"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
Showing posts with label blog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blog. Show all posts

Monday, 13 October 2014

The Multi-Talented Lorraine Devon Wilke - Around the Cauldron!

California's Lorraine Devon Wilke has packed an awful lot into her life and she shows no signs of stopping

The third-eldest sibling of eleven, she packed her bags and hit the road as a travelling rock singer in the big-haired eighties, carrying her camera with her, before settling down to marriage, motherhood and a life of popular bloggery, including her current stint working for the Huffington Post.

Her list of past achievements and current work is quite staggering - and she's a delightful person too!

Lorraine is now a novelist writing (in Indie terms), that quiet, shy and vulnerable industry step-child Literary Fiction. 

The genre the 101 blogs tell you to avoid like the plague and yet, it's the one area where a reader can find really, really decent writing if you look for it. And Lorraine is a really, really decent writer.

I was introduced to her by Brenda Perlin and received both her short story and novel. The former is a cracking read, but the latter - I am twelve chapters in and I am engrossed is possibly a great book. I had to buy it in paperback. 

It's a sweeping, sassy, cynical, redeeming, tricky "Terms of Endearment" type family saga - remember those? - with dialogue so acute you can experience it, a real sense of place, and characters you can see and hear as if they were next to you, the novel deserves a wider audience. 

I picked up the Wizphone and interrupted Lorraine while she tapped out her latest blog on a sunkissed veranda overlooking the Pacific Ocean. Here's what she had to say.

Tell us a bit about yourself, Lorraine?

Hi Wiz! I’m one of eleven children (third oldest). I was born in Chicago, Illinois, which remains one of my all-time favourite cities, but lived most of my childhood in a tiny farm town near the Illinois/Wisconsin border called Richmond. 


I remember flying into O Hare and seeing this shot - amazing (Ed).

Later, I hit the road with a rock band, which led me to Los Angeles... 

...where I started out as an actress, then launched into another full-time run at rock & roll during the wild and woolly 80s (yes, there are “big hair” pics on my website!). 



Website: http://lorrainedevonwilke.com/index.html

The 90s were about indie films (mine and others’), marriage (happy elopement) and family (one son, one stepdaughter); then back to music (more on that in a bit), and always writing (screenplays, articles, songs, books). 

Whereabouts in the US do you live?

Home base is Los Angeles (currently the beach community of Playa del Rey), as it’s been for most of my adult life, with the recent addendum of a wonderful little place in the hinterlands of northern California, Humboldt County, where my husband and I have a home in the charming Victorian Village of Ferndale, California. 

In what genre do you write? 
I write in the category I most love to read, Contemporary Literary Fiction. 

As a reader, I’ve always been drawn to real stories of a literary bent, ones that reflect upon or make commentary about life, relationships, family, culture, etc., and so my sensibilities as a writer lean in that same direction. 

Stylewise, I tend to interweave drama with humour, mostly because that’s the mix I find most often in life (though my recent short story, “She Tumbled Down,” is largely all drama). I seek out those unique narratives hidden in the everyday lives of contemporary people. 




Tell us about your latest work 

Since I mentioned my short story, let me touch on that first: “She Tumbled Down” was inspired by a hit-and-run that occurred in my neighborhood a few years ago, one that hasn’t been solved and likely won’t be. The street memorial put up by the victim’s family remains, even now, and I often walk past it and wonder what kind of person could do such a thing... hit someone then just drive away? “She Tumbled Down” is my imagining of one answer to that question. It’s not the specific story of the woman who died in my neighborhood, but it’s written in her honor and that of other hit-and-run victims whose deaths will never find justice. 

The bigger literary event of the year was After The Sucker Punch, my debut novel published in May of this year. 

What is ATSP about and why did you write it? What family sagas influence the novel?




I’d always wanted to write a novel but never felt I had a story that quite fit the medium. Then, several years ago, and many years after my father’s death, a journal of his came to my attention, one particularly focused on me -- and not in a very complimentary way (yes, he did use the “failed” word!). 

