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My guest today is Chris Delyani, whose contemporary novels set in San Franciso have achieved critical acclaim and who also writes articles for the Huffington Post in addition to holding down a full time day job.

Thank you, Chris, for taking time out of what be an incredibly busy schedule to answer my questions.

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Elin: Can you tell me a little about yourself? For instance, do you have to have a day job as well as being a writer?

Lombard Street, courtesy of Wikimedia

Chris: Twenty years ago I moved to San Francisco with a plan to get a day job and then write on the side.  For twenty years (more or less) I get up early in the morning to write before heading off to work – otherwise, the day would seem wasted.

But I’ve never thought of any of my day jobs as just “day jobs.”  I sometimes wish I had more time to write, but I also think it’s important to get out in the world and interact with other people – real, actual people who need to work for a living and for whom the prospect of getting published is not the least bit necessary to their happiness.  In this respect, I’ve had great luck:  my various jobs have put me in touch with a wide variety of great people who are not only fun people in their own right, but have informed (and continue to inform) my writing.

Elin: When you aren’t writing, is there any other creative activity you enjoy? Have you ever written about it?

Chris: I wish I knew how to do other creative things, but I’m afraid I don’t.  I can’t sing, I can’t draw, I can’t tap dance or play the piano.  I do like to visit museums and marvel at the paintings, which, I suppose, is what impelled me to make painting the driving force of Peter Bankston, the hero of my latest book.

I’m an avid practicer of yoga, which I discovered only a few years ago and wish I had discovered sooner.  I enjoy it so much that I couldn’t resist making one of the characters in my newest project a yoga instructor, although I know I personally will never be able to achieve that level.

Elin:  Can you name any author/authors, past or present, who have been a great influence on your work?

Chris:  Among the dead authors, the ones I turn to the most for inspiration are the usual suspects:  Shakespeare, Tolstoy, Austen.  I also find myself turning again and again to my favorite short stories by Edith Wharton and Flannery O’Connor.

Among the living authors, my favorites are Anne Tyler, Alice Munro, and William Trevor.  They seem to make the ordinary seem extraordinary.

Elin:  What are you reading? Something to be clutched to the bosom or tossed aside with force? Fiction or non-fiction?

Chris:  I’m about two-thirds of the way through Saul Bellow’s “The Adventures of Augie March.”  I had long had that book on my list and managed to nab a hardcover version of the book at a used bookstore in Berkeley, Calif., not far from where I live.  It’s a dense read, but a satisfying one – at times I don’t feel like I’m reading words but, rather, At times, reading it makes me think of listening to a symphony, that is, I’m getting only a general sense of the book’s overall greatness, but that I’d have to read it a second or maybe even a third time to appreciate the individual words and phrases.

Before that, I read Robert K. Massie’s excellent biography of Catherine the Great.  The book read more like a novel than a regurgitation of dates and facts:  Catherine comes alive in that book, from her rise from an obscure German princess to one of the most powerful leaders ever to live.  Best of all, Massie’s voice is clear and sure, and yet his modesty allows the reader to think the story’s telling itself.  Catherine comes across as a woman of many contradictions – passionate, ambitious, empathetic, cruel, sometimes flat-out wrong in her decisions, both romantic and political.  To think she actually existed is hard for me to believe.

Elin:  Are you a plotter or a pantser?

Chris:  For my first two books, I pantsed.  I would write scenes and then figure out after I’d written them what I was going after.  It took me years to finish both of them.

For my current project, I followed the guidelines put forth in Alan Watt’s book “The 90-Day Novel.”  Following his directions, I did nothing but outline for the first 28 days, and then spent the remaining 62 days writing the first draft from the outline.  I’d plan out a week’s worth of plotting (get from Point A to Point B the first week, then from Point B to Point C the second, and so on), and then proceed from there.  Thanks to the increased attention to plot, I think I should have this third book out in a much less time it took me to produce the first two books.

But I also took Watt’s advice to hold the outline “loosely” – that is, to avoid committing to the outline so rigidly that I miss a good detail or a good plot twist.

I suppose this is my longwinded way of saying that I plot when it suits me, and I “pants” when it suits me.  After all, it’s my book.

Elin:  Do your characters arrive fully fledged and ready to fly or do they develop as you work with them?

Chris:  They develop over time.  I have a general idea of what I’m going for when I create a character, but in my head I try to maintain a certain flexibility so that if a character does something or says something I didn’t expect, I can let that happen.  Over the years I’ve learned to appreciate the value of “listening” to what a character is trying to tell me.  And I think it’s important to take the time to let them develop.  It’s kind of like getting to know someone worthwhile in real life.  You just can’t expect to know everything about them right away.

