Posts Tagged ‘Interviews’

As you all know, I have quite a reading list going at the moment, and I’m enjoying everything that has been sent my way for review. Because I’m reading, I haven’t been able to post as often as I would like here on LTR. Between reviews, I’ve taken to posting related commentaries and I intend to do more of that in the coming weeks. I’ve returned to my process of reading multiple books at once for a few reasons, really. I gave single book reading the old college try, but it’s just not my style. Once I abandoned the uncharacteristic practice, things have returned to highly enjoyable, productive levels. Here’s an update on where my list currently stands, and what you can expect in the way of reviews soon:

Books finished and in the review process:

Engleby by Sebastian Faulks
Evauation Plan by Joe M. O’Connell

Currently Reading:
Rodney by Dick Baldwin
Shadow of Innocence by Ric Wasley
Women of Magdalene by Rosemary-Poole Carter
Juliette Ascending by Rosemary-Poole Carter
Resonance by Chris Dolley

Interviews:
Interviews for authors whose books I’ve finished reviewing will be sent out this weekend. Plans for live call-in interviews are still in the works. Once the program is finalized and the Talkshoe show is set up, invites will be sent to authors expressing interest in being interviewed on the show as well as via email. Live show interviews will not be required.


Special Projects (Currently reading):
The Seige of Zolodex and Quest for the Shard by Clifford B. Bowyer

The Bowyer Project, as I’ve dubbed it, will be a look at all of the books in both author Clifford B. Bowyer’s Young Adult and Adult fantasy series, and will be more in depth than a regular review because of the length of the project. I’ll post occasional updates as the project continues to move along.

In terms of exhibit and event reviews, I will be posting a review of the poetry reading that took place at PPU last night, featuring Lynn Emanuel. When I get a free day I’ll be attending the Body Exhibit at the Carnegie Science Center and posting a review as well.

In the meanwhile, if you have any issues or topics you’d like to see discussed, or books reviewed here on LTR, send an email my way, and I’ll see what I can do! As always, thank you for the feedback!

Write Well,

Dawn Papuga

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In honor of Chris Dolley’s Virtual Book Signing Tour for his new Sci-Fi novel Resonance, released today, I’m posting a brief interview of the author:

LTR: Who are your major influences? Are they only authors, or other genres of art as well?

Chris Dolley: I don’t really have many influences. I made a conscious decision as a teenager that I was going to make it by being original - I was going to stun people with ideas that no one had else had imagined. And to do that meant I had to cut myself off from ‘corrupting’ influences - like books.Bad decision. It made my work original but it set my writing back years by cutting me off from my chosen craft. You need to read to improve technique and to see what other people are writing.

Now, I read a lot and watch ‘good’ TV even more. ‘Good’ TV is great for learning the art of writing snappy dialogue. Joss Whedon and David E Kelly are brilliant writers. I also read P G Wodehouse to soak up his effortless style for humour. And sample Dean Koontz and Michael Connelly for their economical thriller narrative style.

But mostly it’s me.

LTR: Why Sci-Fi?

CD: Because it, along with fantasy, allows the imagination a freer rein. It allows the writer to concoct complex mysteries that no one had ever considered before - to create worlds, universes, mechanisms and then tie them together in a story that both captivates and makes sense. It’s a challenge and a fulfilling genre.

LTR: When did you decide that you wanted to be an author?

When I was ten. I was either going to be that or a professional footballer (soccer) - preferably both. I’d sign books at half-time and then go on to score a hat-trick in the second half.Then real life intervened. I had professional trials with my home club - AFC Bournemouth - but never made it. And my first rejection letter from a publisher came when I was fifteen. Recognition took time.

LTR: Do you work from a strict outline when you write, or do you allow the characters to take you to, perhaps, a different ending?

CD: I used to allow my characters a free rein but they kept taking too many liberties. And were forever getting sidetracked. Now, I write a detailed outline - to do otherwise when writing mystery driven fiction is madness. But, having said that, the final book always departs from the outline as improvements are always found and glitches uncovered during the writing process.So, I start with an outline. I plot it, juggle scenes, revise and tweak until I’m happy, then write the opening scene. As new ideas crop up I go back and revise the outline.

LTR: What advice do you have for aspiring authors?

CD: Read widely, write often and never give up. And be lucky. If asked to quantify what it takes to get published I’d say it comes down to luck, talent, determination and contacts. And, unfortunately, talent is not top of the list. Talent is what you need to get the second and third book published. Talent sustains your career. But to make that initial breakthrough you need luck. You need to have the right manuscript placed before the right editor/agent/first reader on the right day. You can have the best vampire book in the world but place it before a reader who doesn’t like vampire fiction, or is having a bad day or has just bought a vampire novel from another author…So you need determination. You have to keep submitting your book, be willing to listen to criticism/advice, to keep reading, to keep writing, to keep learning … until someone buys your book.