I remember my young son finding it so odd that a father would leave words like that in a journal meant to be read; in fact, he was the first one who said, “You should write a book about this.” I gave it some thought, but since I’d had a fairly distant relationship with my father throughout my adult life, his retrospective critique, while hurtful, was not particularly life shattering for me. It was when I brought it up in a women’s group I was in at the time, and realized how dramatically it hit others, that the idea of a book was further sparked.

Many people have asked, “How much of the story is true?” A fair question; but despite any correlations, this is most assuredly not a memoir. I wanted the freedom of fiction to create an imagined family and I very much did: in real life we all get along, no one’s an alcoholic, and there’s not a nun, lawyer, teacher, or lobbyist in the lot! 



Basically, After The Sucker Punch is about life: sometimes dark and exploratory, sometimes funny and irreverent. It encompasses various themes of significance, specifically the concept of self-acceptance, of grasping your personal truth and not letting anyone dissuade you from it, not even a father. Through the main protagonist, her siblings; her friends, lovers and even jobs, we explore issues of family, faith, cults, creativity, love, and the universal struggle to define oneself against the perceptions of a parent. I hope readers both enjoy – and find provocative – what is ultimately a triumphant journey of self-discovery. 




Can you share an extract from the work?

This is the opening chapter and a bit after that, from After The Sucker Punch, setting the stage for all that follows:

 January 5, 2002 – the journal of Leo Curzio:
One is obligated by moral duty to love one’s child. One is not obligated to like them. A conundrum when it comes to my fourth, my third daughter, Teresa – or Tessa, as she insists we call her now.Recently I searched through my journals of the past several years looking for an entry about her but could find nothing. Perhaps that’s not so strange; she has been an enigma to me since she finished high school. As I look back, it seems her senior year was the pinnacle of her life...from that point on little has happened to bear out her great promise.Convinced of her own abilities, which do seem apparent or, at the very least, measurable, she decided to try for a job in the movies, TV, or perhaps the recording business out in Hollywood. She insisted that if after two years she had gotten nowhere she would try something else. Well, it’s been more than three years and she has nothing to show for it except some amateur acting classes and self-produced plays. In September she will be twenty-five.So what’s the problem with Teresa? For sure, I don’t know. She is a great disappointment. Not simply because she’s failed up to now, but that endowed with so much talent she hasn’t employed it for anything useful and doesn’t show signs of improving.
On a day when all she wanted to do was mourn the father so often longed for and buried just hours before, Tessa Curzio sat on the bed in which she was surely conceived and felt posthumously sucker punched. She looked down at the twelve-year-old journal splayed across her lap and realized it truly was a Pandora’s box come to life, a dubious gift from a dead man who had little to say while living but clearly plenty upon departure. She snapped it shut and threw it across the room with enough force to shatter her mother’s purple vanity lamp. A clock that followed to the floor doggedly kept ticking time. 5:17 pm. It was the beginning of the next uncomfortable phase of her life.

There is also a very artfully produced (by Tom Amandes) book trailer for After The Sucker Punch that offers a visual synopsis of the story that’s quite compelling... 




What’s been the highlight of your time in Independent Fiction? And what don’t you like about it?

The highlight, definitely, was the actual creation of ATSP for publishing. Putting together a book, as opposed to just chasing after a publisher, was a new experience that came with quite a learning curve... which was both terrifying and exhilarating for me at the time! As I went through the process of rewriting, editing, formatting, working with a designer (Grace Amandes) on the cover (which I love), I felt like I was building a dream house... one that would be exactly as I pictured it. 

And, then, GETTING IT PUBLISHED... amazing! 

In a world where traditional publishing makes it profoundly difficult for an unknown author not working in a formulaic genre (i.e. vampires, zombies, romance, or SMBD) to get published, the sheer empowerment and pleasure of being able to create the book I wanted, and then put it up where readers from all over the world could access it, was creatively life-changing. From there, all else springs! 

And what I don’t like about indie publishing? A couple of things: 

First, it’s difficult, frankly, to do everything yourself. As savvy and capable as I am with marketing and promotion, there’s just the sheer volume of tasks related to breaking a book, particularly in this uber-saturated marketplace, which makes that process exhausting at times. I’m relentless and enthusiastic, but after five months on my own, I’m currently in conversation with a publicist to hopefully join me in the endeavour! 

