters Scott Lynch created and I just ordered the sequel from the bookstore where I work. I'm currently reading a couple of books right now, "The Sour Lemon Score" by Richard Stark and "The Fall of Billy Hitchings" by Kirkus MacGowan.

That's right, I added it to my 'to read' list because of the discussion we had with Kirkus. And it's still there... because I'm here, doing this interview, instead of reading. 
What do you do when you're not writing? 

Think about writing . . . 

Hmm, is that better or worse than using one's free time to interview people who think about writing?  

I am a stay-at-home dad with two young children and they keep me busy during the day. I work part time at a local independent bookstore most evenings and I drive for a bakery at night. In between, I write. That's not to say I don't have fun too. In my free time, I enjoy biking, reading, watching movies, fixing up my house and hanging out with my family. 

Oh gosh, is this how exhausted people feel when I tell them everything I do around writing? Oh, no, wait, that's just sleep deprivation, never mind. Is there anything of you in any of your protagonists? I've read the Penitent Assassin and I'm kind of hoping maybe no... 

Mallor, from The Penitent Assassin, is a determined, stubborn and often single-minded man who hates to lose and refuses to quit until he gets what he wants and according to my wife . . . well . . . let's just say when I set a goal for myself I can 'sometimes' get a little determined . . . and stubborn . . . and single-minded.

Also like Mallor, I'm fiercely loyal to my friends, very protective of my children and deeply in love with one woman. Fortunately for me, I'm married to the love of my life and she accepts me for who I am . . . even if I am 'sometimes' just a little determined . . . and stubborn . . . and single-minded. 

Thankfully you chose some of Mallor's less violent qualities. I'm not sure if our protagonists would get along like a house on fire or try to kill each other.

Okay, how about a few fun questions and answers?What is your favorite color? 

It's changed over the years, but lately, my favorite color is green. I find green to be a very relaxing and yet mentally stimulating color and since I'm remodeling my tiny home office this summer, I figure it's time to paint it a color I like. 

I'm afraid to ask what the colour is that you don't like that's currently on the walls of your office. I'm thinking about some of the colours they always seem to paint hospitals... 

What is your favorite drink? 

Mt. Dew. Or milk. Wait, was I supposed to name something alcoholic? Some sort of cool mixed drink? Beer? Sorry, I work too often to really enjoy anything alcoholic anymore. 

Nope, non-alcoholic drinks are acceptable. It just means you're not going to raid my liquor cabinet, which means more for me! 

If you were a car, what kind would you be? 

Probably some sort of sports utility vehicle or maybe a pick-up truck. I used to drive a big green Dodge Ram pick-up truck years ago, but gas got too expensive and I traded it in for something smaller. 

I always say a Lotus Elise. Don't ask. I like the pick-up truck notion. We call them 'utes' here. We even have 'ute musters'. 

Finally, do you have anything specific that you want to say to your readers? 

Thank you!

Like any author, I need fans and while I already have some great supporters, I can always use more. A lot more! So if you enjoy my books, please tell all your friends. You can also connect with me on-line on Twitter. You'll find me @STWick. Or you can send me a friend request over on Goodreads. I'd love for you to add my books to your 'to read' list (Okay, I'll admit it - I'd much rather you actually read my books and then add them to your 'read' list).

But in all seriousness, I appreciate you reading my books and I promise, I'll try my best to keep writing the best books I possibly can.

Happy Reading! 

Thanks for joining us, Shawn, it was a pleasure. You can find out more about Shawn and his books on his blog (which he occasionally updates!) The Ink-Competent Writer (God I love that name!). His books are for sale at many online ebook sources including: Amazon, Smashwords, and Barnes and Noble.
If you enjoyed this post, please feel free to check out my previous posts if you haven't already. If you're finding yourself here often, you might like to join as a member, sign up to the blog through RSS or email, or subscribe to my newsletter.

Don't forget to share the love and spread the word on Twitter, Facebook or StumbleUpon (or other social networking site of your choice) if you know other people who might also enjoy this.

Thanks for stopping by and visiting with us!

