Friday, September 21, 2012

Author Insides: E.S. Parkinson


E.S. Parkinson is a writer and historian interested in and inspired by the lives of "ordinary" people. She has worked as a social historian and as a midwife, and these roles impact on everything she writes, in direct and indirect ways. She is fascinated by people’s stories; their ways of making sense of their world and their ways of getting through. She likes cricket, tea, and old books about cooking and housecraft. She lives in Nottingham, United Kingdom with her partner and teenage children.

Her short story "The Red Shoes" appeared in the July 2008 issue of The Battered Suitcase, and her LGBT historical coming-of-age novel, Somethin' Else, was published by Vagabondage Press in March 2012.



When did you first realize you wanted to be a writer?

‘Writer’ seems a very strong word – I probably shy away from it a bit. I do write, I have always written, but there is no particular sense, I don’t think, of wanting to take on that persona. I couldn’t tell you when I first wrote a ‘story’ that wasn’t for school. I scribbled a lot in my teenage years – diaries and manifestos and letters and fragments of places and of people. I struggled with characters though – it seems to be abrogating so much power to create someone. I think I’ve got over that a bit now and maybe it’s because I’m older but I suppose I no longer feel that I can write only about me.

Why do you write?

Because I have to. Which sounds really stupid, or egotistical at the very least, but the stories itch in my blood and it’s a relief and a release to get them down on paper.

Is being a writer/poet anything like you imagined it would be?

I’m not a writer, I’m just someone who writes so I’m not sure I can comment. I don’t even feel that I have a particular idea of what a writer should be or how they should live.

What do you think makes a good story?

I don’t know. I can tell you what works for me, but writer, written and reader are so individual. That is one of the things that fascinates me about fiction – the fact that what I see, what is in my head is so clear, so obvious, but I have no control over what other people will see or even, weirdly enough, how the characters I try to write about will develop and behave. Once you have written a story, once it is out of your head, it begins to breathe on its own. It’s hard to get your head round, and sometimes I panic, but mostly I like that aspect.

I need characters I can care about. That's the bottom line for me I think.

What's your favorite genre to read?

When I was a teenager and in my early twenties I read a lot of fiction. Now days I find I don’t at all. In fact I hardly read anything for ‘pleasure’, I don’t watch television and I don’t go to the cinema.

Who is your favorite author or poet?

Larkin for poetry, PG Wodehouse and James Joyce for everything else.

What books or stories have most influenced you the most as a writer?

Probably Wodehouse, which sounds daft given my current writing, but he has had a huge influence on me. It doesn’t show except in small ways I suspect; I certainly couldn’t plot like he did. But his writing seems to me to have economy and elegance, and he had the most delicious way of turning a phrase. He’s fun and the best answer to stress and gloom.

What books or stories have most influenced you as a person?

I have no idea. I don’t think I’ve lived my life through books at all.

Where/how do you find the most inspiration?

In the everyday. In the people on the streets, in snippets of conversations on buses or in shops. I have, for my ‘real’ working life read and used a lot of oral history and that has been very significant to me. I’m interested in ordinary things.

What does your family think of your writing?

Writing is very much part of my working life as well as my being this itch in my blood. I write all the time, so I think they’ve got used to it.

What is your work schedule like when you're writing?

This question makes it all sound very grand! I work full time so fiction gets squeezed around this and family life. I write very fast and I write long hand in pencil in A4 notebooks, and then type it up. I tend to work like this because it does mean I can write anywhere – on the sofa, at the kitchen table, in bed, on trains or in cafes. It also works for me because although I can scrawl very fast, nearly as fast as I can think, my typing is very C3. I type one handed, generally using one finger, though I’ve recently graduated onto using my thumb for the space bar. Although I find I have become more adept at writing directly onto a keyboard when its work related, it does impact on my flow of thoughts. Writing long hand and then typing also gives me a first pass at corrections.

Do you have any writing quirks or rituals?

I don’t know whether typing one fingered is a quirk or a handicap! I’m not particularly ritualistic because my writing time is opportunistic and time limited.

Is there anything you find particularly challenging in your writing?

Possibly all of it.

What are your current projects?