Elin:  Do you have a crisp mental picture of your characters or are they more a thought and a feeling than an image?

Chris:  The image of them come to me slowly, kind of like a photographs developing in a dark room.  The way they look, the way they act, their moods and gestures – all of them are part of a large puzzle that I trust will come together by the time I’m ready to say, “This book is done.”

Elin:  Put together your ideal team of men – drawing from all and any walks of life, fictional or non-fictional – who you would want to come to your rescue if menaced by muggers/alligators/fundamentalists?

Chris:  I’m delighted to report that I’ve not yet been menaced by a mugger, an alligator, or a fundamentalist.  But if I did, I can’t picture a team of men saving me.  Instead, I picture a team of women.  Wonder Woman and Xena Warrior Princess would of course be leading the rescue squad (Xena by herself would probably be enough), and then to round things off I’d probably include Michelle Obama, Cate Blanchett, and Emily Dickinson (who I can picture dressed all in white, stunning the enemy into silence with her mysterious stare).  I’d also want to include California Attorney General Kamala D. Harris, who is protecting marriage equality from the attacks of more than a few fundamentalists as I write this.  Oh, and I definitely want Catherine the Great.

Sadly, writing about relationships among gay men means that my female characters have so far played only supporting roles.  I’d love to be able to create a great female character, like Henry James’s Isabel Archer or Gustave Flaubert’s Emma Bovary, but I’m worried about getting it wrong.

Elin:  Villains – incredibly important in fiction since they challenge the main protagonists and give them something to contend with beyond the tension of a developing relationship. What sort of villains do you prize? A moustache-twirling nightmare or … ?

Chris:  The villains that I prize the most are the ones who have the power to test the hero’s mettle.  Luke Skywalker wouldn’t be Luke Skywalker without Darth Vader; Dorothy wouldn’t be Dorothy without the Wicked Witch of the West.

And yet I kind of feel bad for the villain – he (or she) plays such an indispensable role in making the plot fun, and all he (or she) gets of out of is the audience’s contempt or outright hatred.  I can’t help thinking sometimes of Malvolio, the villain of Shakespeare’s “Twelfth Night”: he’s a jerk, true, but the fate he meets in that play always makes me feel bad.  So sometimes I can’t help feeling compassion and giving my own villains a break.

I also enjoy villains who are in touch with their inner villainy – among these, my favorite is probably the Marquise de Merteuil in Choderlos de Laclos’s novel “Les Liaisons Dangereuses.”  I suppose it’s her self-awareness, her cheerful willingness to exact her petty vengeances, that’s her biggest appeal.

In the moustache-twirling nightmare department, I doubt if any villain can top Shakespeare’s Iago – probably the most vivid fictional representation of human evil ever set in the English language.  I can’t help but be in awe of Shakespeare for having not only the brilliance but the courage to create such a monster, to demonstrate the corrosive effect of jealousy on the human spirit.

Elin:  What are you working on at the moment? Can you discuss it or do you prefer to keep it a secret until it’s finished.

Chris:  Yes, I am working on a third project, but I’m not quite ready to reveal the plot (or even the title) just yet.  Let’s just say I’m glad marriage equality has returned to the State of California.  More choices available to actual gay people means more choices for the person who likes to write about gay people.

Elin:  Could we please have an excerpt of something?

From “You Are Here”:

“A few days ago I was walking around the shopping center downtown,” Ben said. “And I stopped at one of their floor maps, you know, so I could figure out my way around the shopping center. The map itself was a mess, a jumble of all these boxes that were supposed to be stores, but in the middle of the mess was a little red star that simply stated, “You are here.” It seemed so basic, so obvious—“you are here”—but it got me to thinking. Here I was in this big old shopping mall, with no real reason to be there, surrounded by all these people I didn’t know, under all this unspoken pressure to buy a bunch of crap I didn’t even need, but here was this map with its little red star to guide me, assuring me I’m a person, I exist, I’m here.”

Peter looked at Ben, skeptical. “You want me to paint you a floor map?”

“Well, not a real floor map, but a—a life map. Maybe you could paint a big and mysterious universe, a concept of something we don’t know and can’t know, but a map that has a marker on it to remind us we aren’t lost, a place that reminds us, ‘You are here.’”

Peter looked at the wall and refrained from saying what he felt, that Ben’s idea had to be one of the lamest and stupidest ideas he could have come up with.

