Special Update!
My
lovely writing coach Sarah Soon is hosting an authors showcase on the
14th. I'm taking part in it. This also means on the 15th I'll be in
introvert burnout mode. However, all 5-ish of my followers don't
deserve an empty month.
As
part of the event, I did a Q&A for Sarah's blog. It talks about
my work in progress Don't Fireball the Neighbors. It has been
reposed here for your viewing
Special Content!
Remember that Mary Poppins drawing from last month? Well, Mrs.Soon managed to coax another sketch out of me.Below is a self-portrait with my two main characters, Celebramar the dragon and Leon the wizard.
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Celebramar, Author, and Leon |
Q&A with Sarah Soon
1.
What inspired you to write your WIP, Don’t
Fireball The Neighbors?
Share briefly how it came about.
Leon,
Celebramar, and the world of Mundus started as an oral story I told
to my kid brother. As I grew, the stories grew with me. Before I left
for college, I had five short works. Life then got complicated.
Skipping
over the traumatic back-story, I now want to become a paid, published
writer. However, the older stories aren't quite a series. There's
lots of inside jokes specific to my family and childhood. That means
rewrites. Lots and lots of rewrites. Somehow ended up writing a brand
new pilot story. Don't
Fireball the Neighbors is
the story of how Leon and Celebramar met.
2.
You’ve
shared on your blog that growing up, your parents encouraged you to
read, re-enact scenes from your favorite stories, and write. How did
your childhood spur your desire to write stories as an adult?
Truthfully,
that the desire never stopped. Stories have always meant safety for
me. As a child, I was very bright, but very socially awkward.
However, through stories, I could see different ways to behave and
act. Make-believe isn't just escapism, it can be a learning tool.
Also,
telling stories, was much, much easier than “just
get out there and play with the other kids.”
I
didn't have to triple check my words and tone. The tale had already
picked them out. Listening to other people's stories was easier than
voicing an opinion on clothes I didn't like or a sport I didn't play.
I
socialize by telling stories because I've had years of positive
reinforcement from it. I use the written word because it translates
my ideas better than me trying to speak or draw. Becoming an author
is just trying to turn a lifestyle into a career.
3.
What’s
a major factor to writing for Middle Grade readers vs. Young Adult
readers?
Officially,
the difference between the the two genres are how romance, profanity,
and violence are shown. I don't cover those in my work. Instead I
touch on fraud, prejudice, and bureaucracy. It's hard to use some
these themes without draining all the whimsy out of Mundus. (Readers
that come for light entertainment don't like it when you soapbox at
them.)
Also,
I don't know if I can get away with putting 'grown-up' issues in the
background of a Middle Grade book. I doubt it'll be an issue for my
preteen readers. However, I worry that the parents of those preteens
won't buy my work because how I present these issues offends them.
3.
You’ve
got intriguing protagonists in your WIP, Don’t
Fireball The Neighbors.
Tell us about your two main characters especially with the Middle
Grade reader in mind.
Celebramar
is a large dragon with a larger appetite. Normally, he has a “live
and let be”
view
about humans. However, they won't let him and his pile of treasure
be. Imagine someone swiping the quilt your grandma made and sell it
at an antiques auction. Celebramar's patience is about to go up in
smoke.
Leon
is a wizard who wants to open a magic items repair shop. He would be
happy to spend the rest of his life sharpening enchanted swords and
patching flying carpets. Instead, Leon is stuck as an unpaid handyman
in a half-finished frontier town. Shortages abound and the
townspeople are getting frustrated. Leon's weary of demands to “just
magic it fixed.”
4.
Madeline Engle said, “You
have to write the book that wants to be written. And if the book will
be too difficult for grown-ups, then you write it for children.”
What
is the main lesson you want your MG readers to take away from this
story?
Without
spoiling too much of the plot? Basically, walking away is sometimes
the better option.
Both
Leon and Celebramar deal with several 'rude' neighbors. Both main
characters have the power to be very dangerous. Leon is a
professional wizard. Celebramar can literally spit fire when mad.
However, setting your problems on fire isn't always the best way.
5.
What do you have next after you publish this story?
Take
the criticism and reviews with a grain of salt. Focus on the next
story.
I
want to expand on the world of Mundus. So I'm actually rewriting that
first oral story. Celebramar and Leon will visit the big city... and
Celebramar will mistake a zoo for a buffet.
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