"Who in their right mind wouldn't want to read a book by Mark Barry!" (Mary Quallo, St Louis)

"Who in their right mind wouldn't want to read a book by Mark Barry!"  (Mary Quallo, St Louis)
Coming next week - Carla Eatherington

Wednesday 25 September 2013

Ngaire meets Sci Fi author Yvonne Anderson - around the Cauldron

This week - from her foreboding citadel just outside Cadiz - amidst the orange groves, the raging bulls, bunches of giant pomegranates hanging from parched trees, underneath the illumination of cobalt skies and in the glare of the ever-burning sun, the wonderful Ngaire Elder is back around the Cauldron, by popular demand. 


This morning on my way home from doing the school run, I saw an unusual scene, almost haunting. One of the mountains was shrouded in a smoky-grey layer of cloud with the crests of windmills sprouting through the top. You know the type of windmills I’m talking about, the ones you see on a ‘wind power farm’ not the Don Quixote type!  It triggered a childhood memory – the Pink Floyd music video to Another Brick in the Wall in particular the scene with the walking hammers. I was an ‘ankle-snapper’ (no, kidding Ed!) when the original music video first appeared on television. What an unrelated memory to be triggered by the windmill mountain vista! What triggers a memory to surface from the abyss …? For me, it is simply a sight, sound or smell that sets the memory cogs in motion; the windmill of the mind or as the French would say ‘Los moulins de mon esprit" … is that not a song???

Today, I'm interviewing Yvonne Anderson, Science Fiction author about her latest work. Yvonne lives in rural Ohio with her husband of 37 years and one of her four grown kids. Her five grandchildren live in Virginia, which is entirely too far away. Formerly a legal secretary, Yvonne works part time as a Virtual Assistant but spends most of her time on the planet Gannah researching her books. A member of ACFW, The Lost Genre Guild, Independent Author Network, and International Thriller Writers, she serves as contest administrator for Novel Rocket, named four times to Writer’s Digest list of the 101 Best Websites for Writers.


Yvonne Anderson. Space, aliens, rockets,
mad Gods and incredible paradoxes.
Count me in for the Sci Fi revolution.

Lovely to have you here, Yvonne, nattering round the Wizard’s Cauldron,  tell us a bit about yourself. 

Hi, Ngaire, and thank you for inviting me! I’ve never nattered around a Cauldron before, just a campfire sans Cauldron. So this will be fun. I used to run myself ragged with a mini-farm, kids, and a job. No time to write. Now, my husband and I are in the enviable position of being able to survive on his retirement pension alone. Which is not to say I can spend all my day writing, because I still often have a hard time finding the time. But at least I’m not pressed under the demands of a regular job. 


Yvonne interviewed on "Sci Fi at Nine" on cable.

Your series The Story in the Stars is science fiction and getting superb reader comments, please tell us more about your series and how you chose the genre you write in?


27 Reviews!!

It’s a bizarre tale. Not the book so much, but the background behind its inception. 

February 2002, the strangest thing happened. My two oldest kids were grown and out of the house, the younger two were in high school. We’d purchased our first computer not long before. On the morning in question, the kids had gone to school, I was cleaning up after breakfast, and an unasked-for thought came along and whacked me upside the head: You need to write a book. Huh? Where’d that come from? True, I had the time (no one home to interrupt me! With my husband now retired, I could use some of that…) and a computer. But what would I write about? I tried to block the thought, but it dug under my skin and wouldn’t back out. I finally concluded it was the Holy Spirit, not a tick, so I sat down and talked to God about it. “Surely I’m misunderstanding You. This can’t be what You want.” But He kept pressing, so I finally yielded.

Nine months and 200,000 words later (and daily prayers, begging, “Please, stop me!”), I had a complete novel, but no idea what to do next. 

