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

Saturday, 17 November 2012

An Interview with Sinead MacDughlas


In the second of our interviews with authors from Crushed Hearts and Black Butterfly Press, Toronto's Sinead MacDughlas talks to Wizard Watchers about top selling Indie thriller, Learn To Love Me, and life in the land of houses the size of castles, snow, strange Yams and impossibly coloured vegetation, highways extending into the infinite, Vancouver, the North West Passage, elderberries, Neil Young, Rush, David Cronenburg, the Moose, resurrected Bison, beavers, the Maple Leafs, Jazz Festivals and lots and lots of big trees. 

Multi-talented Toronto scribbler
Sinead MacDughlas

Some interviews are like pulling teeth. The interviewee clearly doesn't want to be there; might not like me (I know, I know, it happens), or maybe, might not like Wizards (is there a phobia of such?). 

They might have severe life issues going down or be suffering a severe case of block, but for whatever reason they don't perform. That's where the magic Cauldron comes in. You, dear Watcher of Wizards, might never know which is which: As it comes - or cauldron stirred.

Interviewing Sinead was as it comes. This was sheer joy. 

All I had to do for this one was get on the Wizplane to Toronto, find her big spread out in the Toronto boondocks, sip filter coffee, sit back, put my tape recorder on the arm of the Laz-E-Boy recliner, ask the questions, and let her rock and roll. The delightful and talented Sinead is a communicator that's for certain, so I'll shut up and let her do the talking.

Top selling Indie thriller
Learn to Love Me

Hiya Sinead. Tell us a bit about yourself. Who are you? Are you a professional writer or do you work at something else?

Hello, Wiz! It's lovely to be in the cauldron!

You're not in the Cauldron, that would be a bit silly and possibly a bit cannibalistic.

You know what I mean! 

Allegorically, you're round the Cauldron. Like a campfire...

Yeh, okay! Before I start answering though, is this one of those deals where if you don't like the answers, you crank up the heat? Being Canadian, I don't function well in high temperatures. Just saying.

No, we're cool. Cold as ice, Sinead.

That's great! So. I'm a forty-two-year-old  Canuck, who lived like an urban gypsy until my mid-twenties. I gave marriage a shot then and failed miserably at it. The second one is chugging along much better though.

Congrats!

Thanks. I'm now a stay-at-home mom, raising a three-year-old  boy, a four-year-old girl, a twelve-year-old  cat (who is also a live-in editor of sorts), and a forty-four-year-old  husband. I live in the small town of Georgina, North of Toronto, Ontario.

Toronto. A bit near the magnificent
Woodbine racetrack

 This is all between writing and blogging, of course. We share a little house with a ghost or two, my muses and my live -in editor.

Gunnar - Sinead's "Live-In" Editor

I've always been a late bloomer. Apparently, I was born three or four weeks late, and I've been losing ground ever since.

When did you start scribbling?

 I started writing fiction quite young, mainly because real life was too boring to keep getting out of bed for. I didn't really do much with my writing until 2010, though. I have one more year to put everything I've got into it, before the kiddies go to school and I have to take a *shudders* day job. 

Oh good God, no. Not a day job

Yeh, I know. I'm already practicing for it. *clears throat* "Good morning, may I take your order?"

"The A4 pads are at the back, sir. Next to the pens and the Sellotape". Don't remind me! What books have you written, Sinead? How have they performed in this most cuthroat of markets?

The first is a collection of short stories and prose/poetry titled The Unscheduled Stops. It never did well in ratings, but I don't mind. I self-published it as more of a thank you gift to the people who've cheered me on, and an introduction to new readers.



The second book is my paper-baby. It's a mystery/suspense novel that I began as a Chick-lit. Unfortunately, I have no control over my muses, and they held my brain hostage until I finished
Learn To Love Me.  (See above)

If I wasn't so proud of it, I'd have likely begun self-medicating by now. lol Thanks to my friends, fans and fabulous family at Crushing Hearts & BlackButterfly Publishing, it pushed its way up to thirteenth place on the Top 100 list for Mystery/Suspense/Thriller for a bit.

Thirteenth? That is a fantastic result, Sinead. I am seriously impressed! Very few people will understand how difficult that is.

I know. It's a tough category. I think I swooned as I brushed past Bram Stoker's Dracula.haha

The last book is a new release. I wrote a Halloween, ghost-story novelette,
Best Served Bloody, for Vamptasy Publishing. It was intended to be a short story for a charity anthology, but those muses ... *shakes her head* 

Cover design by Rue Volley

The proceeds from the book still go to the East Lancashire Hospice though, I'm happy to say.

