Category Archives: Interviews

Interview with Charles Markee

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Author Charles Markee

To start off the year, I’ve had the chance to interview the author of the book, Otherworld Tales: Irish the Demon Slayer, Charles Markee. He is a great inspiration if you’re interested in Celtic lore. His story weaves the imagination with traditional Irish legends such as the Tuatha de Danann and Cuchulain. So, enjoy a peek into the world that Charles created and how he got there.

1) Your book includes a lot of Celtic lore and fairy tales. Why did you
choose to use them as a starting point?

My initial starting point was autobiographical. As a pre-teen, I spent summers in a cabin my grandfather built circa 1921 in San Geronimo, a rural community in Marin County, California. My two best friends and I rode bikes and explored the hills, forests and creeks. We had adventures just like the three characters in my book.

In the first two chapters, the boys seek help from an old woman the boys believe is a witch. For her Irish accent, I remembered a 1960s broadcast of an interview with the Irish poet, Ella Young, in which she described communicating with trees, animals and even rocks. I love the outdoors, so it seemed natural for talking trees to become a significant character in my book.

That Irish theme struck a familiar chord. My mother was 100% Irish, we lived in an Irish Catholic neighborhood of San Francisco and I attended a high school with primarily Irish and Italian kids. The school motto was and still is today, the ‘Fightin’ Irish.’

I had grown up surrounded by this Irish population. Curious about my heritage, I spent two years studying Celtic mythology. Most of my research uncovered tales of leprechauns and fairies, not what I wanted. Finally, I discovered a treatise titled, Cuchulain of Muirthemne, by Lady Augusta Gregory, a peer and friend of Yeats. I poured thorough this exhaustively and incorporated many tales of the great Irish hero, Cuchulain, as updated adventures for the boys and one girl in my book.

2) Have you ever been to Ireland?

Funny that you should ask. Half way through the second or third draft, my wife told me that I couldn’t very well write a story about Ireland without going there, so we did. After a few days in Dublin, we rented a car and got completely lost looking for Tara, but eventually found it. It’s a mystical place, the presumed location of the ancient castle of the king of kings. I made it the location of Queen Aine’s castle in my story. We then took a train to Belfast in Ulster and traveled through the countryside where Cuchulain fought his battles. I stood at the window most of the trip taking photos of the landscape. Later I bought contour maps of the area so I could accurately describe those places that the boys visited in their search for Irish’s sister.

3) Are there other adventures planned for Irish and his friends?

Several readers have asked for a sequel and I’m about half way through a first draft. My target release date is the summer of 2012. This time the boys discover another part of the Otherworld that exists inside Mt. Shasta in California. You can download the first chapter here: http://www.charlesmarkee.com/html/irish2.html

4) What inspires you to write?

Everything inspires me to write, especially talking to other writers. People I meet become my characters. Places I see become the environment in the story. Events I witness become portions of the plot. I’m always writing even when I’m not writing. Finally, I confess that I love the god-like ego-trip of creating a fictitious world filled with my characters who take on an existence of their own.

5) What advice would you give young writers?

Read voraciously, especially in the genre you want to write in. Get to know your target audience. Join and participate with your local community of writers. Join or form a critique group. It’ll keep you sane. And above all, keep writing.

6) In one sentence, how would you describe writing?

For me, writing is the process of producing a dream state in readers’ minds that will take them into the world I have created.

7) In closing, what other books are in the works? Events or
appearances for 2012?

In addition to the sequel about Irish and his friends mentioned above, I have a completed manuscript sitting on the shelf. It’s the story based on true events about a Hispanic girl who discovers her best friend is dying of a kidney disease and her parents refuse to allow medical intervention. It’s a story that needs to be told, but my 72 rejects tell me that it won’t succeed with traditional publishers. You can download the first chapter here: http://www.charlesmarkee.com/html/maria_summary.html

A short story titled ‘Hills like Brown Camels,’ a parody on Hemingway’s ‘Hills like White Elephants’ is published in a 2011 anthology, ‘The Sound of a Thousand Leaves.’

Available from Amazon – http://www.amazon.com/Vintage-Voices-Sound-Thousand-Leaves/dp/1463740220/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1325276789&sr=1-1

I’m working on another short story for the 2012 anthology. It is titled ‘The Bear’ and it’s based on an event in the life of my father-in-law who was a bear guide in the Shasta/Siskiyou County mountains for 30 years.

As the coordinator for the North Bay Society for Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators (SCBWI), I plan, provide speakers and host quarterly meetings in the Santa Rosa area for children’s book writers.

***Charles Markee is the author of Otherworld Tales: Irish the Demon Slayer. Link to the book review here. His website is located at www.charlesmarkee.com.

Interview with Laura Lond, Author of The Lakeland Knight Series

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The summer interview series continues with an interview with Laura Lond. Her middle reader novel, My Sparkling Misfortune, is told from the perspective of the villain protagonist with lots of twists to keep you guessing. Laura discussed her plans for a sequel, her writing routine, and what to expect from her next.

1) How did you get your ideas for your book, My Sparkling Misfortune?
The overall setting and theme are inspired by traditional fairy tales and I guess Disney classics. I’ve always loved a good adventure with knights, swords, castles, and of course some miraculous happenings. As to the specific idea for the book, they usually come to me in the form of a small seed that plants itself deep inside and starts growing. In this case, it was a villain who had a lot to say, and, I thought, deserved a chance.

