My guest today brings a story with an anthropological nature. Please help me welcome author Richard W. Wise to the interview hot seat! Let’s take a look at his background and then find out more about his stories.
Richard W. Wise is the author of four books: bestseller SECRETS OF THE GEM TRADE, THE CONNOISSEUR’S GUIDE (originally published in 2001, second revised edition in 2016), THE FRENCH BLUE (2010)—an award-winning historical novel, and the mystery/thriller REDLINED: A NOVEL OF BOSTON (2020). He lives with his wife, Rebekah, and their two cats (Charlie and Sammy) in Charlottesville, Virginia.
Betty: What inspired you to write the story you’re sharing with us today?
Richard: The magnificent cave paintings at Chauvet Cave in Southern France.
Betty: What, if any, new writing skill did you develop while working on this story?
Richard: I think I improved my character development.
Betty: Did you struggle with any part of this story? What and how?
Richard: The personalities of the two protagonists, particularly the female Lada. She is kidnapped by Neanderthals and given a choice to marry one or remain a slave. How she deals with that choice and her conflicted feelings when she discovers she is pregnant with a child by one of the men who murdered her father and all her friends.
Betty: Which character(s) were the easiest to get to know? Why do you think?
Richard: Again, Lada. Writing about a woman who existed prior to the Judeo-Christian ethos.
Betty: What kind of research did you need to do to write this story?
Richard: I read a number of books on the Aurignacian Period in France. 40-30,000 BP. Also, books by archeologists detailing what we know about the customs, technology, physical morphology crafts and art of both Neanderthals and Cro Magnons. The climate, available plants and animals of the European Ice Age.
Betty: How many drafts of the story did you write before you felt the story was complete?
Richard: Seven.
Betty: How long did it take for you to write the story you’re sharing with us? Is that a typical length of time for you? Why or why not?
Richard: It took about four years part-time. I began it in 2016 just after finishing the revision (2nd edition) of my first book: Secrets Of The Gem Trade. I had almost finished, Redlined: A Novel of Boston (2019-20), but my agent suggested a number of revisions and I had to drop this book and concentrate on the former for a while.
Betty: What rituals or habits do you have while writing?
Richard: I have the habit of being erratic. I don’t have set days or times, but I do write quite a lot. I’m disciplined in an undisciplined way.
Betty: Every author has a tendency to overuse certain words or phrases in drafts, such as just, once, smile, nod, etc. What are yours?
Richard: “Just and first.” My characters do smile and nod quite a bit. I also use “quite” a lot.
Betty: Do you have any role models? If so, why do you look up to them?
Richard: I admire a number of writers: Hemingway, Tolkien, Bernard Cornwell.
Betty: Do you have a special place to write? Revise? Read?
Richard: I have a separate office/library/reading room.
Betty: Many authors have a day job. Do you? If so, what is it and do you enjoy it?
Richard: I’m a retired goldsmith/gemologist/gem dealer. I was head of the company and wrote my first two books while I was running that business.
Betty: As an author, what do you feel is your greatest achievement?
Richard: Well, I guess I’d have to say, my first book. It had a major impact on the gem industry and made me quite well off.
Betty: What is your favorite genre to read?
Richard: Historical fiction.
Betty: Success looks different to different people. It could be wealth, or fame, or an inner joy at reaching a certain level. How do you define success in terms of your writing career?
Richard: I’d like to be a good writer that people read. Improving my craft is important to me.
31,000 BC:
The Dawning tells an age-old story of deadly struggle, the heart-rending tale of young love—its aspirations, pain, disappointments and eventual triumph.
Ejil and Lada, son and daughter of a Cro-Magnon tribe (on the verge of adulthood) have begun to explore their maturing feelings when an encounter with a clan of Neanderthal hunters tears their Ice Age world apart. Lada is lost and Ejil finds himself embarked on a desperate odyssey to find the mother tribe.
The Neanderthals, a pale skinned people, occupied Ice Age Europe for three hundred thousand years. Dark-skinned Cro-Magnons, our direct ancestors, appeared forty-five thousand years ago. Five thousand years later, the Neanderthals had disappeared. What happened when our two ancestral peoples came face to face on the ice bound plains of prehistory?