There's a very noir look and feel to Learn to Love Me. What are your influences?

Life, music and coffee. lol. The look can be entirely attributed to my extremely talented cover designer David J. Ford. Dave was also the first person to read portions of the book for me, and he based the cover on his impression of the first few chapters. In fact, elements of his design altered some of the story elements before the book was complete.
                                                                     
The feel is more a product of my own dark thoughts, my dismay at the society we're forced to survive in, and my need to express it all.

The music? Iron Maiden, Finger Eleven, Sarah McLachlan, Stone Sour, Train, Black Sabbath, Disturbed, Eric Clapton, Mariana's Trench ... I'm eclectic in all things. lol

Literary influences? The Brothers Grimm, (Those boys were disturbed! hahahahaha), Carolyn Keene, Ellis Peters, Stephen King, Clive Barker and J.D. Robb, for a start.


Swoon. Sabbath? My favourite band of all time.

Me too! I love Sabbath.

So, Sinead. Tell Wizard Watchers about your latest project? What are your ambitions for it?

I'd meant to work on my next novel; a paranormal/suspense set in North America 2025-2030. In an odd way, it would be a sequel to Learn To Love Me. However, the muses have other plans for me and now I consider it the transition from one book to the other. It will carry the reader from 1995 through the present, and prepare them for the future. Zander, Emily and Alex, all from Learn To Love Me, play a major role in this book and the next.

My ambitions? I'd hope it will find readers and make them laugh, cry, rage and cheer. And if I can make enough money to fund another book or two, I'd be ecstatic.

Whereabouts do you live? Does your environment affect your writing? Is there anything about Toronto which influences your characters and/or plots?

I think everything in my life influences my writing, really. People I meet get their personality traits absorbed by characters. The places I've lived, (all forty-two of them), make appearances in my stories, as do the various jobs I've worked. 

If someone cuts me off while I'm driving on the highway, I'll have composed their death scene before I've pulled into my driveway. Just kidding!

Sinead's photofit after most recent road rage incident
outside a Newmarket general store. She was wearing
contact lenses at the time. (Image courtesy of Toronto PD)

You're not kidding though, are you?

No I'm not Wiz. That death scene IS already written hahahahahahah. I don't think a writer, or any creative person who is observant of the world around them, can prevent their environment or experiences from affecting their work.

If you were given a one day pass to heaven and could ask your chosen Maker to change one thing about yourself, what would it be and why?

Oh, so many possibilities!  I think I'd ask them to remove my susceptibility to procrastination. I have such ambitious plans, but I so rarely follow them through to the conclusion.

You're walking past a Toronto speakeasy on the way to the deli and you are kidnapped by a Chevyload of mean trilby-hatted gangsters. You are thrown in the bowels of a disused brewery and left to rot until Big Al decides your ransom.  

Jug Ears, the gang's kindly but simple, messenger boy, drops off three books, a CD and a DVD in your gaol. What would you like them to be?

Oh dear! You don't ask easy questions do you, Wiz? 

The books would be a blank notebook (with pen, of course) 

The best book ever written about a
notebook? "A wonderful writer" - Wiz Notes.

A thesaurus. 



The complete works of William Shakespeare. 



The CD? Just one? I'd ask for my personal mixed CD #15. It's the one I've made most recently, so it would take me some time to grow tired of it. 

As well as your ephemeral one, I'll sneak this beauty in with Jug Ears, Sinead. 

The best heavy rock album ever?
Almost certainly - and the foundation stone for
heavy metal ever since. - Wiz Notes.



Hahaha Thanks Wiz!! The DVD? I don't suppose they'd bring me "How to make a lazer gun from a DVD player"? Probably not. In that case, I'd choose the full set of Frank Herbert's: Dune. 

Do you think Big Al would let Jug Ears bring me the smoked meat poutine I was headed to the deli for, Wiz? 






Hahahahahahaha...I don't know. I shall ask him. He's a kindly soul.

I've been known to issue some strongly worded threats in the name of poutine, though I probably wouldn't do so to someone as kindly as Jug Ears.

I had to look this up. It's a Quebecoise fast food
delicacy - not suitable for vegetarians or
those with an elonogated colon.
Hahah. You are too kind!! Who is your favourite writer and what would you cook for him/her Chez Sinead?