LTR: Would you recommend a virtual book tour to other first time novelists?

CD: I would. It takes a lot of work but what book tour doesn’t. The biggest enemy of a new author is anonymity. If no one knows your book is out there, they won’t buy it. So you need to get out there and wave your book.

So what is Resonance about?

It’s a SF mystery novel set in London, and the story of two people whose lives appear fragmented across alternate realities and how, together, they hold the key to the future of a billion worlds. Resonance was also chosen by SFBC as a featured book.

So if you have a chance today, hop on over to check out the other interviews that have been posted for Chris Dolley, and go to his Resonance page to read the sample chapters if you’re so inclined.

~D.M. Papuga

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How often have you read a book and had a list of questions that piled up that you wish you could ask the author? One of the exciting parts of my gig here on LTR is having the opportunity to talk to authors about their work. Following my review of Tara Ison’s forthcoming novel The List, she graciously agreed to an interview. Here are the results of the burning questions I had for Tara:

Dawn M. Papuga: Many writers can recall the moment they realized that they were hopelessly drawn to story telling and sharing the worlds they create. When did you know that you would make writing a career? Was there a specific moment or event, or have you always known?

Tara Ison: Well….truth is, I wanted to be a writer long before I ever wanted to write. I fell in love with the images of writers when I was a kid – the beach house, the Parisian garret, the love affairs, the late night cigarette and Scotch and half-eaten sandwich, the sound of a manual typewriter…. None of that has anything to do with writing, of course, but being a writer just seemed like the coolest thing in the world to be. Then I realized at some point that I’d have to actually write something. (Ugh.) So I took creative writing workshops in college, but I felt like a complete fraud. And then I worked as a screenwriter - which was a “writing career,” and yet….just not quite a love affair. That “moment” happened when I sat down and began writing my first novel – and suddenly it had nothing to do with being a writer, and everything to do with writing, with creating that world and telling the story of those people. Suddenly the violins played and the angels sang and everything was beautiful and I felt I was finally fulfilling my purpose in this life, earning my right to be on the planet, and and and…. OK, that sounds ridiculous, but it really was that stunning to me. Definitely a love affair. (Although it’s often a love/hate kind of love affair…hey, just like Isabel and Al….)

DMP: What were the reactions of your family and friends to your decision to pursue writing?

TI: I have been so lucky on this one, to have friends (some writers, some not) and family who are incredibly supportive – they ask questions about my work, they read drafts and give notes, listen to me whine and flip out over adjectives, really “get” the whole thing. A big THANK YOU to those folks!

DMP: Do you have any advice for aspiring authors or screenwriters? Anything you wish someone would have told you when you were getting started?

TI: My favorite “advice” story is when an Aspiring Author asked a Famous Author something like “Do you think I could be a writer?” And the Famous Author said “That depends – do you like sentences?” I think the hardest thing is balancing the line between being receptive to feedback on your work and yet staying true to your gut. But that might be a lifelong process for most writers…. New screenwriters really need to understand the film industry, and educate themselves on how filmmaking works – a screenplay is only one piece of the process, after all.

DMP: Your characters are so vibrant and alive, how did you find their voices? Do you mold the voices after figuring out the character’s history, or is it all part and parcel?

TI: Definitely part and parcel – the voices and the history are symbiotic, each informs the other as the work evolves. I initially wrote both Al and Isabel in 1st person – I wanted to hear each of them speak in their own voices, rather than have a narrator (well, me) “tell” or translate their stories/thoughts to the reader. That helped quite a bit, to establish the rhythm of their thoughts, their unique vocabulary, syntax, frame of reference, and so on. Then I put it back in alternating 3rd-person, for a little bit of breathing room.

DMP: Isabel and Al have such different professions, why a heart surgeon and director?

TI: I think Isabel was originally a neurologist, but then I was drawn to the idea of the heart, the richness of that image, and it made sense to use that to illustrate her character – how she can deal with the technical/clinical/analytical/scientific part of being human but resists feeling anything, how she wants to see the heart as simply an “organ” and not some pounding, blood-rich, primal thing. As for Al – he’s a film director because my background as a screenwriter gave me an understanding of that, but also (as for Isabel), it worked for his character – his passivity, his desire to “watch” the world play out around him rather than actively participate, and why that triggered his career panic/fears.

DMP: You include some very technical terms in both cinematography and physiology, and I image you spent a lot of time researching. Was that the hardest part about writing The List?

