Showing posts with label #KOTH. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #KOTH. Show all posts

Sunday, July 10, 2016

Author Interview: D.L. Gardner, author of Ian's Realm Saga

With a passion for a good wholesome story D.L. Gardner also (Dianne Lynn Gardner) dives into the adult and young adult fantasy genres. She is both a best selling author and an award winning illustrator who lives in the Pacific Northwest, USA. Dianne loves a book that ignites imaginations, strengthens friendships, spurs courage and applauds honor. Though she targets her stories for young adults, her books are enjoyed by all ages.

Dianne was born in Ohio and raised in southern CA. She attended Northern AZ University and later continued her education in the Pacific Northwest. She's an oil painter, book illustrator, screenwriter and filmmaker. She writes under the names of D. L. Gardner and Dianne Lynn Gardner. Her dystopia novel Altered has hit the best sellers chart and her underwater romance, Pouraka is sure to spark interest. Newest to her collection is the hilarious vampire satire, An Unconditional Mr. Peadlebody.

Website: http://gardnersart.com
Twitter: DianneGardner
Facebook: Facebook profile
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/diannelynngardner
Wattpad: DianneGardner
Smashwords: https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/diendrial  (on sale in July)


Tell me about your fantasy books and where did you get the ideas for the books?

Ian’s Realm Saga is a story about a young man and his father as they discover a portal to another world through their computer. When they enter this magical land of pristine beauty, but deceptive evil, they are separated by sorcery and Ian is thrust into slavery by a dragon worshipping people and finally banished into the wilderness where he meets his enslavers’ enemies. As Ian grows older he battles the dragon, and seeks the mystery behind the twelve year old boy with a magic dagger.

Could you describe the mundane details of writing: How many hours a day to you devote to writing? Do you write a draft on paper or at a keyboard (typewriter or computer)?

I write my drafts on my computer. When I’m writing the draft I try to write at least 1500 to 2000 words a day, and that’s pretty much the same for rewriting and editing. I’m lucky in that I don’ t have another job. Writing and creating is what I do, so I can spend 4 to 8 hours a day writing easily, sometimes more.

What’s more important: characters or plot?

That’s a hard question because you have to have both, a good plot and intriguing characters. However, my stories are pretty much character driven. I think a somewhat shallow plot can be supported by well-rounded and deep characters, but I don’t think you can depend on just a good plot and have shallow characters. In fact, when I begin my outline, I start with character analysis. I don’t mean physical traits, but rather what’s inside them, their soul, what makes them who they are and why. Everyone in my novels has a backstory and sometimes I’ll write short stories about them as a blueprint.

How hard is it to establish and maintain a career in fiction writing?

If you mean financially? Next to impossible. I have a friend who has been an author with the big publishers for over ten years now and she is just now considering quitting her day job, and even still she’s doubtful. You have to have a passion to be a writer and more so a story teller. It has to be in your gut or you’ll be disappointed. You just can’t do it for the money alone unless you work ‘for-hire’.

You also write screenplays? Tell us about that.

I collaborated with a friend on a feature length screenplay of one of my novels (Cassandra’s Castle) two years ago and it came in as a semi-finalist out of 2400 entries. Needless to say I was encouraged. Since then I’ve entered the tough climb of filmmaking and instead of using that screenplay I’ve written a TV series, which we are currently seeking funding for. Just today I learned that the Pilot script for the series that I wrote won 2nd place at a film festival in Ohio (and the trailer came in first place). I’m also in the process of writing a stage and screenplay of my novel An Unconventional Mr. Peadlebody, the first act of which also won Best Mystery at a screenplay festival here in Seattle. I’m beginning to think there is more opportunity for writers in filmmaking, though I’ll never stop writing novels.

If you were to name one piece of clothing that describes you, what would you say?

It would probably have to be some sort of leather tunic. Loose and comfortable, rugged and fit against the weather, hard to tear with your bare hands (you’d better come at me with a sword- haha, I fence). Not real pretty, but gets better with age!!

If you were to write a book about yourself, what would you name it?

Oh my! How about The Trials and Tribulations of an American Female ? I just made that up. I have no idea.

You have to wear a t-shirt with one word on it for the rest of your life. Which word do you choose?

Love

Have you ever jumped out of a plane? If not, would you?

Absolutely not. I know. I should be braver than that but the risks I take are much more subtle and never are associated with fast falling movement.

If you could meet anyone from history, who would you meet and why?

C.S. Lewis. The man was a genius, filled with love and faith and wisdom and a child’s heart. I would love to chat with him, listen to his stories and his advice. Perhaps he’d even critique my work. That would be awesome.

Sing in the rain or dance in the streets?

Singing in the rain.

Name 2 things you consider yourself to be very good at.

I’m good at seeing talent in others. It’s why I’ve been able to get a wonderful crew and cast together for our production, and I’ve been thanked many times by young people for helping them see their gifts and encouraging them to develop them.

I’m also good at seeing and mixing colors. I’m an oil painter and even my students tell me they are amazed how well I know color. It comes natural to me.

Name 2 things you consider yourself to be very bad at.

