Interview With Del Dryden

After earning two graduate degrees, practicing law awhile, and then working for the public school system for over ten years, Del Dryden finally got a clue. She tossed all that aside and started doing what she should have been doing all along, writing novels.

When not writing or doing “mommy stuff” she reads voraciously, noodles around with html and css coding, and plays computer games with her darling (and very romantic) husband. She is fortunate enough to have two absurdly precocious children, and two delightful mutts. She and her family are all Texas natives, and reside in unapologetic suburban bliss near Houston.

 1.       You had a very full professional career before becoming a writer. How does this background affect your writing style?

 I like to think education is never wasted (this may just be how my brain rationalizes all those student loans). Learning to “think like a lawyer” is not unlike learning to think like a writer, in that both mindsets require a certain objectivity in viewing people and their motivations. And the psychology-related degree probably just exacerbates my already overdeveloped tendency to analyze people, but that works great when it comes to analyzing and developing characters. Like I said, education is never wasted! Sometimes it’s just applied a bit differently than the educators probably ever dreamed 😉

 2.       How many different genres have you written? What ties them all together?

 Obviously I got my start as a published author writing contemporary erotic romance and erotica. I also write mainstream romance/fiction with romantic elements. I’ve written a little paranormal (lesbian vampire erotica!), quite a bit of straight-up science fiction (mostly short stories) and am now moving into a primary focus on steampunk which I’ve been a fan of for several years.

 I think what ties these all together is an emphasis on character. For me, regardless of genre or setting or heat level, the writing is always about the characters and their interior journeys.

 3.       How do you get involved with gee/k/ink?

 I co-founded gee/k/ink with fellow writer Daisy Harris, following a long twitter and email conversation about the rise of “geek girl” culture and how great that was, and how there seemed to be an overlap between geeks and kinksters online. Daisy and I pulled in some of our favorite fellow kinky geek girls, Christine d’Abo, Charlotte Stein, Sommer Marsden and Danica Avet. Basically we all saw a niche, and decided to fill it with erudite discussions of popular cultural trends and cutting-edge sexual analysis. Instead we ended up focusing on goofy posts about alien peen and prurient speculation about the sex lives of superheroes! Seriously, if you read the blog, there is a high probability you’ll see a post involving alien peen, and an almost one hundred percent chance of seeing gratuitous pix of hunky dudes from science fiction movies/nerdy tv shows. Fair warning.

4.       What’s a nerdmance?

 A romance featuring nerds! Written by a nerd (me), primarily for nerds or those who enjoy reading about them! There’s something delectable about putting two or more shy, hyperlexic, socially awkward characters into a situation where their hormones short-circuit their ability to reason. I love to read it, and I adore writing it! I believe it was Christine d’Abo who coined the term, in reference to an upcoming Carina release of mine with a Dom hero who’s a rocket scientist and a submissive heroine who writes code…for science!

 5.       Can you explain the term “nerdgasm” to the layreader?

 A nerdgasm is the reaction a nerd has during/after the reading of a well-written nerdmance.

6.       One more term to define, please. What is “Steampunk?”

 Yikes! Got a few hours? The short answer: steampunk is science fiction with a Victorian flavor, either based on an alternate Victorian-era reality in which steam/clockwork technology is more advanced than it actually was, or on a constructed post-Victorian reality in which steam/clockwork power and technology remained the dominant modes, rather than petrol or other later technologies like computers. But that’s only a sorta-answer. I have a longer description on my blog, with links to some other resources.

 7.       What was the spark that ignited The Lamplighter’s Love?

 The Lamplighter’s Love started as a much shorter story targeted to a steampunk anthology (it was rejected). Then I expanded it, made more of the holiday setting, and subbed it elsewhere for a steampunk holiday call (it was rejected). Finally I rewrote it as a novella and sent it to my fabulous editor at Ellora’s Cave (she bought it). The original scene was the one where Mary is strapped in the Chair, and the idea for that came from a stock photo I saw while browsing for a picture for something unrelated.

 8.       Did you know from the beginning that it would be an erotic romance?

 Oh, good heavens yes.

 9.       Do you have rules that define how steamy you write your sex scenes?

 Not really. I just write them. If I’m writing something I intend as mainstream romance, rather than erotic, there are some words I try to avoid using (I won’t name names, but they rhyme with flock, wussy and snit).

10.   Are zombie novels considered mainstream?

 These days, probably so, but when I say “mainstream” I usually mean “a romance that isn’t erotic romance”. It’s a heat level designation, to me.

 11.   What is sexy about the undead in Love With a Chance of Zombies?

 LOL! Nothing is sexy about the undead. They’re icky! Actually there are no undead in Love With a Chance of Zombies; the zombies are just unfortunate victims of a virus similar to rabies, and there isn’t actually a supernatural element involved (at least not in that book. If I ever write another book set in that world, I may delve into that a bit more).

And in fact, the hero isn’t quite a zombie yet anyway, as the premise of the book is that Lena, the heroine, is helping him find a way to keep from turning after he’s bitten. Fortunately Lucas, the hero, is a phenomenal medical researcher, so he has some great skills to fall back on in his quest to not become a lurching, slavering brain-eater. Suspense and science! And, of course, sex.

 12.   Can you describe the path that led to your first publication?

 Mine is the most boring publication story ever, I’m afraid. I wrote a book called When in Rio (during NaNoWriMo!). I polished it, then sent it off to Avon, Kensington, and Ellora’s Cave, and Ellora’s Cave bought it. Actually, EC offered a revise and resubmit on that first book, then while I was working on that revision my editor at EC flat-out bought another submission from me which actually became my first published book (Snow Job, which was also a NaNoWriMo book).

