Interview with Mara Johnstone

We’ve done one of these before and we’re thinking, since people seemed to like it last time, that we’re going to do them more often. I’m talking about interviews, and today I’m interviewing Mara Johnstone, who recently published her work with us in issue #7, titled, “Quicker Liquor.” It was a really funny story about a goblin who takes this speed potion, and it was just super fun and I knew that I wanted to talk in depth with the author. 

When I put out a call for people interested in being interviewed, Mara was one of the ones who threw her name in the ring and I jumped at the chance. I just knew she seemed like a funny and interesting person and, you know what, I was right. We had a really good conversation and I really hope you enjoy it as much as I enjoyed being able to sit down and have this talk with Mara.

Mara: I’ve been writing forever and I enjoy doing creative things just in general. Writing, drawing, making stuff. And I’ve always really enjoyed just the whole process. I remember learning that some people didn’t really like writing so much as they liked having written and that just seems very sad to me that they don’t enjoy the whole thing. I enjoy everything and like sharing it with people.


Annaelise: Yeah, I totally get that. It’s kind of funny when you see these writers who always complain about, like, “Ugh, I hate writing,” and it’s like, well, why are you doing it?

M: Right? Surely there’s something else you could do that you actually enjoy.

A: Exactly. So many creative outlets if you need to be creative. Now, you did say that you’ve been writing for a really long time, so do you have, kinda one of those “when you first picked up a pen” stories?

M: Not really. I’m told that I’ve been telling stories since I was little. My mom tells me that my first story was a single sentence: “I was walking down the road and I found a fish. The End.” Which is lovely. [Laughs] And I remember deciding in fifth grade that I probably wouldn’t get to do all the cool things in reality that I liked reading about. I probably wouldn’t meet aliens and ride dragons and learn magic and all that, so I would write about it instead. And that is a decision that I have stuck with.

A: I can definitely relate to that, as writing is kind of a form of escapism. You know, getting to do things that you wouldn’t otherwise be able to do.

M: Sure, and I love science-fiction and fantasy and that’s full of stuff that I’m never gonna get to do in reality, so why would I not love that?

A: There was another thing that I especially wanted to hit on, because it was something that when you put out your short story with us at Prismatica, something that I thought was just so amazing was your bio. It said, “Mara grew up in a house on a hill, of which the top floor was built first,” and I think that a captivating bio is something that a lot of talented authors tend to struggle with, but you’ve shown that it can be done, that it can be fun and interesting and kind of...weird. So, how many versions did it take for you to arrive at this one?

M: Quite a few, and I’ve written some at different lengths. I’ve got a document of “okay this thing wants a bio that’s really short, this one wants a long one,” and I can just go back to those. But, yeah, it definitely took a lot of practice and figuring out what I wanted to include. And it is definitely an art of putting the interesting things, the relevant things, really succinctly and I like that particular detail because it’s eye-catching and it’s interesting and it kinda says a lot about me in general: that I like to take a different approach to things. And it starts conversations! Like, “wait, wait, how does that work?”

“Well, it’s on a hill and, uh, we started with the top floor and then my dad and some people dug out the bottom and underneath the deck, they made another floor, kind of offset from the other one.” That meant that the top floor of the house looked very antique and old-fashioned and the lower floor looked much newer, and it made for a very interesting place growing up, which I would not trade for anything.

 

A: A lot of people think that writing is an individual-centered career, but a lot of the time being an active member in a writing community can be very helpful in getting your stuff out there, especially when it comes to the publishing industry. So, how do you use networking and interpersonal skills within the community?

M: Well, I do have the local group, the local writers club, and that’s a really big group, so I’m really lucky there that they have a lot of things happening and it’s a really awesome resource for me, because I’ll go to the meetings, I’ll submit stuff to anthologies and contests, and I’ll just get to know other local writers, so if someone’s putting together an anthology about this niche thing, like “hey, yeah, absolutely, I’ll do stuff with that.” And it’s similar online where I love talking to people about writing and other fun ideas to write about and lately I’ve started reaching out to people to do some writing challenges and exchanges where we’ll both write about the same writing prompt and see how different our stories come up. Then we can both share them or cross-promote each other and just have fun with it. And I want to do more of that, because that is really fun.

 

A: So, when it comes to the literary community, do you happen to recall where your first acceptance was at a literary magazine? 

M: Well, it depends on how you define it. I got a poem published when I was eleven, and there were a couple of college ‘zines that probably don’t count ‘cause they don’t exist anymore. But probably one of the first real-official-adult thing was this short story that got published in an anthology from the local branch of the California Writers Club. They do a lot of anthologies and neat things and it’s very cool to get something in that. I was very excited about it.

A: And what about your first rejection?

M: That was probably the second novel-length book that I wrote. The first one I did not bother to submit to anyone because I knew full-well that it wasn’t going anywhere, ‘cause that was just kind of an exploration of ideas that somehow just sort of followed together. But the second one was much better, and I thought it had a chance, and I was mistaken. But maybe someday I’ll come back to it. Probably not, but it’s a possibility.

A: I recently saw that you commented on it slightly on Twitter but we’d really love to hear about your experience with self-publishing and whether you’d ever consider using a traditional publisher in the future.

M: My understanding of it in a nutshell is that self-publishing is great, especially if you have a fanbase of some sort because it’s only real failing is that it doesn’t have the built-in advertising clout of a big publisher. So, if you have a bunch of people who are ready to buy whatever you put out there, then fantastic, you are all set, but otherwise it is going to be a challenge, an uphill climb, to really get anywhere because it is very hard to advertise for yourself if you don’t have all those industry connections and all that money. Otherwise, it’s very easy to get things out in the world, it’s easy to talk to people. You can get local stores to carry it if you do it right and you don’t have it just on Amazon. So, there’s a lot that you can do and it’s pretty cool, but it is just hard to get famous, let’s put it that way.

A: And how did you build up your following?