Second, I’m not fond of the knee-jerk stigmas perpetuated about indie authors as a whole by some mainstream media, various publishing platforms, and select book bloggers (happily, not you!), too many of whom marginalize and rebuff all self-published authors as amateurs willing to put out poorly written, unedited pap to which Mom, Dad, and BFFs will award 5-star reviews. But, then again... I also don’t like that too many self-published authors prove them right! 

We indie authors are the only ones who can change that scenario and the only way we do it is by holding ourselves to the highest possible standards in, both, the excellence of what we write and the professionalism of what we deliver to the marketplace. 

Hear Lorraine ponder political issues HERE

I’ve covered this paradox surrounding “judgmental media vs. indie authors” on my blog and other places, and hope, given changing attitudes and the critical mass of like-minded authors writing on the topic, the industry as a whole steps up to raise the bar... and media takes notice! We’ll see how that goes in the next few years. 

Lorraine's blog at huffingtonpost.com

You were the lead singer in a band. Loads of us would have loved to do that!

ROCK & ROLL!! Yes... thank you for asking; I was a lead singer for many years. A true creative high point in pretty much every way imaginable! 




I mentioned the 80s earlier: that’s when I found the musical mentors with whom I conceived an original project called DEVON, a soul/new wave band that did it up big for most of the decade. 


My most recent foray was with a blues/rock project called Road To Blue... which morphed into an original project under my name... which culminated in an original CD, Somewhere On the Way, a true labour of love and a solid example of my sensibilities as a singer/songwriter. It’s available on iTunes and CDBaby, so hop on over to my site if you’re interested. 

http://www.lorrainedevonwilke.com/music.html

[And FYI: in an interesting bit of mixed media, one of the songs from the CD is part of the epilogue of After the Sucker Punch as a free download... now how fun is that?!)   

How seriously do you take your photography?

Very. One of my images was recently chosen for a traveling exhibit for the amazing group called The Peace Project, and just this week a piece of mine was jury-selected for YourDaily Photograph, a collectors’ site managed by the very prestigious  Duncan Miller Gallery in LA. I still take my camera wherever I go, shooting and uploading new work when I can.

Give me your favourite a) two books, b) CD and C) DVD

Damn, I’m terrible at these “favourite” things, but I’ll do my best to hone down the list! But know that these come with the caveat that they are some of my favourites, not necessary the favourites (I don’t think I could possibly be quite that selective!). 

Books: To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee 




and Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides




CD: Joni Mitchell’s Blue -  I know every word, breath and harmony! 




DVD: Still Crazy – It was my go-to gift DVD for years, particularly for anyone with an appreciation for rock bands and growing older! 




Invite one author, one musician and one actor to dinner. And what would you eat?

The author would be Dave Eggers (I like his books and his mission statement), the musician, George Harrison (my favourite Beatle); 




the actor, Gregory Peck (the man everyone wanted to be their father). 



... and can I add Maggie Gyllenhaal (I just binge-watched The Honourable Woman and she blew my mind!!). 


Wiz's favourite MG role - Crazy Heart

That’s quite a fabulous crowd, isn’t it?

We’d sit around the table at my house with some great blues, a fire going, and the sun setting, eating a Greek meal of roasted lamb with mint jelly, rice pilaf, Greek salad, crusty wheat bread, and baklava, all made by my grandmother, who’d have come down from the heavens to get it done right.



  
Finally, what do fans of Lorraine Devon Wilke have to look forward to in 2014?

I’d hoped to have a collection of my published essays (Sass & Sensibility... a Collection of Essays by Lorraine Devon Wilke

My goal for the rest of 2014 is to continue to give After The Sucker Punch the necessary push to keep it advancing in terms of sales and promotion, as well as get this next novel done. 

Novel #2 should be ready to go by the first quarter. Working title: Woman Between the Lines, “an anti-romantic comedy/drama about a recently dumped 33-year-old portrait photographer who sets off to find his ailing father's first love, convinced she carries the key to happiness for them all.”