2) Why did you pick the villain perspective for My Sparkling Misfortune?
Lord Arkus’s sense of humor had won me over. I heard him “talk” and I knew it would be best to let him tell his story.

3) What other adventures are planned for Lord Arkus and the sparkling, Jarvi?
Lord Arkus is not happy with the situation he finds himself and his sparkling friend in in the end of Book 1. He tries to remedy that, which turns into a whole new quest, more heroic than Arkus would be willing to admit.

4) What is your writing routine?
When I come up with a book idea, which is usually a theme, a character, or a scene, I try to expand it, develop the story as much as I can. I am not a good planner, my stories prefer to write themselves as I go, but it helps to have at least all the major turns mapped out, so I try to do that.

I write in the evening or late at night, when all the other work is done and there are no distractions. Writing is a slow process for me. I often wish I could complete a book sooner, but every writer is different, and I have to accept that I’m a slow one.

5) Could you summarize what writing means to you in one sentence?
Letting out stories I have inside of me.

6) What advice could you give to young authors?
Don’t give up, don’t be discouraged, write as much as you can.

7) What are some current projects you are working on now?
I am writing the sequel to My Sparkling Misfortune. When I’m done with that, I plan to return to another unfinished fantasy novel. Other ideas will have to wait.

My Sparkling Misfortune is available in Paperback and Hardback Editions at Amazon.com. Ebook editions available as Kindle and Smashwords editions.
*** For more information on Laura Lond and her other books, please visit her website at: http://laura-lond.tripod.com/.

**For a link to a review of My Sparkling Misfortune, click here.
**Link to her second book’s review, My Royal Pain Quest.
To continue with your INDIEpendence Day Blog tour event, link back to the Indibles Writers Blog.

Interview with Lindsay Buroker, Author of Goblin Brothers Adventures

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I was lucky to be able to interview Lindsay Buroker as our first Indie Children’s Author. Lindsay has written Goblin Brothers Adventures, a charming short story collection for kids 7-12 yrs old. She was able to share her inspirations and where she gets her story ideas. Plus, a few surprises of what she has in store for her readers.

1) Tell us a little bit about your current book.

The Goblin Brothers Adventures, a collection of short stories for middle-grade readers, is the first ebook I published. Way back in December! Okay, that was only six months ago, but I’ve done a lot of e-publishing since then, so it seems like it’s been a long time.

I originally wrote the goblin stories to put up on my website (http://www.goblinbrothers.com), and several of them are still free there. I wanted folks to be able to get to know those characters, because I was planning to write some novels featuring them.

I have a rough draft done of the first novel with Malagach and Gortok, and I’m hoping to get back to that later this summer. It’s gotten pushed to the side a little since children’s ebooks don’t sell nearly as well as adult books (not many kids with Kindles yet, I guess!). Those characters are a lot of fun, though, and I enjoy writing about them, so I’m definitely planning to get that first novel out.

As for my adult fiction, my most recent release is Dark Currents, a heroic fantasy adventure and the sequel to The Emperor’s Edge, the first novel I published (also back in December). As you can see, I’ve been busy!

2) How did you get started as a writer?

I learned to read at three and started making up my own stories shortly thereafter. I never thought of writing as something one could do as a career, though, so it was a long time before I “got serious” about it and started finishing short stories and novels.

I’m not making a living doing it yet (hey, it’s only been six months), but I can see the potential. As an indie author publishing ebooks, you earn a much higher cut than you would going through a traditional publisher, so you can actually make decent money without having to be a bestseller.

3) What inspires you to write your stories?

I just like spending time with my characters. Maybe I need to get out more? (Wink.)

4) Where do your ideas come from as a writer?

I get inspiration from a lot of places, but history is a big one. I enjoy reading about everything from pirates to steam engines, and I like watching shows like the History Channel and Discovery (yup, I’m a geek like that). I don’t have the best memory, so don’t ask me any trivia, but if I see an idea I like, I’ll write it down to use in a story at some point.

5) For a young author,(children 6-17) what would you recommend they do to start their dreams of writing?

Write (of course!) and start getting feedback as soon as you can. Writing is just like learning the piano or taking soccer lessons–there’s a limit to how much you can improve by yourself.

Parents like everything you do automatically, because they’re your parents, so they’re not always the best critics, but teachers can help make you better. An English or creative writing teacher might be able to help you find a mentor too (maybe a local author you can talk to).

6) If you could have anything in the world, what would it be?

An earthship. 🙂

7) In closing, what are your next projects? Appearances to mention?

I’m working on Book 3 in my Emperor’s Edge series, and, as I mentioned above, I’m hoping to get back to work on that first Goblin Brothers novel soon.

No appearances, but you can always find me on Twitter (http://www.twitter.com/goblinwriter), and you can visit me on my blog too (http://www.lindsayburoker.com). I talk about e-publishing and book promotion there, and you can also see what I’m working on in the news section.

Goblin Brothers Adventures can be found as a Kindle Edition and Smashwords Edition. A review of her book can be found in our Review Section.

For more information on Lindsay Buroker, visit her website at: http://www.lindsayburoker.com.