1. Do you
write a single genre or do your fingers flow over the keys creating tales in
many forms?
I write in many genres and subgenres. This what I said to myself. If Shakespeare, Hemmingway, and James
Patterson can write stories that intrigue them, so could I. I have no interest
in being a Stephen King, my mentor, who has been writing, as far as I am
concerned, tedious horror. My first novel, as yet not published is a horror
story with romance and fantasy elements. My first published novel, A Sinister Obsession is a mystery
thriller with subgenres of romance and a paranormal female detective. My
current novel, Stardust Dreams, is a
senior romance with a science fiction background. The novel I am now working on
is a serious comedy drama about the lives of seniors in a magical fifty-five
and over retirement community. I write my novels in my head first and let my
imagination have no boundaries.
Does your
reading choices reflect your writing choices?
Yes. I’ll read any book from horror to romance if the characters
are interesting and the plot is unique. And the same goes for the stories
lurking in my unconscious. However, I am now leaving violence and focusing on
more senior romance stories, the world I live in.
Are there genres
you wouldn’t attempt?
No. I would like to write a great story in all genres from
children books to young adult to adult but their connection would probably be
my desire to continue to explore human nature and relationships, having been a
clinical social worker and school psychologist in my first two careers.
2. Heroes,
Heroines, Villains. Which are your favorite to write?
Honestly, I love them all. When creating great characters like
Lance Forrester, Sage Saint Charles, Medora, and Detective Aubrey McKenzie they
become so real, I often forget they’re characters, and instead, wonder if I’ve
met in real life. Villains offer me an opportunity to write more dramatic
scenes, more graphic use of language, and diabolical dialogue. I’ve been asked
about writing female characters before, and I’ve said being married for nearly
forty-five years, having a daughter, working in education surrounded by women,
and being a therapist with female patients, have all given me great insights
into the nature of women, but I always consult with my wife to double check my
accuracy.
3. Heroes.
How do you find them? Do pictures, real life or plain imagination create the
man you want every reader to love? Do they come before the plot or after you
have the idea for the story?
The plot arrives in my mind first. Then, I think of the characters
that would fit the story. My heroes reveal themselves in my mind. I don’t
create them. Lance Forrester in Stardust Dreams and Detective Joshua Diamond
are loveable dreamers who overcome their heartfelt tragic pasts to help the
less fortunate. They have deep passions and are undaunted by obstacles. As
Michelangelo was to have said, his characters were in the marble, he just had
to release them. My heroes are not me and are me. They do not come from real
life. However, many of the cast do as they are pieces of past patients,
infamous celebrities, and people I’ve known.
5. Villains or villainesses
or an antagonist, since they don’t always have to be the bad guy or girl. They
can be a person opposed to the hero’s or heroine’s obtaining their goal. How do
you choose one? How do you make them human?
In Stardust Dreams Lance
Forrester will seek a traveling companion to join him on his quest for
immortality in the galaxy. I didn’t want an ordinary woman to join him. Sage
Saint Charles sort of auditioned for the role in my mind. She is a complex
character who had made a mess of her first life and who struggles not to make a
mess of her second one. She fights against Lance’s wish to have her fall in
love with him. As I’ve said, my careers as a therapist and school psychologist
have given me great insights into human nature and relationships. I see all
sides of human nature and that makes for realistic characters. In addition, my
wife was a New York talent agent and through her knowledge of the business and
my interactions with actors and actresses, I had a good sense of their unique
natures.
6. What is
your latest release? Who is the hero, heroine and or the villain?
Stardust Dreams is an epic love story that takes place in the near
future, on a beautiful alien planet, and then back to Earth two hundred
thousand years into our future. Lance Forrester, scientist and astronaut, has
built a spaceship to take him on a one way journey into the stars. Not wishing
to go alone, he asks Sage to join him. Not wishing to spoil the mystery of my
novel, I will say that Lance will meet a loving alien culture with countless
mysteries and surprises. In the third part, Lance will return to Earth’s future
to find its inhabitants suffering from the devastation of human nature and
mother nature. He just might be their savior.
7. What are you working on
now?
I am completing a novel, If
We’re Dreaming, Don’t Wake Us! It is my first comedy drama in the style of
a Neil Simon play, Plaza Suite. It
showcases an ensemble cast of senior citizens in a magical fifty-five and over
retirement community. They are given the miracle of youth and good health to
live their early lives over again. Some will find greater happiness and some
will foolishly destroy it. It essentially explores the lives of senior citizens
and grandparents who struggle with infirmity, depression, lost dreams and
family crises.
8. How can
people find you?
Good Morning Janet
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