I was going to put this interview in with the Sergeys post but it's too long so...new post! Comments from me are in red ink.
1- Diann T. Read, when did you start writing Sci Fi?
Actually,
the very first story I ever wrote, all four sentences of it, with a fat
pencil on wide-lined paper at the age of five, might have qualified as
Sci-Fi because it involved a little green man from outer space. But I
didn't seriously get interested in science fiction until my sophomore
year in college. I'd been working on a novel based on the Arthurian
legends and was more interested in knights, horses, and swords. I even
took fencing in college, though that's nothing like handling a
broadsword! Then some of my high school friends, who were major Star
Trek fans, "kidnapped" me to go see this new little movie called Star
Wars. My initial reaction? "That's Le Morte D'Arthur in space!" All the
same archetypal characters. But it got me into the library looking for
science fiction.
I can't wait to read Gareth's story!
2- I know much of the jargon comes straight from
your 23-year stint in the USAF. How much of the material about Lujan's
recovery have you personally experienced, or is it simply fantastic
research?
That was all intense research--and I wrote "Dominion"
before you could just Google questions about central nervous system
injuries. I picked the brains of a couple nurse friends, hung out in the
ER with one of them one night, went through the yellow pages to find
audiologists and physical therapists and drove to their offices to
interview them, and scoured the medical section of the local university
library. Then I ran the manuscript past medical people to make sure I'd
gotten it right. It was like doing a Master's
program in nine months--because that was the deadline set by my
publisher. (The Sergey books were originally published by Tor in the
late 90s.)
You can really tell you've been meticulous with your research. It brings your characters to life in a way you can't if you simply pull stuff out of thin air.
3- Who have been your hero(ine)s in the Sci Fi writing world?
Authors?
Or their characters? My favorite female writers of military SF are C.J.
Cherryh, Lois McMaster Bujold, and Elizabeth Moon. C.J. encouraged
me--and connected me with my agent--when I was first starting out.
Later, Elizabeth Moon went wa-a-a-a-a-ay beyond all expectations to
mentor me. We did panels on military SF together at conventions, and
when I deployed to Bosnia, I kept in touch with her almost as much as my
family.
Elizabeth's character, Esmay Suiza, from a series that began
with "Once a Hero," is one of my favorites. While I was in Bosnia and
emailing my adventures to Elizabeth, she emailed back, "Esmay is looking
more like you all the time!"--which I took as a compliment. And, of
course, Lois's Cordelia, mother of
Miles Vorkosigan, who takes matters into her own hands more than once.
Holy Astrochick Batman, we have the SAME HEROINES! I love those books! I've also read a ton of guy SF writers (My husband is beginning to wonder if there'll be room for him in our bedroom soon. I might lend out a book or two so he'll fit...;o). Bujold is one of my all-time favorites. I'm always glad to see a woman SF writer.
3- Will you be doing another Sergey book?
Not
immediately, though it's not out of the question. It'll more likely be
novelettes or novellas. A couple of reader friends about my age have
said they'd like to see more about Lujan and Darcie and what they do
after "Dominion." I hadn't realized there was a market for middle-aged
space heroes! ;-)
The young studs get all the fun heroes. I think people our age want to see that they aren't obsolete and can still do amazing things. Especially since they are doing more and more in the medical field to keep the body viable for longer. Bring it on, baby. Darcie needs her day.
4- I'd love to hear more about Darcie.
She's such a strong woman that I don't want her to get lost in the
shuffle. I think she has a whole book's worth of story waiting.
I
had a book about Darcie semi-planned, about her bringing up Tristan on
Ganwold, but Tor didn't go for it. Here's a young woman from a high-tech
civilization abruptly thrust into a primitive hunter-gatherer culture.
How does she learn to survive? Can she even trust the native population,
who are obviously carnivores?
What does she teach her child about his origins? I thought it'd be fun
to show Tris as a small child, too, assimilating himself into the gan
culture, as children so readily do.
I feel like there's a whole story about her after the trilogy. You could tie up the problem of Remarq in there too. Maybe SHE could even do it...;o)
5- I'd like to watch Lujan
finally make it to health. I'm so impressed with what a strong MAN he
is. I love that he prays and works for freedom and for his family.
Lujan
will never quite be 100% physically after all that damage but, as you
saw in "Dominion," he learns to compensate. I think that makes him a lot
more interesting. In a later book I started brainstorming but never
fully developed, he regained enough capability to have another child
with Darcie--much to Tristan's surprise!