Travel back 33,000 years into our deep past. Set against the backdrop of the fabulous painted caves of Southern France, follow the gripping tale of two young lovers and the sweeping narrative of ancient cultures met in bloody conflict.
I applaud you, Richard, for tackling ancient history like this. I have studied anthropology in the 1990s and loved the Clan of the Cave Bear series by Jean Auel (well, most of the books in that series). I hope this one finds its audience! Thanks for stopping by.
Happy reading!
Betty
Award-winning Author of Historical Fiction with Heart, and Haunting, Bewitching Love Stories
Visit www.bettybolte.com for a complete list of my books and appearances.
I finished reading The Mermaid from Jeju by Sumi Hahn and am glad I read this story. Last week I gave you my brief initial thoughts on the story. If you’ve missed my previous reads, you can do a quick search on the Historical Fiction Around the World series title to find the others I’ve commented on since November of 2021 when I began this tour of fiction authors.
The Mermaid from Jeju is a dual-timeline read. We jump from 2001 to 1944 and 1948 and back again. I am so used to reading in close third person point of view (POV), that it took me a while to realize that this author is narrating with an omniscient POV. Bopping in and out of everyone’s thoughts and emotions was a bit disorienting at first, but once I realized that the narrator knows and sees all, then I could accept it. She has a good reason for using this POV and it works.
Note that the past in this novel is during WWII in Korea. I have found it interesting to see the war from the view in different locales and countries. My father served on Guadalcanal with the U.S. Army and he told me about his experiences. He even wrote them down in a memoir for his family. So seeing others experiences is enlightening. How soldiers in Korea felt about what they were asked to do. How people living in the towns impacted—literally and figuratively—adapted and carried on despite the hardships and tensions. All of the ambiance of the setting and history combined into a moving story.
This story also surprised me because of the mystical elements throughout. I hadn’t expected them, so was delighted to find not only mention of ghosts and spirits but of the inexplicable. Some might call it magic. One of the most fascinating scenes involved a shaman summoning the spirits of the dead family to assemble and communicate in what is termed a “kut.” While it’s tempting to think of it as a séance, the kut is more ceremonial and involved. Elegant and inviting, also. It’s a beautiful scene, one that easily replays in my mind.
Of course, we can’t overlook the title mystical or mythical element: mermaids. In Hahn’s tale, the mermaids are divers who free dive, no scuba or snorkel gear necessary. They are trained, athletic, strong, courageous, and loving women. They bring back treasures from the sea, anything from seaweed to pearls, depending on their needs and what is available. Seeing into the life of such a person was intriguing and I’m glad to have the opportunity to visit their underwater world. I’m not a diver, so that’s as close as I’ll ever get. (Trust me, I’ve tried scuba diving and it’s not my cuppa.)
I’m glad to have read this story. It’s filled with the beliefs and superstitions and daily life of these people. How they treat each other based on their relationship and of course their previous interactions. I’m a believer in understanding cause and effect so that was interesting to read about in this tale as well. The inclusion of dreams as a foretelling of an individual’s future was also a fascinating view into their way of life.
In a nutshell: I recommend this book.
Next up is another one from a Korean author. I’ll be reading Beasts of a Little Land by Juhea Kim. Now I’m off to the library to pick it up.
Happy reading!
Betty
P.S. If you haven’t already, please consider signing up for my newsletter, which I send out most every month, including news like new covers, new releases, and upcoming appearances where I love to meet my readers, along with recipes and writing progress. Thanks and happy reading!
Love is never lost; it haunts the heart… An unsuspecting Southern town. Ghosts. Witchcraft. Skeletons in the closet. Discover the Secrets of Roseville in this five book series… Undying Love, Haunted Melody, The Touchstone of Raven Hollow, Veiled Visions of Love, and Charmed Against All Odds!
His search for a home led him straight to her heart…
Psychic Beth Golden longs for the life of a heroine in a suspense novel but fears death by boredom working in the small town bookstore. Until a pilot rolls into town on his motorcycle with a secret mission.