When I first wrote Somethin’ Else I envisaged it as primarily a two-hander between Jim and Edward, with quite a limited and claustrophobic palate. To a certain extent it stayed like that, but I was caught unawares by how strong a character Jim’s sister Dorothy became. I am currently trying to tell her story, which has overlaps and parallels with Jim’s in terms of the themes of entrapment and escape.

What are you planning for future projects?

The idea, possibly, maybe, is that Somethin’ Else will be the first part of a trilogy told backwards.

Do you have any advice for other writers?

None at all I’m afraid.

You can find E.S. online at her blog at http://esparkinson.wordpress.com/ and purchase Somethin' Else at Amazon, B&N, Powell's or other bookstores both in print and ebook.
 

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Author Insides - Mitchell Edgeworth

Mitchell Edgeworth was born and raised in the cultural wasteland of suburban Australia. He graduated from Curtin University in 2008 with a double degree in Professional Writing and Creative Writing, which has somehow failed to secure him a career. After teaching English in South Korea in 2009 and backpacking across Asia and Europe in 2010, he has returned to Australia.

His debut publication, short story "The City," appeared in the Autumn 2011 issue of The Battered Suitcase.


Mitch, when did you first realize you wanted to be a writer? 

I have no idea; it extends beyond my youngest memories.

Why do you write?

Escapism and creation.

Is being a writer anything like you imagined it would be?

It’s hard. It used to be a lot easier, when I was a kid, and didn’t care about what other people would think of my work.

What do you think makes a good story? 

Intrigue. It has to have a fascinating premise. As a reader, if my attention isn’t grabbed in the first few paragraphs of a short story, I’m gone.

What's your favorite genre to read? 

I’d prefer a really good sci-fi novel over a really good literary novel, but really good sci-fi novels are a lot rarer than really good literary novels.

Who is your favorite author or poet?

David Mitchell, hands down.

What books or stories have most influenced you the most as a writer?

Hard to say. I read a lot and I think I’ve developed a writing style that’s fairly generic and can’t be traced to any one author. I know that as I was growing up I certainly tried ripping off John Wyndham, John Christopher, Philip Reeve and Philip Pullman a lot. Reeve would definitely be the author whose descriptive style I try to emulate; he’s a fairly low-profile author of young adult fiction, but as a former illustrator, his ability to paint a picture with words is amazing.

What books or stories have most influenced you as a person? 

That’s an easier one. My understanding of human nature was hugely influenced by Calvin and Hobbes and Terry Pratchett’s Discworld series. By the time I read David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas I was all grown up, but it lays out a manifesto for altruism that I greatly admire and would try to live by if I wasn’t so lazy and selfish.

Where/how do you find the most inspiration?

Other writer’s stories, and daydreaming.

What does your family think of your writing? 

It rarely comes up, which I’m fine with. I’m pretty self-conscious and I generally keep my writing to myself. My best friend is a musical composer and often gets annoyed at me because I’m the only other creative person he knows, but I feel uncomfortable discussing creative endeavours.

What is your work schedule like when you're writing?

I’m a night owl and tend to be most productive after midnight, when there are fewer distractions.

Do you have any writing quirks or rituals? 

No. I’m a pretty lazy writer and can’t really afford to have a set of requirements in place before getting some work done.

Is there anything you find particularly challenging in your writing?

Motivation, especially in the last few years. I have plenty of ideas for stories but never the desire to sit down and write them. Now that I’ve received the sweet, sweet validation of a published story, I’m hoping that will change.

What are your current projects?

For the last five or six years I’ve been working on an online serial novel. It’s an objectively terrible novel (which I won’t link to here) and because I’m a stubborn person it’s also the albatross around my neck distracting me from working on better projects. When I can ignore the albatross, I’m writing a series of short stories revolving around the crew of a dilapidated spaceship two hundred years in the future. Not the most original idea, but there’s something really fun about that Star Wars/Cowboy Bebop/Firefly idea of collecting an oddball crew of misfits and criminals on a ship and sending them off to have swashbuckling adventures.

What are you planning for future projects?

I do intend to eventually expand “The City” into a full-length novel. I also have faint ideas about a young adult adventure set in an alternate universe Australia.

Do you have any advice for other writers?

Bookmark Duotrope’s Digest (www.duotrope.com), a searchable database of pretty much every fiction journal and magazine. Way easier than trawling through Google and Wikipedia.

Where can we find your work? 