M: The slow way. Just starting with people that I know and did a lot of networking and meeting people online and in-person and I went to all the local bookstores and did my research. I pretty much did everything that I could that seemed like a reasonable opportunity to take. I got a little YouTube video that played on local TV stations and all kinds of stuff, whatever I could find, really. And they say that nothing advertises the first book as well as the second, and well, in progress. Everything takes time. I did all my research and did everything that I could feasibly do. And all you can do, is all you can do.

A: That’s awesome. And how do you split your time between doing that sort of networking and writing, on top of having just your own life that you’re running?

M: It is a challenge, definitely. In particular, in recent past I haven’t had as much time as I want, but it’s really the kind of thing that if you’re determined to do this, you have to carve out time and dedicate it to it. You have to make time, you can’t just wait for it to come around. So, I got better at just sitting down and writing whenever I had time. I’d plan things out ahead of time and just work with what I had to work with, really. That’s all you can do, is to make time, ‘cause if it’s important enough then you gotta make it happen sometime. And it isn’t going to necessarily be enough time, but you do what you can.

A: Yeah, I mean it was Toni Morrison who, for her first book, she would write for the last fifteen minutes of the day or something like that before she went to bed. Definitely, if you want it, you can carve out that time, even if it is only fifteen minutes a day to write down something.

M: Yeah, and that can be really hard. I mean fifteen minutes hardly enough time to do anything unless you know exactly what you want to say, but man, you can make it work one way or another.

A: What’s the longest period of time that you’ve gone without writing since you’ve started to really get into it?

M: I don’t know. I don’t think it’s that long. I do NaNoWriMo, National Novel Writing Month, every year and I’m always going to be doing something in between. Either little short stories ‘cause there’s a contest that sounds fun or because there’s an idea I like or because there’s just something that needs to be written one way or another. Writing is one of those things that’s always on the back of my mind, so I’m always going to get back to it and I’m always taking notes of ideas to use, so it’s not something I put aside for long because it’s a pretty big part of the inside of my head.

A: And when it comes to novels versus short stories, what do you tend to prefer?

M: I like novels as, like, the main thing that I want to do, as the career option, but short stories are also a lot of fun and they are faster because they are shorter and that’s great. I can just whip out a short story and then it’s finished and I can share it with people, hooray! And there’s plenty of opportunities to do something with them, submit them to stuff and share them online. So, both of them are really good, just in different ways, and I’ve had a lot of success in exploring an idea through short stories and then realizing later that I actually had enough to build a book out of. They coexist really well. With short stories, there’s no pressure. You just do a little bit of idea, little bit here and there. Then here’s another idea and then you can do that and you’re done. And sometimes you can tie them all together and it’s fantastic. 

A: Have any of the novels that you’re working on stemmed from a short story?

M: The main one that I got self-published did, actually. ‘Cause I wrote the draft of the novel during NaNoWriMo but the original idea came from a song that was on the radio and I was like, “That’s a cool idea. I don’t have enough to make a book out of at all, but I can maybe make a short story out of that.” And a bunch of writer friends at the time had decided, “Okay we’re gonna get together and do this challenge where we all write a little bit of something each day for a month, and I was probably the only one who actually did it each day, but by the end of the month I was writing each day about the same character and the same story because I’d come up with a different thought that tied in to the last idea and for like a week I just built on that, and by the time I got to the end of that, I had enough ideas there that I could actually start building an actual novel from it. And I’m so glad for it because it was a great story and I never would have gotten to the book without exploring it in the short stories.

A: So, it sounds like having that community is a pretty big part in your creative process?

M: It does help, but I can certainly just write things on my own, too. I just need an excuse to do it, basically, and community is a great way to come up with ideas and deadlines. You know, you could write something every day, but why would you unless someone else wants to see it?

A: Yeah, I think that having someone expecting you to do it is definitely a big push to keep going.

M: Yeah, and I’ve done my own writing challenges like that later one where, okay, I’m going to write something every day all by myself and...I can do that, it’s fine...but it’s lonely if there’s no one to share it with. [chuckles]

A: And with NaNoWriMo being kind of your main novel writing time, how much do you prepare for it?

M: A pretty good amount. A lot of worldbuilding and just general, where I want the book to go, and some idea of what’s going to happen in the first scene. At the beginning of everything, I’ll have just a rough skeleton of an idea, like okay “here’s the high points of what this book’s going to be about” and just a clear idea of the first scene and then the day before I write each part I gotta figure out kinda what’s going to happen. It’s the whole thing about taking a drive at night where your headlights light up just a bit in front of you but you can make the whole way there. I think that was a Neil Gaiman quote* and it definitely works, especially in NaNoWriMo where you’re writing quickly and gotta figure out the part in front of you and don’t worry about the rest yet. 

* [Editor’s Note: this was an E.L. Doctorow quote]

A: Another thing when it comes with NaNoWriMo is something that I constantly struggle with, ‘cause I’ve tried it about four times and succeeded once. I have to go back and edit, and I know you’re not supposed to do it. Is that something you struggle with too?

M: To some degree. For me it’s mostly, it’s like the sentence-level, like the typos are going to bother me unless I’m going to fix them, but that’s pretty quick. What I’ve found works best for me is that I have a separate document of what actually need fixing because if I can’t just do it in a minute or two, if it’s gonna take time to fix, then I’ll just write it down with very clear notes on what it is, on what page it is, and I’ll come back to it. That can be little things like, “Okay, I didn’t actually say this person’s name until now, I need to make that clear somewhere before then,” and it can be bigger stuff like, “we’re gonna change this entire part here to this other thing,” and I’ll just keep my running notes document of what to do with the edits later, and that way I don’t have to worry about trying to fix it right away.

A: This kind of reminds me of something you said in a previous interview about finishing Sweeping Changes. You said it worked for you because you weren’t worried about it being good, just about having it finished. If a successful first draft is having a completed piece of work to show, how would you characterize a successful second draft?