Major Mitch Sawyer wants his own home with a wife and family. He entices a sexy book lover to help him with one last airplane repo job before he can realize his dream. Only Beth’s need for excitement endangers herself and an innocent bystander. Can he save them before it’s too late?
Please help me welcome author Matt Lucas to the interview hot seat! Let’s take a gander at his bio and then find out more about what he has to share with us today.
Matthew C. (“Matt”) Lucas was born and raised in Tampa, Florida, and lives there now with his wife, their two sons, dog, and axolotl. He writes speculative fiction that ranges from dark and epic, to droll and historic, to a lot of stuff in between. His published novels include The Mountain (Montag Press) and Yonder & Far: The Lost Lock (Ellysian Press), with two more novels (including the next Yonder & Far adventure) set to be released in late 2023 or early 2024. Matt’s shorter works have appeared in Bards & Sages Quarterly, The Society of Misfit Stories, Sword & Sorcery Magazine, and Best Indie Speculative Fiction.
When he’s not working, enjoying his family, writing, or playing the bagpipes (badly), he can be found at the neighborhood bowling alley, an enthusiastic if not especially talented regular.
Betty: What inspired you to write the story you’re sharing with us today?
Matthew:Yonder & Far: The Lost Lock came about after I had read Susanna Clarke’s delightful Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell (for the third or fourth time) and thought to myself how fun it would be to craft a historical fantasy in that same vein, but set in the United States … and told from the point of view of the fae … and with a dash of Casablanca. With that impetus, and after a fair amount of historical research, the book practically wrote itself.
Betty: What, if any, new writing skill did you develop while working on this story?
Matthew:Definitely historical research. This is my first novel of historical fiction, and I wanted to get the details as right as possible. I am not, however, a professional (or even an amateur) historian. So it took some time for me to find good sources that could provide a holistic overview of the late eighteenth century in the United States as well as more granular details about specific story points I wanted to flesh out (e.g., legal proceedings in post-Colonial Boston, the origins of Prince Hall Freemasonry, Age of Sail mechanics, and so forth).
Betty: Did you struggle with any part of this story? What and how?
Matthew:I’m a discovery writer (i.e., a “pantser”), so I usually go into a new novel with a good idea about what will happen in the beginning, a fair idea about how it will end, and no idea about the middle. Middles are where I spend the most time in my writing, and Yonder & Far: The Lost Lock was no exception.
Betty: Which character(s) were the easiest to get to know? Why do you think?
Matthew:John Yonder came pretty easily (although his partner, Captain Far, was a close second). Some of Yonder’s lines, I swear, I heard them spoken in my ear while I was writing. He’s a fussy, preening, pompous, lawyerly little fellow of simple pleasures. For some reason, I can channel him pretty easily. Make of that what you will.
Betty: What kind of research did you need to do to write this story?
Matthew:I read a couple of “general history” books, a couple of presidential biographies, some guy’s master’s thesis on Boston in the 1790’s (that was, fortuitously, posted online for whatever reason), and I looked at a lot of maps.
Betty: How many drafts of the story did you write before you felt the story was complete?
Matthew:As a discovery writer, my writing process usually has me going over the prior day’s work before writing anything new. So the first completed version of my drafts takes a little longer to complete, but it’s usually about 80% finished by the time I write “The End.” So, really, it only took two versions—the initial and the edited final—before I felt the story was complete. My editors (God bless them) had other ideas. We went through somewhere between ten and twelve passes of the whole manuscript before the book was released last year.
Betty: How long did it take for you to write the story you’re sharing with us? Is that a typical length of time for you? Why or why not?
Matthew:It took about a year. And that’s right on track for my method of writing. I’m a daily word-count writer (I try for around 500 a day, not including Sundays), which puts me on pace to finish a first draft of a 100,000-word novel in about twelve months.
Betty: What rituals or habits do you have while writing?
Matthew:I drink a lot while I write … Half a pot of coffee, at least.
Betty: Every author has a tendency to overuse certain words or phrases in drafts, such as just, once, smile, nod, etc. What are yours?
Matthew:Arching eyebrows, nods, and smiles. I end up editing a lot of them out because my first drafts have my characters communicating like mimes.
Betty: Do you have any role models? If so, why do you look up to them?