I can’t make money.

Also I’m not a good housekeeper even when I try. That darn spot never wants to go away, it just jumps on to something else.

You are planning the most awesome dinner party of your life. Which 3 celebrities/historical figures (past or present) would you add to your guest list to keep the dinner talk interesting?


Johnny Depp, C.S. Lewis, and Winston Churchill.

Tell me about your next project?

I’m in the process of getting my novel Cassandra’s Castle ready for publishing.
Cassandra’s Castle is book 5 of the Ian’s Realm Saga, and it’s about Ian’s daughter, who years after her father returns, finds the portal to the Realm while taking photos with her cell phone. She time travels to another world and ends up in a turn of the century rebellion.

Monday, July 4, 2016

Author Interview: Jenna Whittaker, author of Watership


My name is Jenna Whittaker and I am an Australian author who has been writing fantasy, science fiction, and horror novels for as long as I can remember! I have self-published 2 novels--1 science fiction and 1 fantasy, have finished the first draft of a 3rd, a dystopian fantasy (to edit and then publish later this year) and finally am currently writing the first draft of a 4th, another fantasy, about half-way done.

Check out my author blog: jennawhittaker-author.weebly.com
FB: https://www.facebook.com/jennawhittakerauthor
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Jen_W_95


1.                   Tell me about your fantasy books and where did you get the ideas for the books?
I have two novels that are published--one is fantasy, and one is science fiction. Both of these novels’ inspiration came from my dreams! I have a word document of everything that inspires me, and collect up a bunch of ideas that seem to fit together…put it in another word document and start the story!
My fantasy novel is the first one I ever wrote and finished, and is a tale of a world with a dimension of the gods, a man who is born in that dimension and sent to earth, a genetically engineered machine from the future that wishes to destroy his world, and more!
My science fiction novel is my second one, and tells of the last survivors of the human race, hiding inside the hollow earth, watched over by Crawlers--and eventually sent out into space to find a new world.

2.                   Did you have any goals for this collection when you wrote it — to get published, or just to finish, etc.?
I have always written because I love it, and because I think my brain would explode with ideas if I didn’t get them down! The feeling of accomplishment of having finished a novel was all that my goal ever was, but being published--even self-published--is even better.

3.                   What authors do you like to read? What book or books have had a strong influence on you or your writing?
I have a huge collection of fantasy (and some sci fi) novels, and I have always read them ever since I was young. I think that is what influenced me to start writing; first with cliché fantasy, and finally developing my own author’s voice and style into something unique!

4.                   Could you describe the mundane details of writing: How many hours a day to you devote to writing? Do you write a draft on paper or at a keyboard (typewriter or computer)?
I use my laptop and Microsoft Word--I don’t use anything fancy. Doing it by hand would probably kill me, though printing out a completed first draft and editing it in hard copy--heck, seeing the pages there, in real life, of what I’ve written is amazing enough--is useful. I have a goal of about 600-800 words per day on a draft, and that usually takes me about 30-60 minutes. It’s not long, but I find if I push myself to keep going, it slowly gets less fun and more like toil, with the words coming with more difficulty and eventually not really looking forward to it at all. I’m not writing as a job, I’m writing because I enjoy it!

5.                   What’s more important: characters or plot?
Both. I start with a plot and I fill it with characters that fit, but others do it the other way around. Honestly, a unique and fascinating plot goes hand-in-hand with well-written characters. If one of those aspects falls flat, so does the novel.

6.                   If you were to write a book about yourself, what would you name it?
Probably: ‘Why the Hell are You Reading This? Lady Didn’t Do Much Interesting’ with a subtitle of ‘You nosy bastard’. Yup, I think that’s perfect!

7.                   Have you ever jumped out of a plane? If not, would you?
I have! I wanted to for years, but I finally did it for my 18th birthday. It was amazing. I’ve always been a bit of a thrill seeker in some ways, and the complete opposite in others! I’ll go skydiving or abseiling off a cliff, but I’ll balk at doing something new in front of people, or public speaking…

8.                   Sing in the rain or dance in the streets?
How about dance in the rain? :D

9.                   Do you scream on roller coasters? Do you lift up your hands?
Nope. I’ve been on a rollercoaster, but I prefer to enjoy the ride, instead of spending the time shrieking! Each to their own.

10.               Tell me about your next project?

Currently I have 2 work-in-progress novels, another fantasy (kind-of sequel to my first fantasy, Dreamscape--same world, set 100 years in the future) and a dystopian fantasy (in an entirely unrelated universe). I finished the first draft of both, have their blurbs and covers ready…just waiting on beta reader feedback, doing my final edits…then I’m publishing them too!


Jenna's latest book is Watership. 

The world was dying, so scientists worked to create a safe haven in the centre of the earth; hollowing it out for the future generations to live safely.

When the creatures created to watch over the people detected the failsafe program had activated, and that their hollow world was about to collapse, they took them to a sentient, biological spaceship, set with the coordinates to take them to a new world.

But with the aliens who helped the scientists in the past having come back to change the course of the ship, things soon spiral out of control.

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