 13.   You are published through both self and traditional means. What do you consider when deciding which avenue to take?

 The self-publishing was really just an experiment, and I don’t know that I’ll try it again because it takes a tremendous amount of work that I think I’d probably rather leave to others.  I think it works best (with a few very rare exceptions) for those who already have a very well-established platform and base of readers who will automatically buy anything the author puts out. If I get to that point some day I might try it again, but at this point I’m happy focusing on just writing the books.

 14.   How did you find your editor? Does she work on all your releases?

 Which one? I have several! At Ellora’s Cave, my editor is the fabulous Kelli Collins. She was my acquiring editor there and has kept me ever since, much to my gratitude and delight. For Carina Press, I’m going to be working with Deb Nemeth on the aforementioned nerdmance. I have a few friends who’ve worked with Deb and they all say wonderful things about her, so I’m really looking forward to that. For my self-pub, Love With a Chance of Zombies, I was fortunate enough to have the help of the incomparable Ruthie Knox, who is an editor in real life when she isn’t being an insanely talented writer.

Mostly, like a lot of writers, I rely heavily on a network of trusted beta readers who are also writers, to read stuff before it ever gets to the point of being released or sometimes even submitted. Ruthie beta-reads for me, as do Christine d’Abo and Daisy Harris, and I return the favor (you get great feedback from beta readers, you learn a lot about writing craft when you read that feedback and when you read for others, and the added bonus is you get to read some awesome books before anybody else. I’m currently reading a late revision of Christine’s upcoming Carina release, Calling the Shots, and enjoying every second of it!).

 15.   What was the process like to create your cover art? Did you have a lot of input, or just a little?

 Much as with the editor thing, this varies from publisher to publisher. Ellora’s Cave and Carina both have forms the author fills out to provide the cover art department with information about the book, and of course you can request certain elements be considered for the cover, but for the most part the input ends there and the cover artists create something they think will work best to sell that book. Sometimes their vision meshes with yours, sometimes it doesn’t, but unless you have some strong objection to the cover it’s usually out of the author’s hands once the form is filled out.

I did the cover for Love With a Chance of Zombies myself so had full artistic control on that one.

 16.   How do you promote your books? In your experience, what works and what doesn’t?

 I’m the worst at self-promotion, but I’ve had the best results from just being active on twitter, keeping my web site current, and also placing ads at some blogs/sites I think are likely to be frequented by people like me. Lately I’ve focused less on advertising at the traditional online places (book review sites and romance genre blogs) and more on places that aren’t inundated by book ads; humorous blogs and web comics that I read regularly, in particular. I’m planning to do more of that in the future.

 17.   What is your favorite electronic or digital writing tool?

 Scrivener!

 18.   What is your favorite non-electronic writing tool?

 Moleskine notebooks. I have a bit of an addiction.

 19.   What is the most persistent distraction from writing?

 It’s a tossup between kids (especially my homeschooled 6th grader), dogs, and twitter.

 20.   Who shot first, Han or Greedo?

 Han! I have strong feelings about this. Lucas has long since lost all his geek cred with meanyway, but I thought the attempt to change the order of these particular events after the fact went way beyond geek considerations and violated the integrity of the story and the character.  Moral ambiguity was a hallmark of Han Solo’s character (it’s a hallmark of that character archetype). If Greedo shoots first, and Han is only reacting, that also makes Han boring and robs his character of its core power.

The shortlink for this post is http://wp.me/p1qnT4-ss

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Up in the Air

Overall, I’m feeling pretty good, even though there are major things going on in the family life. My father has a heart condition, and he’s in the hospital for the six thousand and eighty fifth time in his life. His prognosis is not good, and I’ll probably be stretching the family budget to take a 15 hour train ride so I can be with my mother.

I’m glad I did a lot of prep work during October. I finished Synaesthesia, my time travel serial I’ve been publishing on my blog a chapter at a time. I’ve entered chapters 15-18 plus the epilogue into the blog and scheduled them, so all I need to do is give them a quick edit and an image or two and they’ll go up exactly on time. I also pre-formatted and scheduled my SyFy Q of the Day posts all through November.

I made and froze several meatloaves and chicken pot pies, so my family won’t starve whether I’m out of town or just busy writing.

I wish I was ahead on interviews, but at least I’m on time, and I’ve arranged who is being interviewed each week halfway through December.

And the NaNoWriMo story! At last! It’s been beating its way out my head for weeks now, and I was afraid it was going to come out before I was ready. I’m so very glad that it is now started. I stayed up till 2am to start it, and I reached 2k words, which is a great start. More tonight.

How’s everyone doing with ROW80? Have you changed your goals?

The shortlink for this post is http://wp.me/p1qnT4-sn

Posted in Commentary & Musing | 4 Comments

SyFy Q of the Day: Sparkly Vampires

Before I even started this blog, I would occasionally pose a SyFy Question of the Day to my facebook friends. Sometimes, it was directly related to what I was writing, and I really did want some input to help me decide what direction to take with the story. Other times, it was purely fun.

Here’s one of my favorites, from August 2011:

SyFy Question of the Day: You have been condemned to spend 24 hours in the “Twilight” (AKA Sparkly Vampires) universe being hunted by the bad vampires, but you can pick one character and their weapon of choice out of any ~other~ universe to have your back.
Who do you pick?

Emily:                    Albus Dumbledor… he has the elder wand after all.

Heather:              I want Captain McSpirk! (Kirk, Spock, and McCoy all rolled into one) with the magic kit of hyposprays, phasers, and his hands full of nerve pinches ready to administer!

US_Nessie:         LOL!

Kirk:                       I choose Acheron from Sherrilyn Kenyon’s Dark Hunter series

US_Nessie:         What’s his weapon?

John:                     Luke skywalker with his light saber and force

Kirk:                       Acheron’s?… he is a weapon LOL   Good series of books if you havent read them… dark vampirey type romance/erotica

Kyle:                      I think I would be Anita Blake. She kind of is a weapon herself, but I would choose a shard blade from “The Way of Kings” as my weapon.

Douglas:               Buffy.

Geri:                      Anita Blake rocks…I wanna be Anita. Can I, can I?

Bernard:              Kojack the Night Stalker!

Lisa:                       Blade, oh, and can I make an alliance with the “bad” vampires and take out the sparklies first? I’m a Nosferatu fan who never liked Angel out of Buffy and was very disappointed when Spike went all puppy dog.

Dan:                       Valentine Michael Smith, (no weapon needed)

Gawain:               Dammit, Dan! – you stole my partner!!     Guess I’ll have to settle for the Archangel Gabriel (as portrayed by Christopher Walken in The Prophecy).

(Does Divine Providence count as a weapon?) 😛

Glenn:             @Kirk…and the Enterprise. Phasers, photon torpedoes…no more vampires.

Alan:                      Govenor Tarkin…and the Death Star.

Gawain:               I wonder if Cain (as in Cain and Able… as told by the WW original storyline) would have complete control of the sparklies, since he is The Progenitor of All…     …makes you wonder, in fact, how the vampire cultures would interact with each other. Would *any* of the non-sparklie vampires *not* want to kill them??

US_Nessie:         I’m not sure if that counts as cheating, Glenn… what does the jury say?

Gawain:               Hmm… I’m pretty sure that Kirk would just charm them into submission.

I would love to hear what you think! Even if you are reading this post a year or more after publishing, I hope you will leave a comment with your own ideas on this topic.

Post Script: I’ve wavered back and forth about the whole SciFi vs SyFy thing for a long time. Saving just one little letter in a tweet isn’t really saving much, and the Polish translation is a really strong argument against SyFy! I’m not one to make changes lightly. But I think that, at the end of this year, along with other structural changes I might make to the site, I will change SyFy Question of the Day to the name SciFi Question of the Day.

Joe will be happy. :)

The previous SyFy Q of the Day is Enough ___ Already!

The shortlink for this post is http://wp.me/p1qnT4-rM

The next SyFy Q of the Day is Starfleet Karaoke

Posted in SyFy Question of the Day | Tagged | 2 Comments

Interview With Tammy Holloway

Happily married – Nontraditional student – Veteran of the US Navy – 30,000 words into writing a science fiction novel – Animal lover – Volunteer – Goofball…Wait, that should be first…..No no no, Happily married goofball …..I mean, Happily married to a goofball….wait..no….I mean, yes I am married to a goofball….Okay okay, here it is……Happily married goofballs who love their four-legged kids, who enjoy helping others in need and are 1/4 of the way through our Master’s…Yeah, that’s it!

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1.       So, did you know your husband was a redneck before you married him? Or did you find out after it was too late?

I was the queen of his double-wide trailer at first sight. We are definitely two peas in a pod. So to answer your question….yes I knew his neck was as red as the Georgia Bulldogs;-)

 Here we are planting collard greens:

 2.       I love that your site has a whole section dedicated to Encouragement! Were these quotes all compiled at once, or did you collect them over time?

I found them all together from this website: http://sites.google.com/site/amberdine/beginning. I always look for inspirational words, videos or pictures to help keep me going. I also enjoy helping others in any way I can so that is why I created the Encouragement page ~ http://tammyholloway.wordpress.com/encouragement-2/

I have volunteered for many organizations over the years to satisfy my need to help others. My latest venture is with a group called Feed Fannin. Money is raised in different ways and I am in charge of this one:

 And some past cool volunteer jobs:

Laramie Raptor Refuge

Give Kids The World

 

Marine Life Oceanarium (Now IMMS)

 (This is not me pictured here)

 …and a whole list of other wonderful places.

 3.       Where did you learn your puppy whispering skills?

The art of puppy whispering is my own unique way of training. I’ve researched animal behaviors since I was very young and owning dogs all my life made it easier to study them. When other kids were watching cartoons and playing with dolls, I was watching animal documentaries and feeding the wild squirrels and pigeons out of my hand. Dogs have their own language and I take the time to watch every action. It is a combination of patience, understanding, reading the language, enrichment and a whole lot of love that helps me train. It is not related to the dog whispering you see on TV but they meet the same objective I suppose. Buster and Daisy both learned the famous “Beer Trick” at a young age but Buster was 6 months old. Daisy is seen here doing the trick at 5 months old. This training is the foundation for many other tricks:

 http://youtu.be/fjkjjw5TLC4

 4.       I have a cat that plays fetch! Do your dogs have tricks that just came naturally to them? Or is it all training?

That is too cute! I have to see that. Some of their tricks do come naturally but most from some form of training. Here is Daisy performing the “Clean the Peanut Butter Jar” trick…she’s so talented lol!