Matthew:I think Patrick O’Brian’s writing is superb. His Aubrey Maturin books are an amazing amalgam of flowing prose, richly drawn characters, high-stakes action, and impeccable historical research (that never overwhelms the story).
Betty: Do you have a special place to write? Revise? Read?
Matthew:For writing and revising, we have a small den with a window to the backyard and a framed picture of a peacock that I end up staring at a lot. That’s where I do my fiction writing. Reading can be anywhere, but usually it’s on the couch in the living room.
Betty: Many authors have a day job. Do you? If so, what is it and do you enjoy it?
Matthew:I do have a day job, and I love it. I’ve been a state appellate judge for the past eight years—a job that entails, interestingly enough, an enormous amount of reading and writing.
Betty: As an author, what do you feel is your greatest achievement?
Matthew:It’s been a few years, but honestly, I’m still on cloud nine each time I get an offer of publication from a publisher. That’s a thrill I don’t think any author ever forgets. More recently, I was proud that Yonder & Far: The Lost Lock took second place in the historical fantasy category of the spring 2023 BookFest Award.
Betty: What is your favorite genre to read?
Matthew:Right now, historical fantasy.
Betty: Success looks different to different people. It could be wealth, or fame, or an inner joy at reaching a certain level. How do you define success in terms of your writing career?
Matthew:For me, success is reaching an audience that enjoys the kind of stories I do: fantastic adventures told with a little bit of a literary flare; page-turning speculative fiction that also wrangles with the deeper issues of life. If I can entertain those readers, the time and effort I’ve put into my writing will have been worth it.
Boston 1798. John Yonder, Esquire has accepted a seemingly simple case. He need only recover a magical lock of hair for a spurned lady. She had given it to her lover, Wylde, who is somewhere in Boston. The problem is, neither Yonder nor his murderous, wine-soaked partner, Captain Far, have any idea how to find him. But Yonder has an idea: he tricks a fortuneteller, Mary Faulkner, into assisting with the case. With a whisper in her ear, he tethers Mary’s mind to Wylde’s, creating a terrible, but potent human compass.
Following Mary’s guidance, the trio sets out after Wylde. Hapless sailors, pirates, slave owners, and a host of others hinder the path to Wylde. In the end, Yonder, Far, and Mary learn that the man they’re after, the lock of hair he’s carrying, and the client who hired them are not at all what they seem.
After a short hiatus, let’s return to my Historical Fiction Around the World series, shall we? I’ve chosen The Mermaid from Jeju by Sumi Hahn as next up on my world tour of historical fiction by authors outside of my native USA. If you’ve missed my previous reads, you can do a quick search on the series title to find the others I’ve commented on over the last year or so.
I’ve borrowed it via Hoopla this time, and at least the ebook is formatted correctly. Should make reading it easier and more enjoyable instead of frustrating like some have been. The story is copyrighted 2020 and is 304 pages long. It’s set in Korea in 1910-1945 while that country was occupied by Japan, but the first scene (a sort of Prologue?) is set in Philadelphia in 2001. Interestingly, the Acknowledgements appear after that opening scene—to ensure more readers read it or is it a mistake in the formatting? Sumi Kahn was born in Korea, grew up in the USA, and now lives in New Zealand. She’s probably had a wealth and variety of experience to inform her stories, don’t you think?
There are two parts plus a section called “One Last Story” which I’m eager to find out more about. Hahn included a Glossary of Korean Terms and also Readers Club Guide Questions. I have only virtually dipped my toe into this aquatic tale so I don’t have much to say about it yet. I can tell Hahn has a commanding authorial voice and the story is engaging to me. I’m looking forward to getting back to reading it as a result.
I’m glad to be able to return to this series because I enjoy the stretch to my reading experience through choosing books based on author’s native/resident country instead of purely by topic or familiarity with any given author. Each of these books was recommended to me by other historical fiction readers, so I feel fairly safe randomly picking from the list. Note that I’m in the K’s now so approximately halfway through the alphabet working backwards.
I’m off to continue reading and I’ll have more next week after I’ve finished reading it. Happy reading!