This is my first published story (thank you, by the way!) but I keep a blog at www.grubstreethack.wordpress.com. It’s mostly book reviews but there are also a few stories lying around there. I also kept a travelogue of my trip around Asia and Europe at www.gentlemenoftheroad.wordpress.com.


Sunday, April 1, 2012

Author Insides - M. Shaw


M. Shaw has eaten two books in the course of its life: The Things They Carried and Little Women, in each case because it hoped to gain their powers. It has burned a number of others because it hoped to gain insight from their sacrifice. It is taking applications for a third book. Books are not to be eaten lightly. It is very hard to do.

Shaw’s surreal and hilarious short story ” Toccata and #&%$!!” appeared in the Autumn 2011 issue of The Battered Suitcase.

So, when did you first realize you wanted to be a writer? 

I don't want to be a writer. I really have done my best to avoid it, and have actually succeeded at giving it up for periods of time, but it keeps coming back like a smoker's cough. What I want to do is sit at home in my pajamas, eat cookie dough and splatter paint all over the walls, but I don't see that this scenario is forthcoming.

Why do you write?


Let's stick with the smoking metaphor. Being a writer is like being a smoker: those who aren't one consider it an offensive habit, but for those who are it's barely a habit at all. Just something you do, almost passively.

Is being a writer/poet anything like you imagined it would be?

The way things have gone, I honestly can't remember how I imagined my life would be when I was younger. I know that when I talk to people about being a writer, their conceptions of what it entails are almost never in any kind of line with reality. I asked a friend of mine how much he thought writers were paid for short stories and he said $20,000 (I told him, try $500 for top-shelf periodicals). I don't reckon my preconceived notions were much different back before.

What do you think makes a good story? 

*I think* the most important thing for a good story is for it to feel in some way organic. A lot of stories strive toward a certain point, a certain moral, try to tie up all loose ends and make everything have a point and purpose and be understood by the end, but that doesn't really work for me. They feel skeletal, like they've had all the meat picked off and been edited right down to the bone. Besides which, they just ring false: life doesn't work that way. I want to be reassured that life doesn't make sense, and I want to read stories that don't exactly end so much as leave me to think. My favorite joke goes like this: A severed head rolls into a convenience store and says (the joke doesn't end here but that's the best part so it's better to just imagine how awesome the rest must be).

What's your favorite genre to read? 

Does short story count as a genre? It's definitely what I read the most of. If I'm going to spend time on a new book, I figure an anthology with one good story will be better than a novel with one good chapter. Almost all of my favorite authors are ones I first encountered through their short stories. As far as which shelf it's on in the bookstore, most fictional genres do just fine, except that I'm very hard to impress with mysteries. I read historical fiction if I'm hanging out with historians and want to make them laugh. In nonfiction I enjoy psychology (but not pop-psychology) and social sciences.

Who is your favorite author or poet? 

Kelly Link. See also: What do you think makes a good story?

What books or stories have most influenced you the most as a writer?

Joanna Russ' The Female Man. Freud, mainly “The Uncanny,” “Totem and Taboo,” and The Interpretation of Dreams. Barthelme's ambitious 40 Stories and 50% more ambitious 60 stories. Gene Wolfe's The Fifth Head of Cerberus. Kelly Link again, particularly “The Girl Detective.” Kouhei Kadono's Boogiepop and Others. Angelica Gorodischer's Kalpa Imperial.

What books or stories have most influenced you as a person? 

Any number of biographies of Queen Elizabeth I of England. The 1818 version of Frankenstein. A certain book of poetry, This Brevity by Gianmarc Manzione. The writings of Munenori Yagyuu. Gaiman's The Sandman. Once again Kelly Link, particularly “Magic for Beginners.” Also The Communist Manifesto. Oh, and Susan Faludi's Backlash.

Where/how do you find the most inspiration?

Through sacrifice. Through striving toward harmony with nature. From involving myself in conversations but not saying anything. If you want to learn a lot about people, shut up.

What does your family think of your writing? 

They don't. I came from a puppy mill.

What is your work schedule like when you're writing? 

