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Archives for March 2016

What Acclaimed Authors Love About The Writing Life

March 27, 2016 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

Over the years, I’ve had the incredibly good fortune of interviewing many of the most wiWrite6dely-read novelists on the planet. I often (but not always) ask certain questions of each author. One of my favorites is: What do you love about the writing life?

Here are excerpted answers from some highly acclaimed writers.

 Robert Crais: What I love about the writing life–despite the bad days when I have to force my way through–is when I’m there ‘in the moment,’ when what’s happening on the page is real and true and good; and I’m there with Elvis Cole or with Joe Pike or with Maggie and Scott, and I’m in complete touch with my emotions—there’s no better feeling. ~Talking about The Promise

Tess Gerritsen: I love being able to indulge my curiosity. Many of my stories come about because I want to know more about a particular subject. I get a chance, to be somebody else. When I wrote about the NASA space program, I spent two years pretending I was an astronaut. Writing Playing with Fire, I got to explore World War II Italy. ~ Talking about Playing with Fire

Simon Toyne: I love that I can work from home and take my kids to school every day. That’s the practical side of what I love about the writing life. And of course, it’s creatively very rewarding. I love researching all sorts of weird stuff. I always say, ‘God help me if the FBI came across my Internet search history.’ ~ Talking about The Searcher

Tami Hoag: Aside from the fact that I can go to work dressed like a vagrant, the thing I love most is hearing back from readers when a book has helped them in some way. I recently received a letter from a young man in prison. He said he’d never read a book. In prison, he had nothing else to do, and picked up one of my books. Now, he’s a reader. It’s such an incredible feeling to realize you’ve impacted someone’s life like that. ~ Talking about Cold, Cold Heart

Joseph Finder: One of the things I love about the writing life is that it’s a creative outlet. I don’t really have hobbies. Writing a book is so creative and takes so much out of you, it can consume you. I also love being my own boss. I don’t think I’d have worked well as a company man in a hierarchy. I really appreciate the autonomy that comes with writing. ~ Talking about The Fixer

Jayne Ann Krentz: I just love seeing a scene come together on the page. I live from scene to scene. If I actually sat down and thought about the fact that I’ve got five hundred pages to go, I’d be doomed before I started. When I get a scene just right, I feel so good. ~ Talking about Trust No One

Harlan Coben: I think the short answer would be ‘What don’t I love about it?’ There’s no downside for me. I guess I’d rather not have to do so much travelling; and writing never gets any easier. It always torments you. There’s that insecurity, the feeling I’ll never be able to do it again. But really, for me, there’s very little downside, and I love what I do. ~ Talking about The Stranger

Lisa Gardner: I love that magical moment when it all comes together in a way I couldn’t ever have imagined. There’s that ‘Ah ha’ moment when things just fall into place. Those days are amazing and precious. The art takes over, it all comes together, and I’ve actually completed a novel despite myself. ~ Talking about Crash and Burn

Dennis Lehane: I love that I get paid to make stuff up. I’d be doing it for free. I walk around thinking, ‘These lunatics actually pay me to do this.’ If a planeload of money was dumped on me, I’d continue doing what I do. ~ Talking about, World Gone By

Faye Kellerman: I love the ability to let my mind explore whatever it wants. If you have an imagination, you can go everywhere. I love that–the inception–having a germ of an idea and building upon it. You can do whatever you want with it. Many writers would say you can play God. ~Talking about Murder 101

James Rollins: Nothing gets me more excited than writing. Each morning, I cannot get to my chair fast enough. Overnight, I’ll have a new idea, maybe from reading another author, or something just popped into my head. Writing is so much fun, even though on some days, it’s like pulling teeth. ~ Talking about The Bone Labyrinth

 Catherine Coulter: I love the fact that there’s always a reason to put your feet on the floor in the morning. I also love that you don’t have a jerk-face of a boss, because if you’re a jerk-face, you’re your own boss, so who cares? ~ Talking about The Lost Key

 Phillip Margolin: It’s the puzzle aspect of writing. I love Ellery Queen books, Ross Macdonald’s books and Harlan Coben’s Myron Bolitar books for their mystery and clue elements. I love trying to construct a puzzle for the reader. That’s the most fun. ~ Talking about Woman with a Gun