Betty
P.S. If you haven’t already, please consider signing up for my newsletter, which I send out most every month, including news like new covers, new releases, and upcoming appearances where I love to meet my readers, along with recipes and writing progress. Thanks and happy reading!
Love is never lost; it haunts the heart… An unsuspecting Southern town. Ghosts. Witchcraft. Skeletons in the closet. Discover the Secrets of Roseville in this five book series… Undying Love, Haunted Melody, The Touchstone of Raven Hollow, Veiled Visions of Love, and Charmed Against All Odds!
His search for a home led him straight to her heart…
Psychic Beth Golden longs for the life of a heroine in a suspense novel but fears death by boredom working in the small town bookstore. Until a pilot rolls into town on his motorcycle with a secret mission.
Major Mitch Sawyer wants his own home with a wife and family. He entices a sexy book lover to help him with one last airplane repo job before he can realize his dream. Only Beth’s need for excitement endangers herself and an innocent bystander. Can he save them before it’s too late?
My guest author today has quite a story to share with us, both about her writing inspiration and process and the book she’s talking about. A quick peek at her bio, and then let’s dive right in!
LENORE HART is the author of eight books, including the novels Waterwoman (a Barnes &Noble Discover selection),Becky: The Life and Loves of Becky Thatcher, and The Raven’s Bride. Two novels have been optioned for film. She’s the series editor of three Night Bazaar fantastic fiction anthologies. A Shirley Jackson Award finalist, Hart has received prizes, grants, and fellowships from arts organizations in the US, Ireland, and Germany. Her short stories and poetry have appeared in numerous magazines and journals. She’s a writer for the Kevin Anderson Agency in New York City, and teaches fiction writing at the Ossabaw Island Writers Retreat in Savannah. Forthcoming is a historical folkloric novel, The Alchemy of Light, from Milford House/Sunbury Press. She lives in Virginia, in a Victorian-era farmhouse on the Chesapeake Bay, with her husband, novelist David Poyer, two cats, and two peahens.
Betty: What inspired you to write the story you’re sharing with us today?
Lenore: I was in my last year of graduate school, getting my MFA in creative writing, and realized I’d run out of stories to hand in for that semester’s writing workshops. I had a vague idea of a story I wanted to write; a scribbled note that said: “Two elderly sisters live alone in a house on a remote island, and they are angry at each other. It has something to do with a man.” That was all I had at the moment, but classes were about to start. As the mother of a five year old, who was teaching two classes and commuting 120 miles round trip to the university, I felt panicked. When would I have any writing time? So in desperation I spent a long weekend secluded at a friend’s house intending to crank out what I thought would be a short story based on that mingy paragraph. Instead a rather different story came pouring out as if it was being downloaded directly to my brain. My friend Nancy kept me fed, supplied an occasional glass of wine, and made trips to the local library to get me needed research books. I wrote over 37,000 words (about 125 pages) in less than three days. It was a novel, not a short story. And that MS later became first my book-length MFA thesis, and then my first mainstream novel, published by the Berkley imprint of Penguin Putnam in 2002.
Betty: What, if any, new writing skill did you develop while working on this story?
Lenore: I’m not sure it’s exactly a concrete writing skill, but I learned a lot about how crucial it is to stop being self-critical or second-guess myself too early in the creative process – in other words, to listen to and respect The Muse when she comes calling. Otherwise the writer risks sending her away for good to greener, more receptive pastures.
Betty: Did you struggle with any part of this story? What and how?
Lenore: The odd thing about this book is that is was not much of a struggle at all. I revised it only maybe three times in total before I sent it out for submission. I also had several working watermen read it, and they thought it was accurate and moving. But after Putnam acquired it, I expected to receive an editorial letter and revision guidance from my editor there, yet she said she had none. “I believe it’s wonderful as it is now, and I don’t want to tamper with the unique voice.”
Well, I was astounded to say the least. How could that be? Actually, this made me very nervous, even anxious. I don’t really believe in perfection, at least not for us humans. I called her up and asked her to reconsider: wasn’t there anything she’d like more, or less of? Finally she said I might consider lengthening a scene early on at the post office when Annie (protagonist) receives a love letter from war-torn France, which she mistakenly thinks is for her, rather than for her sister Rebecca. I thanked my editor profusely and did just that, feeling much better. I still wonder if she did it mainly to humor me . . . anyhow, I would like to stress that this has not been the experience with my other novels. They all came much harder and required many more revisions. I think I received a truly magical gift with Waterwoman, that first one!