 I’ll continue to write for The Huffington Post and the various other publishers I work for; keep my blogs going 

AfterTheSuckerPunch.com 
My Adventures in Independent Publishing and Rock+Paper+Music 
Sass & Sensibility from Lorraine Devon Wilke

hopefully find a few places to get up and sing, and, of course, sling the camera over my shoulder on some travels I’ve got in mind. 



I can always be found at 

info@lorrainedevonwilke.com 

Lorraine, it has been a pleasure to speak to you around the Cauldron and I wish you all the best in the coming year.

Thanks so much, Mark, for inviting me to visit you and your readers around the Cauldron. I had a blast answering your questions and hope your readers enjoy the glimpse.  



Buy Lorraine's work HERE

UK: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Lorraine-Devon-Wilke/e/B00K2ZOLSA/ref=sr_tc_2_0?qid=1413186082&sr=1-2-ent

US: http://www.amazon.com/Lorraine-Devon-Wilke/e/B00K2ZOLSA/ref=sr_tc_2_0?qid=1413186082&sr=1-2-ent

Contact Lorraine:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lorraine-devon-wilke/




Facebook. https://www.facebook.com/lorrainedevonwilke

Website. http://www.lorrainedevonwilke.com/index.html



Twitter. @LorraineDWilke

Goodreads. https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/8185626.Lorraine_Devon_Wilke


Google Plus. https://plus.google.com/+LorraineDevonWilke/posts




Wednesday, 21 November 2012

An Interview with Alex Granados

Alex Granados 
Alex Granados works in radio and print newspapers and has just taken a step into the waters of Indielit publishing for Crushed Hearts and Black Butterfly Publishing with a new Zombie novel called Cemetery Plot.

He's been doing the rounds lately - skim forward to the bottom of the interview to find four other interviews with other bloggers - to promote his work which is garnering decent reviews on the circuit, as you would expect from someone with his pedigree. Zombielit readers are going to be well served by this novel, it seems.

The Wiz and his magic radar Orb managed to track him down in one of America's finest regions - that of North Carolina - and he agreed to speak around the Cauldron. Here's what he had to say.






Hiya Alex Tell us a bit about yourself. Who are you? How did you come to write? Do you write for a living?

Hi Wiz. Thanks for having me. So, I live in Raleigh, North Carolina. 



They tell me Raleigh is known as 'The City of Oaks,'Alex?

It is indeed, Wiz. 

Because of a lot of Oak trees about?

There are certainly plenty of oak trees. However, I work in Durham, which is about 30 minutes away, as a producer on a local talk show called The State of Things. It's a public radio program hosted by NPR veteran Frank Stasio. When I'm not doing that, I write a freelance column for the local newspaper, the News & Observer. I also practice magic.


 You know like disappearing coins and that sort of thing. I got into it a few months ago when I had to watch a documentary for work. It was about this magician who moved to Japan to do shows. 

He learned that the Japanese magicians were great at coming up with tricks but lousy at showmanship, so he made it his job to bring them up to speed. It was weird and engaging. I decided I wanted to be able to do some tricks, too. 

I've been writing since the fourth grade. Our class had a Halloween short story writing contest, and I wrote a story about (appropriately enough) zombies. The class was riveted when I read it out loud and I got hooked to the attention. Been writing ever since.  

How do you write? Are you a methodical 2.5k word a day grinder? Or an inspirational - lock-me-away-for-the-weekend kind of pantser?

I'm more of a 2.5k word-a-day grinder, except my chosen goal is 2,000 words a day. I settled on that during last year's National Novel Writing month. 

I got a late start and was trying to write 50,000 words in 25 days, so it looked like 2,000 words per day would do the trick. I've been doing that ever since.  

Tell us about Cemetery Plot, published two weeks ago?

Apocalyptic Zombie Classic


"This is a weird horror/sci fi hybrid. It came about when I was walking by a graveyard last year. It was one of those places reserved for the well off and relatively famous. The cemetery was, more or less, at capacity and I got to thinking about what would happen on a long enough time frame if we ran out of places to bury people. Would the world just be one big graveyard? "
The story came from there. I wrote two intertwined stories. One set in a world that is overrun with cemeteries due to a virus that spreads through the cremated ashes of the dead. Cremation was outlawed and cemetery space is at a premium. 

