Website: rhiannonheld.com
> What is Silver about?
Andrew Dare is a werewolf. He’s the
enforcer for the Roanoke pack, and responsible for capturing or
killing any Were intruders in Roanoke’s territory. But the lone
Were he’s tracking doesn’t smell or act like anyone he’s ever
encountered. And when he catches her, it doesn’t get any better.
She’s beautiful, she’s crazy, and someone has tortured her by
injecting silver into her veins. She says her name is Silver, and
that she’s lost her wild self and can’t shift any more.
The packs in North America have a
live-and-let-live attitude, and try not to overlap with each other.
But Silver represents a terrible threat to every Were on the
continent.
Andrew and Silver will join forces to
track down this menace while discovering their own power and their
passion for each other.
> What drew you to writing about werewolves?
Several things! They suited my
perspective as a professional archaeologist, because once I made them
a species (my werewolves are only born, not turned), they offered
lots of cool opportunities for showing social dynamics and pack
behavior as people with human tendencies might interpret them.
Readers also already mostly know what
werewolves are. That means I can spend a little time on establishing
a few unique details of mine and then move on to what I think is the
fun part: their culture and religion and social etiquette and all
kinds of stuff. How do they interact with each other? How do they
interact with humans, since they’re hiding their real culture?
If I’d made up a new creature, I’d have to spend much more time
on establishing everything about that creature, and much less on
their culture and interactions.
> If you could, would you change places with any of your characters?
If I changed places with anyone, it would probably be one of my secondary characters. Their lives have much less upheaval! On the one hand, I think life in a pack-based society would be something I’d enjoy, since it’s so supportive. On the other hand, keeping your identity as a werewolf secret would be really stressful, so I think I’m better off as I am.
> What's the first novel (published or unpublished) that you wrote and how long did it take to write it?
This question has two answers, so I’ll
give you both. The first almost-novel-length writing exercise I did
was for National Novel Writing Month. It took me about six or seven
months to write 60,000 words. The reason I don’t count it as a full
novel is that it was so short, and I never even tried to revise it.
Silver was the first real novel I wrote. For comparison, it
ended up being 85,000 words. The first draft took 3 months, but I did
multiple revisions after that. Including six months where I set it
aside to recharge my creativity for that project, about 18 months
passed from the time when I wrote the first word to when I submitted
it.
The simplest answer is “when I’m
alert” and “on my laptop”. However, given that I work full
time, I mostly end up writing in the evenings on weekdays and a
variety of times on weekends. In my apartment, I usually take the
laptop to the couch, but that’s not a necessary part of the
experience. I’ll write in coffee shops with other writers, but not
by myself. When it’s raining, I’ve been known to write in the
back seat of my car at the park, because I want to be outside, but my
laptop would not be amused if it I took it out in that kind of
weather.
> Do you have any advice for hopeful authors?
Meet people in the writing community.
Now, when you’re first learning or honing your craft. Don’t wait
until you have a finished novel and then aim yourself at editors at
parties for a hard sell. Meet people now just to meet people. People
who are your peers, people who are earlier in their learning process
than you, people who are established writers. Go to writing community
events: conventions, workshops, retreats, critique groups, gatherings
at the local coffee shop. Make friends with as many people as happens
naturally, and remain friendly with all the others. When it comes
time to sell your novel, you probably will have networked with
someone who can help you, certainly, but the real benefit is that
you’ll have connections with a great group of people will support
you and you can support along the way.
> Any tips against writers block?
I’ll be so bold as to say I’ve
never gotten writer’s block. I do stall every so often, unable to
get a plot element to work. Then I stop writing for the day and pick
up the next day. By then, I’ll either have solved the problem or
I’ll work on another project for a while. How do I solve thorny
plot problems? The same way I solve other mental puzzles. I think
hard about it consciously for significant period while I do something
that makes my mental flow smoother, like driving or walking. When
I’ve brainstormed and turned the problem this way and that
consciously, I set it aside and do something completely different.
That’s when my unconscious gets to work. More often than not, in
under 24 hours a solution will pop into my conscious mind. You might
recognize this sensation from other areas of your life, whether it’s
Sudoku, crossword puzzles, anagrams, or even a computer game like
Myst. You can’t be lazy and stop trying immediately when a
problem gets hard, figuring you unconscious will help you. You have
to put in the work, and then you’ll be rewarded later.
> How do you discipline yourself to write?
An easy answer to this would be that I
just do, but that’s not very helpful. I think my discipline comes
partially from knowing my rhythms of alertness and attention and
working with them rather than trying to change them. For instance, if
you want to lose weight and can’t resist cookies, you can either
make yourself miserable thinking about the ones in the cupboard and
wallow in guilt when you give in…or you can make sure not to buy
any. I know I get very distracted after about two hours of writing.
So rather than beating myself up and staring at a blank screen in the
third hour, I plan to do something else after two. Maybe I get fewer
words written that morning because I didn’t keep going for that
extra hour. But maybe that afternoon after lunch and a walk, I feel
energized and write many, many more, rather than being in a pit of
guilt and getting nothing more done.
> How many rejection letters did you get for your first novel or story?
I sent my first story out with a group
of three or four that all ended up rejected several times. In fact,
back when I was writing only short stories, I came up with a game.
When I reached 100 total rejections for all of the different stories
I’d sent out, I’d buy myself a flat panel TV. Around 55 or so, I
sold my first story. Around 70 I sold my novel. I still haven’t
quite made 100, but I’m getting close now. I know I have a lot
fewer total rejections than many writers, but I sent stories out
pretty slowly during busy periods in my life, like when I was writing
my thesis. And now I’ve got my novel series to work on!
1 comment:
Thanks, Jessica!
I'm not surprised, given her background, that the author focuses on the culture and anthropology of werewolves more than the RAWRRR! :)
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