Betty: Which character(s) were the easiest to get to know? Why do you think?
Lenore: Annie Revels, my protagonist. I had a lot in common with her – save for all the time out on the water; I don’t even fish, I get seasick easily, and I have fair skin that burns after about five minutes in the sun! But she was considered too “boyish” and had trouble fitting in with the social mores of her time; wanted more from life but was trapped in isolation, and thus frustrated, and she longed for a partner in life who understood and accepted her. I think those are universal issues many readers can relate to, as well.
Betty: What kind of research did you need to do to write this story?
Lenore: Again, this novel was atypical for me (as I would find out later.) I had lived on the Eastern Shore by then for about 8 years, and so – as a history buff – I already knew a bit about its past, and about the landscape and people. I had never been out on a waterman’s boat though and knew only a little about the calling (I don’t think it’s a mere “job”). And I am and always have been a stickler for historical accuracy in my work and in the books I choose to read. But again, I was terribly short on time to write, so I got a stack of books about the Shore’s history and about waterman of that period (1900-1921.) And I read them as I wrote, and after I stopped writing, until I went to sleep. When I came up hard against a spot where I needed a particular word or phrase or technical information, I looked it up. But again, it was odd, in that – as I mentioned before – the whole story came so fast and furious, and felt so sure and true as I typed it, I didn’t have to even do a lot of that. It was actually a bit creepy, in retrospect. Almost as if someone was telling me their own story; one they’d waited a long time to have seen and told. I can’t explain it all any better than that – even to myself!
Betty: How many drafts of the story did you write before you felt the story was complete?
Lenore: As I mentioned, three in total. The first draft on the long weekend; a second draft to enlarge on that to meet the required word count for my MFA thesis; and once again before it was submitted to three presses: Putnam, Crown, and one other I’ve forgotten. There was something of a bidding war between Putnam and Crown, but ultimately I went with the former.
Betty: How long did it take for you to write the story you’re sharing with us? Is that a typical length of time for you? Why or why not?
Lenore: Not at all typical. For example, I took five years to complete my later novel Becky: The Life and Loves of Becky Thatcher. Almost four years of reading and research, and the rest spent writing and revising. Other novels have taken a year to two or three years. Waterwoman, when I added all the reading, writing and revisions, took less than five months in total. I do wish it would happen that way again, as with Waterwoman. But so far – not! Maybe a writer only gets one of those “ultimate downloads” in a lifetime?
Betty: What rituals or habits do you have while writing?
Lenore: My most effective ritual is to run away from home while I write the first draft of a manuscript. I have to have quiet in order to concentrate – it’s less crucial at the revision stage — and that isn’t the situation at home! My hideout needn’t be fancy. I’ve written first drafts on a fellowship at a lovely writers’ retreat in Germany, and I’ve written them in a friend’s uninsulated office over his boat shed. It’s just the act of getting away to concentrate and work that’s important.
I don’t have a lucky pen or special computer software or anything like that. I write a detailed synopsis of the novel first, about 7 to ten pages long, so I’m sure I grasp the basic events, characters, and trajectory of the story. Some people (like my husband) prefer chapter outlines, but I get too bogged down in them; a synopsis works better for me. But I do feel some kind of planning tool is crucial, and I reject the idea (which I’ve been told more than once) that an outline or synopsis is too “inorganic” or not “creative.” In fact, it’s exactly the opposite. Knowing as much as you can before you begin is freeing for the writer. Once that guide is in hand, you no longer have to worry “Where is this going?” or “What comes next?” You already know; just look at your outline or synopsis and there’s no excuse for writer’s block (which I think is mostly just the writer’s version of “I don’t wanna get up and go to work today”). A plan frees you to be as creative as you like without worrying if you’re getting too far off track (been there, got the T-shirt) and if you encounter a need for changes, well – it’s a computer file, not a concrete building. Easy to update as needed!
