Author Interview Series #61 – Elaine Isaak

The thing for young and/or inexperienced writers to remember is that is soon as one starts treating your work professionally, as something serious and worthy of effort, not to mention respect, one can enter a world of other creative people who have the same struggles, goals, and roadblocks. We all go through the writing life in various stages, with similar milestones, similar roadblocks, but all with unique stories.  All one has to do is make that mental shift from closeted, cloistered, would-be fiction writer, toiling away forlornly in a lonely garret, to Real-Life Fiction Writer.  Once you make that shift,Continue readingAuthor Interview Series #61 – Elaine Isaak

Author Interview Series #60 – Cat Rambo

At Readercon in Boston this past July, at a Codex Writers’ Group lunch, I was introduced to Cat Rambo. Cat Rambo’s stories have been described as “works of urban mythopoeia”, a mashup of mythology and urban fantasy. She has worked as a programmer-writer for Microsoft and a Tarot card reader, professions which, she claims, both involve a certain combination of technical knowledge and willingness to go with the flow. Her stories have appeared in Asimov’s, Weird Tales, Clarkesworld, and Strange Horizons, plus several anthologies and Year’s Best collections.  On top of all that, she’s the managing editor at Fantasy Magazine.Continue readingAuthor Interview Series #60 – Cat Rambo

Author Interview Series #59 – Tony Richards

I ran into a pleasant British gentleman at the book launch party for Peter Straub’s American Fantastic Tales. He introduced himself as Tony Richards. Tony is a long-time author of horror and dark fantasy stories, these days numbering over a hundred short stories, novellas, and novels, with a career spanning thirty years.  His debut novel, The Harvest Bride, first appeared in 1987 and was nominated for a Stoker award. In addition to being a darn fine writer, he’s a great guy to share a conversation with over cocktails. Read on!

Author Interview Series #58 – Gail Carriger

I hadn’t been sitting at the bar in the Fairmont Hotel at the World Fantasy Convention, nursing a Bombay Sapphire and tonic, when this dame slides onto the stool next to me.  But a second glance proved this to be no dame, but a lady looking as if she had stepped out of a 1940s noir film. I wondered if she was packing heat in that little clutch. Wearing a vintage ensemble complete with white gloves, Gail Carriger made a striking first impression, and the conversation quickly went interesting places, her book that just came out, her career as anContinue readingAuthor Interview Series #58 – Gail Carriger

Author Interview Series #57 – James Van Pelt

At the Mass Book Signing at the World Fantasy Convention on the Eve of Halloween, I had the good fortune to share a table with James Van Pelt.  He’s been selling short stories for 20 years, with nearly a hundred published to date, including appearances in Asimov’s, Analog, and Year’s Best Science Fiction, and being nominated for the Nebula in 2004. We discussed writing as a career and how even well-established authors experience bolts of fan-ness in the presence of so many other accomplished professionals.  Jim maintains a teaching career as well, and the speculative fiction community can applaud himContinue readingAuthor Interview Series #57 – James Van Pelt

Author Interview Series #56 – David Drake

Major conventions like the World Science Fiction Convention and the World Fantasy Convention are the still the best way to meet authors whose work you’ve known and respected for a long time. At World Fantasy two weeks ago, yours truly had the great fortune to meet at least a metric ton of such folks, so herewith is the first of many interviews with other World Fantasy attendees.  I first encountered David Drake’s work back in the 1980s with his military science fiction Hammer’s Slammers series, plus reading Ranks of Bronze, a book about Roman Legionnaires taken to serve as interstellarContinue readingAuthor Interview Series #56 – David Drake

Author Interview Series #55 – Chloe Neill

Continuing a tradition of encountering really interesting people at conventions, I met author Chloe Neill this summer at OSFest, the Omaha Science Fiction Education Society’s annual sci-fi convention.  Although she’s not a katana-wielding vampire badass like the main character in her Chicagoland Vampire series, she perhaps could be with some training.  Neill grew up in Arkansas (maintains a touch of the accent) and now makes her home in Nebraska, where she recently launched her pro writing career with her first novel Some Girls Bite, out this year from Penguin.  She managed to wrangle us some interview time in the midstContinue readingAuthor Interview Series #55 – Chloe Neill

Author Interview Series #54 – Jeanne Cavelos

This week I have the distinct pleasure of interviewing a person who has had a tremendous impact on me (and hopefully my writing career!), Jeanne Cavelos.  Jeanne is a former senior editor at Bantam Doubleday Dell, and these days is the brains and (most of) the brawn behind one of the premier writing workshops for genre fiction, the Odyssey Writing Workshop.  In addition to Odyssey, she also teaches fiction writing at St. Anselm College in Manchester, NH.  One doesn’t have to look very hard to find praises being sung for the quality of the Odyssey experience, and that is dueContinue readingAuthor Interview Series #54 – Jeanne Cavelos

Author Interview Series #53 – Paolo Bacigalupi

Paolo Bacigalupi is relative newcomer to the science fiction writing genre, but his work has already made waves, won the Theodore Sturgeon Award and the Locus Awards for Best Collection and Best Novelette for Pump Six. His work has appeared in two of the three biggest science fiction markets, Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine and The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. His short fiction collection Pump Six was released early last year from Night Shade Books.  Yours truly ran into him at Readercon in Boston in August, 2009, where he was participating in a panel on YA fiction. His shortContinue readingAuthor Interview Series #53 – Paolo Bacigalupi

Author Interview Series #52 – Patricia Bray

If you ever have the chance to meet Patricia Bray in person, one of your first thoughts will be, “Wow, here is a woman with some energy.” Patricia Bray was a guest lecturer at the Odyssey Writing Workshop this year, which is where yours truly met her.  With verve, humor, and enthusiasm, she offered an excellent discussion of Heroes and Sidekicks in fiction, how to do it, and how not to do it.  In her Sword of Change series, the viewpoint character is the sidekick, not the main character of the story, which leads to some interesting storytelling dynamics andContinue readingAuthor Interview Series #52 – Patricia Bray

Author Interview Series #51 – Marcus Pelegrimas

Yes, we’re baaaaack.  It’s a been a hiatus, I know, but this summer has been devoted to craft, connections, and career building.  After a tremendous experience at the Odyssey Writing Workshop, I came home fresh and motivated to attend OSFest 2, the Omaha Science Fiction Education Society’s second annual science fiction convention, whereat I was pleased to meet Marcus Pelegrimas, a fellow Omaha-based author, whose novel series Skinners has just debuted from EOS Books. We participated in a panel for writers on avoiding the biggest mistakes that novice writers make, and the panel went extremely well, even generating compliments afterContinue readingAuthor Interview Series #51 – Marcus Pelegrimas

So what’s going on?

It’s going to be a busy summer.  In addition to promoting Heart of the Ronin and working on graduate school, I’m taking six weeks to attend the Odyssey Writers Workshop, starting next week. It’s going to be a great experience focusing so intensely on writing over the summer. In case you don’t know, Odyssey is a science fiction/fantasy/horror workshop for professional writers and writers on the verge of going pro. This year, two of the guest teachers at Odyssey will be Carrie Vaughn and Jack Ketchum, both of whom have been interviewed right here at Blogging the Muse, so I’mContinue readingSo what’s going on?