Into that story comes Vanessa. She was depressed, living in the 1970s and decided to take part in a Satanic ritual that would turn her into one of the living dead. Instead she woke up years later, unchanged and all too alive. A cemetery tycoon finds out about her and wants to experiment on her to find out the secret of her resurrection. He hopes to use that secret to clear the cemeteries and make room for more bodies... and of course put more money in his pockets. 

That storyline is mixed with another one set in the future of that world. In this future, a zombie apocalypse has taken place, and the action follows a living dead medium who makes his money bilking the rich. The two stories eventually converge and you find out how everything is connected.  
  
Do you think The Walking Dead should have ended at the end of the first series. Has the Apocalypse/Zombie genre reached its peak of popularity and/or creative limit? Or does it have somewhere else to travel?


"It's hard to say. If Season Two were all we had to go on, then I would say, yes, The Walking Dead should have ended after Season One. The second season was very slow going and only picked up the pace towards the end. Not enough to redeem it though. The third season looks like it's livening things up though, so there could be some redemption after all. Give me another season and I'll let you know what I think."

As for the zombie genre. I think it's time for it to go back to its origins in Haiti. The zombie idea got started because of the legend of zombifications in the voodoo religion of Haiti.  But the zombies they were talking about were completely different. They were victims, forced into an existence of servitude to people with powers greater than them. I think there is more to explore in that aspect of the zombie genre. 

Haitian origins? Zombie Flesh Eaters? Are Zombies real, Alex? Here's a chap who explains the origins of the zombie phenomenon.

  “Our source here is ethnobotanist Wade Davis. In 1982 he visited Haiti to see if he could learn the secret of the "zombie powder" that local sorcerers, known as bokors, allegedly used to reanimate the dead. As told in his 1985 book, The Serpent and the Rainbow,  Davis had little to go on but some tantalizing stories and a few contacts. Nonetheless, during his first week in Haiti he managed to meet two alleged zombies who'd been patients at a local psychiatric institute.  What's more, with the aid of a wad of greenbacks he was able to witness the manufacture of a batch of zombie powder. In a chilling passage he tells of a midnight trip to a graveyard where he watched a bokor and his assistants dig up the corpse of a recently deceased infant, portions of which - Davis is a bit vague on the details - were added to a witch's brew of plants, sea worm, toad, lizard, and fish.       As time went on Davis learned a bit about why zombies were created. Typically the victim had antagonized his family or neighbors, who hired a bokor to do him in. The bokor would spread zombie powder on the threshold of the home of the victim, where he would absorb it through his feet. After falling into a deathlike trance the victim would be buried then later summoned from the grave by the bokor, who would exploit the zombie as a slave. During several trips to Haiti, Davis was able to collect eight samples of powder. A number of the ingredients had psychoactive properties, but the most important, he concluded, was a potent neurotoxin called tetrodotoxin, which was extracted from the puffer fish found in Haitian waters. The principal symptom of tetrodotoxin poisoning is paralysis--often the victim remains conscious, but his breathing becomes so shallow as to be undetectable and he appears lifeless. Davis claims some victims were thought dead but revived. Davis tells of providing samples of zombie powder to pathologist Leon Roizin, who tested them on rats. Roizin told him the animals became completely immobilized and unresponsive, though heartbeat and brainwaves were still detectable. After 24 hours the rats recovered, apparently without lingering effects. Davis never actually saw the creation of a zombie and concedes there is much about Haitian society he doesn't understand. But one might conclude that tetrodotoxin was the drug used to create zombies...” (Source: The Straight Dope)
 As for apocalyptic stories... I never get tired of them. I feel as though there is limitless ground for the exploration of the human condition in them. 

How do you market Cemetery Plot? What is your favoured method? Have you any tips for aspiring novelists on marketing their work in this most vicious and saturated of marketplaces?