Betty: Every author has a tendency to overuse certain words or phrases in drafts, such as just, once, smile, nod, etc. What are yours?
Lenore: Oh lord, yes. Though mine are so boring I hate to even list them. But here goes: a bit, little, small. As a writing prof I’m well aware of avoiding too many repetitive tags like “he smiled” and awkward, negative-attention-drawing words like “strode” or “torso”. But I just . . . can’t . . . seem to shake . . that darn . . . list! So I go looking for them in my last revision with Find and Replace to stamp them out – yet again.
Betty: Do you have any role models? If so, why do you look up to them?
Lenore: Early on I took writers I met and whose behavior I admired as my role models for how to act like a decent person-slash-author. Ray Bradbury was one; a kinder, more patient, humble or humorous soul you could not find. I felt very lucky to make his acquaintance. Also, when I was learning about the craft early on – a good writer is always still learning — I had mentors who helped me immensely: novelist Janet Peery, short story writer Lee K. Abbott, nonfiction writer Philip Gerard, editor/teacher Frank Green, and of course my husband, novelist David Poyer. We still read, comment on, and line edit every single MS the other produces, no matter how long or short.
Betty: Do you have a special place to write? Revise? Read?
Lenore: I like to write away from home, as I said earlier. It needn’t be a fancy place, but should be a fairly quiet one, or it just won’t work!
I can revise (unless it’s a really complex and long change) pretty much anywhere, including at home, despite cats jumping on me, the phone ringing (mostly telemarketers) and my husband watching loud news-clip videos in the next office.
I can and do read anywhere, though my favorite spots are on the back screened porch, which overlooks a tidal creek just off the Chesapeake Bay — and in bed at night before I go to sleep.
Betty: Many authors have a day job. Do you? If so, what is it and do you enjoy it?
Lenore: For many years my day job was teaching creative writing, mostly in colleges and universities, sometimes as a visiting professor or writer in residence. Previous to becoming a full-time writer, in Florida (my natal state) I was a librarian, in such varied settings as a state mental hospital’s forensic unit; at the Florida Department of Commerce, and finally in 25-branch public library system in Jacksonville. Later I was fiction faculty in the country’s largest low-residence MFA program for 16 years. I have been (and still am) core faculty at the Ossabaw Island Writers Retreat, an excellent workshop and retreat-based getaway for aspiring authors that crams a lot of information about how to succeed in a short stay, while also offering a gorgeous unspoiled setting on an undeveloped Georgia barrier wildlife island refuge. I also have a community-based writing workshop at a local arts center which has been ongoing for 27 years now. I’m happy to say that a good number of my students there have been quite successful: receiving publishing contracts, including with NY houses, being finalists for or winning literary awards, receiving conference or retreat fellowships, and even becoming Amazon bestsellers. I still teach the local workshop because I do enjoy teaching, seeing them improve and become skilled writers, and I like helping beginning writers start out on the path to publication well-prepared!
Betty: As an author, what do you feel is your greatest achievement?
Lenore: Being able to keep publishing – poetry, short stories, and book-length fiction – nonstop, since my college days in the late 1970s! I feel very fortunate indeed to have the craft of writing shape and inform my whole career.
Betty: What is your favorite genre to read?
Lenore: Oh dear. A hard question, since my tastes are very eclectic and tend to evolve over time. I read mostly novels, story collections/anthologies, and memoirs. But my favorite genres, fiction or nonfiction, usually draw heavily on either fairy tales, folklore, or mythology to inform their themes, plot, and underlying structure. Those old, archetypal stories are both a big side interest, and a big influence on my own work.
Betty: Success looks different to different people. It could be wealth, or fame, or an inner joy at reaching a certain level. How do you define success in terms of your writing career?
Lenore: Definitely the joy option, as with other aspects of life, even though there are always low points. But I would celebrate still being able to keep at it, over three decades later. And – though I’ve been known to carp about how hard first drafts are, since my favorite part is revision – the fact that I never grow tired of the process, and have been able to make it work as my primary career for so long. The unhappiest writers I’ve met went into writing feeling sure they’d get fabulously rich, probably right away, with their first book. As if – especially these days! They probably should have gone into a field that more readily assures such a goal. For that kind of success is the exception, not the rule, in publishing, an industry in which success is also heavily dependent on sheer luck. But even if I never made another cent from writing, I would still be a writer. It’s not really even a choice for me, but rather an essential and basic part of my existence! And I’m very satisfied with my fate.