TI: I love doing research! Makes you feel you’re working hard, but it’s an excuse not to write, too. I love “information” – I’m one of those people who loves trivia books of facts and figures, etc., I can study that stuff for hours. But facts and figures can also really inform fiction in a wonderfully creative way – as an expression of character, great verisimilitude, good for texture and figurative language. The hardest part of writing The List was actually the love story itself – it’s so damn tricky to depict the most universal of human emotions, love, fear, grief, desire, without resorting to cliché. You have to find the oblique, idiosyncratic angle to come at and express those things – and the technical lingo, the “film” and “medical” terminology and mindsets were my conduit to that.

DMP: What made you decide on the format of alternating perspectives?

TI: Well…I think I’m half Isabel, half Al, so I couldn’t play favorites! They’re both such flawed human beings, yet they’re trying so hard… I wanted to give each of them a strong “forum,” equal time to express themselves, make their case to the reader, if that makes sense. They’re both equally right and equally wrong in how they’re dealing with the relationship, with life. So I wanted to let both of them speak.

DMP: Some writers sit down with an idea and let it develop into a specific story, form, and genre. Do you typically know the ending of your novel before you begin writing?

TI: Yes, definitely – but that doesn’t mean it doesn’t change! I’m a believer in outlines for a novel (probably the screenwriting training), and I like having that rough map before I begin – for me there’s a real comfort and security in knowing I’ve embraced the scope of the story ahead of time, that I’ve structured a beginning, middle, and end, and that I understand where I’m trying to go. But – an important but! – if the writing takes a turn and I wander off the map, that’s fine, I absolutely go wherever it’s taking me. I can just stuff the map in the glove compartment, or throw it away and start over.

DMP: The description in your writing is very strong with clear imagery—like you’re putting a scene already playing out visually into words. Do you approach writing novels differently than you do screenplays? Is there, aside from format, a different thought process you go through?

TI: First, thank you! And yes, it’s a very different process. A screenplay is all about image, and how to convey the story visually. (Yes, there’s dialogue, but it isn’t a radio play – it’s a story meant to be seen, not heard.) For me, a novel is primarily about language – and how to capture and convey a character’s psychology through words. But I don’t think we think in words – haven’t studies shown we “think” in images? So there’s a real challenge in the limitations of what language can convey. But again, I think my experience as a screenwriter has been very helpful for my fiction – I do think in terms of “scene,” and what the reader is “seeing,” how to actualize the inner-lives of the characters.

DMP: The List would lend itself beautifully to film. If it’s optioned, who would you, in a perfect world, like to play Al and Isabel?

TI: Hmmm…. You know, I often do keep the idea of an actor or real person in my head as the “picture” of the character as I write – but I didn’t do that this time, in this book. More than anything else I’ve written, I only “see” Isabel and Al as themselves, I can’t quite put a familiar actor face onto either of them. But that said – I do think it would work wonderfully as a film, too, and there’s a slew of folks who would be a great Isabel and Al. I’d love that to happen – fingers crossed!

DMP: What’s next for you?

TI: A new novel! Well, 2 new novels, both in-progress….at this point I have to decide which one I’m going to commit to in the coming year, and move forward.

Please Join Tara Ison for a Reading of her new novel THE LIST:

LOS ANGELES

March 6 - Borders Books,
Century City 10250 Santa Monica Blvd.
Tuesday, 7 pm

March 17 - Dutton’s Brentwood
11975 San Vicente Blvd.
Saturday, 2 pm

SAN FRANCISCO
March 8 - Edinburgh Castle Pub
950 Geary St.
Thursday, 8 pm

OHIO
March 29 - Books & Co.,
Dayton Town & Country Shopping Center
350 E. Stroop Road
Thursday, 7 pm

CHICAGO
March 30 - The Chopin Theatre
1543 W. Division St.
Friday, 7 pm

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15
Feb

What’s Next?

   Posted by: Dawn Papuga    in Lyrique Tragedy Reviews, Updates

Wonderful news! More reviews and author interviews have been added to the list! In the coming weeks there should be a steady flow of reviews and interviews posted here, on the sister site, and at BookPleasures.com. Some of the great new additions coming next:

  • The review of Bridie Clark’s first novel, Because She Can, will be posted today or tomorrow and the review will be followed by an interview with the author, as well!
  • Award winning novelist Sandra Worth’s next novel, The Rose of York: Fall from Grace, will be hitting the shelves in May of 2007. The Rose of York: Fall from Grace has already won the Francis Ford Coppola New Century Writers Award, and concludes her The Rose of York series which has been the recipient of ten different awards. A review will be posted sometime in the coming weeks prior to its release. For more info on the book and the Rose of York series, see the Sandra Worth website.

Stay warm and keep reading!

~D.M. Papuga

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