I've got to say, I hate marketing. I do the usual Facebook posting thing, and I've done a fair number of blog interviews. I've also sent out my novel for review to various places and done a number of book signings locally. I don't really have any marketing tips for aspiring novelists... if anything, I need some! 


"Buy my book! Buy my book!" Indielit - modern
Tin Men (and women).

Marketing is a bloody nightmare, Alex.

You ain't kidding, Wiz.

Does your environment affect your writing? Is there anything about  Raleigh which influences your characters and/or plots?

I mentioned earlier the cemetery nearby that inspired Cemetery Plot. The setting of some of my other novels, or at least one anyway, is Raleigh, though I don't call it that. 


Northern Virginia
newspaper and magazine
editor
Really, all of my stories, characters and ideas come, in some way, from experiences that I've had, and since I've lived most of my life in Raleigh, it becomes the setting for many of them. I used to live in Manassas, Virginia, and I spent a number of years in Morgantown, West Virginia, so those also get jammed into my stories from time to time. 

Sentient zomboids - half alive, half dead - capture you while you are driving to the lake. You are tied up and taken to a cabin deep in the North Carolina woods and prepared for mutation. The previous owners of the cabin have left three books, two CD's and a DVD in a big suitcase you find in the cellar. In your ideal world, what would you wish them to be.

The Two CD's would be: Animals by Pink Floyd and a mix CD of crazy techno. 


Wiz notes: The third best Floyd album and one which divided critics at the time. Contains two classic Floyd moments, but is chiefly remembered for being the album where Roger Waters began to exert control - lyrically, at least - over the direction of the band.

Plus 

Some Crazy Techno Beats






The DVD wouldn't matter. I wouldn't be able to watch it after a couple of viewings. But just for the hell of it, let's say Koyaanisqatsi. 

I'm a bit the same with films, Alex. 

Are you, Wiz?

Yes. Much prefer reading and music. Here's Koya...





The three books would be:

Catch 22 by Joseph Heller

Catch 22 PDF

Hocus Pocus by Kurt Vonnegut 



and for a bonus feature....



Hocus Pocus by Focus (live ultra prog version)

...and the collected works of Phillip K. Dick, if such a thing existed. 

What would be your three major tips for surviving a zombie apocalypse if you were the sole survivor?

One: Get a gun. 
Two: Learn to survive in the woods, off the land. 
Three: Find the most isolated piece of forest you can find and disappear in the middle of it.  

Or befriend Daryl Dixon?

That would work, Wiz.

What is your favourite zombie film? And which film, book or CD has had the biggest influence on Cemetery Plot

28 Days Later has got to be my favorite Zombie film, however the movies of George Romero, like Night of the Living Dead, Dawn of the Dead, etc., influenced me more. 


Classic opening shot in 28 Days Later.
Filmed at 5am outside the Houses of Parliament

Cemetery Plot utilizes many traditional zombie tropes, and those mostly developed because of Romero's vision.  

Which creative person would you invite for dinner. What would they be eating Chez Alex?

I would invite Kurt Vonnegut. 


Vonnegut Quote


He inspired me to write and showed me that reading could be fun. Unfortunately, he's dead, so he would be a zombie. That means that  I would probably be on the menu that night. 

That's OK though. If I have to go, having Kurt Vonnegut eat me for dinner is as good a way as any.  
  
What does 2013 hold for fans of Alex Granados?
I have a novel coming out April 1 from Crushing Hearts and Black Butterfly Publishing. 

It's called Into the Cave. 


It's not horror exactly, more like fantasy. It follows a young boy from an abusive home who discovers that he can create worlds by writing them. He escapes into one of these worlds to get away from his father and ends up losing his identity. The story is him trying to find out who he is and learning to control his power.  

Alex, thanks for chatting with us. It's been an absolute pleasure and I wish you every success in the coming year.

Thanks Wiz!!

Buy Cemetery Plot here:

 http://www.amazon.com/Cemetery-Plot-Alex-Granados/dp/0615711448/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1353356914&sr=8-1&keywords=cemetery+plot

Talk to Alex here:

www.facebook.com/AlexGranadosWrites

Read about Alex here: