Welcome to the blog, Anne.
Let's start small: tell us about a great book you've read recently!
I’m working my way through
Jim Butcher’s Dresden series again in anticipation of his new releases this
month and in October so I just finished Proven Guilty. I also read Dragon’s
Reach by JA Andrews which is fabulous! I’m trying to work my way through
all the SPFBO 2020 books slowly but surely.
- Okay, time to escalate things: reality warps and you suddenly find yourself leading a D&D-style party through a monster-infested dungeon. What character class are you, and what's your weapon of choice?
I’m a female
half-elven battle mage. My weapon of choice is my fireball spell, my lightning
spell… and throwing knives. I don’t like close combat. If you’re close enough
to touch me, you’re too close!
- When you’re not trawling through dungeons, how do you like to work? (In silence, with music, or serenaded by the damned souls of a thousand dead shrimps? Do you prefer to type or to hand-write? Are you an architect or a gardener? A plotter or a pantser? D'you write in your underwear, or in a deep-sea diver's suit?)
Tell us a little bit about
your writing method!
I am a pantser. My
Long-Suffering Editrix®has been trying to cure me of it, but I see the outlines
we do in our coaching sessions and they make me twitch. I lost all motivation
to write. So I basically have thrown them out and now I’m just writing. It is
going much better. I listen to classical music generally and I also work in
silence. If there are words in the music I get too distracted. I’ve worked at
home in my design company for 20+ years, so I get up and go through my routine
(exercise, prayer time, violin practice) and then I settle in to work. Our
basement is outfitted as a big office and I work with my husband. I used to
write just on weekends but this year I started writing full time. I still
design and code, but it’s about 20% of what I do. The rest of the time, I’m
writing now. When I write, most of the time I’m on my couch. We have an office
in downtown Louisville and sometimes I will run down there and work, too. I
write with Scrivener.
- What (or who) are your most significant female fantasy influences? Are there any creators whom you dream of working with someday?
Susan Cooper was a HUGE
influence on me. I fell in love with the Dark is Rising series as a
child and I still read it every year. People who love the books recite lines of
it like a code to each other. The books are magical. Madeleine L’Engle and her
books A Wrinkle in Time and A Swiftly Tilting Planet have been
big influences, particularly in helping me devise the Lorica. Carol Berg
definitely inspires me, her Dust and Light duet. Those ladies are kind
of a standard for me, what I’d like my work to mean to others. I think they are
amazing.
I’d love to work with any
of them, but Madeleine L’Engle, of course, is no longer with us.
- What was the last thing you watched on TV and why did you choose to watch it? Alternatively, what games have you enjoyed recently?
The Order, which I
realized was a big academy series. We binged it over the past weekend on
Netflix and I just love it. I’m not a big paranormal person but I really liked
the characters. They reminded me of Dresden.
- The world shifts, and you find yourself with an extra day on your hands during which you're not allowed to write. How do you choose to spend the day?
I’m not yet 50 years old
…but I have four grandchildren. I’d go with the kids and their parents to
Kentucky Kingdom or Holiday World, (local amusement parks.) We do this once a
year now and it is one of my favorite things to do. The kids are so excited to
ride roller coasters and water slides! Throw in a teleport device and we would
all go to Universal Studios in Florida. Harry Potter!
- Can you tell us a little something about your current work(s) in progress?
SPOILERS!
I’m working on Book 2 of
the Call of the Lorica. So Dane and Sara have become bonded as faisant and
Majister. Sara has won an internship with a design studio that serves Hollywood
here in our world while Dane has been taken on a quest for the remaining
refrains of the Lorica. So this book is more Dane’s story, about his quest to
recover the refrains.
- What's the most (and/or least) helpful piece of writing advice you've ever received?
Put the cat in the oven
before you describe the kitchen. There’s a book by that name and it was huge
for me! It’s a very good book. Basically it says to make the action happen
before you go into a ton of description. I don’t always do that, but I do it a
lot more now I’ve read that book.
The least helpful advice
was to outline.
- Every writer encounters stumbling blocks, be it a difficult chapter, challenging subject matter or just starting a new project. How do you motivate yourself on days when you don't want to write?
I search image sites
for strange or odd landscapes or flowers or trees or what have you. Sometimes I
will look for images of my characters. It helps me to think about the story.
- If you could visit any country at any point in history, where/when would you go, and why?
I think I’d really like to
see ancient Britain, especially Wales, at the time of Arthur. I’d like to know
what really happened.
- Who are your favourite female characters in literature or pop culture? And do you have a favourite type of female character you enjoy writing?
Menolly in the Harper
Hall series by Anne McCaffrey and Lessa in the Dragonriders of Pern.
Lorelai Gilmore from Gilmore Girls. I love them all.
I like to write sassy,
bold, foolish women who learn from their mistakes and grow in wisdom. We are
all in process. I like to write about that process. I’m not super interested in
Mary Sue types.
- Tell us about a book that's excellent, but underappreciated or obscure.
Gemini Gambit by D. Scott Johnson is
amazing. It’s The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo meets Ready Player One.
I gush over it because it’s really well done. It’s definitely leaning more to
scifi than fantasy, but it’s a great book.
- Finally, would you be so kind as to dazzle us with an elevator pitch? Why should readers check out your work?
Sorrowfish is the story of
a sculpting student from Louisville, Kentucky named Sara.
Sara is a hot mess. Her twin sister is in a
coma. She’s struggling with sculpture, and she may not graduate. Her best
friend, Peter, wants to date. It’s enough to make anyone sleepwalk.
She visits a world where music is magical and stone creatures move. There, she helps Dane, a wizard-luthier, break an ancient curse. It’s a clean fantasy that readers of CS Lewis or Michael J Sullivan will enjoy. It will make you laugh out loud, and It stands alone, though it is the first book in the series.
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