More like what's my writing schedule like when I'm working. I work second shift and my only form of transportation is a bicycle. But the thing is, my best writing gets done when I have very little time to do it and during the time I do have, I need to do it secretly, as if I were sitting in public looking at porn (when people see you writing they will sometimes want to talk to you about it and OH MY GOD). I sweat all the way downtown, hop into a cafe and scratch out a few pages, go to work for 8 hours, freeze my ass off back to the 'hood, scratch out a few more pages in a bar, edit on the weekend. Stuff gets done pretty slowly. “Tocatta” took 5 months just for a first draft.

Do you have any writing quirks or rituals? 

Ever seen Mystery Men with the invisible boy who can only turn invisible when nobody is looking at him, including himself? Yeah.

Is there anything you find particularly challenging in your writing?

What you need to understand is that I'm not really a person; I'm a dog. That I can write to begin with is a miracle.

What are your current projects?

Emigrating to England. Also I'm hot for meta-fiction and frame stories these days and experimenting with such, reading as well as writing. Plowing through Catherynne Valente's Orphan's Tales and finding a lot of good stuff.

What are you planning for future projects?

I want to try illustrating my own stories. I want to have a dream in which I kill one of my recurring nightmares.

Do you have any advice for other writers?

Try the patch. I'm not saying it will necessarily work, but at least you'll have tried. Write a story longhand and burn the only copy, to help yourself get used to letting go. You can save your rejections if you want to, but this strikes me as rather silly. Like they're some kind of currency or something.

Where can we find your work? 

I think people who enjoy “Tocatta and #&%$!!” should definitely check out “And Points Beyond” in the 2010 Semaphore Anthology (published by the e-zine of the same name, where the story appeared in June 2010) and “Uncle Rick” on the Nil Desperandum podcast. More of my work appears in the anthologies Sick Things (Comet Press) and Daily Flash 2011 (Pill Hill Press), or online at amphibi.us, 69 Flavors of Paranoia, and Bloody Bridge Review. I keep an up-to-date list of publications on my blog.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Author Insides - Michael Lee Johnson

Michael Lee Johnson is a poet from Itasca, Illinois who lived 10 years in Canada during the Vietnam era.  His work has been published in 23 countries. His published poetry books are available through his site as well as Amazon.Com, Borders Books, and Lulu.com.

His poems "Kansas" and "Mexican Street Children" appeared in the Summer 2011 issue of The Battered Suitcase.

Michael Lee, when did you first realize you wanted to be a writer?

I have been scribbling at paper and later restaurant napkins (while in Canada referred to as serviettes) since I was 16 or 17 years old.  When I was about 11 or 12 walking toward the wooded area in rural South Bend, Indiana,  I "saw an Easter bunny" that I was convinced that it was as tall as the telephone pole it was beside.  Before I understood that completely, I wanted to write about it, long before I really knew what writing was about?  Due to a severe disease as a youth, I barely made it through grades two, three, and four in grade school, thus missing basic phonics, grammar, and syntax.  So I have struggle throughout my life with these elements of writing.  I also failed creative writing class in university.  Fortunately, my conceptual skills and imagistic mind, coupled with the eccentricities of poetry have allowed me to survive these shortcomings.

Why do you write?  Why not? 

I think it has something to do with life experiences and interpretations of those experiences, plus locating where my conceptual and imagistic ability derive from:  right or left hemisphere of the brain.

Is being a writer/poet anything like you imagined it would be?

I think from a relatively early age I realized an ability to imagine things in a big, different, and diverse way.  I didn’t realize they were meant to go on paper till later.  I didn’t realize how poor a poet could be.

What do you think makes a good story?

A good story is good mental cinema; use of common words in a creative way; the ability to see an incident or photograph in an isolated way and expand upon everything around it.

What's your favorite genre to read?

I write primarily imagistic poetry free verse with storytelling elements, some limited form poetry such as Japanese poetry since I love the short imagery and lingering feeling.  I tried fiction a few times but so far have failed miserably; which is unfortunate since fiction does pay.  “The Lost American:  from Exile to Freedom,” was originally intended to be a novel but evolved into a book of poetry.

Who is your favorite author or poet? 

I have been heavily influenced by:  Carl Sandburg, Robert Frost, William Carlos Williams, Irving Layton, Leonard Cohen, and Allen Ginsberg; especially Carl Sandburg.  I was able in 2010 to visit Galesburg, Illinois, his birthplace and the Carl Sandburg State Historic Site.

What books or stories have most influenced you the most as a writer?