M: Well, I look at it in artist terms, like, the second one doesn’t have any sketchy parts that are very obviously out of place. It tends to flow and look like you meant to do that. There’s no spots where there’s like “okay, notes to fix this later” or “then they did a bunch of stuff.” That’s a pretty good second draft.

A: And what is the most work you’ve put into a project that you ultimately scrapped?

M: Probably that second novel. I wrote the first draft pretty fast and then I spent a while working on it, making it longer. I added a whole detour to the plot, which is tricky. Just did a bunch of editing and all that and...it didn’t really go anywhere. But the nice thing about writing is that it doesn’t necessarily have to be done for good. You can just put it in the trunk, as they say, and maybe come back to it later, but not anytime soon.

A: Have there been any projects that you shelved that you eventually did take back out?

M: There’s one in particular, and it’s the one I just finished editing that I wrote the original a long time ago, but I was bad at it, apparently, because I came back to it and found all kinds of things that were surprisingly bad. It’s been very difficult to work on it when it was that old because it had a lot of flaws that I didn’t remember being there. Like, some little things are easy to fix, if it’s just punctuation, but if it’s larger stuff, like the structure of the story, that’s harder to change. I don’t know how well I’ve done it. Hopefully I’ve made it good enough but it’s been more difficult than I expected.

A: Yeah, I’ve definitely been there. There was one piece in particular that I tried to go back to, and I had no idea how bad it was. I was like, “what, I wrote this?” It was embarrassing to me and nobody was even reading it.

M: There’s also the surprises that get you. I went back to a science-fiction thing that I wrote, not that long ago, I thought, but the technology was outdated ‘cause they were talking about CDs and 3D printing. They were talking about something like 3D printing as if they’d never heard of it, because they hadn’t, because I hadn’t! It seemed very, very old fashioned and I didn’t think enough time had passed for that to be old fashioned.  

A: It’s pretty amazing, when you look at science-fiction from even the past ten, fifteen years, the amount of things that have become real; the different contraptions and whatnot.

M: I think we live in a time period where technology is just making incredible leaps all the time, which of course makes it difficult for science-fiction writers, but still it makes it exciting to see where everything goes. I was thinking earlier, “Hey, we have video phones.” When I was in high school, we didn’t have them and they seemed so far in the future but they’re very easy and casual and common now and we’re absolutely living in the future.

A: So, as a fantasy and science-fiction writer, what is a piece of technology that you predict is the most likely to come to fruition?

M: I’ve always liked hover-boards and hover-cars and things, and I know people are working on that, but I don’t think it’s going to happen any time soon. I know they’ve come up with things that are very loud and they blast all this air and there’re these things you can use over water but they haven’t come up with anything that’s really quiet yet. I know they’re working on it, so maybe that will happen. I would love a hover-board someday.

A: Like the pink Matel hoverboard from Back to the Future.

M: Exactly. Even if it’s a horribly childish color, I will be all over it.

A: Wasn’t that supposed to have taken place like a couple years ago?

M: I think that is the nature of science-fiction, to always get things wrong in terms of how fast things are developing and we always reach the day where the time was predicted to have all these amazing things and, well, we don’t have any of those but we do have this other thing that you didn’t think of. In Back to the Future, they did not have cellphones that can do eleven billion different things in your pocket. Like, no one thought of that one. We have gadgets that can do everything, and that’s pretty awesome.

A: Yeah, what is it, the computing power of your iPhone is more than what got us to the moon?

M: Right? There’s a long, long list of things it can do, it’s astounding. It can translate, it’s a flashlight, it’s a camera, all kinds of stuff. And it’s the biggest encyclopedia in the world that you just talk at and it tells you things. Old-style Star Trek would be jealous. I like to take note of all the cool things of this time period, because there are cool things, you just gotta notice them.

A: Yeah, a lot of people tend to look at technology as sort of a bad thing and it’s part of the evils of the world, but it’s so incredibly helpful.

M: Yeah, but they’ve always thought that. When books became a thing, when the printing press came out, people were up in arms about it because then people would, their memories would fail. They wouldn’t be able to remember as much stuff because they had this crutch. And, I guess that’s true, but on the other hand, look at all this knowledge we have written down that we wouldn’t have been able to keep otherwise. That’s always how it goes: someone complains and that’s the way of things.

A: It’s always older people complaining about the newer stuff but we’re always going to be there. Someday it’s going to happen to me. I’m gonna be one of those old people that like, “ah, nowadays!”

M: “You kids and your holograms! Do real things!”

A: How much research do you tend to do when writing these things that don’t exist?

M: A pretty good amount, not a huge amount, but I will invent an aliens species and base them off of existing animals and I’ll research that animal to come up with stuff I wouldn’t have thought of. That can be really fun, so I’ll read a bunch of articles and take all my notes and go from there. Like, I’m gonna base this alien species off of dinosaurs with feathers, the ones that are shaped like ostriches, so let’s research how ostriches live. Let’s see what we can do to build a species and a society from there. There’s so much interesting stuff in the real world that you can easily extrapolate from into speculative fiction.

A: Oh, definitely. It’s pretty insane when you see these creatures that just look like they should be aliens. Especially when it comes to stuff at the bottom of the ocean or in the jungle. Like, how is that real?

M: There’s so much that’s really interesting one way or another and it’s just a matter of taking note, like okay, that’s really interesting, I’m going to write that down for later […] I think it’s emus that are apparently bad parents and they lose track of which babies are theirs. The father emus are the ones that watch out for them and whenever they find another family, the father emus fight each other and the babies all scatter, then they follow whichever adult feet they find first. So, any random gathering, there will be a family with one father and a bunch of kids of all different ages ‘cause they’re not related. That is so absurd and so funny that I want to use it in something, so I write it down.

A: You know, that actually happened to me when I took my daughter to the park. I came home with, like, five other kids.

M: It’ll happen, yeah! Go to the store, they’ll follow you. [laughs] Now, I have not yet figured out how a civilized society will do that but I’ll figure it out.