 5.       Is it difficult to live with an alien named “Al” in your brain who keeps repeating “Norf du spak! Norf du spak!”? Does he at least work as a muse, and does he have a brother?

I am ready to have brain surgery to get him removed. Flak dort kheb …..”AL!!!”……Anyway, he serves no purpose other than to irritate.

 6.       Does Al help at all with your migraines?

Yep. He helps make them worse.

 7.       There’s a place on your website with feeds from Stephen King and Dean Koontz. What is it about these two authors that moved you to include their updates on your blog?

Both inspire me to write. My twisted imagination reminds me of some of their work and it helps drive me to reach toward a goal to be as good as them one day. It is like having two magnificent, jaw-dropping wonders on either side of me….Grand Canyon on one side and Mount Everest on the other….both  have a very difficult path to get to the end but neither one impossible.

 8.       Does your military experience influence your writing?

No. My military experience was uneventful and boring mostly. I received the Humanitarian Award while I was in which I am proud of but nothing to really write about. However, I did get the G I Bill which helped pay for college, which gave me writing experience, which eventually led me to this point. If that counts as influence then my answer is yes.

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 9.       What’s your stance on the great “traditional versus self-publishing” debate?

As I travel down this road, I learn more and more about the two. They both serve a purpose for different “target markets”. You have your traditional readers who refuse to get into the age of electronics and the younger generation who may never turn the actual pages of a book.

 10.   How did “About My Mother” come to be published on Amazon?

I entered a contest with Aberdeen Publishing and placed in the top ten. I was very excited about that since it was just a quick story thrown together with no edits. It was all from the heart. My father passed away and I watched the pain my mom went through after he passed. I sat at the computer and wrote without stopping. It was a Mother’s Day present for her which she now cherishes.

 11.   What is “The Deep Freeze” about?

The Deep Freeze is a science fiction novel about a boy and an alien who share an inner connection. The boy, Michael, works at a local grocery store and finds himself locked inside a faulty walk-in freezer while preparing for inventory the next day. When he finally sabotages the freezer, it begins to thaw and something else comes to life in the freezer with him.  He manages to escape but so does Xanthan (the name Michael gave it from his D&D game days) and now Michael is the only one that can stop the menacing alien from its reign of terror.

 12.   What do you need to accomplish before publishing “Deep Freeze?”

More lessons on writing and about 40,000 more words. The words are the easy part. My descriptions, however, need some work 🙂

 13.   What are your plans to publish and promote “Deep Freeze?”  

I want to go with the traditional way of publishing so I will be spending quite a bit of time on this book to make sure it is in the best format. As far as promoting the book, I will do whatever necessary to get it out there. I will contact book stores in order to do signings and attend writing conferences or other activities to get The Deep Freeze recognized. I joined the local Chamber of Commerce as another outlet for promotion as well.

 14.   When did you get serious about writing and why?

I got serious about writing when I woke up one day last December and began writing The Deep Freeze from a dream. I kept writing and writing and realized how much I loved it. I also realized I had no writing experience other than years of college papers and general English courses so I put The Deep Freeze on hold and joined the Georgia Writers Association. I have been attending writing conferences ever since. I also began writing short stories to sharpen my writing skills.

 15.   What is your favorite electronic or digital writing tool?

My trusty ol’ laptop

 16.   What is your favorite non-electronic writing tool?

A cheap pen and a 10 cent notepad

 17.   What is the most persistent distraction from writing? 

School. I have to put my college first and if I have homework (which I do now lol), I cannot concentrate because I am worried about getting my homework done.

 18.   What is your ideal writing environment? Have you ever been able to create it?

Right here at home. It is peaceful, quiet and I live in the mountains in the middle of the woods. The creek runs along the side of the house in the shape of a crescent and the birds chirp a sweet melody in my ears. Home…definitely.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OajWsSmhG-0

19.   How important was it to you, personally, to establish a web presence as a pre-published writer?

To be honest, I was just so excited about The Deep Freeze that I felt the need to express it in any way I could. I first started with Facebook since I was already there. I felt the encouragement from friends and it helped push me further. I then decided to try and get to know some wonderful, experienced people like you to learn all that I can. The blog http://tammyholloway.wordpress.com/  came when I learned that Stephen King started out writing short stories as did many other famous authors. I felt it was probably the best way to practice before going back and finishing The Deep Freeze. It is also a good way to get feedback. However, I try to refrain from too much time spent on each site and focus more on reading.

20.   Who shot first, Han or Greedo?

Well that depends on age I suppose. If kids are reading this, Greedo shot first. We don’t want to go around messing with what is “morally” correct and what is not now do we? However, Greedo is no longer around to testify in his defense and the chances of some kid actually reading about me are slim so Han shot first. It’s a good thing because Greedo was a horrible shot!

 Han was not:

AmyBeth ~ Thanks again for giving me the honor of being interviewed. Your questions were great and the time you put into research for each interviewee is amazing. Writers need people like you in their lives and I am lucky to have cyber met you. It’s time to feed Al before he gets mad;-)

You’re very welcome! It was so much fun to learn all about you!

The shortlink for this post is http://wp.me/p1qnT4-rp

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Pre-NaNoWriMo ROW80 Update

I finished Synaesthesia, which was a major goal. I’m debating regarding my Steampunk Mermaid story… I’d love to finish it before November, but it might be better to concentrate on planning ahead for my blog posts instead. I already have this Friday’s interview and next Tuesday’s SyFy Question of the Day formatted and scheduled, so they’ll post themselves at the appropriate times. I could, with very little effort, do a few more Tuesday SyFy posts and schedule them. It will take more effort to do the interview questions, and I might just leave those to do during NaNoWriMo. At least I have the subjects all scheduled, and I’ve exchanged the initial e-mails with each of them through the second week of December.

Another wrench thrown into the works. I got a call last night that my father is in the hospital for a heart catheterization. They did the cath this morning, found a large blockage, and now he needs open heart surgery. He’s had 2 heart attacks, 2 open heart surgeries, and numerous smaller procedures in the past 30 years. My November plans might change.

I’m ready to get going on Natasha’s Story. I spent some time perusing Model Mayhem and picked out a look for each of my characters. Unfortunately, the model whom I chose to represent Natasha herself never answered any of my messages, so I don’t have permission to share her picture, I can only link to it. Without her permission, there’s no point in even trying to get permission from the secondary characters. Maybe I’ll post their links later… next week when I’m in the beginning of writing it.

The shortlink to this post is http://wp.me/p1qnT4-rT

Posted in Commentary & Musing | 6 Comments

SyFy Q of the Day: Enough ___ Already!

Before I even started this blog, I would occasionally pose a SyFy Question of the Day to my facebook friends. Sometimes, it was directly related to what I was writing, and I really did want some input to help me decide what direction to take with the story. Other times, it was purely fun.

Here’s one of my favorites, from March 2011:

SyFy question of the night: “Enough with all the ______ lately!” (OK, the easy answer is “sparkly vampires”, but I know you can do better.)

Frank                   Ok how about “monsters as human love interests”

AB                          Good…. good… let’s keep em’ coming, folks!

Hannah               Giant leprachauns frolicking to star wars music while eating swedish fish?          Lol I don’t think I get the question but I said the first thing that came to mind…

AB                          THAT was the first thing that came to mind?!?!? rotflol!

Hannah               lol well my mind is a very random and sometimes scary place…

Joseph                  Sci-Fi not Syfy 😛

There’s no “Y” in Science Fiction, especially not 2 of them. 🙂

Al                            Zombies…

AB                          Ah, yes, I was waiting for someone to say zombies! Ninjas?

US_Nessie                  Hunky werewolves? Well, maybe we can keep them around just a little while longer…

Glenn                   formulaic writing

US_Nessie                  ‎@Glenn that’s why I gave up reading Xanth. After, like, 20 books…

I would love to hear what you think! Even if you are reading this post a year or more after publishing, I hope you will leave a comment with your own ideas on this topic.

Post Script: I’ve wavered back and forth about the whole SciFi vs SyFy thing for a long time. Saving just one little letter in a tweet isn’t really saving much, and the Polish translation is a really strong argument against SyFy! I’m not one to make changes lightly. But I think that, at the end of this year, along with other structural changes I might make to the site, I will change SyFy Question of the Day to the name SciFi Question of the Day.

Joe will be happy. :)

The previous SyFy Q of the Day is Humanoid Robots

The shortlink for this post is http://wp.me/p1qnT4-rj

The next SyFy Q of the Day is Sparkly Vampires

Posted in SyFy Question of the Day | 2 Comments

Interview With Sarah Barnard

Sarah was born in March 1969 in Dunfermline, Scotland, but didn’t live there long.She currently lives in Chesterfield, a lovely market town in the UK.

She’s a Pisces according to one zodiac and a rooster by another. Make of that what you will.

Mother to 2 children and running her own business from home, Ethics Trading, as well as writing means Sarah is always busy. But in what spare time she has she keeps chickens and grows some of the family’s fruit and veg.

Sarah began writing properly after a dare was issued by a good friend in November 2005. But she’s been making stories since teenage years, just never got round to finishing anything or writing most of them down

She is a publisher and author of several books, including the Portal Series, available in paperback and Kindle Edition.

1)  Are you a pantser or a plotter?

Mostly a pantser, with a sprinkle of plotting and frequent racing around manic research as I go along. I don’t like to over plot or I find it constrains the flow of what I’m working on. Or, it has done for the Portal series. The series I’m working on now seems to need a bit more plotting and research before I really get into it. I’m open to trying new ways of approaching my writing and if more plotting is needed then that’s the way I’ll go.

I feel it’s important to remember that there’s no “right” way to write, there’s no wrong way. There’s only the way that works for you, for the book you’re working on and that may vary from one piece to the next for the same writer. We all grow, evolve and change and if we embrace that then we are open to new ways, new ideas and that is what keeps our writing alive.

2)  What is NaNoWriMo? Will you be participating this year?

NaNoWriMo is the National Novel Writing Month and it takes place every year during November. Tens of thousands of people all over the world take part and it’s purely a challenge to write 50,000 words in 30 days. It’s what started my writing journey properly and it was the birthplace of my first published novel.

I certainly plan to participate this year.

The website is here: http://www.nanowrimo.org

3)  How many years have you done NaNoWriMo? What happened to the books you wrote each time?

I took part in NaNoWriMo for the first time in 2005 and have done every year since. So, this year will be the seventh year running.

        What happened to the books?

2005 – The Portal Between – edited, polished and finally published in Oct 2008.

2006 – Sam’s Story – Filed in a dark and dusty corner, but not forgotten. This was the year I tried planning in detail and I found it easier to hit the word count targets by just padding the frame I already had in place. But the end result felt stilted, constrained and I’ve not yet managed to get it into a state where I’m happy to release it and I’m not sure I ever will.

2007 – A Sci fi foray with a working title of “The Unsecluded Matriarch” Again consigned to the depths of a dusty corner of my hard drive and all but forgotten. It had some promise but went off track. At some point I may dig this one out and work on it.

2008 – The Psychic Sheep – Oh I had fun with this one. It started as a brainstorming session where my writing buddy and I fell about laughing at the idea of sheep who watched you secretly, at the notion of having to ask a sheep if you could use its fleece for anything, at the idea of a society where the sheep were in charge. But when I finished it, I hated it. So this one has little chance of being published.

2009 – The Map and The Stone – Since 2005 my kids have begged to read my books and I told them no. In my head it was “Hell, NO!” but they heard, “No, they’re grown up books.” but still they begged, “Just read us a little bit?” and then the questions would start. Who’s Lily? Why did that happen? And so on. So, in 2009 I deliberately set out to write something that my children could cope with. The Map and The Stone is the result, in print within a year of typing the first words on the page, and now I’m being badgered for a sequel.

2010 – Sage – Another foray into Sci Fi, but with an eco twist and the start of something that could blossom into another series. I’m still working on this and debating how and when to release some Sage stories on Kindle.

4)  When you decided to publish your stories, did you consider traditional vs. self-publishing?

No.

I finished The Portal Between and started sending it out to traditional publishers, totally unaware that self publishing was even within my grasp and before ereaders were popular. I sent it out and I collected rejections, hoping that someone, somewhere would take a chance on me and my book. It came very close a couple of times but didn’t happen for one reason or another.

I only really considered self publishing as an option when I stumbled across an article about it in a newspaper. That was when I put the first books into print. Then came Kindle, and Smashwords and the genius of ereaders and ereader apps. I’m not sure I’d jump at a traditional publishing deal now, unless it was very special.

5)  What was your path to publication?

Complicated, with many turns and dead ends. More like a maze really. But now I’ve reached the heart of the labyrinth I can confront the goblin king, or grab the Triwizard cup and face Lord Voldemort…..

The path to publication is changing all the time, it’s a journey with no end where you learn more and more as you go along.

6)  Besides your own books, what else have you published?

I own a small press partner publisher business. It’s a bit of a mouthful, but it boils down to me using the knowledge I’ve gained on my own publication journey to help other authors find those first choices and see themselves in print.

As part of that I’ve published 2 other writers. Morgan Gallagher who writes horror – I love her non-sparkly vampires. Vamps are meant to be scary. Kristina Jackson, who writes gentler, feel good stories. Then I have Isobel Herring coming to work with me soon. (Are you reading this Isobel? Get on with your edits!)

But my main publishing focus is on my own work and with my collaborative charity project. Ah, nicely leads to the next question….

7)  Tell me about the With Love Project.

In March 2011 there were a bunch of writers hanging out on facebook, chatting and laughing, when someone posted a link to events unfolding in Japan. A huge earthquake had hit and we watched in horror as images of total devastation flooded our screens. One of us had relatives in Japan and was afraid for them, another had a writing friend there. It touched us on so many different levels.

Then one of us said, “I want to do something. But I have kids, a job, I can’t just get on a plane and go and help, and I wouldn’t know what to do when I got there.” It was a tiny plea, an urge to reach out. But we were all in the same position. Someone suggested offering proceeds from their book to the Red Cross and we started thinking. Someone said, “What about New Zealand?” They’d had a large and destructive quake too. What about the Haiti quake?

Through those early ramblings we pulled together a book of random short stories which we released as an ebook to try to raise some money to help people in those, and other, disaster areas.

As an ongoing project I work with a writing and publishing partner in Illinois, Catrina Taylor of The Writing Network, and we plan to produce an anthology a few times a year as our own work allows. All will be constructed of donated work and all will be sold to raise funds for Medecins Sans Frontieres. I’ll expand on them, and why we chose them, in the next bit.

The With Love Project, as it’s become known, has a dual purpose. Firstly we aim to showcase new, emerging and independent talent both in the stories we include and in any artwork we use. Secondly we aim to raise money for Medecins Sans Frontieres. So far we have 2 anthologies published, one due at the end of October, and another planned for the New Year, January 2012.

If anyone would like to find out how to get involved then please check the Ethics Trading website for details. (http://ethicstrading.com)

8)  Medicins sans Frontieres, also known as Doctors Without Borders, is a widely recognized charitable organization. How does the With Love Project benefit them?

All net profits from every single sale of a With Love Project anthology is donated to MSF as soon as we receive the money from that sale. Every single penny. The last donation we sent was the equivalent of 140 malaria treatments. Thinking about the cash in those terms really helps put it into perspective. Another donation was the equivalent of 80 tests for tuberculosis. It all makes such a real difference.

We chose MSF on the basis that this was going to be an ongoing project and we wanted to help in a global way, not just for a single event. We chose them because they “are committed to providing medical aid where it is most needed, regardless of race, religion, politics or gender and also to raising awareness of the plight of the people we help.” (from their website: http://www.msf.org.uk/)

9)  In both writing and publishing, what other professionals do you work with?

I work with a variety of professionals at various stages of any project but I try to find independent businesses where possible. I’d rather support small business and entrepreneurs instead of feeding larger corporations. Local or eco friendly is even better. How we choose to do business, and with whom, can make a huge difference.