Jesus Christ, the new testament of the Bible; The Fight of the Eagle, by J. Krishamurti; Ernest Hemingway, The Old Man and the Sea.  Also a little book of poems entitled The Little Tin Soldier, author forgotten, but I carried this book with by clothes hitchhiking on the highways of Ontario in exile during the Vietnam War.

What books or stories have most influenced you as a person?   

Most are above, but I’d say over all the influence and astonishment of acts in the Bible by Jesus Christ, and the promises there within.
Where/how do you find the most inspiration?

For me inspiration is often found in nature and expanded to reflect a human condition of sunshine or rain.  Sometimes it is a few moments lying in bed before sleep and recording on a tape recorder; sometimes it is driving along with that tape recorder and re-listening over and over making changes.  Sometimes it jumps at me over a few shots of Vodka.

What does your family think of your writing?

I have very little family to share with anymore, most are in heaven with their wings or roasting their pitchforks in hot ashes.  I share my works with fellow small press editors, local long term friends, and drive acquaintances nutty with the occasional email−most remember poetry as their most contemptible subject, this included me when only the “Masters” were read.

What is your work schedule like when you're writing?

I don’t think I have a schedule: in between running a small demanding little promotional business (www.promoman.us), that affords me the luxury of writing time, sliced between editing four poetry sites and averaging about fifty to eighty five emails a day.

Do you have any writing quirks or rituals?

Yes.  Knowing full well of my numerous shortcoming, swearing, impulsive behaviors, sometime difficult to get along with, I read the following to start each day:

Today there is peace within me.
I trust God, revealed through Jesus Christ,
that I‘m exactly where I’m meant to be.
I have given this control of my life over to God,
through Jesus Christ,
(all the fears, anxieties, self-doubts)
and taken it away from myself.
This is the gift of faith.
His presence and healing
settles in my bones.

It’s basically recognizing and realizing there is more to life than me.

Is there anything you find particularly challenging in your writing?

That is simple:  my life time struggle with phonics, grammar, and syntax.
What are your current projects?

Right now my only current project is to catch up with everything lingering.

What are you planning for future projects?

A long term project is to gather all my initial works with all the new ones hitting the market now plus many not exposed to small press yet, collecting them all into a large book of poetry likely called “Electric in the Sun.”

Do you have any advice for other writers?

Yes I do. It is imperative you support local and international small presses, without them, poets and others would be screaming in cornfields and no one would be answering. They are a God sent, support them! The editors work hard to edit, format, select, review, emails many hours each day. They are like writers, and many of them are or were writers. Since poetry pays little, requires much, I see my personal story writing poems since 16 years of age, now 63 years old as an example of determination. Most of my publishing has come in within the last four years-I had/have poems dating back as far as 1967. Now, forty seven years later, by poems are getting published all over the world, and most of them came from yellowed papers, wrinkled napkins and such, they wait for the hand of revival. Never give up hope and always remember a power greater than self is driving the life vehicle home.
Where can we find your work? 

Just type “Michael Lee Johnson” into Google search and you will find me everywhere.  My new poetry chapbook with pictures, titled From Which Place the Morning Rises, and his new photo version of The Lost American: from Exile to Freedom are available at: http://stores.lulu.com/promomanusa. The original version of The Lost American: from Exile to Freedom, can be found at: http://www.iuniverse.com/bookstore/book_detail.asp?isbn=0-595-46091-7.  New Chapbook:  Challenge of Night and Day, and Chicago Poems, by Michael Lee Johnson:  http://www.lulu.com/product/paperback/challenge-of-night-and-day-and-chicago-poems-%28night%29/12443733.  I have 2 previous chapbooks available at: http://stores.lulu.com/poetryboy.
I have been published in 23 different countries. I’m also editor/publisher of four poetry sites, all open for submission, which can be found at his Web site: http://poetryman.mysite.com.  All of my books are now available on Amazon.com:http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_ss_b?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=michael+lee+johnson. Borders:  http://www.borders.com.au/book/lost-american-from-exile-to-freedom/1566571/.  Now on You-Tube:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ih5WJrjqQ18.   E-mail: promomanusa@gmail.com.  