I didn't think he'd be 100% but playing with the alternate "gifts" could be really fun. And another child, especially a brilliant girl, would be fantastic.
6- I'd really like to see Tristan fly again and maybe deal further with his demons.
If
Tris had been brought up by his father, he'd be as enthusiastic a pilot
as Lujan. However, growing up on the ground with the ganan--and having
been subjected
to pilot training under duress--he's much more comfortable with ground
operations. He can fly, but it's not his forte. I had tentatively
planned books showing him progressing into the Spherzah while evading
attempts on his life. (After what he and Lujan did in the current
trilogy, they're both targeted men.) I also had marriage and kids in
mind for Tris; I introduced his future wife, in fact, in "Echoes."
I'm definitely looking forward to that. He needs to really climb out of his shell and shine.
7- I know you're writing another series. What's this one about?
The
Seventh Shaman series is similar to the Sergey books, except aimed at
the YA audience. My protagonist, Akuleh (the name means "Looks Up,"
which he has to learn to do on a few levels, but he goes by Ku), would
be American Indian if the books were set on Earth. Having a non-Anglo
protagonist was a very deliberate choice; I see far too few non-Anglo,
especially American Indian, kids in YA fiction.
Ku is an orphan being
brought up by an abusive stepmother. He knows a
prophecy was made about him at his birth but he doesn't know what it
said, so when his stepmother starts calling him Death Bringer he
believes the worst. Time to leave before anyone else he cares about is
killed. So he runs away from home, lies about his age, and joins the
military. Ku also has a snarky streak, which is a lot of fun to write!
Like
Lujan, Ku is a natural combat pilot, but that's as much curse as
blessing during pilot training. He also has to deal with cultural
issues--his latent shaman capabilities, which adds a fantasy element,
clan traditions, and that prophecy--on top of prejudice, some bullying,
and the usual teen challenges of boy-girl relationships and heartbreak.
In the end Ku will hear the contents of the prophecy and learn that his
life does have worth and purpose--a great purpose. And that's the
message I want to get across to kids, especially at-risk kids.
Wow! I can't wait to read this series! I love the idea of helping non-mainstream kids come out into the light. This is going to be fun.
8- Are there plans for future series?
Some
day
I really need to go back and finish that Arthurian book I began in high
school. It's actually about Sir Gareth, one of Arthur's nephews and Sir
Gawain's youngest brother. All the Round Table knights went on the
quest for the Holy Grail but not all of their stories are told in the
old literature. So I decided to tell Sir Gareth's tale.
I can almost see the movie now...;o) Picturing Gareth. Mmmm!
9- Are you going to be doing any book tours down here in sunny Arizona? I can't wait to meet you!
I
would LOVE to do a book tour in Arizona! But that works best when you
have print books. Right now--except for "Echoes," which I had to get
printed for some contests, and which is now available in print from
CreateSpace--the Sergey books are available only as ebooks for Kindle.
They will be available on Nook in early March. If there's sufficient
demand, I'll do print runs of "Ganwold" and "Dominion" as well.
I agree with the ebook thing. Right now I'm mostly selling on Kindle. Hopefully there will be print books coming in the near future.
10- What advice would you give aspiring Sci Fi writers?
Trust
yourself and the
stories banging on the inside of your skull to get out! Do your
homework on your topics. To me, the education I get from the research is
half the fun. Keep some means of jotting notes with you at all times;
you never know when you're going to get a great idea. Write something
every day, even if it's only a page or a paragraph. Learning to write
well is like learning to play a musical instrument or a sport; it takes
coaching, studying, and practice, practice, practice! Attend writing
classes or workshops when you can; learn from the pros. And never let
anyone steal your dream!
Great advice. Thank you for the interview. Looking forward to meeting you someday soon. Now get back to work so I can read your new material...;o)
Diann's contact information:
Website: www.diannthornleyread.com
Blog: Hero Journeys, at: www.diannread.wordpress.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/pages/Diann-T-Read/291193624316145?ref=hl
Twitter: @DiannTRead
Hi! I could have sworn I've visited this website before but after looking at a few
ReplyDeleteof the posts I realized it's new to me. Regardless, I'm definitely
pleased I discovered it and I'll be book-marking it and checking back regularly!
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