A short time later, I picked up a little nonfiction book I’d heard some friends talking about. It was a reprint of a book written in the 1800s titled The Gospel in the Stars, and it explained the premise that when God created the heavens and the earth, He arranged the stars in constellations for a specific purpose. Together, they portrayed the gospel story so that early man could “read” it and learn about the Christ who would one day come to redeem their souls. I found the concept intriguing, but I had a hard time with the book because the language was archaic and the technical concepts were unfamiliar. At first I thought it might be fun to “translate” the book, put it into language that a modern reader could enjoy, but I realized I needed to understand it all a bit better before I could do that. Then it occurred to me to write a fictional piece in which the characters discovered this story in the stars. (So much for “never again”!)



I could have given a tale like that any setting I wanted, but perhaps because I’d just been reading about astronomy and had stars on the brain, I gave it an outer-space setting. Once I started writing, I really got into it, and before I’d been at it very long, I realized this was what I’d been studying for all those years. 


The best ever Outer Space episode of Star Trek?
"The City at the Edge of Forever"
How many books have you written? 

All told, I’ve completed a total of eight novels: two when I was younger and just fooling around. Then Mom’s Mirror, and then a sequel to it. Those first four were just practice. The Story in the Stars was my fifth, and I’ve since written three more in that series. BTW, the series is called Gateway to Gannah. The Story in the Stars is the first book in the series. 




Which is your favourite?

My favourite is The Last Toqeph, the fourth and final in the series and as yet unpublished.

What was one of the most surprising things you learned in creating your books?

Probably the most surprising thing, as noted above, was that I would ever enjoy writing sci-fi. The second most surprising thing was how difficult it is. 

Top 100 Sci Fi Novels of all time: Some Really Hard Books

Do the characters seem real and believable? Can you relate to their predicaments? To what extent do they remind you of yourself or someone you know?

In my opinion, the characters are eminently real and believable. I have a hard time remembering sometimes that they aren’t flesh-and-blood people and that Gannah exists only in my mind. I keep wanting look online for photos of the place. Since the characters live in another time and another world, their predicaments aren’t much like the situations I face in my own life, but the underlying issues are the same: love and resentment, pushing through tough times when you haven’t the strength, faith and doubt, difficult choices to be made and uncertainty as to where to go for reliable guidance. Alien though they may be, the characters are in essence very human.


Reputed to be one of the
finest sci-fi novels of all time - and living proof
that not all average  covers come from an Indie scribbler's
Publisher software.

Are you traditional or self- published, and has your publishing experience been what you expected it to be? Would you change anything?

In 2011 I signed a three-book contract with Risen Books, a small press. Very small. One-man small. This qualifies me as being traditionally published but doesn’t provide me with the kind of support a major publisher can afford to give their authors. (Not that any publisher does much marketing these days anyway.) 

I didn’t have many expectations when I signed the contract, so I can’t say the experience has disappointed me. Nor can I say I’d change anything, looking back on it. 


Einstein - Beyond genius

It’s been a valuable learning experience. The contract offer came at a time when I was giving serious thought, once again, to hanging it all up, so it encouraged me to keep going. I’d never thought of Stars as part of a series. 

Now, thanks to Risen Books’ interest in it, Gateway to Gannah is a complete, four-book series (though only the first two titles are published) and I’m absolutely delighted with it. I love-love-LOVE the way it wraps up in the last book, and the fact that the publisher doesn’t seem inclined to move forward with producing the rest of it doesn’t bother me. There are a lot of options available to authors these days, and one dead end isn’t the end of the road. 


London based Sci Fi pioneer and pulp fictionist,
HG Wells

Can you tell us about your current work-in-progress?

With the inestimable help of my critique friends (a different group from those I started with, but all wonderful, talented writers and dear to me personally), I’m putting the final polish on Book 4. I’m also mentally working on my next project. I’m excited about it, too, but I can only concentrate on one thing at a time, so I’m not ready to discuss it yet.

How do you market your work? What avenues have you found to work best for your genre?

Ah, there’s the rub. I’ve tried the usual recommended methods such as blog tours, personal appearances/speaking/book signings, social media, advertising on Goodreads, give-aways, a couple of radio interviews. 

And I’ve sold a few books, but it’s been only a trickle at best. Now it’s dwindled to a slow, lazy drip. I haven’t found anything that I can say really works.


Genius painter - terrible marketeer who died
penniless and broken hearted. Vincent Van Gogh.
The fate of many Indie writers?