Sunday, March 4, 2012

Author Insides - Brian Barnett

Brian Barnett lives with his wife, Stephanie, and son, Michael, in Frankfort, Kentucky. He has appeared in nearly thirty publications, online and in print, including several anthologies. He was co-editor of the anthologies Toe Tags, Toe Tags II and Long Live The New Flesh: Year One with William Pauley III, and has published a collection of horror stories titled State of the Dark. For up-to-date news on all things Brian: http://merrilyhauntingfrankfort.blogspot.com/

Brian's humorous poetry appeared in the Autumn 2011 issue of The Battered Suitcase.


Brian, when did you first realize you wanted to be a writer? 

I’m not really sure if I consider myself a true ‘writer’ even now. I can remember back to when I was younger (I can’t remember my exact age) and my parents had an old typewriter in the living room. I felt inspired enough to want to write then, but I had no idea how to even approach doing it. Plus typing was a bit of a mystery to me.

Now, I write whenever I can, which is not very often it seems. That’s why I don’t consider myself a writer, really. ‘Writers write’ is the saying I’ve always heard. I only write when I’m able, which is not nearly often enough. Sounds redundant, huh? Probably because I’m rusty from lack of writing.

Why do you write?

I love to write. I love translating the stories that I see in running through my head repeatedly like that obscure late-night B-movie that nobody else has ever seen. I love being able to bring those stories to life so that other people can see why I’m so deranged.

Is being a writer/poet anything like you imagined it would be?

Not at all. Well, at least not like I imagined it when I was younger. I used to think that if your name was stamped on a book cover, you were well-to-do and rich. As I got older and noticed that there were tons of writers out there and probably the top 1% actually made a living from it, I started to wise up.

Also I’ve been far more successful that I deserve to be. No I haven’t made a great deal of money, but I am certainly gaining a lot of credits and I’m improving all the time. Who knows, I might actually make enough to gas up the family van soon.

What do you think makes a good story? 

I used to think lots of scary monsters and lots of spooky sequences made stories good. But the more I read and the more I write, the more I see that the characters, especially in longer stories, are the key to a great story. If people care about your characters, they will be sucked in. No matter how many cool sequences you put in your story, readers won’t take it as seriously if they don’t care about the characters. I’ve read a few books now where I thought, “wow that was cool”, or “wow that was creative”, but I didn’t like the overall product because the characters were so weak.

What's your favorite genre to read? 

Horror. That’s probably 90% of my reading load. However, I like a few other genres to change the pace from time to time.

Who is your favorite author or poet? 

Author: Richard Matheson
Poet: Edgar Allan Poe

What books or stories have most influenced you the most as a writer?

I’d love to say Richard Matheson, but after reflecting on all that I’ve written, I’m a lot more pulpy than he is. I guess H.P. Lovecraft or Guy N. Smith would fit the “influential” bill.

What books or stories have most influenced you as a person? 

I haven’t really approached any books or stories that have influenced me that deeply. To me, books are entertainment, not life-changing. Perhaps I just hung myself with that statement, but I have yet to find anything so earth-shattering that I change my viewpoints on life.

Where/how do you find the most inspiration?

I wish I knew. Sometimes the writing bug just bites me and I can crank out a publishable short story in one 20-minute to half-hour sitting. If I was always that inspired, I would have a much larger body of work.

What does your family think of your writing? 

My family is very supportive. They usually buy the books that my work is in (anthologies and magazines). My wife provides enough tough love to keep me grounded. If I write something that is garbage, she’s not afraid to tell me. The problem is I don’t usually listen until it’s too late. Then once I wipe the egg off my face, I open up a little more to her suggestions.

What is your work schedule like when you're writing? 

Sporadic is probably the best word I can think of. If I get time and inspiration, I write like crazy. Other times, I write very little if at all, I’m ashamed to say.

Do you have any writing quirks or rituals? 

Nope. I just sit down and go to it. I used to create outlines for every story. But now I only do that for stories with longer story arcs and multiple characters.

Is there anything you find particularly challenging in your writing?

Just keeping my muse happy and busy seems like the most challenging part of my writing. I also have a difficult time staying focused on one project at a time.

What are your current projects?

I have a few novellas in the works. I’m a few chapters into four different stories. As I said in the previous answer, I have a hard time keeping focus. I’ll write a chapter or two for one story and then I’ll move to another. I usually don’t get a whole lot of progress on any one story at a time. However, I usually finish two or three at the same time, so I guess I break even in the end.