 David Morrell: When I grew up, I discovered this need to tell stories. I get to do it, and even earn a living. It’s a wonderful opportunity to benefit from my daydreams in a culture that doesn’t value daydreaming. I think our best ideas come to us when we give ourselves permission to go into that kind of trance. ~ Talking about Inspector of the Dead

 

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‘Goodbye to the Dead,’ A Talk with Brian Freeman

March 20, 2016 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

brian freeman cr. martin hoffstenBrian Freeman is an internationally bestselling author of psychological suspense novels. His books have been sold in 46 countries, and have been Main Selections in the Literary Guild and Book of the Month Club. His novels have been nominated for prestigious awards, and two have won the Macavity Award and an award presented by the International Thriller Writers Organization. Before breaking into the fiction writing world, Brian was a communications strategist and business writer, and served as director of marketing and public relations for an international law firm.

Read more on the Huffington Post >>

 

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Filed Under: About Books, Huffington Post Column, Interviews, Mark Rubinstein, On Writing Tagged With: column, Huffington Post, HuffPo, Mark Rubinstein, writing

‘Hard Cold Winter,’ A Conversation with Glen Erik Hamilton

March 15, 2016 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

Glen Erik HamiltonGlen Erik Hamilton is a native of Seattle. He grew up aboard a sailboat and spent his youth around marinas, commercial docks, and islands of the Pacific Northwest.

Hard Cold Winter, his second novel, follows protagonist, Van Shaw, as he embarks on a dangerous mission in search of a missing girl tied to his criminal past. But things don’t turn out as planned; there has been a murder, and the investigation leads to intolerable pressure coming from a billionaire businessman on one side, and vicious gangsters on the other. Moreover, a powerful, unseen player is about to unleash a firestorm on Seattle that will burn Van and his people to cinders—and it will take a miracle to stop it.

Read more on the Huffington Post >>

 

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Filed Under: About Books, book launch, creativity, Huffington Post Column, Interviews Tagged With: fiction, getting published, plotting a novel, publishing, thrillers

‘Off the Grid,’ A Conversation with C.J. Box

March 9, 2016 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

Chuck Box__Michael_SmithC.J. Box, the New York Times bestselling author of sixteen Joe Pickett novels, has millions of fans. In addition to the Joe Pickett series, he’s written five standalones, and a short story collection, Shots Fired. He’s won multiple awards for his fiction. His books have been translated into twenty-seven languages.

Off the Grid finds Joe’s good friend Nate living off the grid, relying solely on survival skills, as he attempts to find Muhammad Ibraheem, a rogue journalist, who has also gone “off the grid”. An ultra-secret government agency has pressed Nate into service to apprehend this suspect whose activities could lead to great bloodshed.  Meanwhile, Joe’s daughter Sheridan has accepted an invitation to attend a gathering where a group of political activists have been invited. But who and what exactly are they, and what’s their real agenda?

Read more on the Huffington Post >>

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Filed Under: book launch, crime, Huffington Post Column, Interviews Tagged With: home grown terrorism, procrastination, Terrorism, thrillers

‘Out Of The Blues,’ A Conversation with Trudy Nan Boyce

March 1, 2016 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

Trudy Nan Boyce received her Ph.D. in community counseling before becoming a police ofTrudy Nan Boyce, Photo, Viki Hoang Timianficer for the City of Atlanta. As a police officer for more than 30 years, she worked as a beat cop, homicide detective, senior hostage negotiator, and in the Special Victims Unit, among other assignments.

Out of the Blues, her debut novel, introduces newly minted homicide detective Sarah “Salt” Alt who on her first day in homicide, is assigned a cold-case murder of a blues musician whose death was first ruled an accidental drug overdose. Sarah’s investigation takes her to unanticipated encounters ranging from Atlanta’s homeless to its richest and most influential citizens.

Read more on the Huffington Post >>

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Filed Under: About Books, book launch Tagged With: Blues music, community, creativity, crime, police novels, Reading, writing

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