Blogging has consumed a great deal of time but yielded little to no results. I used to post to my personal blog three times a week without fail, but the past few months I’ve cut back because it wasn’t proving to be a wise use of my time. 

I post every 2nd Wednesday on Speculative Faith, a blog for readers and writers of Christian speculative fiction. I’m a member of the Novel Rocket team, a blog that’s been named by Writer’s Digest as one of the 101 top websites for writers five years out of the past six. 

Connect with Novel Rocket

My role there is contest administrator for the Launch Pad Contest, Boosting You Out of the Slush Pile, a competition for unpublished novelists. I’m also a weekly contributor to the writers blog The Borrowed Book. But it’s been busywork, for the most part, not useful for stimulating sales.


Indie writer discovers this months sales figures
after daring to create her Amazon report.

What has been the toughest criticism given to you as an author? What has been the best compliment?

I don’t pay a lot of attention to criticism. If several critics tell me the same thing when I’m working on a chapter, that’s worth taking seriously. But where reviews are concerned or general criticism, I figure most of that is just a matter of personal opinion. 

Decent article about dealing with bad reviews

I don’t expect everyone to agree with me so it doesn’t upset me when people don’t. On the other hand, my favourite review to date is a 1-star of The Story in the Stars on Goodreads. ( :-), Ed!) The reviewer’s comments reveal that she understood precisely what I’d hoped to portray, though I didn’t wish to offend anyone. 


Jim Starlin - bringing sci-fi to comics
in  the nineteen seventies and
revolutionising the medium

Once I got past the sting of her words, I realized that her comments were exactly what I needed to hear: I had, in fact, gotten my point across effectively. 


Starlin's Warlock
None of the good reviews gave me that confirmation. The best direct compliment? A friend told me she read Stars twice: the first time, she read fast because she couldn’t wait to see what happened next. Then she read it again just to 
savour it. 



Whom would you give this year’s Nobel Peace Prize to, and why?

Good golly, I have no idea. Because I’m an ignoramus.

The magnificent Aung San Suu Kyi - her story is inspirational



Do you have a bucket-list …? If, so please share one thing you have on the list.

Nope, no bucket list. My goal is merely to take advantage of opportunities the Lord offers, go through the doors He opens. That alone can lead to some unexpected adventures.

What book are you reading now?

The Children of Men by P.D. James.


PD James

Finally, Yvonne, where can readers buy your books and find out more about you?

The first two titles in the Gateway to Gannah series are available in print and ebook formats: 

Book 1: The Story in the Stars at Amazon, and B&N.

Book 2: Words in the Wind at Amazon, and B&N.


You can learn more about me and the Gannah series on my website, Y’s Words, connect with me on Twitter, or, if you insist, on Facebook, though I’m scarcely ever there.

Yvonne, on behalf of the absent Wizard and the Wizardwatchers, I'd like to wish you the best of luck and thank you for coming around the Cauldron.

Thanks, Ngaire, for inviting me to visit. It’s been fun!

Contact


Blog link – http://yswords.com/


Twitter – https://twitter.com/YAnderson101


The father of Sci Fi - Isaac Asimov
The Story in the Satrs – Amazon Link http://www.amazon.com/The-Story-Stars-Yvonne-Anderson/dp/1936835045
Words in the Wind Amazon Link - http://www.amazon.com/Words-Wind-Yvonne-Anderson/dp/193683510X


Another Yvonne Anderson.
Not a science fiction author
from Ohio.
Ngaire Elder can be found most days on Twitter. @ngaireinfo and also around this blog. Check the bottom right.



2 comments:

  1. Ngaire, The Great Wizard is currently in the Neutral Zone on Federation business, so he is not absent - that being said - "The City at the Edge of Forever" is my number one favorite Star Trek Episode - great choice.

    Yvonne, best of luck with sales. Am glad you didn't give up on a dream God had placed in your heart. He is working behind the scenes, and I'm glad you're keeping the faith.

    Kudos everything for a great interview.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thoroughly enjoyed meeting Yvonne and having our natter. Thank you for your support and the update on the Wizard! n x

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