What are you planning for future projects?

Always planning. I have close to a dozen projects jotted down. Now if I could just get to writing them…

Do you have any advice for other writers?

Toughen up. You’ll get rejected probably more than you’re accepted when you’re first starting out. It’s nothing personal. Just take the advise of the editors and improve your work. That’s the only way to get better.

Also, be patient. That’s my biggest problem. Some publications take months to review your work. Don’t pester them with lots of follow-up emails. You certainly don’t want to annoy the editor before they read your story. If more than three months go by, then yes, send a polite follow-up email to see if the email gremlins stole your story. Outside of that, it’s a lot of sitting around and waiting.

Where else can we find your work? 

Everywhere, it seems. Probably the quickest way to access my stories is to access them from my blog page. I have them everywhere, so I’m not going to list them here.

My blog:  http://merrilyhauntingfrankfort.blogspot.com/

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Author Insides - N.P. Miller

N.P. Miller is a Baltimorean native currently residing in Winston Salem, North Carolina. His poetry has appeared in such publications as Twisted Tongue, Dark Gothic Resurrected, and Moon Washed Kisses.

His poetry was also published in the Autumn 2011 issue of The Battered Suitcase.


When did you first realize you wanted to be a writer? 


Truth be told, I never really decided on becoming a writer, but more or less falling into it. I’ve always been writing stories and poems since I was in elementary school, so writing was just a natural, everyday thing for me. I couldn’t imagine pursuing anything else.

Why do you write?

I love entertaining people, and I think poetry is my best outlet for that. I get a rush when friends and family and complete strangers read my work. It’s invigorating, really.

Is being a writer/poet anything like you imagined it would be?

It’s actually more difficult than I thought it would be. The persistence of being a writer is probably the most complex aspect about it. It’s tough to find time to write every day, but if you love the craft, you’ll make time.

What do you think makes a good story?

I think well-developed characters are important, but it balances out with an interesting and engaging plot. I can’t say that one is more essential than the other. They kind of share the same space. Also, snappy dialogue – I’m a sucker for quick wit and sharp tongues between characters.

What's your favorite genre to read?

When I was younger, I was all about fantasy and horror stories, but these days I lean more towards the slice-of-life and coming of age genres. I enjoy reading stories about characters and situations I can relate to. There’s a comfort in that.

Who is your favorite author or poet?

I haven’t the fingers and toes to count them all, but if I had to save two a burning building it would have to be Edgar Allen Poe and Noah Cicero. I’ll read anything by these guys.

What books or stories have most influenced you the most as a writer?

In my freshman year of high school, our English class read “The Catcher in the Rye.” I have never been so entertained by a book before. I was so intrigued by the story; I went out and bought myself a copy a couple days after we finished it. I still have it on my bookshelf today.

What books or stories have most influenced you as a person?

“The Human War” by Noah Cicero was pretty influential for me in terms of how I viewed the world. The book taught me how there can be light in darkness, even when it’s small and speckled, and how one can still be an individual and not be an asshole about it.

Where/how do you find the most inspiration?

Here comes the strange part: I really don’t read that much. Most of my ideas come from music, film, or events that have happened in my life. I also love to travel and explore new places, which always help with my writing. If you discover a new place, you might discover a new you along with it.

What does your family think of your writing? 

They support me all the way, even though they’re not the biggest fans of poetry. They always have an attentive and honest ear when I want to read my work to them. I couldn’t ask for better critics.

What is your work schedule like when you're writing?

I usually bring a notepad with me and jot down ideas while I’m really supposed to be working. They haven’t caught me yet, so it works out rather nicely. Other then that, I write after I get off work. Usually I’ll have some experiences from the workday that I can incorporate within my writing.

Do you have any writing quirks or rituals? 

I always have a pen or marker in my mouth while I’m writing. I’m a ritualistic pen-chewer. Guilty as charged. What can I say? It helps me think. I also light scented candles, especially vanilla. It really opens up my senses. Also – as stereotypical as this may seem – I usually write at night. I can’t focus well in the daytime when there’s all this activity going on.

Is there anything you find particularly challenging in your writing?

Persistence is perhaps the most challenging part. Coming up with ideas can be difficult, as well, especially when considering a theme or topic for a poem.

What are your current projects?

Right now I’m writing a screenplay. I’m kind of putting everything else on hold and focusing on this project alone.

