I’m occasionally asked about the art of writing by those who read my blog-posts and books, but I’m usually caught off-guard, quite unprepared to give a cogent answer. I was better primed for an industry online interview, however—an edited transcript of which is shared in this post.
Q. What is it you enjoy most about writing?
I enjoy the freedom to do whatever I want in the first-draft stages—creating credible characters, inventing dialogue, describing events, contriving plausible story-lines.
But even more, I enjoy the rewriting, where I can change things, reconstruct situations, alter outcomes. I love having the opportunity to shape and re-shape the fictional world I’ve created in each story—almost like a wizard, going back in time with the power to change what originally happened.
Q. What is your writing process?
I write everything down as soon as possible after it occurs to me —essays, short stories, blog-posts, episodes for my novels—sometimes in the wee, small hours of the morning when the thoughts tumbling in my brain won’t let me sleep. Later, when the frenzy of first-draft has abated, I rewrite them to see where, or if, they fit in the overall picture.
I often spend hours on end in the process, even to the point of missing lunch or dinner. I’m amazed when I discover that four or five hours might have passed before I paused for breath, so to speak. For me, writing is an alternate universe, one in which I easily lose myself.
Q. Do you remember the first story you ever wrote?
I remember the first story I wrote as an adult. It was titled The Leaving, and was included in two of my published collections of tales. It told of the conflicting joy and sadness associated with the realization that my two daughters were growing up, leaving their childhood behind. It was predicated on a credo my wife and I adopted in their upbringing—hug them close, then let them go. The hugging was easy, of course; the letting-go not so much.
Q. What prompted you to try writing a novel?
In the beginning, it was an attempt to answer the question as to whether or not I could do it. And it took a long time to figure out—five years from inception to publication. I was hoping to accomplish a number of things, the first being just to finish it; while I had been writing stories and poetry for a long time, I had never attempted a novel.
Additionally, I wanted to tell a story that would prove difficult for readers to resist. I wanted to relate that story mainly through dialogue among the characters—in their respective voices. I discovered, however, that the telling of some events had to be in my own narrator’s voice. I also wanted to create convincing characters in whom readers might invest—little knowing at the time that I would become so attached to two of them that a series would follow. They feel like friends now—to the point where, rather than creating their story in each successive book, I’ve come to feel like I’m simply recording it as it unfolds.
Q. How many books have you published?
To my astonishment, there are five novels now: By Precept and Example, 2007; Until He Killed Her, 2010; Lockdown, 2012; First Do No Harm, 2015; and the most recent, Missing and Murdered, 2017. Each of the stories is told against a backdrop of contemporary events taking place at the time of publication.
There are also three books of collected stories: On Top of the Grass: Tales of a Snowbird in Florida, 2008; It Matters to Me: Tales of a Young Father, 2010, and The Passing Parade: Tales of a Bemused Bystander, 2017.
All the books can be found, in print or e-book formats, at a number of locations, including http://www.amazon.ca and http://www.barnesandnoble.ca. They are also available online at http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/precept.
Q. What are you working on now?
I’m currently working on a sixth novel in the Maggie Keiller/Derek Sloan crime series, and I hope to have a fourth collection of tales, Tall and True: Tales of a Peripatetic Blogger, published in 2018.
Q. When you’re not writing, how do you spend your time?
I spend a lot of time reading—more, perhaps, than writing. And I sing bass with an a capella men’s chorus, Harbourtown Sound, which is both enjoyable and time-consuming. The chorus website is http://www.harbourtownsound.ca/.
I also try to stay active in golf, tennis, cycling, swimming, and other physical pursuits.
Q. Who are your favorite authors?
There are several, including John D. MacDonald, James Lee Burke, Lee Child, Michael Connelly, Elmore Leonard, John Sandford, and Randy Wayne White—all of whom write in my preferred genre. I also enjoy authors from different genres—Bill Bryson, Don DeLillo, Cormac McCarthy, J. R. R. Tolkien, and Winston Churchill, to name a few.
Thanks, Pat…..some of the books are in e-book format, but not all. That’s a project-in-waiting!
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I found “Until He Killed Her” in ebook format. Really enjoying it,.
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Whew! That’s a relief…..always nice when a good writer likes something I’ve written!
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PS…I had to look up peripatetic. You might want to rethink that one. 😊
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In writing my posts, I’m always on the move from one topic to another, one point of view to another, one affect or humour to another…..hence, peripatetic.
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Well it’s still a weird word…😊 Tell Donna she’s not allowed to use it in scrabble,.
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A kindred spirit to be sure. I know what you mean about getting lost in time, as the storyboard plays out in your head as you write. I enjoyed reading your interview Brad. I would love to read one of your books…which one do you recommend I start with? I hope they are available in e-book format, as I can only read on my iPad these days, so I can adjust the font. Thanks for the great post.
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