Anyone who knows me knows that my favourite anything changes from minute to minute. Choosing just one of something is nearly impossible for me, but I'll try. Let's see. I'll narrow the field a little. I couldn't pick just one from my Indie author friends, so I'll go with famous authors. I need to think.

(Sinead goes out to the kitchen at this point. Rings out to the Deli. Calls her friend Marge in the park. Chops carrot. Feeds Gunnar. Stares out the window. Fifteen minutes later, she returns).

I do believe I'd invite Piers Anthony for dinner. 



Partially, because he took the time to personally ring me back in 1992, after I'd called his fan club telephone line to ask advice about securing a literary agent, (which I never did). Also because I love his caustic sense of humour and admire his unapologetic attitude.

Who wouldn't want to have dinner with a self-professed ogre? hahaha. I'd have to forgo my carnivorous habits and prepare a vegetarian lasagna for him. Perhaps I'd bake one of my carrot cakes for dessert.

What does 2013 hold for fans of Sinead MacD?

I hope 2013 will bring a novelette (or novella), a full novel, several short stories, many shared giggles, lots of swag and a few pleasant surprises. hahahaha.

I've also taken on a pen name, Jane Douglas, for the purpose of writing for children. You'll certainly see "Jane's" debut short story, maybe
even before the New Year, in an upcoming anthology for an exceptional cause.

Sinead, it's been an absolute pleasure talking to you and I wish you all the best in 2013 and beyond.

Thanks for inviting me, Wiz. It's been awesome.


Contact:

If you have a week or so spare, here are the many ways to contact Sinead.



Publications:


Best Served Bloody: Vamptasy Publishing
Purchase Links: http://www.amazon.com/Best-Served-Bloody-ebook/dp/B009UTYWOC/ http://www.amazon.co.uk/Best-Served-Bloody-ebook/dp/B009UTYWOC/
Webpage: Still to come. ;)

BIO:

Sinead MacDughlas is a Canadian writer whose main addictions are words, music and coffee. A recovered high school drop-out, Sinead has spent much of her adult life moving around the province of Ontario and working at various jobs, including: taxi driver, advertising graphic designer, library clerk, short order cook, industrial cleaner and retail product consultant for a chain of beauty salons. In November of 2011, she finally achieved a lifelong dream of being a published author.

Friday, 10 August 2012

An Interview with Emma Edwards



The stunning Catherine Deneuve - 
classic ageless Sanguinarian in "The Hunger"


Sanguinary  

adjective
1.     accompanied by much bloodshed
2.     bloodthirsty
3.     consisting of, flowing, or stained with blood (Collins English Dictionary)

Sanguinarian - Blood Drinker 



Last week, Wizardwatchers had the pleasure of visiting Honolulu. This week, we turn our navigational gaze to the cold,windswept and mysterious land of the Ancient Britons, Wales, and the much vaunted work of neo-Gothic crime and horror writer Emma Edwards  whose first book, Sanguinary has been chilling the bones and freezing the blood of those who have read it. 

Wiz stocked up on garlic and silver bullets and - from the safety of the Wizphone Callbox - spoke to Emma about her highly rated first novel and matters criminal, literary, bloody and dark


Emma Edwards - 
hot new neo-gothic wordsmith behind "Sanguinary"
Hi Emma! Tell us a bit about yourself. Where do you live? Do you work? Are you married? Kids? 

Hi Wiz!! Home is Cwmbran, South Wales.  It was my 15th wedding anniversary on Thursday.  15 years?  Oh dear, now that makes me sound old!  I have two gorgeous children.  The rest of the household is made up of two Westies (one called Luci-Fur, she's a bit naughty but as my cousin once said to me, what do you expect when you name your dog Luci-fur?), two hamsters and a leopard gecko.  I work from home, my husband is self-employed and I help out his business when needed and when not needed I write!

Tell Wizardwatchers about "Sanguinary."
  
Sanguinary is, I would hope, a different sort of vampire novel.  Rather than being about traditional vampires my book is about 'real vampires' or otherwise 'normal' people who need to drink blood.  The idea started when I saw a documentary about people who claimed to drink blood and it ran from there really.  

Sanguinary has elements of horror, vampirism and romance all set to a rock n’ roll backdrop. 

Striking cover to Emma Edward's "Sanguinary"



Great cover, Emma. Where does the idea come from? I personally think roses are an absorbing emblem. Did you design it yourself?

