Showing posts with label Interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Interview. Show all posts

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Interview & Giveaway with Wesley Chu author of The Lives of Tao

Banzai!
It's been a while since I've had an interview on the blog, and a good opportunity presented itself so that we could get acquainted with charming debut author Wesley Chu. It's always my goal to have an awesome and worthwhile interview, and I think we accomplished that.

That said, I want to take this moment in time to state my intent to wage war against this Chu character. I forgive him for making a fool out of me with some of his answers, even sidestepping a few of my most insightful questions, but he took it too far when he dared to blaspheme against the almighty god Jack Bauer, my daddy. Here I was rejoicing the future return of this great hero, when Mr. Chu with his clever words alluded to Bauer's human mortality, and diminished badassery. Unacceptable. And he didn't stop there. While last night, much as it pains me and to my repulsiveness, the world conspired to mettle a small token of revenge for this slight, I'm not ready to forgive and forget just yet.

In any case, have a look for yourselves... oh, and don't forget to enter the giveaway at the end of the post; The Lives of Tao was awesome.

**********


Bastard:  Hey Wes, welcome to our house at Bastard Books. Looks like all the begging you did to get invited finally paid off. I hope you don’t come to regret it as you’ve just given me permission to invade your privacy, never a good idea. How are you doing today?

Wesley Chu: I’m good. Fantastic even.

Uh, I was fantastic at the beginning of the interview. By the end, I was far from fugging fantastic. Bastard’s a right bastard when it comes to interviewing!


Bastard:  For the record, can you tell us a bit about yourself? Make sure to state your full name and inform us of the when and where you first got your diapers changed, as well as your favorite color and your favorite song to dance to when you don’t think anyone is watching.

Wesley Chu: Hello all, my name is Wesley Chu, and I’ve never had my diapers changed. You see, when you grow up in the jungles like I did, you don’t wear diapers. After all, predators can follow your scent. Therefore, it’s extraordinarily important to bury the feces right away. Remember kids, one in five children don’t make it to three years old because they don’t bury their poop.

My favorite color is blue. No, yellow! (One geek point if you get the reference)


Bastard:  Budweiser has been my beer of choice for as long as I can remember, but lately I’ve been partial to some Blue Moon with the orange slices. Which is your preferred beer, and don’t you dare tell me you don’t drink, else we can’t be friends any longer. Lie if you have to, some things are just too important to ruin with unwelcomed truths.

Wesley Chu: I think you’re the first human being that actually admits to drinking Budweiser. It tastes like a mixture of armpit sweat and carbonated Robitussin. I used to like beer, being partial to Magic Hat #9, but drinking too much of it ill fits my small bladder lifestyle.

Now, I just drink Scotch neat. My current favorite scotch (changes weekly) is Ardbeg Uigeadail, but I like basically anything peaty that punches you in the face. If someone forces me to drink something else, I’ll drink stuff from Speyside, but I refuse to drink any of the Glens.


Bastard:  You mention on your website that you got into Information Technology for your professional career, what do you actually do within it? Programming, networking, Excel Master, Google Search specialist?  Or is this an elaborate way of calling yourself a gamer? Yes indeed, I’m well aware of all the boasting you’ve been doing around about your elite WoW skillz.

Wesley Chu: I do Middleware design and build for large financial institutions, but let’s talk about the important stuff. World of Warcraft raiding is the best thing one can enroll in for leadership training.

As the former recruiting officer for the #1 end game raiding guild on my server, I had so much power in the palm of my delicate blood elf hands that it was intoxicating, not to mention I was one of the richest guys on the server. I was like the Jared of my server, and no, not the Subway guy, the jewelers. I’ve managed people in real life before, but they’re nowhere as difficult to herd a group of 150 pubescent and not so pubescent guys (and a few girls) hot for epic loots!


Bastard:  As any self-respecting person would do, as soon as I learned you were an actor I IMDB’ed you.  To my surprise you had a role in Fred Claus as the “Banzai Chef”. I’m a very skeptical person, as I’m sure the readers in my blog are too, so I went and gathered proof.  Behold!



I take it you’re the one shouting “Banzai!” Tell us a bit about your experience as an actor, is it a career you’re still pursuing?

Wesley Chu: I am impressed you found this thing. It was a dangerous job. I bled my own blood shooting that cinematic scene. No honestly, I did. I nearly cut Rachel Weisz too. They actually had the hot plate turned on. And no, I didn’t have any teppanyaki training.

Acting is still there on the side, but I’m starting to fill the second class older roles. Meh, it goes with the territory. When I was young, tuned, and limber, I used to chase work. Now, it’s all about the writing. That and I’ve come to the realization that there’s just not that many roles for Asian guys.

We’re pretty much near the bottom of the acting totem pole, relegated to token Asian guy roles. That’s the problem with Asian male roles. Asian women are highly sought after and can play many more roles than us dudes. Hell, even Lucy Liu even got to play Watson sidekick in Elementary. Asian guys, we get to be Sulu, and your doctor telling you that you have cancer, or the guy at Best Buy selling you a phone.


Bastard:  Don’t know how far you went with your gymnastics, but it seems like your dreams of becoming a professional athlete didn’t materialize, at least not yet. I assume you’re still a sports fan though, what are your preferred sports? And what about those Chicago Bulls and how far they’ve gone without Derrick Rose? I sympathize with my Boston Celtics missing Rajon Rondo, but I still won’t forgive Chicago for stealing Tom Thibodeau and Brian Scalabrine from us.

Owie
Wesley Chu: Hey, don’t you mention that Derrick !@$@ #%% !%#% piece of !#%!@& @$!%%@ #$^&$%$ that damn !@!%^ *$@! Rose guy. I mean, he’s been !@$#% cleared ^&** since {honk} January to play! Yo DRose, man up and go help your team in the playoffs. Otherwise, the Bulls are aight.

I’m really a Bears fan though, which makes my life even more tragic. I mean !@%% dang draft !#$^@ !(&(^&%^ Long, a 2nd round !@%!$^ (&(^$ in the first? But hey, we’re gonna win it all this year!


Bastard:  I’ve also seen that you call yourself a Kung-Fu Master, so I just know everyone is wondering if you and Jack Bauer got into a slapfight, who do you think would win? Obviously Jack Bauer would win, but I’ll give you the benefit of the doubt. Give us a blow by blow account if necessary.

War has been declared!
Wesley Chu: First of all, that’s a load of BULL! Jack Bauer can’t kick my ass! He’s 47 years old and he’s been in hiding! So that means he’s probably not eating well. Not to mention since he’s keeping a low profile, he’s probably not working out anymore. And if we’re going to size people’s weaknesses, heroin addicts have a higher sensitivity to pain. I would crush him in a fight.

Oh wait, I see what you did there. Very tricky, Bastard. Very tricky. Slap fight eh? We both know Jack Bauer’s hands can only make fists. He is physically unable to touch another human being with an open hand. Jack Bauer does not slap.


Bastard:  Before I became engrossed with my SF&F reading, I was mainly a manga reader and anime watcher. I’ve seen your picture around with the Superman t-shirt, all the talk about WoW gaming, so on that respect as you were growing up, and even now, what has held your interests?

Wesley Chu: I used to play a lot of first person shooters, and then as time went on, I realized that I sucked at them. Sure there were a few I got pretty mediocre at, but my FPS experience usually involves me spawning at the safe zone and getting crushed like a worm 15 seconds later.

So now, I’m all about the Civilizations, the Total Wars, and if I feel the need to be competitive, I play Heroes of Newerth. And before any of you DOTA masters challenge me, I will admit that I pretty much suck at that too. 