What are you planning for future projects?

Not quite sure just yet. Whatever it is, I’m certain it will involve two things: writing and a bunch of teeth-mangled pens and markers.

Do you have any advice for other writers?

Write for the sake of writing. Don't wait for the conditions, and don't rely on the prose fairies to swoop into your computer and pen your words for you. If you got a story, tell it, and then share it. The written word makes the world go 'round.

Where else can we find your work? 

I’ve been published in several online magazines such as Dark Gothic Resurrected, Moon Washed Kisses, and the UK e-zine Twisted Tongue. I don’t have a writing website or anything because I’m not that cool. I hope to have one up soon, though.

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Author Insides - Jonathan Slusher

Jonathan Slusher is a native of the Garden State, now living in the San Francisco Bay area. He has a MS in Environmental Science and has spent the past six years — two of those abroad in France — as a stay at home father. You can find recent work by Jonathan in Paper Darts Magazine, Toasted Cheese Literary Journal, and on his webpage at www.waterlanding.net.

Jonathan's short story "That Far to Deep River" appeared in the Autumn 2011 issue of The Battered Suitcase.


When did you first realize you wanted to be a writer? 

I realized that I wanted to be a writer gradually alongside with my reluctant acceptance of being a failure as a conversationalist.

Why do you write?

I’m not a quick thinker. Writing gives me a second chance to come up with all of the things that I wish I’d said in person. Also, whether writing them down or just imagining, creating stories is a great way to get someplace else, straightaway.

Is being a writer/poet anything like you imagined it would be?

I am still only in the beginning stages of taking myself seriously as a writer. I want to continue to write purely for pleasure, but I do shamefully admit indulging in the occasional delusion of grandeur.

What do you think makes a good story?

This is hard to say, but I prefer good story telling that is enhanced, not overly enriched with straightforward, meaningful prose.

What's your favorite genre to read?

Literary fiction is my favorite genre, but I am also not ashamed to admit being a huge fan of Robert Parker, J.K. Rowling, and Carlos Ruiz Zafón.

Who is your favorite author or poet? 

If I have to choose one favorite author I’ll go with Paul Auster. He’s so bold. Not every book is one my favorites, but each is almost always a new invention in itself. I read The Book of Illusions years ago and it is still very fresh in my mind.
 
What books or stories have most influenced you the most as a writer?

The short stories of T.C. Boyle make me want to search harder for my own secret formula.

What books or stories have most influenced you as a person? 

Even during the times when everything I owned fit neatly into a few plastic clothing baskets I’ve always kept a perfectly worn out, hardcover copy of Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance. It isn’t even one of my all time favorites, but it was the book that made me crave stories with a purpose.

Where/how do you find the most inspiration?

I have a lot of story ideas that I’d like to get out, but don’t always know how. Attempting to find the right words to bring these ideas to life can be inspiring, sometimes it can be frustrating, and the challenge can be good or bad depending on my state of mind.

What is your work schedule like when you're writing?

Although it would probably be a good idea I don’t have much of a schedule. I do, however seem to make far better use of my free time when I don’t have very much of it.

Do you have any writing quirks or rituals? 

Early morning at the kitchen table when everything is still and I have a strong cup of coffee within arm’s reach: that’s the most fruitful setup there is.

Is there anything you find particularly challenging in your writing?

Editing is hard for me. The waiting aspect of publishing is extremely tough. I also still regret self publishing my first novel.

What are your current projects?

I’m just finishing The Room Above the Garage, which is a short story about a jealous husband –who is supposed to be out of town--lying in wait in the room above the garage to find out if his wife is cheating on him. He’s worried about getting caught and he can’t decide how many evenings will be enough to ease his suspicion. As usual, I have no idea if it will be worthy of publishing or doomed to join the collection of other duds lurking throughout the unorganized files on my hard drive.

What are you planning for future projects?

I’d like start working on a second novel. The first one took me almost two years and I gained fifteen extra pounds. I’m just now finally getting back in shape.

Do you have any advice for other writers? 

Try your best to write for your own enjoyment and avoid getting bogged down with worrying about how your writing will be received by others.

Where can we find your work? 

You can find my work in Paper Darts Magazine and Toasted Cheese Literary Journal. I also have a personal website at waterlanding.net