10)  Were any changes suggested to you that you were reluctant to make?

No. Any time I ask for feedback on any aspect of my work I am open to all suggestions. I do reserve the right to not implement any feedback I receive but I don’t think I’ve exercised that right yet. Not beyond the odd rephrasing here and there – and that’s more to do with character voice than anything major.

11)  How did you create your covers?

It was a different process for each book. The authors I work with make their own arrangements. The With Love Project covers are each donated and designed by the artist, with the exception of the new book, “After Dark” where the artist donated an image and I set it into the cover.

For my own work, each cover was slightly different in the process used. The Portal Between cover was created by a photographic designer in return for a credit for his portfolio. The Portal Sundered cover I made myself from a photograph I took while on holiday. The Map and The Stone cover was created by an artist who I know through facebook, but I pulled the elements together to form the final cover. Child of the Portal was an image I fell in love with when I saw it on facebook and the artist was happy for me to use it as part of the cover.

12)  What methods of promotion have you found work best?

All the ones someone else does. That’s not just laziness, it’s that when I try to sell my own books I’m not very good at it and I feel like a dodgy person lurking in the shadows, hat pulled low over my eyes, hissing as you pass….. “Pssst, wanna buy a book?” But if someone else likes my books and tells people about them, it carries so much more weight. The best publicity and promotion is from people other than the author, at this level anyway.

13)  What social media do you use? Do you combine your personal and professional or keep them separate?

I use facebook, twitter and google + mainly, but I have accounts at other places too – I just don’t use them as much. I try to maintain a blend of public personal and professional, but I keep the very personal offline. No-one wants to be bombarded by the daily blah.

14)  What is your favorite electronic or digital writing tool?

My PC. I type faster than I write. I sometimes type faster than I think. My desktop is my favourite, purely because of keyboard and screen sizes, and the angle  have it all set up. Second favourite now is my netbook, perfect for taking away from home. My kids play rugby and I end up hanging around so the netbook goes too and I sit and write by the side of the pitch, often sitting in the car to get out of the rain.

15)  What is your favorite non-electronic writing tool?

Oh, you really can’t beat a good quality fountain pen with good quality black ink. I have a parker vector that writes beautifully, smooth and just sheer joy to use. With that you need a good notebook with properly sealed paper so the ink lays on the surface and doesn’t do that nasty spidery thing.

16)  What is the most persistent distraction from writing?

My garden. No, my kids. No, the housework. Maybe facebook….. Oooh…. shiny…. Real life?

17)  What is your ideal writing environment? Have you ever been able to create it?

That varies from day to day, and from project to project. As long as I have my desk, a comfy chair and I’m warm enough then I’m ok. Oh, and snacks, plenty of hot tea and snacks – the variety of which will also vary according to the day, time of year, mood I’m in etc.

18)  Many writers go through a stage when they hate what they’re writing. Do you ever feel this way? How do you get through it?

I’m sure everyone feels that way at times. If I start to hate a piece of work then I stop working on it. Hate is so very strong as a feeling, it’s very different from feeling that writing part of something is hard work, or upsetting, or disturbing. All of those I can just work through and then it’s ok again.

19)  When the day comes that you are on stage, accepting some prestigious award, who are you most likely to forget to thank?

Forget to thank? I’ll probably freeze up and forget how to speak, or breathe, or be back stage having a panic attack while the entire room is waiting for me. But the award would be nice.

20)  Who shot first, Han or Greedo?

More to the point, which version works better in terms of the story and which serves the character development most dramatically? If Han shoots first it shows his almost bad guy status at the start of the films. He’s a gambler, he owes a significant amount of money, he’s not a good guy, he just happens to have the best ship for the job, he’s available and at the right price. He’s really not much better than the other reprobates in the Cantina. When he shoots first it illustrates the level his character begins from, and then his growth to Honoured Rebel Alliance Hero is a real life changing story.

When Greedo shoots first Han is just defending himself and could be said to have an underlying code of honour which diminishes his growth through the films, it lessens him as a character.

The Shortlink for this post is http://wp.me/p1qnT4-qZ

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Getting My Brain Back to Where It Belongs

My brain might be part of my body, but it doesn’t always do my bidding.

I want to finish Synaesthesia. I actually got pretty far along today; just two chapters and an epilogue left. It’s the hardest stage for me… where I know exactly what happens, and I wish it was already written so I could read it! But I haven’t actually put down the words yet.

This is why I like NaNoWriMo. I write much better when there’s an externally-imposed deadline. It’s not so much for my own motivation as it is my excuse and justification. When I did the 3 Day Novel, I had my hubby’s support to take charge of the kids all weekend. He even found me a place to hide away from the world.

I can’t do that every weekend.

I can’t do NaNoWriMo every month.

But one thing I’ve learned about my own writing style is that I’m better and Pantsing. Like now, I was about to log on and say “Uh… I’m getting there…” and magically there are all these other words coming out of my fingertips!

Maybe it’s just the fact that my 12yo is vaccuuming the hall and that makes me happy…

Anyways.

Progress… yes. I have to do an unreal amount of proofreading tonight to turn in tomorrow, but I can do it even though I’ll be getting to bed late. I got a lot done on Synaesthesia; only two chapters and an epilogue to go.

Which brings me back to what I started to say in the beginning of this post before I started rambling. I have been working at getting my brain back to where it belongs.  Synaesthesia is not some little side project I can ignore. I’m posting one chapter at a time, and it would be a huge waste (and disappoint about, oh, eight people who read it) if I just gave up with only a few chapters left. Also, I like it!