Tuesday, 22 May 2012

Interview with Steve McHugh: Author of Crimes Against Magic

Today I’m welcoming Steve McHugh to Flight of the Dragon to tell us more about himself and his book, Crimes Against Magic. Steve’s been writing from an early age and his first completed story was done in an English lesson. Unfortunately, after the teacher read it, he had to have a chat with the head of the year about the violent content and bad language. The follow up ‘One boy and his frog’ was less concerning to his teachers and got him an A.
It wasn’t for another decade that he would start work on a full length novel, the results of which is Crimes Against Magic.
He was born in a small village called Mexbrough, South Yorkshire, but now lives with his wife and two young daughters in Southampton.
I love the title Crimes Against Magic so much so I wish I’d thought of it myself! How did you come up with it?
If I’m honest, I don’t know. I don’t know how I come up with any of my titles. They sort of pop into my head when I’m thinking about the story and if I like it, it sticks. I liked the idea of there being criminal acts using magic, things so bad that if you got caught, you’d be executed for it. It probably came from there.
Well, just the title has got ideas spinning in my head about where I could take this concept. I’d say that’s a pretty effective title! What genre do you consider the book?
Crimes Against Magic is Urban Fantasy, although I’ve heard people describe it as Action, Adventure with magic. Either of those work quite well.
I’m not a fan for strict classification of books, particularly when we start drilling down into subgenres. How did you choose the genre you write in?
It sort of chose me. I’ve always loved mythology and magic and history, so combining them meant Urban Fantasy was a natural fit.
I’m with you on that one. Some of us do just naturally gravitate towards something.  What was your part of Crimes Against Magic to write and why?
My favourite parts to write were probably one fight scene near the end of the book between Nate and a villain and a scene where you’re introduced to Nathan’s young neighbour, Dani. That was a lot of fun to write.
I always feel twisted and evil when I ask this question. Why am I the only one who enjoys writing things like the Black Moment? Anyway, back to Steve… Are there certain characters you would like to go back to, or is there a theme or idea you’d love to work with?
A lot of the characters who make it to the end of the book will be back in future stories in one way or another.
As for themes, the second book is going to be much darker in tone. That was something I made a conscious decision to do, due to what the story is about.
Ahah, so there’s a sequel! Is it your current project?
Yes, I’m currently writing the second book, Born of Hatred, and outlining the third, With Silent Screams. Hopefully book two will be out within the next six months.
That’s not a bad timeframe. So do you ever experience writer's block or that’s just not something you suffer from?
Not really, although I do experience writer’s procrastination, especially when I should be editing.
Don’t we all – I suffer from what I like to call writer’s knurd. What has been the toughest criticism given to you as an author? What has been the best compliment?
The toughest criticism would be something that was unfair. I’ve had a few, mostly when I went for the Amazon Breakthrough Award, but I tend to ignore it and move on. If someone wants to give constructive criticism, I’m all ears though.
The best compliment? I was told by someone that they don’t read a lot of books, but that they loved Crimes Against Magic. That made me feel superb.
I bet it does. The one thing I love to hear is people stayed up past their bedtime and into the wee hours of the morning reading! OK, so now a few unusual questions, just to give our readers a hint of the ‘real’ Steve McHugh. If you were a Star Trek® or Star Wars®  character, which one would it be?
I could probably be really geeky and come up with something obscure, but I’m going to go with Han Solo. I think everyone wants to be him though.
Yep, even me! So what if I’m a woman? Ahem. So what is your favourite drink?
Alcoholic – Scotch
Hot – Green tea
Cold – Apple juice
Never mix those three together in the same drink.
Dang! *hides apple juice behind back* The thought never even crossed my mind. To wrap up, tell us the last book you read.
Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins. Probably not quite as good as The Hunger Games as it takes a while to get going, but still a very good book. I’ll read the third at some point too.

Haven’t read them, but they are on my TBR list – as is Crimes Against Magic! If you want your very own copy, you can get one here from Amazon or Amazon UK. For more on Steve, check out his blog or follow him on Twitter at @stevejmchugh! Thanks so much for joining us today, Steve, it was a pleasure to have you.

If you enjoyed this post, please feel free to check out my previous posts if you haven't already. If you're finding yourself here often, you might like to join as a member, sign up to the blog through RSS or email, or subscribe to my newsletter.

Don't forget to share the love and spread the word on Twitter, Facebook or StumbleUpon (or other social networking site of your choice) if you know other people who might also enjoy this.

Thanks for stopping by and visiting with us!

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