“Which is the point of today’s parade, if you ask me,” Ben went on. “I know a lot of what goes on there seems frivolous, but the point of the pride parade is so you can show up and let yourself be counted—and not just for the people living today, but for the people who’ll be living here years from now, centuries from now, anyone who cares enough to take a backward look, wanting to know how we lived. Who knows? The way they talk about global warming and rising seas, maybe San Francisco itself—the whole city—won’t be on the map in a hundred years. Everything around us, houses, streets, parks, bridges, the goddamned Transamerica Building, will simply get washed away. Who knows what the world will look like in the future? So that’s why you need to paint a painting as soon as possible—and why you need to go to the parade today, if only to let yourself be counted for a few minutes. You’re here, Peter. You’ve got to let people know you’re here.”

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Thanks again to Chris for visiting. If you would like to follow him on Twitter you can find him as @chrisdelyani or you may follow him at his website, on Goodreads and on his page at the Huffington Post.

 

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Friday Interviews-Jonathan Hopkins author of Walls of Jericho and Leopardkill.

John Hopkins is THE man for information on period saddlery and Napoleonic War cavalry! He also once delivered flowers to his wife dressed as a Regency hussar. Who says romance is dead?

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comfy chair

My guest today is Hans Hirschi, who is currently dipping his toe into the choppy waters of published fiction for the first time. I hope it turns out to be clear and sweet and the perfect temperature rather than murky and filled with eels! His first two novels were published this month so please join me in helping him to celebrate.

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Elin : Can you tell me a little about yourself? For instance, do you have to have a day job as well as being a writer?

Hans : I’m currently enjoying a few months of paternity leave, taking care of our son who was born in March. I have a small consultancy firm and will be starting to work again in fall, but I’ll also keep writing. I don’t think I could just sit cooped up in my office, writing for a living. I need the social interaction, and I doubt that book signings would do…

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The latest romance from fellow-Brit author Becky Black was released on Tuesday and it looks like a doozey!

Patient Z

Two years ago the zombie apocalypse wiped out the world police officer Mitch Kennedy had a role in. But he’s found a way to continue doing his duty, serving as guardian of a small community of survivors, living in the safest place they can find. When the group takes in Cal Richardson Mitch can’t help but be attracted to the first available–and incidentally, gorgeous–man to cross his path in months.

Mitch and Cal can’t resist each other physically, but each man tries to hold back his emotions. Though he’s strong on the outside, Mitch is too badly hurt inside to risk more pain. Cal’s very sure he won’t stay for long. He’s been a drifter all his life and it came naturally to him to survive alone after civilization fell. He’s sure this is a temporary stopover for him. He has no intention of becoming emotionally involved with a cop who is certain to despise Cal when he learns the truth about him.

But the longer Cal stays the stronger his urge to run, but the harder it becomes to give up the safety of the community and his new friends. The harder it becomes to give up Mitch.

Interested? Want to win a  copy of the  ebook?  Then get in quick and leave a comment on this post before Saturday July 27th at 09:00 UK time. (BST) Make sure to leave your email address so Becky can can contact you if you win.

Meantime – here’s an excerpt:

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This week on Humpday Hook, we’re doing something a little bit different – a giveaway event.

If you go to this link there’s a list of authors all of whom are offering something to their readers in return for either answering a question or simply commenting. We will be posting a summery snippet from our work in progress and explaining why we look forward to summer so much.

So, straight away I’m going to fail because I don’t have a WIP with anything summery in it.  Instead here’s a bit of A Fierce Reaping:

Image from Bretwalda, original photo from Badonicus, no idea who the terrific artist who added the textures is.

“I’m sick of the lot of you,” Cynon raged. “You were told to fetch firewood not start a war. Especially not a war with troops one and two and even more especially not with the prince’s Companions. Until you can be trusted to behave responsibly we can’t remain in the dun. Be ready to leave at first light. Use what remains of today to get ready. Draw oats from the stores for yourselves and your mounts. Enough for a fist of days.”

Aeddan swore quietly and Cynfal glanced at him then stepped forward. “What about the injured?” he asked. “For some of them riding in this weather could be dangerous.”

Cynon’s lips thinned and he tapped his clenched fist twice against his thigh before replying. “The wounded must remain here. Greid, you stay too. Yes, I know it’s only a flesh wound but,” his voice rose to a shout again, “a fucking tree fell on you! ”

His voice rang in the icy air. They all stood in silence until the echo died away then someone sighed and another groaned as the air filled with drifting white flakes.