However, I will challenge ANYONE to a game of Axis & Allies as long as I get to be Japan.



Bastard:  What’s your tale about your trials and tribulations to get your book published, every author seems to have one? The uncensored version please.

Wesley Chu: I’m gonna cheat a little on this one:

It all started with an expensive email. Wait, let me back track. I’m sure the Great Angry Robots Open submission of 2011 is old news now, but in case you don’t follow their every spoken word (like I do), here’s a quick recap. In March 2011, AR had their first open submission ever. Nearly 1000 people submitted works, 65 were asked for full manuscripts and 24 made it to the editors’ desk. Out of those 24, 5 received offers. The End.

Back to the expensive email. In December of 2011, my wife and I were vacationing in Bora Bora, which while a fantastically beautiful place, had perfected the fine art of legalized racketeering. Yes it’s a very small island in the middle of the ocean. We get it. But $24 for a 6oz bottle of bug spray? Yeah, you suck, Mr. Convenience Store Owner. Don’t even ask what sunblock was going for. I could have bought 6oz of plutonium for less. So after a week being disconnected from the internet, we finally caved and bought access for a whopping $40 a day.

My wife and I were watching “The Bounty” starring Mel Gibson (ironically, the movie was filmed on the island – no wonder it came so highly recommended) when an email popped in from a certain Mr. Lee Harris expressing interest in publishing The Lives of Tao. I did what anyone wearing a bathrobe in an over-water bungalow would do in that situation. I ran around the room in circles about nine times whooping and making a fool of myself, and then I jumped into the ocean.

Then when I got home, I bought a bottle of scotch which I was supposed to save for the actual signing. My friends got into most of it during my New Year’s Party (/shakes fist at said friends). The rest I shared with my bestie literary friend Laura Lam (of Pantomime fame) over Skype when the contract appeared in my inbox. It was 6AM in the morning. Friendly tip folks; scotch and toothpaste make a foul combination.

(Co-opted from my original signing post)


Bastard:  The Lives of Tao is your extremely fun debut novel, one that I would describe as the bastard child of NBC’s Chuck and, as you mentioned in the novel, the Invasion of the Body Snatchers film. Share with those who haven’t read it yet a bit about the novel and advise them on why The Lives of Tao should be in their next shopping basket.

Chuck being badass
Wesley Chu: The Lives of Tao is a modern day science fiction about an alien that inhabits an overweight loser and convinces him to fight in a civil war over humanity’s evolution. The alien, Tao, with his millions of years of wisdom and experience, has a slight problem. He can only talk to Roen, the overweight and highly unmotivated loser, but can’t control him. So now, the two must learn to work together as Roen loses weight, learns how to throw a stiff jab, find love, and stay alive as Tao’s powerful enemies hunt them down.

Oh, and some guy on the internet said that it’s an extremely fun debut, and a bastard child of Chuck and Invasion of the Body Snatchers.


Bastard:  What is a Quasing and what is the name of yours? What do you make of the voices inside my head? Maybe I’m destined for greatness.

Wesley Chu: My Quasing’s name is Eva, which incidentally is the name of my dog. See, that’s how my Quasing got me. Eva spiked my brain and convinced me to get a dog and call her Eva. It’s really confusing.

And since I’m always with my dog, and think my dog’s talking to me, my brain has no issues dealing with this alien in my head. Got it? Of course, for some reason, Eva the dog and the Quasing both sound like Marge Simpson.


Bastard:  Considering that you were born in Taiwan, and without getting into its tricky relationship with mainland China, The Lives of Tao integrated plenty of Chinese history, mythology, and folklore into its narrative. How much did your country of origin and your family’s culture influence how you went about writing your novel? In other words, how the heck did a typical fat loser white American end up being named Roen Tan? Maybe because of his English or German heritage?

Wesley Chu: Ahh…but is he white? Let me put it this way. I purposely named him Roen Tan and did not describe his ethnicity or physical features too closely for two reasons. I wanted him to be the common man blank enough so that any reader can think to themselves “man, I could be this Roen guy.”

Also, in my opinion, far too often minority roles are written with stereotypes in mind. That’s why people assume leads are white. Sure there have been lead roles that utilize Latinos, African Americans, and other minorities, but how many books and movies have written lead Asian males without minority stereotypes in mind? I wanted to address that.
So, what you're saying is that Seth Rogen still has a chance...

Bastard:  The Lives of Tao was recently released, as a rookie author you’re in the unique position to divulge some trade secrets. What kind of hazing have you had to endure from fellow veteran authors? It’s quite all right, you’re in a safe environment. And so far, how has your early publishing life been treating you, as expected?

Not Jack Bauer
Wesley Chu: Well, there was this one night at Immortal Confusion when Myke Cole started handing out tequila shots like candy. Now, I would tell you what happened next if I remembered, but I believe Diana Rowland, who is an ex-cop, had to save my life at one point.

But honestly, I love the writing community. When my non-writing friends ask me what it’s like going to all these SFF conventions, I tell them I feel like the hobbit coming back to the shire. It’s the strangest and most unique feeling when a guy finally finds a place he belongs.

Psst…Myke Cole is Jack Bauer.


Bastard:  While we’re at it, does this series have a name? What can you share with us about the future of this series and the sequel you’re currently working on? Any other projects or is writing this series holding your full focus at the moment?

Wesley Chu: Due to the great early reception for The Lives of Tao, the Angry Robot overlords have green lit The Deaths of Tao and moved it up to Oct 29, 2013. Fans of the first book can expect something a little different in Deaths. After all, it is five years later and the Quasing civil war has put Roen through the ringer. He’s a little older and a lot more pissed off. Oh yeah, and things aren’t looking too rosy.

As for a series name…um… let me get back to you on that.


Bastard:  At the risk of a copy/paste answer, what novels and authors have had the biggest influence in your writing and life? Any recent novels you've read you’d like to recommend?

Wesley Chu: I’m gonna cheat again and just talk about an upcoming novel dropping in August. I have the arc for Jay Posey’s Three at the moment. It’s a gritty dystopian about a guy trying to help a woman and her son from a slew of baddies, both human, kinda human, and some straight up weird bad shit.

Now, Jay works for Red Storm Entertainment, and he’s one of the guys who brought us Rainbow Six and Ghost Recon. The first thing I felt about reading Three was how visceral the book is. I felt like I was right there in his clusterphobic world, and I’ll be honest, it’s not a nice place to be for someone of my low pain threshold.

Keep an eye on for Three; it’s going to make a good splash.


Bastard:  Well off you go, I’m sure you have other places to invade. I’d like to say it was a pleasure… well, it actually was. Thanks for stopping by, hope to see you around. Good luck with The Lives of Tao, and any future projects you get involved in. Any parting shots?

Wesley Chu: Thanks much. You’re not as bad as they all said you were, even if you are a Boston fan. By the way, how did your guys doing in the playoffs? Oh, oops. =) It’s okay. I’m sure my Bulls will be joining you soon.



They sure did, Nostradamus. In the interest of not being an ungrateful host, I'll call for a temporary truce for the rest of the day.

All kidding aside, thanks to Wesley Chu for stopping by, much appreciated. The Lives of Tao was a really good read, so go buy yourself a copy as soon as you can. It's extremely fun. Or, you can try your luck and see if you can win a copy in the following giveaway (if you're honest, this is probably why you came here in the first place).

For more information on Wesley Chu you can visit his website and follow him on Twitter @wes_chu.


Participants have to be 18 years of age or older to participate. Void where prohibited by law. Giveaway rules are subject to change. 

Giveaway will be for 1 physical copy of The Lives of Tao by Wesley Chu provided by Angry Robot.

The giveaway is open to US and CANADA shipping addresses only, and it will run from May 16, 2013 until 11:59 pm ET on May 31, 2013.

How to participate:
  • To participate simply log-in into to the Rafflecopter and "Enter" through the easy entry.
  • One entry per person, or face disqualification.
  • Entries accepted until 11:59pm ET on May 31, 2013.
  • There'll be 1 winner only for one physical copy of The Lives of Tao.
  • Will have to confirm email to be considered a winner within 48 hours.
  • Additional entries may be had by following the steps provided in the Rafflecopter instructions, and only by doing those steps. 
  • Winners will be chosen by random selection using the Rafflecopter.
Good luck everyone! You can follow...

Monday, September 10, 2012

Interview with Jenn Bennett - author of the Arcadia Bell series

Well, it's been about 5 months since I've had author on the blog whom I could torture with a little bit of the Bastard treatment, so glad to have author Jenn Bennett around to break-in my new electrodes. I've been very fortunate so far with my interviews, with some great answers, and this was no different. I gave her some solid jabs, and she responded with a few well placed uppercuts. I think I may have a concussion.

In any case, Jenn Bennett is the author of the Arcadia Bell urban fantasy series, and she's an awesome person. Even though we had a rocky start to our relationship, I've found that she's one of the coolest people I've interacted with. Well, see for yourself. I challenge anyone not to laugh at least twice through this...hopefully not at my expense.

**********


Bastard: Hello Jenn, last chance to walk away... still here? Welcome then, hope you don't have any regrets after this.

Jenn Bennett: Hellooooo, Bastard. I feel a bit like Rachel Maddow walking into an interview with Bill O’ Reilly. At any moment, someone’s going to shout “BURN HER AT THE STAKE” or require me to undergo a medically unnecessary transvaginal ultrasound.


Bastard: Looking through your website, you mention that you were born in Germany, but have lived and traveled in various places around the world. What else can you tell us about yourself for those that don't know you? And please share what it has been like living in different parts of the world.

Jenn Bennett: My father served in the US Army, which is why I was born in Germany (and lived there twice). I’ve traveled in Europe, and I’ve visited 40 states on this side of the pond (lived in 8 of them). I’ve also spent a lot of time in Hong Kong, China, and Taiwan for business.

Living and travelling in other parts of the world has given me unique perspectives of cultures, races, religions, politics. It’s also filled my head with a thousand potential storylines, charters, settings, worlds. I mean, it’s one thing to imagine the bustle of Hong Kong, but quite another to have actually been drunk in Wanchai after midnight. I know what it smells, sounds, and feels like. And I know what it’s like to push past multiple language and cultural barriers to connect with people and foster unlikely friendships.


Bastard: It's also mentioned that you're an award-winning visual artist, which award was this and how did you come about winning it?

Jenn Bennett: I won several awards in college, including a national ad campaign for Anheuser-Busch. For that particular award, not only was my artwork used in ads, but the company also awarded me $5000 . . . which I promptly spent on pizza, beer, and weed. What can I say? I was 19 and stupid. I did a lot of other dumb things that year, including getting married for the first time. But I was still able to graduate summa cum laude and granted the highest award given in the School of Fine Arts. So I wasn’t a total fuckup.


Bastard: You're the author of the urban fantasy series Arcadia Bell, which has been well received by numerous fans of the genre. In part, you've been lauded for originality and a good cast of characters. Can you tell us a bit more of what this series is about, and have you been content with the reception you've received so far?

Jenn Bennett: My series is about an occult mage who owns a tiki bar in central California that serves Earthbound demons. It’s also about a girl who falls in love with a divorced dad twice her age, and the ensuing trials of establishing a new family with him and his teenage kid. It’s also a love letter to Thelema and medieval demonology, and an exploration of race and culture and good and evil. Whichever level you want to read it on it is fine by me.


Bastard: I don't think it's a secret that I didn't enjoy Kindling the Moon much, and part of it was due to how the investigation and procedural aspects of the plot were handled. Recently I finished the second book in the series, Summoning the Night, and I'm glad to say that in this regard it's where I noticed your biggest improvement. Mainly, the investigation was more dynamic and the characters were more active chasing leads, of course with the awareness that they are amateurs. Was this something you were focusing on, or was it a natural consequence of the story you wanted to tell?

Jenn Bennett:  Ooooh, yes—I’m quite aware that you’re not my biggest fan. My first encounter with the entity known as Bastard Books was when I noticed you talking trash about KINDLING to half the urban fantasy bloggers on twitter.
Not one of my finest
moments I admit.

Regarding procedural investigation. . . Honestly? Procedurals bore me to tears. Okay, that’s not entirely true. But it’s certainly not my main writing objective. I’m not a cop or a lawyer or a detective—I can’t bring that sort of perspective to a book, nor do I want to. And if I tried to make that my primary focus, it would undercut the fact that my characters aren’t detectives. They’re researchers at best, but photographers and bartenders by and large. These are amateurs who are trying to figure out how to use what they have to solve a problem, and developing as people as they go along. It’s never about the main plot for me. It’s about the subtext. The relationships. The way Cady is slowly changing and adapting her behavior and reactions. The way Lon is opening up. The way Jupe is learning about the world.


Bastard: Something I can say about your writing is that it seems like you're having a ton of fun with the scenes you're coming up with.  As I'm reading some of them I can just imagine you with a smirk on your face and a grin among others. Maybe bit of loud maniac laughter when no one is looking. Is this accurate?

Jenn Bennett: Are you saying that you think I’m funny, or that you think I think I’m funny? If it’s the former, then thanks. If it’s the latter, then, yes, Mr. Bastard, I think I’m flippin’ hilarious, and I often laugh at my own jokes. Can you feel my smirk right now?


Bastard: The dialogue in this series seems to be the biggest benefactor of this fun I'm speaking about, which is quite abundant in your story. Along with it, it seemed like good communication was a main feature in Summoning the Night. It goes contrary to the usual drama-heightening tactic of characters keeping quiet and working under assumptions, often wrong ones. This is something I highly approve of; how important is it for you to have characters that actually communicate with each other, and is it something you plan on continuing as the series progresses?

Jenn Bennett: Godammit, Bastard. Are you screwing with me? Trolling me? I CAN’T TELL ANY LONGER.

For the record, not trolling.
I think...
Yes, I specifically wanted Cady and Lon to communicate openly and keep the assumptions to a minimum. I think they’ve managed it pretty well, so far. But Cady is in the process of shedding her Don’t Trust Anyone skin, and Lon has spent years developing his wounded-heart hermit routine. So I think they’re allowed a few mistakes now and then. Book 4 will be particularly trying, due to the circumstances they find themselves in at the end of Book 3.


Bastard: Visiting the Tambuku Tiki Lounge, which beer would you order? Or would you order one of those fruity drinks? As an aside, do you think you would get along with Cady as your bartender?

Jenn Bennett: No beer is served in Tambuku. I would order a Mai Tai, as you can always test a tiki bar’s merit by the quality of their Mai Tai. And would I get along with Cady? Absolutely. I think she’s a no-nonsense bartender who pours fast, keeps conversation to a minimum, and is pleasant to ogle. What’s not to like?


Bastard: Out of all the paranormal beings you could have used or imagined, what attracted you to the combination of magicians and demons?

Jenn Bennett: I’m knowledgeable about the occult in general, ceremonial magic specifically. Like many other elements in medieval/Renaissance magic, I feel demons got short shrift. What can I say? I’m a cheerleader for the downtrodden and maligned.


Bastard: You're a magician and you summon the Bastard demon. At the cost of sharing your darkest secret, what would you have this demon do for you? And of course, what is your darkest secret? You can trust him, he won't share it with anyone.

Jenn Bennett: I would have him beta read for me, since he seems to have some very specific ideas about what he likes and doesn’t like. My deepest darkest secret? I worked at Burger King for 2 hours when I was 19. Long enough to get a uniform and watch a couple of training videos. When no one was looking, I walked out the back door and never went back. I tossed the uniform in the dumpster.


Bastard: There's also been mention of you enjoying dark stories. There's a certain darkness to your Arcadia Bell novels at the moment, but I get the impression that you may be holding back a bit. Do you have plans on going darker as the series goes along, or are you comfortable with the current state of things?

Jenn Bennett: Sure, I adore super dark stories, but I also like what I’ve done in Arcadia so far. I think it’s a nice balance of light and grit. However, Book 3 is sliding into a darker space (my agent said she couldn’t sleep after finishing it). Book 4 will easily be the darkest thing I’ve ever written.


Bastard: One of my favorite scenes in urban fantasy novels in the past year or so, and it goes without saying my favorite in this series, is when Arcadia beats the shit out of a character in that classroom scene in Kindling the Moon. I think you have a real knack (see what I did there) for writing physical altercation action sequences. I'm not sure if I'm alone here, but it is my hope that you write more of these as the series goes along. It reminds me of Kate Daniels, one of my top characters in urban fantasy, when Cady gets all badass in her blind rages. Can you make this happen for me, please, please, please?

Jenn Bennett: Did you actually just give me a compliment? Huh. Well, thank you. A lot of readers like the classroom scene. Cady has a major blind-rage scene in book 3, one I think many readers will be cheering. Maybe, dare I say, even you . . .


Bastard: As far as knack goes, if you were an Earthbound, what knack would you hope to have? And which one do you hope not to be stuck with? What about color of your halo? Let me guess, your favorite color would be electric blue.

Jenn Bennett: Demonic knacks are nothing but trouble. I would NOT want Lon’s. Nor Jupe’s. A healing knack might be helpful, though. Halo color? Hold on. Did you just link to an Icehouse video? VOMIT. I’ve never been partial to the color blue, but definitely not after being reminded of that old chestnut. By the way, I was in high school when that song came out (1987), and that particular year I was listening to a lot of “The” bands: the Pixies, The Damned, the Smiths, The Cure, the Replacements. A little Dead Kennedys thrown in for good measure.

Come on, what's wrong with a little Icehouse?

Bastard: Taking a turn to the controversial, let's imagine that all the characters have a sex reversal (just go along with it). Men become women, boys become girls, and vice-versa.  Particularly concerning the teenage Jupe, do you think what's currently coming off as cute, charming, and adoring relationships and interactions might instead come off as very creepy particularly from Arcadia's standpoint? See, this is the crap that goes through my brain while reading, I apologize.

Jenn Bennett:  Never apologize for your personal hang-ups. And no, I don’t think a female Jupe would be creepy if Cady was male. Jupe is missing a mother figure; Cady fills that role. Period. There’s nothing creepy about their relationship. If Cady were male, she’d treat Jupe mostly the same way. I say mostly, because I believe there’s a different dynamic between a 25-year old male and a 14-year-old girl than there is with the sexes swapped. But Cady’s not male—she’s female. So stop trying to police them, you crazy pervert, you.

Bastard: Keeping it with Jupe, would it surprise you to know that I dislike him? He's the kind of kid that if I went to school with him,  it'd be a constant struggle for me to restrain myself from punching his face repeatedly.  He's probably your best character, a complete scene stealer and fan favorite, but I really want to kick his ass. Interestingly, he reminds me of my brother and one of my best friends. Yes, it doesn't make much sense to me either.

Jenn Bennett: BINGO! I do believe we’ve hit the motherload reason for Why Bastard Hates My Books. And all this time, I thought it was the dirty romance.

Yes, Jupe is a fan favorite. Readers regularly write me fan mail about Jupe. No shit. And he’s my favorite character to write. I think he’s pretty revolutionary for urban fantasy—a biracial, younger teen being raised by a single father is not something you read in UF every day. I like that he’s flawed. I like that he’s occasionally obnoxious, and that he talks too much. You can trash Cady all you want, but mess with Jupiter Butler, and I’ll go into full-on Mother Bird defense mode and poke your eyes out.

Does it surprise me that you hate him? Absolutely not. Which is why I don’t expect you to get excited about any sort of Jupe spinoff I may or may not have in the pipeline. I will now amuse myself by picturing a Bastard-Jupe fistfight for a few seconds. . . .

Bastard: Lon is Jupe's dad and Arcadia's current lover. He also features what is constantly referred to as a pirate mustache. Much has been said about his mustache, what led you to give him one, and are you sure he's not actually rocking a pornstache?
Ron Jeremy...sexy!

Jenn Bennett: Pfft, you’re talking to the wrong person, because I love a good pornstache. I also love a good beard. I like clean-shaven men, too, but a little facial hair is good for the manly soul. So’s a little chest hair. And, while we’re on the subject, men with excessive grooming habits below the belt end up looking too feminine for my tastes. Just saying.


Bastard: Without giving much away, what's next for Cady? And what short-term and long-term plans you have for this series?

Jenn Bennett: Cady’s life is about to take a plunge into misery in BINDING THE SHADOWS. Readers will finally learn about her birthright, and the semi-normal life she’s been building will be snatched away from her. Book 4 will be worse. So there’s your darkness. You can cheer while everything seems hopeless and unfixable. Bonus: there’s less Jupe in BINDING, so you’ll be overjoyed.


Bastard: With your writing career underway and now being a published author, what have you learned about yourself that you weren't aware of before?

Jenn Bennett: That my self-confidence is more fragile that I ever thought possible. But don’t worry: I’m also far cockier than I have any right to be. So it all evens out.


Bastard: Reading your list of literary influences, I notice that most of them are authors that are long dead. Do you have any other authors that are more recent that have been an influence upon your writing, or your life in general?

Jenn Bennett: You probably won’t like them, but I’ll mention a few anyway: Diana Gabaldon, Joanna Bourne, Judith Ivory, Loretta Chase, Grant Morrison, Neil Gaiman, Philip Pullman.


Bastard: Any novel you've read recently you'd like to recommend?

Jenn Bennett: THE SIREN, by Tiffany Reisz. Not for the faint of heart.

I don't think this one's for me.

Bastard: I think our business here is concluded, feel free to banish us back to the Æthyr.  Don't be shy about performing the ritual in front of us, there's even a puke bucket at hand.

Jenn Bennett: Puke bucket much appreciated!

You know, I think if we met in person, we might actually get along just fine. If you’re ever in Atlanta, let me know. I’ll take you out for a decent Mai Tai. Maybe slip one of Cady’s medicinals in your drink . . . perform a few dark rituals with you. By the time we’re done, you’ll have pornstache and Jupe will be your FAVORITE CHARACTER OF ALL TIME.

Never say never, my friend.

**********

There you go. See? Good thing I don't have a glass jaw. Thanks Jenn, really appreciate the interview particularly since you seemed to be quite busy through the last few weeks. Good luck with the rest of the Arcadia Bell series, and as for a Jupe spin-off...yeah, that would be a bit of a stretch for me. But we'll see.

For more information, please visit Jenn Bennett's website and you can follow her on twitter too @Jenn_Benn.

Monday, August 20, 2012

Interview with authors of Fading Light: An Anthology of the Monstrous edited by Tim Marquitz (and a Giveaway)



When I set out to create Fading Light, I had a specific vision in mind…That was until I was assailed by the slew of great submissions. There were so many amazing stories, so different than what I had expected, they threw a wrench into all my machinations and forced an evolution on Fading Light I hadn’t foreseen. In the end, it was the authors who defined the direction as much as the anthology prompt. As such, I feel it is they who should introduce themselves and the beast that is Fading Light: An Anthology of the Monstrous.

Take a moment to get to know them in part three of the multi-blog interview…

Tim Marquitz
El Paso, TX
August 20, 2012

Fading Light collects 30 monstrous stories by authors new and experienced, in the genres of horror, science fiction, and fantasy, each bringing their own interpretation of what lurks in the dark.

Contributors: Mark Lawrence, Gene O’Neill, William Meikle, David Dalglish, Gord Rollo, Nick Cato, Adam Millard, Stephen McQuiggan, Gary W Olson, Tom Olbert, Malon Edwards, Carl Barker, Jake Elliot, Lee Mather, Georgina Kamsika, Dorian Dawes, Timothy Baker, DL Seymour, Wayne Ligon, TSP Sweeney, Stacey Turner, Gef Fox, Edward M Erdelac, Henry P Gravelle, & Ryan Lawler, with bonus stories from CM Saunders, Regan Campbell, Jonathan Pine, Peter Welmerink, & Alex Marshall.


  1. Thanks for taking part in the multi-blog, Fading Light interview. Tell us a little about yourself.
Dorian Dawes: Here is where one might stumble a bit with put-on humility, or go into endless paragraphs of self-aggrandizing rhetoric in all their spooky horribleness, but I don't think I'll do either. I think I'll just borrow a bit here from Fight Club, in that I am nothing special. I am the same decaying organic matter as everyone else. I am, as all of us are, nothing. I'm a young gay man living in the backwoods of Florida with a predilection for horror and the macabre, particularly through literature. I like scary movies and books, comic books and graphic novels, and video games. Once upon a time, I thought I could change the world, but I don't believe in that anymore.

Ryan Lawler: I suppose I should start with my day job right? I’m an aviation software engineer, working with the Australian military to provide safety assurance for different aircraft. It’s an enjoyable job that has taken me around the country and I hope it continues to do so.

My wife and I are currently living in the capital, Canberra, where we both spent our childhood growing up. It’s a great city and I see myself settling down there, but not before I live in a bunch of other cities and countries.

Tim Baker: Happy to be here. I’m just an old ex-firefighter trying to start a new career in writing. Not too easy, it turns out. May be harder than firefighting, though much less dangerous.

Carl Barker: Well I could tell you, but then I’d have to kill you.

Peter Welmerink: My name is Peter Welmerink. I have been crafting tales since grade school, but didn’t find the pursuit or pleasure of publication until the 1990’s. I have penned action-adventure tales from superhero to star-venturing space hero, though have mainly written in the Sword & Sorcery Heroic/Epic Fantasy genre. I have a day job, a wife and kids. My first novel was co-written with the very talented Steven Shrewsbury. BEDLAM UNLEASHED: a nice cheery non-violent story about a massive Viking berserker in 1014AD. I lie about that first part. I am a robot. Bzzt. Bzzt.


  1. Besides the anthology prompt, what led you to write your Fading Light contribution?
Ed Erdelac: Tim sold me on the concept. He was urging me to come up with something for it and after a lot of ruminating I watched a documentary on the origin of the moon with my wife, specifically, that it might’ve been caused when another celestial body.

I found that I had a knack for darker stories, and I was working on a very dark story about a post apocalypse engineer when the Fading Light story prompt came through. With a few tweaks of my setting and the addition of some monstrous enemies, I had my submission.

Gef Fox: Peer pressure. Last winter, Tim told me he was editing this anthology and I should consider writing up something to submit. Who was I to argue? I love monsters anyway, so coming up with something wasn't going to be too difficult.

CM Saunders: I remember seeing a documentary a while back about freelance ambulance crews in South America. Being a naturally twisted individual, I began to wonder what would happen if they picked up an accident victim who also happened to be a zombie? 


  1. Does music play a part of your writing? Television, movies?
Ed Erdelac: I’m sure I’m influenced by all of these things, but I need total silence when I write. I never listen to music or have anything on in the background. I’m pretty monastic when I write. But these things wend their way into my work, sure. For Gully Gods, a novella I did for the Four In the Morning collection, that was a supernatural story set in inner city Chicago, with gangbangers. I listened to a lot of Scarface, because the main character was from South Houston. For The Crawlin’ Chaos Blues, a story I did about a blues player making a deal with Nyarlathotep for fame, I listened to a lot of Delta and Chicago Blues. Howlin’ Wolf, Elmore James, Muddy Waters, Lightnin’ Hopkins. I did this to prepare myself for these stories, to get inspired, but again, I don’t listen to anything while I’m writing.

Adam Millard: I listen to a lot of music when I write.  I'm a bit of a metalhead, so I tend to listen to noisy stuff through these behemoth earphones.  Sometimes, if a scene I'm working on requires a certain mood, I'll find music to match it.  I think it helps a lot.

Ryan Lawler: I find things like music, television, movies, books, video games, internet meme’s, and news stories to be a great source of ideas for my writing. My initial spark for Light Save Us came from watching an episode of The Colony, a reality TV show about a group of people trying to survive in a simulated post apocalyptic world.

But when it comes to actually writing, I need a semi sterile environment otherwise I get too distracted. Oh, look, another internet meme, just five more minutes and I will get back to writing… after I check my email and Twitter feed… and see what my friends are doing on Facebook… oh man I’m really digging the lyrics to this new song I’ll just quickly look them up before I get back to writing…


  1. Tell us about your story in Fading Light.
William Meikle: I wondered what it might be like to live in an underground society where the lights were always on, then become exposed to the totality of the vast darkness of space on a planet where the sun had gone dim. I believe a new bogey man might just emerge in that situation, something born from a psyche that had spent too long in isolation. The darkness might take many forms. His is a story of one of them.

Adam Millard: My story, Parasitic Embrace, was a little homage to the science-fiction films of the 50s.  These were movies, ultimately, about paranoia, about whether the person you love is still the same person.  These micro-parasites travel across the ocean in a volcanic ash-cloud and locate hosts, changing them into . . . just read it!

Ed Erdelac: In The Theophany Of Nyx, it’s about ten or twenty years down the road and the earth establishes its first bona fide lunar colony, which falls prey to an unexplained seismic disaster when a crack in the moon opens up and the colony slides inside, spewing a thick cloud of dust which descends into earth’s atmosphere and blankets the planet. The sun is blotted out, vegetation begins to die. My story centers specifically on a plumber who gets stuck on a military base when the disaster happens. A week or so later it rains and people begin rejoicing, thinking it means the end of the dust cloud. It doesn’t.

TSP Sweeney: Der Tuefel Sie Wissen (“The Devil You Know”) follows a group of Hitler Youth members as they stalk a Russian officer through fire-ravaged ruins during the fall of Berlin in World War II.  Naturally, all is not as it seems.


  1. Writers are a different breed of human. What led you to down the path to making up worlds and telling stories?
Gene O’Neill: Irish genes.

Tom Olbert: It came very naturally at a very young age.  I was always a day-dreamer by nature.  I loved monster movies and sci-fi and UFO stories.  I’d always dreamed of being a published writer.

Adam Millard: I love being a writer.  We are, as a species, odd and often in need of psychological evaluation, but I know a lot of writers that would rather die than quit.  I think it's  in a persons' blood; it's certainly in mine, and I just love the idea that one day, when I'm planted in some cemetery, someone will still be reading something I wrote.  Or, at least, I hope they will.

CM Saunders: I guess there were many factors. English was about the only thing I was good at in school, so I spent most of my time hiding at the back of the class writing stories. Also, in your stories you call all the shots. It’s like playing God!

Peter Welmerink: I had/have all these ideas crowded within my skull. I saw and see sheets of blank line paper, or, now, a big white screen when I open MSWord. Those blank spaces need to run heavy with adventure.


  1. What led you to submit to Fading Light?
William Meikle: I was invited J but the theme is one that immediately spoke to me.

TSP Sweeney: After coming across the description of Fading Light online, I looked into it a bit more and found that I really loved the concept of the anthology and admiring what Tim Marquitz was doing with it.  Combine that with the opportunity to finally write about an idea that had been bouncing around in my head for a long time, and it seemed like a match made in heaven (or hell, considering the nature of the anthology).


  1. Who are your greatest influences in your life, both literary and otherwise?
Gef Fox: I'm a bit low on the totem pole to start citing my influences. I will say I've long gravitated to stories by Stephen King, Neil Gaiman, Joss Whedon, and Elmore Leonard. I wouldn't say I'm trying to emulate any of these writers, but I will say I greatly admire their work.

The Boss
CM Saunders: Number one has to be my dad, but I know that's a boring answer so instead I will say Stephen King and Bruce Springsteen – two people from humble beginnings who worked hard to make an impression, and gradually became masters of their art. Examples to follow!

Ryan Lawler: My parents and grandparents have been the greatest influence throughout my life. They taught me not only how to seek out opportunities but how to grab onto them with both hands. My wife has been the biggest influence in the last six years, tempering my massive ego while nurturing the empathetic and caring side of my personality I never knew was there. I also have to give credit to someone from my first job building box trailers. I can’t remember his name but I will always remember what he told me after I cut an entire batch of mud guards almost 10 millimetres too short. “If you aren’t pissed off about your failure to follow instructions and to cut pieces of metal to the right size, technicians will never trust your calculations and you will never make it as an engineer.” Doing things right is something you should care about.

From a literary perspective, the writings of Ayn Rand and Terry Goodkind really influenced my personality as a teenager. Objectivism seemed to resonate with the way I saw the world, and I couldn’t get enough of it. Then I grew up and I now find my greatest literary influence to be Sir Terry Pratchett for his wonderfully optimistic view of the world.

Jake Elliot: Hunter S. Thompson is my greatest literary hero. He was also a troublemaker, but by a much deeper category of troubled. Like me, he never finished his degree, yet was very successful as a writer. My successes pale greatly to his, but then I’ve shied away from eating handfuls of mescaline and huffing ether.

I’m also fascinated by a 1st century prophet––another famous troublemaker––better known throughout the English and Hispanic parts of the world as Jesus. I’m not interested in the mythological Zeus-like savior of all mankind, but the historical and philosophical entity. The man changed the entire world with his message of a loving God and his words played a huge role in destroying the Roman Empire, and he did it all though non-violent means. It makes sense to me why the world painted him as God on Earth, but I don’t believe in that dogmatic religious view. Since I don’t accept the prescribed version, I’ve spent a lot of time trying to figure out what about the man was real, and what was fictionalized. I’m not as lost as the day I started looking, but I certainly better understand the philosophy of, “Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you.”


  1. The zombie apocalypse arrives: who do you want on your response team?
William Meikle: Superman. Then I could sit back and let him do all the work.

Gef Fox: Someone slower and tastier than me.

            Carl Barker: Chuck Norris. Obviously.


  1. How do your daily experiences impact your writing?
Tim Baker: Well, my life experiences certainly have. There’s usually something in my writing that reflects my world view or event I’ve been through, though it’s very vague and covered up by a lot of nastiness.

TSP Sweeney: Names and places will often find a way of cropping up in my work, although usually in a substantially altered format.  So too amusing conversations or interesting pieces of trivia.

Otherwise, the main impact my daily experiences have is making me so exhausted that the idea of sitting on the computer writing can occasionally be terrifying! I’ve managed to compensate for this via use of an iPad, which has proven itself to be more effective at increasing my useful writing time far more than my old laptop ever did.


  1. All authors have goals they set for themselves, be it getting published, getting a bigger deal, or selling millions of copies. Can you share some of yours?
Mark Lawrence: The only writing goal I ever had was to get a short story published in a print magazine.

Carl Barker: I think that most authors would list some or all of the above as goals. We do what we do because we enjoy it, so if we could do this for a living, then we’d be as happy as a man called Larry.


  1. What projects are you working on now? Anything cool you can share with us?
Adam Millard: Just finishing up on the first draft of the concluding book in my Dead series, which will be released in March 2013, and then I have a few anthologies to write for before Christmas.

CM Saunders: I have written the first volume of a YA time travel adventure series and am about to start the second volume. Next year I plan to self-publish a collection of short stories, and later this year will see the release of Rainbow's End, my first tentative foray into literary fiction.

Ryan Lawler: I’ve been invited to submit a short story to an anthology about women creating their perfect companions (as opposed to all those stories about men creating the perfect women). There are a couple of big names attached to this whose contribution will likely be announced in the next month or two.

Tom Olbert: I’m working on two short science fiction stories.  One’s a space opera about science vs. religion in a futuristic interstellar dark age.  The other’s a contemporary spy drama about a government agent struggling with his own identity and finding himself at a temporal crossroads.

TSP Sweeney: I am working on a short horror piece for an anthology called The Black Wind’s Whispers, which is being written and put together by several members of the Black Library Bolthole forums.

Beyond that, I have a few things I am waiting to hear back on from a few different publishers, and I have the ever-present couple of novels I have been working on for far too long hanging over me, attempting to draw me back in.


  1. A troll, a rabid skunk, and Justin Bieber walk into a bar: how does the story end?
Word to yo motha
William Meikle: With a dead skunk inside a dead Justin Bieber, and a drunk troll.

Dorian Dawes: With John Waters arriving late to the scene with a film camera, and several months following, the unveiling of his latest trash masterpiece, "CRYBABY 2: Never Say Never."

Carl Barker: If I ever put Justin Bieber into one of my stories, I’ll have to kill myself.


  1. Given the opportunity, is there any one author you’d like to write a story with? What would you write about?
Ed Erdelac: You know, I don’t think I’m really the collaborative type. There are people I’d like to contribute to books with, sure. Joe Lansdale, for instance. If I could get into writing one of those neat-o Star Wars reference guides, guys like Dan Wallace and Jason Fry, Abel Pena. I have author friends I’d like to work with in some capacity, like Greg Mitchell. But I couldn’t really see myself writing a novel or something like that with somebody else, like how King and Straub did. Only child syndrome I guess.


  1. Tell us a little about your writing process: do you outline, pants it, write twenty drafts or just one, practice voodoo?
Ed Erdelac: I write the whole thing out in paragraph form if I can, like ‘John goes to the store. He doesn’t have enough change for the bus, etc.’ Then I start writing the thing properly in the same document and delete the summary as I go, so I know how much I have left to do. Usually the first thing I do before I write is go over everything I wrote the previous day. That’s it, in terms of drafts. I wouldn’t say I write one draft, because I’m revising the whole time. With three kids I don’t really have time for rituals, neurotic or occult.

Ryan Lawler: I use a bunch of seven point outlines to create my arcs. I try to come up with a really cool resolution, a beginning that is far away from that resolution, and then five steps in the middle that shape the progress of the arc from beginning to resolution. For short stories I do just the one outline, but for larger stories I create multiple outlines for things like the main plot, subplots, and character arcs.

I weave these outlines together to come up with a series of scenes and events that cover off each point in my outline. Once I have these scenes in mind, I just write, allowing all of the finer detail to evolve as I go through. Having the seven dot points makes sure I know where to start and where to finish, but it allows me the freedom to take almost any path along that journey.

Tim Baker: Whew, let me tell ya, I only started writing seriously a couple of years ago, so I’m on a fast learning curve. I took a creative writing class before that, writing three short stories, and I simply didn’t learn much there. I made straight A’s but I don’t think the teacher was interested enough to point out the mistakes, I now know, I was making. I wrote a novel after that for the NaNoWriMo thing and I pants it all the way. Cool idea, but after an editor looked at it, I realized how clueless I was. Short stories I write off the cuff with little prep; the idea is in my head and I have an ending in mind and I shoot for that. The novella I’m working on is getting outlined. And the voodoo thing just didn’t work out.

TSP Sweeney: I am still sort of trying to find the one method that really suits me, but my general method (at least with shorts) is to write at least a barebones core of a story down and then go back and redraft a thousand times.  In saying that, however, I have also had some success with outlining and then writing a good, solid draft straight away.  I think it really depends on how fleshed out the piece is in your mind; is it just a concept, or do you have actual plot and characters and setting and dialogue bouncing around in there as well?

Peter Welmerink: I typically do some reference work first if required, then dive in. In the past, no outlines or really any notes. Now, just because I think it helps me stay focused and on track, a write little snippets of where things are going. It usually changes as I get sucked into the story and characters and events take me away.


  1. What do you do to get better as a writer?
Dorian Dawes: An endless cycle of reading and writing. I have a trusted few who look at my work for me, who's eyes and tastes I trust. They're usually dead-on with their advice and have  provided invaluable assistance to my progress in improving as a writer. Too many young and budding writers, and many artists these days actually, are too terrified of negative criticism, or at least, anything that resembles anything but infinite praise for their precious babies. I try not to get too attached to my work. Yes, I spent a lot of time and effort on it, but I'm going to write more things in the future, better things too. I just don't have that much time and effort to spend defending mediocre work when I could be taking that criticism and using it as a springboard to create better work in the future.

Jake Elliot: Read, read, and read­­––then add on an occasional creative writing class at the local university or college. I might try a writers’ group in Oregon.

Adam Millard: Read, read, read.  When I'm not writing, I'm reading.  The two things go hand-in-hand, and reading is essential.  If you don't read, you can't be a writer.

CM Saunders: Write. And read. I have learned that you learn just as much (if not more) from bad writing as you do from good writing!

Peter Welmerink: Listen to advice from editors. Look at how they edited my work after I thought I had polished it rather nicely but obviously needed fresh eyes to really shake the bugs out.

Always time for some reading

  1. When you first imagine a story, do the characters come first or the plot? Is it always the same?
William Meikle: For me, they come visually, like photographs of a particular scene. I look closely at the scene, and the participants start to move and talk. The story forms from there.

I carry a notebook at all times in which I jot these kinds of thing down. It tends to be full of fragmentary pieces of information such as "Remember the fat man with the umbrella", but it is enough to jog my memory later on.

TSP Sweeney: I usually have a germ of an idea of a plot (or even a particular scenario), which will percolate around in my mind for a while.  After that, I start to come up with the characters and the greater narrative, with both sort of informing each other until everything fits together just right, and then I get on with writing and rewriting (and rewriting and rewriting and rewriting some more).


  1. Do you work in any other creative mediums besides writing? What are they?
Tim Baker: I’m a guitarist/songwriter and had a great band long ago named LickHouse (you can find them on YouTube), but rock ‘n roll is a little too much for a fella my age.

Peter Welmerink: Sidewalk chalk. Though I have yet to perfect anything beyond giant stick people.


  1. How much of a role do reader/publisher expectations play in your writing?
CM Saunders: I try to write for myself, rather than write for a particular audience. Otherwise, you are compromising your art.

TSP Sweeney: At this stage of my (burgeoning) career, I have tended to write solely to what I find interesting as a reader, and that plan seems to be working out ok for me so far. I’ve always figured that any story I am not one hundred percent behind is one that readers and publishers aren’t going to be interested in anyway, as I feel that would show in the quality of my writing.  

Whether I am just being naïve in that regard, I guess I’ll find out soon enough.


  1. Any tidbits of advice you can give aspiring authors?
CM Saunders: Write every day, read as widely as you can, and grow a thick skin!

Tim Baker: Read ALOT, and not just in your chosen genre. Write more. The only books on writing I have found valuable and keep close at hand are, The Elements of Style, Stephen King’s On Writing, and Self-Editing for Fiction Writers by Renni Browne and Dave King.

William Meikle: As a writer it is all too easy to concentrate on the mechanics of submitting work to editors and to forget that the writing itself is of primary importance. We should all be constantly seeking to improve. If we do that, editorial approval will become that much easier.

To that end, here are five things you can start doing today that will immediately improve your writing, and with it your chances of getting published.

- Improve your vocabulary

Buy a good dictionary, and learn a word every day. Play around with it, using it in sentences, in dialogue and description. As you go along, make a list of the words you've learned. At the end of the month, try to write down a definition beside each word. If you can't remember what the word means, look it up again, play with it again, and leave it on the list for another month. I guarantee your vocabulary will grow in leaps and bounds.

- Read more

You can't come up with an original idea unless you know what isn't original. So read as widely as you can, both within your chosen area and beyond.

I write, and read, horror fiction, but I also read the classics, crime fiction, science-fiction, fantasy and the occasional airport blockbuster. I also read non-fiction, in the fields of astronomy, biology, parapsychology, archaeology, religious history and mythology.

Everything is grist to the mill, and little is ever wasted. If nothing else, it allows you to feel superior while watching "The Weakest Link".

- Deconstruct Writing that Works

When you read something that strikes you as a fine piece of writing, or something that has had success in your chosen area, go back and read it again. This time take notes:

What caught your attention about the writing?

What does the writer do that you don't?

Would you have done it differently? If so, what makes what you've just read better?

You can also do this when you see bad writing. After a while, you'll find yourself doing it automatically with almost everything you read. From the notes you can make up a list of writing tips for yourself. Add to it as you go along, read it often, and follow your own guidance. Improvements will follow.

- Edit yourself

You have to develop a thick skin, and an ability to look at your work dispassionately. After you've written something, put it away for a few days, then come back and look at it critically.
Hone your work until it is as good as you can make it. If you don't respect your writing, how can you expect anyone else to do so?

- Read your work out loud.

Reading aloud enables you to check the rhythm of your work. Check that your writing flows. If it feels uncomfortable to say it, it's time to rewrite.

At the same time check your sentence lengths. If you need to take a breath in mid-sentence, then it probably needs editing. You might feel self-conscious at first, but stick with it. I've found this to be one of the best ways to find your writer's voice.

Go on. Start now. You'll feel the benefits immediately, and you'll be a better writer for it. And that's what we all want, isn't it?


  1. How has the current publishing atmosphere affected you and how you approach your work?
Ryan Lawler: Not at all. The only thing that has changed is the opportunity to put your book on an online shelf and get someone to buy it. Fundamentally, things have not changed – if you can’t write, you will not be able to communicate your story effectively, people will not be entertained, and you will not sell any copies.

Carl Barker: It hasn’t. Where to send a story and how to get it published is something I don’t consider until it’s finished.


  1. Did you a) write for the anthology or b) have a suitable piece ready - & if a) how'd you resist quoting Dylan Thomas? (per Mark Lawrence)
CM Saunders: Luckily I had just finished a piece that was vaguely suitable. I cannot resist quoting Dylan Thomas. Rage! Rage against the dying of the light.

Carl Barker: The piece was already finished. I rarely write with a specific anthology in mind, unless I happen to have the bones of an idea kicking around at the time. I don’t always know where a story and its characters are going to go when I start a piece, so I prefer not to place restrictions on my narrative.


  1. To steal a question from my friend, Bastard, what’s your favorite alcoholic beverage? Do you imbibe when you write?
William Meikle: Being a Scotsman, there’s only one answer. Single malt, and Talisker, from the Isle of Skye if possible. Not to be mixed with anything, whether it be lemonade, ice or writing.

TSP Sweeney: I love an ice cold pale beer.  I don’t really care about who makes it or where they are located, so long as it tastes good.  I will have a drink or two when I write sometimes, especially if I am struggling to loosen up and get words on the page.

Peter Welmerink: Bourbon whiskey and cola, or, at least this summer, Leine’s Summer Shandy. I imbibe when I write though not to the point of writing wasted. I did that years and years ago. The end result was some pretty funny stuff, but it would never see the light of day without ending me up in the loony bin.


  1. What books have you read recently? Any new authors you’re impressed by?
The Child Thief by Brom
Dorian Dawes: Currently reading Peter Straub's Ghost Story, and I must say I'm incredibly behind on my reading. I don't think I've read a book that's come out in the last five years, because I'm still making my way through the 70's, 80's, and the 90's. There's so much literature for me to catch up on. My bookshelves are lined with old horror and sci-fi books I bought at a Library Booksale that I am slowly making my way through. I think the most recent book I read was a horror/fantasy take on the Peter Pan story called the Child Thief, by Author/Illustrator Brom. The book itself was extremely compelling and one of the best fantasy works I've ever read.

Ed Erdelac: I’m reading Imaro by Charles Saunders. It’s an African sword and sorcery book, what Milton Davis calls Sword and Soul. I’m really enjoying it so far. Before that I got into George MacDonald Frasier’s Flashman series pretty heavy. It’s about this purportedly renowned Victorian British war hero, a veteran of practically every major military engagement of the period, including the American Civil War (he served on both sides!), Little Big Horn, Roarke’s Drift, etc, who’s actually a complete coward and villain. Love those. Hilarious.

Carl Barker: Too many to mention.  I try to read as widely and regularly as possible. King once said that ‘if you can’t find the time to read, then you have neither the time, nor the tools, to write.’

CM Saunders: Robert Brumm Jr is an American indie writer just starting out. He is a real talent. I recently read Horns by Joe Hill. He writes just like his old man, but with a slightly more contemporary vibe. Let’s see... I am a big fan of Chuck Palahniuk, and read Rant recently. I try not to miss a Peter Hessler book, as he writes the truth about modern China. 


  1. Stylistically, what genre is most satisfying to write? Are you married to a genre or do you write across different ones? Is there a specific genre you want to write in but
Dorian Dawes: Without a doubt it's horror, but specifically the perfect blend of horror and fantasy that lets you get weird and creative but without spoiling the creepy atmosphere or delving into the incredibly overdone Tolkienism that is proving to be a cancer to the fantasy genre today. I don't think there's a genre of fiction I'm interested in writing that I haven't already, save for maybe certain subgenres of science-fiction like a Space Opera that would be a lot of fun to do. Most of my work is going to be a blend of "other genre" and "horror." It's just the way it happens to work out most of the time as I can't resist that gothic edge. One thing I'd really like to try one day is to tell a children's story with talking animals and a cute fantasy environment, and have it end with wailing and shrieking and gnashing of teeth as their world comes to a bitter and bloody end, hell on earth for the cartoon characters, a river of blood for the talking rabbits.

Gef Fox: I try to write in various genres, with a clear affinity for dark fantasy and horror. The stories that garner the most positive responses tend to have a pinch of humor mixed in with the horror.

TSP Sweeney: I’m definitely not married to a specific genre, so much as I have particular ideas for stories and tailor them in certain directions, all of which are equally satisfying in my mind.  My dream is to write an epic dark fantasy series that is masquerading as Tolkien-esque high fantasy, but I feel as though I am not quite ready as an author to write that to the right standard just yet.  In the meantime, I‘d love to write a cyberpunk story, a steampunk story, and a modern-day spy thriller with a twist, but I haven’t gotten around to putting fingers to keyboard on any of those ideas just yet.


  1. You’re drunk at a karaoke bar: what one song will get you up and wailing?
William Meikle: Satisfaction by the Rolling Stones.

Tim Baker: Born to Be Wild.

TSP Sweeney: Chop Suey by System of a Down – I don’t know what it is about that song, but I can’t resist belting it out.


  1. Where can readers find out more about you and your work?
William Meikle: Full details and more waffle on my website at http://www.williammeikle.com.

Tom Olbert: Try my blog: http://tomolbert.blogspot.com.

Dorian Dawes: I have a website with links to my currently published work and a series of rants that are the result of my existence on this terrifying thing called the internet, check out doriandawes.com for all the latest updates.

Jake Elliot: I’d recommend jakeelliotfiction.com to start. I’m on Facebook and I’ll friend everybody until I’m offered naked pictures. Remember, my wife can kick my ass and she might get upset if I’m looking at your naked pics. I’m on Goodreads too, and there, you can read the fist 15% of ‘The Wrong Way Down’ for free.

Gene O’Neill: Just Google my name.

Ed Erdelac: www.emerdelac.wordpress.com. Otherwise look me up on Facebook.

Adam Millard: Readers can check out my website for upcoming events and news, which is www.adammillard.co.uk and you can find me on Facebook and also on Twitter @adammillard.

Gef Fox: They can check out my blog (waggingthefox.blogspot.com), or find me on Twitter (@wagthefox) or Facebook (facebook.com/wagthefox). I'm elsewhere online, but those are the big three.

CM Saunders: I have a new blog: http://cmsaunders.wordpress.com/

All the usual haunts like Amazon Author Central, Author's Den, and Goodreads.

And, of course, Facebook and Myspace. I think I am the only person in the civilized world with a deep suspicion of Twitter!

Ryan Lawler: You can follow me on Twitter – @RyanL1986 – or you can check out my blog at http://ryanlawler86.wordpress.com

Tim Baker: They can check me out at: facebook.com/tim.baker.3532. Will soon have a blog up and running, too.

TSP Sweeney: My personal, all-too-infrequently updated blog is at http://timsweeney.net, and contains links to the various stories I have thrown up around the web, as well as details about my upcoming published works. I can also be tracked down on Twitter @TSPSweeney

Carl Barker: I maintain a web presence at www.holeinthepage.co.uk

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Thanks everyone for stopping by. Fading Light: An Anthology of the Monstrous will be released on September 1, 2012 by Angelic Knight Press. Been seeing some great early reactions to this anthology.

For those interested, here are all the previous stops:

1. Fading Light Multi-Author Interview @ http://lincolncrisler.info:
2. Fading Light Multi-Author Interview @ The Nocturnal Library
Keep an eye out over at Wag the Fox, Fantasy Book Critic, and The Dark Fantastic as the tour continues.