My brain wants to think about my story for NaNoWriMo. For some writers, that might be a good thing. Have the plot percolating in the back of their brain for a couple of weeks, then be ready to roll on November 1. Not me. Once it starts, it pushes out all else, and I have to finish a few other things first. Sure, WIP1 and WIP2 can pause till December. But I must finish Synaesthesia and I really want to button up Give Me Your Answer Do as well. And the other danger for me is that once I start really thinking about it, I have to start writing. I have resisted even making little notes, because I’m not sure I could stop myself from doing more.

The shortlink for this post is http://wp.me/p1qnT4-qV

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SyFy Q of the Day: Humanoid Robots

NASA's Astrorobonaut

Before I even started this blog, I would occasionally pose a SyFy Question of the Day to my facebook friends. Sometimes, it was directly related to what I was writing, and I really did want some input to help me decide what direction to take with the story. Other times, it was purely fun. Here’s one of my favorites, from June 2011:


SyFy question of the day: Why make robots humanoid, other than for the familiarity and novelty?


Tony                      Because robot chicks are hot? 🙂

US_Nessie           Good point…

Tony                      At least on TV they are. Not sure about real life. Never seen one… that I’m aware of. 🙂

US_Nessie           And it’s considered rude to “check” whether they are male or female when one does meet them in person.

Tony                      Yep, part of their programming.

Emily                     that way you can have the “perfect” man… program him to your likeing… and store him in a closet when you need you space

Josh                       Because it makes the special effects easier.

Shane                   ‎@Emily: The man could be perfect, as he has a Linux OS. All the lady robots run on Microsoft platforms….

US_Nessie          My platforms would be manolo blahnik.

Matthew              I won’t comment on this one….

Geri                       Because humans are programmed from birth to look for human characteristics. If a robot doesn’t have them, humans will ascribe them…which gets creepy. Paranoia sets in, people start violently dismantling their robots, anarchy sets in, and civilization teeters on the brink of oblivion. You know…or else people just won’t use them.

Emily                     ‎@shane: lol your version of Men are from Mars Women are from Venus… Male robots are from linux Female robots are from Microsoft…

US_Nessie          But… R2D2 was cute!

Geri                       See that’s the thing…R2 was completely NON human in any way – no arms, wheels, random round and/or square bits. It’s gotta be one way or the other, so if the robot needs to be able to do fine manipulation (or stairs) it’s gotta be humanoid or you move into the creepy anarchy scenario again. LOL

Shane                   ‎@Emily: It would appear that I have publicly embarrassed myself again. That book was absolute dreck.

US_Nessie          Some of us (esp the writer types) count on your willingness to embarrass yourself publically.

Shane                   Then let me be your inspirational jackass….

US_Nessie         I have a stablefull! Though some are refusing to comment on this one…

Rocco                    Because Isaac Asimov did it so brilliantly there can be no other way

Lisa                        The costumes fit better?

I would love to hear what you think! Even if you are reading this post a year or more after publishing, I hope you will leave a comment with your own ideas on this topic.

Post Script: I’ve wavered back and forth about the whole SciFi vs SyFy thing for a long time. Saving just one little letter in a tweet isn’t really saving much, and the Polish translation is a really strong argument against SyFy! I’m not one to make changes lightly. But I think that, at the end of this year, along with other structural changes I might make to the site, I will change SyFy Question of the Day to the name SciFi Question of the Day.

Joe will be happy. :)

The previous SyFy Q of the Day is Sugarwater or Saltwater

The shortlink for this post is http://wp.me/p1qnT4-qP

The next SyFy Q of the Day is Enough ___ Already!

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Play Dough in the Carpet

This is an old post… but I am re-sharing it in November 2012 for the Write on Edge prompt “Gratitude.”

Today was most definitely a Monday.

Even though I ignored the dishes and only did as much laundry as I absolutely had to do, there was always something more facing me, insisting Take Care of This Right Now!

There has been no time for writing.

To make things worse, I’m feeling particularly OCD today. My brain will not focus on what I want it to focus on. I’m writing interview questions for Sarah Barnard, who has been so very gracious about me getting the questions to her rather late. But while browsing all the information on her sites, I keep finding more than I can process! This often happens while I’m researching interview questions. Also, my OCD brain really wants to skip ahead to NaNoWriMo and start on that story right away.  But the rules say we don’t begin writing until November 1. Besides, there are other things, like Synaesthesia, that I want to finish  first.

And then, to top it off, I stepped in something squishy.

Play Dough.

My three-year-old’s first Play Dough.

Now stuck in the rubber crevasses in the bottom of my slipper.

Now squished into a thin crepe on the kitchen linoleum.

One might think this experience made my day even worse, my mood more foul…

But it did not.

Instead, I remembered the first time I found Play Dough on the floor.

Or more specifically, hopelessly ground into the living room carpet.

At that time, I was almost gleefully happy to find the mess. You see, for almost ten years, my husband and I thought we would never have Play Dough ground into our living room carpet. Infertility had taken us by surprise; I’d always thought it would be easy for me to get pregnant, but even starting at age twenty-five, it did not turn out to be so simple.

We’d been married more than ten years when we finally brought our six-year-old daughter home.

It was her Play Dough in the carpet that time.

So this time, I really didn’t mind it so much.

The shortlink for this post is http://wp.me/p1qnT4-qJ

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