“Excellent,” Cynon snarled. “Practice in winter travel and manoeuvres. Just what we need. You’d all better pack an extra blanket. Go on, get out of my sight.”

~

Winter sucks. It’s damp and cold and everyone is stroppy and miserable. Clothes feel damp, boots are muddy, dogs are both.  To celebrate that it’s the summer I’ll give a $5 gift card to a commenter who can link me to a picture of the ideal holiday destination. I’ll post the winners name on Wednesday 30th but I’ll be in touch by email as well.

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My guest today is Andrew Peters, an author who is causing a stir amongst those readers devoted to shifter fiction and whose novel about the last days of Atlantis is getting close to the top of my TBR pile.

Welcome, Andrew, and thanks for answering my questions.

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Elin: Can you tell me a little about yourself? For instance, do you have to have a day job as well as being a writer?

Andrew: Well, I wanted to be a writer from the time I started reading. I used to make my own picture books, and when I was a little older I started reading fantasies and mysteries and coming up with my own stories.

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comfy chairMy guest today is a best-selling author best known for scorching erotica and erotic romance, writing both M/F as Lauren Gallagher and M/M as L A Witt. Her series of novels – Rules of Engagement, Cover Me, The Distance Between Us, Changing Plans and, with Aleksandr Voinov, The Market Garden – all have an avid following. In addition she has written many standalone works to delight her readers ranging from speculative fiction to steampunk and back via historical and contemporary romance. She is one of the people I was lucky enough to see this year at the UK Meet in Manchester.

Welcome L A and thanks for agreeing to the interview.

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comfy chair My guest today is Sage Marlowe, best selling author of contemporary erotic and paranormal fiction with several popular series – including Romeo and Julian, Sub-Culture and Ink Sweat and Tears. Sage really enjoys putting characters through the wringer –  half the fun of being an author – but takes care to give them at least an HFN to tide them over until their next book.

Welcome Sage and thanks for answering my questions.

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Elin: Can you tell me a little about yourself? For instance, do you have to have a day job as well as being a writer?

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Today I am joined by Dean Pace-Frech, a brand new author of historical LGBT themed fiction whose first novel, A Place To Call Their Own, was released last Friday.

Thank you for visiting, Dean, and for answering my questions.

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Elin: Can you tell me a little about yourself? For instance, do you have to have a day job as well as being a writer?

Dean: I have been writing for five years.  I also work as an administrative assistant to eight busy doctors.  I work 1 pm to 9 pm and do my writing in the morning before I go to work each day.

Elin: When you aren’t writing, is there any other creative activity you enjoy? Have you ever written about it?

Dean: I knit and I tinker around with patio gardening.  In A Place to Call Their Own, Frank and Gregory are farmers and Frank knits.

Elin:Can you name any author/authors, past or present, who have been a great influence on your work?

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Hump Day Hook

I’ve missed a few weeks of this – a very iffy keyboard really takes the kick out of your gallop when producing something coherent means going back and inserting every H and N with a vicious whack – but I have trolled around the blogs of other participants to see what you’ve all been up to. Nice work lads and lasses. Here’s the special linky link to get at all the rest of the posts for this week.

This week I may as well carry on with my Regency crack. If you remember, Sir Aubrey Stanton-Rivers lost his sister, Lady Cicely, to a friend in a card game. Since then the IOU has changed hands and someone wants to collect. Lady Cicely is pissed off about this, especially since the winner is Patrick Fitzgerald, the scapegrace elder son of the Earl of Innisidhe.

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Young Mr MacAvoy, looking very fancy in velvet

“He’s a handsome devil, though,” Aubrey admitted, “which makes him even more eligible despite his faults. There are going to be a lot of disappointed young ladies and furious mamas reading the paper this morning.”

Cicely gaped at him. “You mean to say that he’s a – a catch! Mad Pat FitzRoy?”

“Mad Pat FitzRoy has got more money than he knows what to do with. There’s many a girl, as you well know, who would give her eyeteeth to be a Countess with a fortune not dependent upon a few hundred acres in Derbyshire. They are going to be green with envy.” Aubrey suddenly grinned. “They’ll be cutting you dead in the streets.”

Cicely also saw the funny side and began to giggle. “Are you sure,” she demanded, “that he’ll be as upset about this as I am?”

“Mad Pat? With a wife? He’ll be frantic!”

“Good,” and now Cicely’s smile was not very nice. “Let’s teach him a lesson. I want you to write a letter to my betrothed, Aubrey. Let’s see if we can make the worm squirm before we let him off the hook.”

~~~

And next week and change of POV as we join Mad Pat to get his side of the story.

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