Even as a child in 1920s Virginia, plain and boyish Annie Revels had everyone’s role in life figured out. Everyone’s except her own. Her mother was sickly and needed to be taken care of. Her little sister Rebecca was remarkably beautiful, while Annie was not. Her father was a waterman, a free-looking life Annie deeply envied and could’ve had, if only she’d been born a son. But a waterman wants no women aboard his boat; it’s bad luck.
Tiny, remote Yaupon Island knows nothing of the partying, gin-soaked Roaring Twenties which grip the rest of the country. The Revels family depends on the coastal waters to make their living, and tragedy is always only a bad storm away. As Annie notes, “In order to live on the Shore, you need to understand that good weather always follows bad.” But when her father dies suddenly, it falls to Annie to take his place aboard the oyster boat and support what’s left of her family. Out on the water, she’s free for the first time. It seems Annie’s found a life she can enjoy, even if the watermen around there shun her. Then one day, stuck on a sandbar, she meets a handsome hunting guide named Nathan. And finally, against her better judgement, she takes him home to meet her mother and sister. His presence in that house of women upsets the family’s uneasy balance, bringing joy – but also discontent, jealousy, rivalry – and ultimately, tragedy for them all.
Lenore, you’ve had quite a diverse and impressive career! Thanks for sharing The Waterwoman with us—I’m adding it to my TBR now. I’ve always been in love with and fascinated by the Eastern Shore of Maryland and Virginia, so this sounds right up my alley.
Happy reading!
Betty
Award-winning Author of Historical Fiction with Heart, and Haunting, Bewitching Love Stories
Visit www.bettybolte.com for a complete list of my books and appearances.
While last week was National Library Week, the Right to Read is an every week thing. Not only did I celebrate Right to Read Day last week, but I’m heartened by the reintroduction of the Right to Read Act. The basic concept of the importance of literacy, of a broad education through reading, speaks directly to my experience and my beliefs.
Reading—the actual act of reading words on a page/screen, not listening to them—is so very important to a person’s ability to comprehend language and communicate it effectively. Knowing spelling, grammar, and how to string words together to express your thoughts is vital in an information age such as we’re living in.
Reading widely enhances our ability to understand the world around us, but also to enable empathy toward those who live in different settings, cultures, and expectations from our own. Reading widely does not dictate how you interpret, how you question, how you agree with what you’re reading. Indeed, reading actually leads to more questions and more awareness of the larger world in which we live. More understanding, in fact.
I believe it is vital for everyone to read. Starting from infants being read to all the way through life. Critical thinking skills stem from reading widely. Having comparative texts enables discussion and evaluation of the facts, opinions, claims. Decision making skills we all need to hone, especially in this era of “fake news” and propaganda posing as news.
So defend your right to choose what you want to learn more about, experience from the comfort of your armchair, or just escape to. But above all else, happy reading!
Betty
P.S. If you haven’t already, please consider signing up for my newsletter, which I send out most every month, including news like new covers, new releases, and upcoming appearances where I love to meet my readers, along with recipes and writing progress. Thanks and happy reading!
Fury Falls Inn in 1821 Alabama. A place for ghosts, witches, and magic. A place of secrets and hidden dangers.
Cassie Fairhope longs for only one thing: to escape her mother’s tyranny. Her plan? Seduce the young man, who is acting as innkeeper while her father is away on business, into marrying her. But Flint Hamilton has his own plans and they don’t include marriage, even to the pretty temptress. He quickly learns that running a roadside inn in northern Alabama in 1821 means dealing not only with the young woman and her hostile mother but also with horse thieves and rogues. When tragedy strikes, Cassie and Flint are forced to face unforeseen challenges and dangerous decisions together in order to attempt to rid the inn of its newly arrived specter—who doesn’t have any plan to leave…