Thank you. The roses are very symbolic throughout the Sanguinary series, to me and the characters.  I've even got the tattoo!  There is a part in the book where the character Ash describes what the rose means to him.  It's a symbol of awakening, discovering and the colour is always red, for blood.  Cover design was a joint effort between my husband and I, fortunately for me he is quite handy at these things.  We took the photo ourselves, which involved him having to buy me some roses, believe me flower buying is not a regular occurrence in the Edwards household!  We played about with lighting until we got the perfect picture, I have to say I love the cover!



The book melds crime and horror - which fields the stronger impetus behind your work?

I read both genres but I'm more of a horror girl at heart.  I feel that the vampire element and the relationship between Ash and Angel is the main plot to Sanguinary, the crime is the sub-plot.

The quintessential Count Dracula; and the
quintessential blood drinking scene: From frigid spinster
to blood drenched nymphomanic in one sanguine sip. (Dracula, Prince of Darkness, 1966)


How do you write? Longhand into Word? Straight into the PC? Are you methodical or freeform? Are you a 2k a day woman or a mad binge writer?

I write straight onto the PC.  There is absolutely no method to it, only madness!  Usually I will have a beginning and an end and the rest just comes after.  I'm not strict with myself about writing a certain amount a day, when it flows, it flows!   When the writing is really under my skin I'll be constantly thinking about what comes next, whatever I'm doing and I will form the scene in my head.  Except then the scene will loop around and around in my head until I can get it out, via my fingers onto the screen in front of me, only then will I be able to stop thinking about it.  Like I said, madness.  But I guess the methodical side does kick in when I am editing and I get a bit OCD then.


Three books, two CD's and one DVD for your desert island marooning, please, Emma.

Tricky, so hard to narrow it down, but here goes....

Books:
Killing me softly by Nicci French

Vaunted Nicci French obsession thriller


I would also have to take It by Stephen King with me, and From the corner of his eye by Dean Koontz too.

For music, I'd take Artwork by The Used

Rebels and mischief makers, "The Used"

and the classic The Path of Totality by Korn




My sole DVD would be close between The Lost Boys and The Crow but I guess it has to be The Lost Boys, after all it was my introduction to the world of vampires in my younger years.

A night out with a writer, a comedian and a musician. Where would you go and what would you eat?

The writer would be Stephen King, I have admired him since I started reading his books when I was a teenager.  

Genius writer of "The Shining"



The comedian would be Eddie Izzard and the musician would be Bert McCraken of The Used.  So much to do, so little time!  

Actually, I'd take them to the little beach by the Gwendraeth river, where we could talk and laugh.  I can see it now, us sitting around a campfire, with Bert playing his acoustic guitar.  As for eating, despite all the blood and gore, I'm actually a vegetarian and as we're on the beach it would probably be a picnic, champagne and strawberries sounds good.

Bridge over the Gwendraeth River
Does Wales play a big role in your books? Does the Welsh environment play a part in your ideas and writing?

I find it's easier to write about what I know.  Sanguinary is set in Cardiff, whose streets are very familiar to me.   I worked for about five years in an office block just on the outskirts of the city centre.  Every lunchtime I would end up in the city centre, usually spending all the money I had spent the day earning, this was in my single days before kids arrived to spend all my money for me. 

Back Street Cardiff: Capital City of blood drinkers

So I have maps planned out in my head of where the characters live and the routes they take throughout the book. I also spend a lot of time in West Wales, it has to be said the view of Gwendraeth river can be very inspiring.  

  
What do fans of the brilliantly titled Sanguinary and Emma Edwards have to look forward to in the coming year?

The second part of Sanguinary is almost there, I can exclusively reveal to you that the working title is 

'The Slayer'.   

I am working on editing at the moment, so hopefully this will be finished within the next few weeks.  

I have also just published a short story, just a bite sized taster of my writing, it's called Upon Reflection and is available now!




After that I have several other novels in the works and there will also be a third part to the Sanguinary Trilogy.

Emma, it's been a privilege and an honour to talk to you and I know Wizardwatchers will want me to wish you every success with your novels.

Thanks, Wiz. Loved it!!

Contact Emma at: www.emmaedwards.net


Buy "Sanguinary" at:


Chat with Emma on Facebook: 

www.facebook.com/sanguinaryseries

Tweet with Emma at: 

Twitter: @Emledwards