A: Now, something that you do very well, which is difficult to do in such a short period of time with short stories, is the worldbuilding, and fantasy takes a lot. I often find that that is what most writers have the most difficulty with, is fantasy short stories because there’s so much worldbuilding within fantasy. So, what’s your approach to worldbuilding? 

M: It’s a lot like creating a species. I’ll do research and take notes of what’s relevant and make up my own stuff. It’s the kind of thing that you can get lost in and just build every little detail about the world but I’ve found, especially if you’re writing the first draft, that you don’t really need everything; you just need the basics. Some interesting details and build on that. 

Anything that seems fun, I’ll explore, and the stuff that doesn’t really matter, I’ll figure it out as I go. I always want to make the world interesting to me. It’s very easy to do something where, “okay, well, standard fantasy conventions, go.” That’s easy enough, but it can be more fun if you can add some little details from what people expect, and I very much enjoy taking tropes and turning them sideways.

A: Are there any tropes that you find annoying or are tired of?

M: Oh, tons. Prophecies are kind of annoying. I’m only going to write a prophecy if I can change it into something where the characters don’t think it is. Like, “no man or woman can defeat me,” okay, then that means it’s a nonbinary person who defeats you. Or, “I cannot be killed by any mortal-made weapon.” Okay, cool, you’re getting beaned in the head with a rock. I don’t like things that are boring or things that have been done a billion times.

A: What are some novels you like that are successful when it comes to worldbuilding?

M: I like stuff written by Wen Spencer; she’s done some really cool things. Two of her books in particular have really good worldbuilding. One of them is A Brother’s Price. It’s in a world where men are rare, which is an interesting premise that’s been done before, but the way she does this one is really impressive and fascinating. It’s not that men are the ones in charge, it’s more that they’re the ones that stay at home with all the kids and if one family has a brother in each group of sisters, they get to trade it with another family. They’d swap brothers, so that’s how marriages happen: one boy marries a group of sisters and each generation goes down to be a group of mothers. The whole society is very unexpected and interesting. 

The other one, Endless Blue, is a futuristic thing where spaceships disappear if they set their warp jumps to zero. If you put the coordinates in at zero, everything knows you disappear. And then you’re gone forever. Turns out, they actually go somewhere and that place is really interesting and the worldbuilding is very fascinating. It’s like an inside-out planet where the ground is on the outside and all the rules of physics and society are totally different and she had to make it up from scratch and it’s so cool. A lot of her stuff is creative and it’s been an example for me to follow.

A: I love that planet idea, like if M.C. Escher was to create his own planet.

M: Yeah, and you look up and you don’t see sky, you see more ground and the light comes from somewhere in the middle. And there’s aliens species in there, too [...] One in particular that really stuck out to me, ‘cause they’re a lot like minotaurs, and their society is built like cattle. For them, the only one in the group that talks to any outsider is the dominant bull and, at one point, we see this little family that crashed and it’s just a group of siblings that stole the ship and took it for a drive. The little boy of that group is pushed to the front to talk to everyone because he’s the only bull there and the only human that knows how their society works is this rather small female who has to pretend to be a bull and do all the body language and it’s really funny. 

There’s another thing where their society never really did livestock the way we do; because they eat plants, they didn’t need to have any actual animals living with them, so they understand humans’ relationship to pets. They don’t understand a lot of things that are just basic to how we live, because they never needed to have a pet or any animal in their society, and that’s such an alien view of things.

A: That’s probably one of my favorite things that science-fiction does. It’s more introspective on us as a society and I love that idea of looking at why do we do things the way that we do, and why do we think it’s weird when it’s not that way.

A: What is some advice you’d give to a writer that is trying to break into the literary scene?

M: I would say to expect it to take longer than you want it to, so be ready for the long hall and be determined and all that. Also, have as much fun with it as you can, remember why you’re doing this. The more about it you enjoy, the better the entire process is going to be. Obviously, if you’re having more fun, you’re having more fun, but writing tends to go better when you enjoy it. That’s absolutely been my experience. Particularly with all these writing challenges where there are no high stakes, it doesn’t have to be good, you just have to write it. That makes it so much easier to write something silly or something that’s just a fun idea, something that I enjoy, if it doesn't have to be deathless prose, very-important-stuff. It can just be funsies! And then the fun things tend to turn out really good because it’s something that I enjoy and others will enjoy [...] If you like it, you’ve made your first reader happy, and that’s the most important one.

A: On the flip side of that, what is a piece of very common advice that you see people give authors that you think should be ignored?

M: I think people misinterpret the “Write what you know,” advice, because, a lot of the time, people assume, “Okay, I need to write about a character living the exact life that I, myself, have lived and I shouldn’t write about experiences I’ve never had. That’s not the point. That’s writing what you’ve experienced, not writing what you know. If you research properly, if you talk to people who have had those experiences, then you can know about it and you can learn about pretty much anything to some degree. As long as you’re being respectful about people who have actually lived those experiences that you haven’t, as long as you’re doing it right, then you can write about anything and have it be something that you know. Obviously, you wouldn’t know it to the same degree as someone who’s lived it [...] I’d say it’s “Write whatever you want to spend enough time getting to know.”

A: I love that. “Write what you want to spend enough time getting to know.”

M: Yeah, you want to enjoy the headspace that you’re gonna be in one way or another.

A: The last thing I wanted to say is, you’ve got an anthology coming out. Can you tell us a little bit about that?

M: I don’t know if you’ve heard of the trope that has been popular in the last couple of years online where, in science-fiction, the humans are not the boring little weakling aliens, that humans are the interesting ones. It’s been something that’s been really fun to play with. Just the idea that it’s a multispecies spaceship and humans are the ones that everyone else is either befuddled by or afraid of or there’s just something that makes us exceptional, because there’s so many ways that we can actually work with this. On Earth, we’re actually really good at endurance for walking or running a long distance. Only dogs and horses can really keep up with us, and we used to hunt that way. We would follow a deer until it falls down in exhaustion and that’s how we would get food. And we’re really good at throwing things. Even other apes, their shoulders aren’t built the same way as ours, so on that spaceship, if there’s an invading alien, we can pick up a rock and throw it and impress everyone. Just extrapolating from real things and going with stuff like, we work with eyesight. What if we’re meeting a species that doesn’t do that? What if they see some other way? How do we explain this to them? Like, “I can look at that jar and see that the medicine is moldy.”

So, it’s a really fun idea to play with and a lot of people online have been exploring this and there’s already one anthology out there that is focusing on humans being valuable and showing how good they are. It’s a good anthology; I have a copy. But I want to put together an anthology to focus on specifically how weird we can be. Like, compared to the other aliens, there’s something about us that’s different than the others, and I want to explore the different ways that we can be strange. This is going to be open for people to submit to. The current thought is having May and June when you can submit things. With the state of the world being what it is, that may extend a little bit, we will see. I just put together a page on my website with details on it. Maralynnjohnstone.com has a section that has all the details. 

 

Mara Johnstone (she/her) grew up in a house on a hill, of which the top floor was built first. She split er time between climbing trees, drawing fantastical things, reading books, and writing her own. She has a master’s degree in Creative Writing an continues to write, draw, and climb things. To read more of Mara’s work, check out her website maralynnjohnstone.com or follow her on Twitter.

Twitter: @MarlynnOfMany


Chandra Montez (she/her), also known as Chandra Vess, lives in Tucson, Arizona, where she lives with her girlfriend as a stay-at-home partner. She is the co-founder of Lazy Adventurer Publishing and heads both press's magazines, Prismatica Magazine and Collective Realms Magazine as Editor-in-Chief and Publisher.

Her work can be found in the two magazines as well as Selcouth Station Press, Chaparral Press, and Theta Wave Magazine.

Twitter: @chandra_vess

Interview with K.D. Edwards

I recently got the chance to sit down with the author, K.D. Edwards. We talked about the ferocity of fandom, learning the spectrums of the LGBTQ community, where his previous book fell short, and his reaction to the success he's had with his debut novel. Oh, there's also a part where he wrote two chapters on a battleship.

For those of you who are unfamiliar with Edwards’ work, he is the author of The Tarot Sequence, an urban fantasy series that imagines a modern day Atlantis off the coast of Massachusetts, governed by powerful courts based on the traditional Tarot deck. Rune St. John, last child of the fallen Sun Throne, is backed into a fight of high court magic and political appetites in a desperate bid to protect his ward, Max, from a forced marital alliance with the Hanged Man. Rune’s resistance will take him to the island’s dankest corners, including a Red Light district made up of moored ghost ships, the residence of Lady Death, and the floor of the ruling convocation where a gathering of arcana will change Rune’s life forever. His book, The Hanged Man, is the follow-up to his debut novel, The Last Sun. Edwards lives and writes in North Carolina, but has spent time in Massachusetts, Maine, Colorado, New Hampshire, Montana, and Washington.

You can purchase The Hanged Man on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Books-a-Million, and IndieBound.

Annaelise: First off, congratulations on publishing The Hanged Man, which is the follow up to your debut novel. So, what new challenges has writing a sequel presented you?

K.D.: It’s kinda funny. You think you would know, like you would have an idea of what the challenges would be, and then it turns out to be completely 180 opposite from what you expect. I mean, I always knew where I wanted it to go with this series, I have nine books planned. From the very beginning, before I even sold the first novel, I knew what happens from beginning to end. Everything’s plotted out, the second novel was fairly well outlined before the first one was even written, so I thought the biggest challenge would be overcoming the Sophomore Slump because, even though I want to do nine novels, they are three trilogies, which means this is, essentially, the middle book of the first trilogy. And a lot of middle books, I mean not only is it your sophomore book but it’s the middle of a trilogy and sometimes that can come across as just a bit of a bridge, or a placeholder, until you get to the climax of your trilogy.

FINDING MY OWN AUDIENCE ON TWITTER THAT WASN’T CONSTANTLY ALL THE DOOM AND GLOOM, BUT SOMETHING POSITIVE AND SUPPORTIVE, TURNED OUT TO BE PROBABLY ONE OF THE BIGGEST JOURNEYS.

I was really worried about that, so I thought that would be my biggest challenge, but I think what I didn’t realize, more than anything else, is what was going on in the country, too, would influence my writing. Cause it’s been a, I mean, you gotta admit the last few years have been really bizarre. I certainly have no desire to get into politics or to talk about it but it really did influence my writing, my ability to sit down and just kind of open up creatively everyday. And that was all going on right when I had just started writing The Hanged Man.

So, at the end of the day it turned out that the actual process of writing Hanged Man wasn’t that difficult and it really flowed as it’s own story, which is something I’m really proud of, but getting through just, you know, trying to find my own routine within what was going on in the rest of the world and finding my own audience on Twitter that wasn’t constantly all the doom and gloom, but something positive and supportive, turned out to be probably one of the biggest journeys I was on in the past year and a half.

YOU’RE GOING TO HAVE AN AUDIENCE BUT WHAT YOU DON’T REALLY EXPECT, NECESSARILY, ARE PEOPLE THAT COME CLOSE TO BEING FANS AND FRIENDS.

Annaelise: That’s awesome, and speaking of your reading, that’s something I wanted to touch on. You’ve had a very great reception online from your readers, especially when it comes to fanart. Like I looked at your website and I just saw all of this fanart of all different characters in your book and, you know, we’re living in an age where you can hear your audience better than ever, so what does it mean to you, as a writer, to be able to hear from the people directly that are reading your work?

K.D.: You know, I really love that question because it hasn’t been asked of me before and what’s happening right now is just absolutely insane. There are two websites, people who I’ve kind of become friends with over Twitter, actually really good friends by now, because they asked us if they could deal with the promotion for Hanged Man. Like, basically, a fan-based promotion. You know, a reader-based promotion, where they handled everything and the last three weeks, I mean, you saw the artwork on the website, but everything else that’s happened, leading up to Hanged Man, I mean, there are like challenges going on. There are four different Courts and they’re competing for points and people have done quilts and artwork and comic page panels. They baked cookie recipes inspired by the characters. Drink recipes. I literally…All of this creative stuff is going around based off of something I wrote. It’s mind boggling. And I never, especially when I was writing Hanged Man, towards the end, knowing that, I don’t know how to put this other than that I feel like I’ve shared something.

That was one of the things I just never expected. You would expect that you would get readers when you do something and that you’re going to have an audience but what you don’t really expect, necessarily, are people that come close to being fans and friends, in some cases, because they reach out to you and they engage. Not only that, I’ve lost track of the amount of times people have said that they’ve read my story and it inspired them to go to the art store and buy a canvas when they hadn’t painted in years. And then they made something based off of something I wrote and that’s so overwhelming and humbling, I don’t even know how to put that into context.

I also know that, uh, I’ve just finished writing something for another website, it’s a romance website. And I’ve never had to write something for a romance website before and I talked about, that’s probably one of the scariest things now that I’ve connected with the fans is, one of the things they really care about is the romance aspect and who is with who and the level of intimacy, even if it’s not romance. The relationship between the characters and there are some people who want one thing to happen and there are some people who want something entirely different to happen and then there’s a whole group that wants, like, both to happen at once and trying to figure out what I’m going to do with that. I think I decided recently that the one story element, which I haven’t planned out for the nine novels, is how to deal with that aspect of it. But the rest of it is nothing but encouragement of what I get from readers. I mean, just nothing but encouragement. I have absolutely had the best readers of this world.

Annaelise: I guess that’s something that I haven’t really thought about is the, when you’re online and with access to the Internet, people have become more intense in their fandom-ness and just how intensely people get into it. Is that what you were expecting at all?

THEY KNEW IT WOULD AFFECT THEM IF THERE WASN’T A HAPPILY EVER AFTER. I MEAN TALK ABOUT RESPONSIBILITY.

K.D.: No, no. I’ll even give you an example of something that just blew me away. It’s also, sort of, it’s sort like a sense of responsibility, too. Like, especially, you know I have a lot of young readers. I set about writing something which would appeal to a younger audience and I wanted it to be something that I wished I had had when I was younger and I think I’ve kind of hit a vein in that respect. But I had this one young reader in Asia reach out to me and they said that it’s not easy for them to get books like this and that their aunt had sent it. They hadn’t read the book themselves but their friend had and told them all about it and then this reader proceeded to, well at the time they weren’t a reader, had proceeded to tell me all the high points of the book even though the reader had not read the book. And the reason that the reader had no read the book is because they were terrified that I was going to break the heart of one of the characters in a relationship in the book. They were scared to read it because they didn’t want to set themselves up for being upset, because what they had heard so far meant enough to them that they knew it would affect them if there wasn’t a happily ever after. I mean talk about responsibility in a case like that. Let alone having someone reach out to you from a foreign country saying it’s not easy to get books like this and to know that I can fill a niche like that is…it’s humbling and it’s something that I take really, really seriously.

It’s definitely inspired my own education on the different spectrums of intimacy. It seems the younger people are more comfortable, I don’t want to call it labels because I think what we are talking about nowadays has been around forever but now we just have a framework around it, but when you talk about things like demisexuality and asexuality, all those things have always existed but now they’re just discussed more freely and a lot of young readers, they really closely identity with these things and that’s been my journey that I’ve been on more than anything else with these readers who reach out to me and want to see their reflection in a story and realizing, in some cases, that I’ve already sort of planned that with these characters without even realizing it.

Annaelise: When it comes to the audience of the LGBTQ community, that’s a very big part of your readership for a very obvious reason, is the fact that, you know, your characters are predominantly within the LGBTQ spectrum. Do you feel that that’s sort of why people cling to it or what else is it about your book that draws people in?

K.D.: Well, I think that’s a huge part of it and that’s what I set out to do. I guess the genre that you would call it is speculative fiction or urban fantasy, I call it modern fantasy sometimes, but over the last, I don’t know, twenty years or so, it’s become really big. Urban fantasy is a huge buzzword now and it’s a very saturated genre but there are all these greats like Laurell Hamilton and Charlaine Harris and Ilona Andrews, who I absolutely adore. Anne Bishop writes some really edgy stuff and Patricia Briggs. And they do all these amazing novels but I’ve always wanted to take these stories I love but to do them from my voice, from a gay male voice. And have characters in the background who just happen to be gay without it being a gay novel because when I was growing up, a lot of the fiction you had, if there were gay characters, that was the focus of the story. It was a gay science-fiction. It was a gay mystery. That was a predominant element, not just sort of an intrinsic piece of the background and so that’s what I wanted to do. I wanted to do something where the story came first and just happened to be populated with gay male characters and that is my journey.

LOOKING BACK I REALIZE HOW MUCH I LET DOWN THAT PART OF THE READERSHIP AND THAT IS A HUGE COURSE CORRECTION I DO IN HANGED MAN. I REALLY LISTENED.

It’s been my journey with all that I do not just this series. But I think that even beyond that, one of the things that I realized, I mean here I’m expecting someone’s gonna hand me a trophy because I wrote an urban fantasy with gay male characters and then they’re like, “yeah but you did an awful job representing women, like genuinely horrible,” like every female character I had in the first book had some sort of serious flaw or was a hidden villain. And looking back I realize how much I let down that part of the readership and that is a huge course correction I do in Hanged Man. I really listened.

A lot of writers will tell you they don’t read reviews. I read every single one of them and especially the reviews where people say they love the novel “but, dot dot dot". I paid really close attention to that and so it’s great that I wrote [The Last Sun] with a lot of gay characters but I hope to see some more lesbians and like one of the characters is asexual and one is growing more into identifying as demisexual. I have a lot of strong female characters coming in and certainly people of color, I’m hoping to show a lot more diversity with that as well.

Annaelise: I think that it’s really great that you’re able to go out and take in that criticism, so to speak, and be able to transform that into something to make yourself better. I think that’s something that not a whole lot of people can do. But another thing that you hit was the worldbuilding within your novels, which, I’ve read this one, The Hanged Man, and the worldbuilding that you do is honestly just amazing and it’s something that you’re often praised on, from what I was looking at, so can you tell us a little bit about your process when it comes to creating the universe?

K.D.: Yeah and thank you by the way. Those were really kind words. I love worldbuilding. I think back when I read, so I mentioned Anne Bishop and Ilona Andrews. They are two authors who taught me that you can take a risk with writing. If you have strong characters, and maybe you have grounded it in something interesting and compelling about the relationship with the characters that’s going to be the core of your story, something so approachable that anyone will understand, if you do that you can kind of take a chance on the worldbuilding.

IT’S THE CREAM OF THE CROP OF TWENTY OR THIRTY YEARS.

Ilona Andrews, in particular the Kate Daniels novels, I mean you get thrown right into this world and you have no idea what’s going on because all the characters are living in that world so they don’t go around explaining what that world is. So you gotta pick up pieces and figure out how this world’s got broken on your own and I think I’ve always wanted to do that. I love crazy worldbuilding. I love things that are surreal. I love taking things that are real in our world but adding an edge to it that makes it something unique and mysterious or a little bit darker.

When I started doing this, the first thing I created were the characters and the second thing I created was a two-page prologue, which never got published but it will show up on Hanged Man, that explains the fabric of this world. And then after that I just kinda dive into it but I think, for me, the strength of the worldbuilding [is because] I’m a planner. I mean, obviously if I have planned out nine novels. I have hundreds of thousands of words written down in an Excel file and when anything that occurs to me, not matter where I am, I jot it down. Worldbuilding is never just sitting in front of the computer and saying “what am I gonna do now?” Generally there’s often years of notes behind that I’ve been taking for my entire life that I’ve been waiting for moment to find a good home for. It’s not just the cream of the crop of the last year of brainstorming. It’s the cream of the crop of twenty or thirty years.

Annaelise: When it comes to planning and brainstorming, what sort of technology, other than, you said, Excel, do you use?

K.D.: Oh, you ask really good questions. Like, just so people know, this isn’t planned but this is literally like if you could softball me a question it would be this because I actually invest in startup technology about voice-to-text recognition.

There’s this thing called the Senstone that I looked into for a while where it’s a medallion on your chest and you press the button and you speak a note and it sends it wirelessly via Bluetooth to your phone. Because everything I do, when you’re doing it on the run or driving or waiting in line, you can’t always pull out a computer and take a note, so I am very aware of technology and how to organize my notes and how to keep it separated by different novels so that it’s not a mess of a bin of ideas but whenever I have a note it goes somewhere sensible so I’ll be able to access it later. And lately voice-to-text technology is something I’ve really been looking into.

I just got my first set of AirPods, Apple AirPods, that I’m excited about that because I hear that it has some transcription technology, so ask me about that in a couple weeks.

WIKIPEDIA WE’RE GONNA LOOK BACK ON SOME DAY AND REALIZE THAT WAS AN EVOLUTION RIGHT THERE. THE IMMEDIATE ACCESS TO SHARED KNOWLEDGE IS PRETTY INCREDIBLE.

Annaelise: You bring up something really big. I mean with our cellphones we have access to a miniature computer nowadays that we didn’t have ten, twelve, fifteen years ago. What do you think that that’s done for the writing community?

K.D.: It’s funny, I think you’ll still find a lot of writers who will write longhand with an 8-by-11, yellow, striped piece of paper but for me the biggest thing that technology does even on the phone, other than doing the transcription, is just the ability to do research. Part of my worldbuilding, I think, comes off well because I do a ton of research before I actually write.

The city of New Atlantis in my novel is comprised of abandoned human buildings across the world, so I do a fair amount of research on abandoned human ruins and imagine them brought over to the island and then rehabilitated. I researched the mythologies of monsters before I put them in. Cellphones and Wikipedia - I mean, Wikipedia we’re gonna look back on some day and realize that was an evolution right there. The immediate access to shared knowledge is pretty incredible. But I think definitely that between research and transcription, I mean, there are a lot of things.

There are a lot of tools you can use now as writers like Scrivener, that people speak highly of, but for me Excel is pretty much the most technological I can get when it comes to organizing all my notes so that I can sort them by either novel name or series name and then the research is huge.

Annaelise: What about your workspace? That’s usually a pretty integral part of the creative process, so what does your creative space look like?

K.D.: Oh not nearly as well as it should. I mean that’s probably the one thing that I wish I could do better. I’m always working, whether it’s brainstorming or research but I wish I could sit in front of a computer and write a little bit faster. And right now, the place I write, there’s a coffee shop in town and pretty much there’s one spot that I always sit in and almost the entire second novel got written there, with the exception of one sequence set on a battleship, and I actually wrote those two chapters on a battleship. I don’t mind noise around me, like at a coffee shop.I can’t have anyone sit at the table with me but if I have energy around me, even the better. People watching? Even better.

Annaelise: Well, how did you manage to, uh, get onto a battleship for that?

LIKE I LITERALLY BROUGHT MY COMPUTER WITH ME AND FOLLOWED THEIR PATH THROUGH THE SHIP ON THIS ADVENTURE.

K.D.: There’s one in North Carolina. The Battleship North Carolina. I essentially created a fictional ship that’s the sister of that ship and it’s a really important part of The Hanged Man. They turned it into a museum and I used to go and visit it just because it’s just this…I don’t know how to describe it. It doesn’t necessarily make you feel good when you’re on it because you know what it was used for but it’s awe-inspiring because it’s huge. The guns are like five-stories tall. I mean like, you can think of what it must have been like when the ship pulled into your harbor. And I kinda tied it into this ghost story I wanted to tell in novel number two. If you’re on the Battleship North Carolina, you can literally follow the progress of Rune and Bran through the ship, like I literally brought my computer with me and followed their path through the ship on this adventure, this ghost story. It meant a lot doing that.

Annaelise: Now, you did mention Andrews and Bishop. Were there any other specific authors or any series that you looked to for inspiration during the creation stages of The Tarot Sequence?

K.D.: Yeah, there are definitely echoes of other series. Charlie Huston wrote a vampire series called the Joe Pitt series that is set in New York City and that has some really surreal, underground worldbuilding and he also does something kinda brilliant, and that I more or less adopted, the technique of separating exposition and dialogue. So you can have a scene where you can just focus on the action of the scene and the dialogue of the scene but all the exposition that goes into explaining what’s going on is set apart in its own little section and it’s really condensed so that, if it’s done well, it’s interesting and it doesn’t slow down the momentum of the story. That was a huge influence for me and […] Julie Czerneda, she’s a sci-fi writer, nothing like mine because she’s hardcore sci-fi in outerspace and I’m based on Earth, but she focuses on the concept of found family and that is massively inspirational to me as well. The whole of my series is based around found family.

Annaelise: When it comes to the theme of found family, why do you think that’s so important to you?

K.D.: [pauses] I…I don’t know. Maybe it’s just that’s what works. I don’t think I ever necessarily planned that in any of my writing. It’s probably one of the first stories where that’s instrumental to it but it just works and I created like…we were talking about immediate feedback from people who are reading. That was really critical with Last Sun because I wrote some of these characters who were supposed to be really sideline characters.

There’s this one character called Quinn who, more or less only has three or four scenes. That’s all people have read about him, realistically three or four scenes, but he’s mentioned in the story enough and it works so well that he becomes found family to the two main characters and when you talk about readers doing artwork or talking about my characters, he gets talked about all the time. And because of that, I mean, it’s like I was experiencing this found family as well so that it inspired me to add these characters to the core and now they’re really the heart of the second story in the best way possible like just…I like sitting down and actually engaging with these characters again.

Annaelise: Now, with these sideline characters, that is something I did notice there was a common theme, in how much people get attached to these ancillary characters. Has that ever made you wonder why it is that they [the audience] are so strongly attached to these particular characters?

K.D.: I will say that I do try to put a lot of work into anyone I put on page, even if it’s someone who only shares a single scene. I really try to give them something that stands apart, so that it’s not forgettable. I don’t want anything just average, I want on every page at least one detail that jumps off and hits the reader in the face.

A lot of how I accomplish that is through the characters, so I think sometimes that’s what resonates and a lot of these side characters I also put in the first novel, they’re misfits. They don’t have place. They’re like ostracized. They’ve never been the type of people to get invited to a birthday part or barbecues or bowling parties, so they became naturally found family in the story cause the main character, Rune, he’s not just rebuilding the Sun Throne, but essentially the Misfit Throne.

So, all of that just kind of conspired to naturally bring all of these elements together and to make these characters a little bit more pronounced than maybe I intended originally, in the best way possible.

Annaelise: Do you feel that the fact that a lot of these characters are misfits, that it has something to do with why people are able to relate to your work so much?

K.D.: Oh I absolutely think so. I really do. [laughs] And I’m okay with that. I will be the King of Misfits, I’m perfectly happy with that name.

I’M NOT ON STEP ONE HUNDRED BUT I’M NOT ON STEP ONE, EITHER.

Annaelise: Yeah, I think it does say something about the fact that, especially within the LGBTQ community that there are so many people that do identify with misfit characters because, in a way, that’s kind of how a lot of society sees us, you know? But moving away from that, now that the sequel to The Last Sun is published, what comes next? Are you going to be working on the third book, or is there something else in store?

K.D.: Both, actually. Well, I guess kinda three things. One is I definitely am working on Tarot three, that is a reality. That’s gonna happen. I’m hard at work on that at the moment. I want to continue to do free novellas between every novel, so I have to work on the next novella between novel two and novel three. I also have a series I want to write, a young adult series that I have been planning for years now, and I think that I’m gonna start writing that in the spring.

Beyond that, I mean there are a hundred steps in this process and the chances of this happening…I’m not on step one hundred but I’m not on step one, either. But I do have a Hollywood agent and I have a development company that I’ve been talking with about turning The Last Sun into a TV series.

Like I said, the finish line is always so far out on stuff like that but even going through this step of the process and, you know, going from the point where you hear someone’s interested and then you actually get a name and then you talk with this developer and then maybe there’s a screenwriter attached and maybe they start working on a pitch and they start to talk about what the entire season would look like. It’s kind of crazy. It’s doesn’t feel real sometimes but so far the people I’ve worked with have just been wonderful and if they can do anything with this, God bless them. I hope they can because you think of a stereotype of Hollywood sometimes like agents tell you exactly what you want to hear but there’s nothing sincere but I’ve got nothing but sincerity from the people I’ve been working with.

Annaelise: I mean I definitely think that there’s a niche for it, you know, for a TV series of that type. A fantasy, the urban fantasy, as well as people just wanting any sort of LGBTQ representation within television. And as far as the novellas are concerned, are they on your website?

K.D.: So, I’ve only done one and I haven’t finished it. I still have the last chapter of the novella to finish but I promised it by Sunday. Five chapters are out and they are on a Google Drive that anyone can download from and Twitter is basically my main social media outlet, I don’t really do anything else at this point but I’ll post that on Twitter and I’ll pin it to the top of my page. [Editor’s note: this interview was done a month ago]

 

K.D. Edwards (he/him) is the author of The Last Sun, book one of the Tarot Sequence. He lives and writes in North Carolina, but has spent time in Massachusetts, Maine, Colorado, New Hampshire, Montana, and Washington State. (Common theme until NC: Snow. So, so much snow.) Mercifully short careers in food service, interactive television, corporate banking, retail management, and bariatric furniture have led to a much less short career in higher education, currently for the University of North Carolina System.

You can purchase The Hanged Man on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Books-a-Million, and IndieBound.