A native of Walnut Grove, in
California’s Sacramento River Delta, Mary Deal has lived in England, the
Caribbean, and now resides in Kapa`a, Kauai, Hawaii.
Mary is an award-winning author of
8 books and also a Pushcart Prize
nominee. She is a newspaper columnist and Associate and Contributing Editor of
a magazine. Additionally, she is an oil painter and photographer and maintains
an online gallery, http://www.marydealfineart.com.
Learn more about Mary and read
short stories and novel excerpts, and watch video trailers for each of her
books in the Video Theatre on her Web site: http://www.writeanygenre.com
Welcome back, Mary. How has living in Hawaii affected your writing?
How many books have
you written?
Eight
published, with 5-6 more still waiting for final polish or re-editing. Of the 8
published, 5 are suspense/thrillers. One is a collection of zany short stories
and flash fiction. Another is a reference for authors.
Give a short synop of
your most recently published book.
Sara
has purchased a home in Hawaii as an R&R stopover for veterans who make
frequent trips between the U.S. Mainland and Vietnam. Sara learns that a
six-year-old neighborhood girl went missing ten years earlier and strangely,
dogs howl when taken high on a cliffside trail. Accompanied by a retired
forensic dog, Sara wants to learn why dogs react in the forest.
Continued
attempts are made on Sara’s life as she investigates the girl’s disappearance.
She investigates two known perverts and wonders about a police officer’s son.
Sara is gravely injured after being run off the road. Her backyard trail is
undermined so she would plummet into the gorge. Her home is broken into. Then
she is pushed over a cliff deep in the forest. Dazed and alone at night on a
narrow ledge, she discovers a frightful scene. The forensic dog later leads
Sara and the police to a second disgusting site that explodes the case wide
open and exposes an elusive murderer’s motives, revenge and victims.
I loved River Bones!
What sets your book
apart from others?
Is it available in print,
ebook, and Kindle formats?
What do you think is
the greatest lesson you’ve learned about writing so far? What advice can you
give other writers?
When
writing, it’s imperative that the story read like real life. Fiction must
emulate real life in order for a reader to suspend disbelief that it’s fiction.
That is, in order for the reader to feel a part of the story, it must feel
real.
My advice
to other writers is to live life and experience as much as you can and observe
everything. Your experiences will be fodder for your plots, no matter how much
you alter the real occurrences. If you haven’t lived fully, how can you write
about anything?
Kauai is an
island with only two books stores. Actually one is a coffee house trying to
become a book store. I have book signings at the other when I can. I’m waiting
to hear if the coffee house is willing to schedule me for my first signing
there. I gave them free books to promote myself and to help the store make a
little profit. The books disappeared the first day they were on the shelf. That
should be reason to have me for a signing. I’d make it a gala event. I’m widely
known on the island, thankfully.
The rest of
the promotion is word of mouth wherever I travel, and on the Internet. I
frequent many, many sites and help others when I can. Sometimes all it takes to
gain interest in our books is to answer a nagging question for a struggling
author. The major portion of my
promotion is online.
Can you tell us your
writing goals/projects for 2012 or beyond?
I receive
wonderful comments from writers about how my articles help them. I just can’t
single out any particular topics to publish in the next volume and the next. So
they’ll all be together. My expected date is 2012; that’s the closet I can nail
it right now.
Too, I have
several nonfiction manuscripts written which address aspects of my former
career field of clinical hypnotherapy.
Where can folks learn
more about your books and events?
Go to my
Author page at amazon.com to see the list of all my books:
My books
are also available at smashwords.com.
My art
gallery, which has been perused by writers looking for book cover art, is http://www.marydealfineart.com.
Great questions, Susan. You pack a lot of information into
one of your interviews. No wonder people seek you out!
Thank you, Mary. But I have to say that this new Blogger is killing me. ( I'm sorry that spacing is wrong and there's no color. I've tried to fix it, but Blogger hangs up. Very frustrating, indeed.)
SUSAN, HERE ARE THE LINKS TO MY AMAZON AND SMASHWORDS PAGES:
smashwords:
So folks, all you have to do is click above . I can attest to Mary's fine writing. Mary, best wishes and continued success with your writing endeavors.
Susan, thank you for this interview. It's always good to see one's interview in the best places on the Net, and especially on the blogs of award-winning authors, like you. Thank you so much!
ReplyDeleteMary, you're so kind. You're welcome on my blog any time, gal. Your writing is tight and powerful. I look forward to reading your howling book soon.
ReplyDeleteTo hear that my writing is tight, coming from you, that's huge! Thank you so much. I do what I can to make my prose lean and mean.
ReplyDeleteAnother great interview, Susan and Mary. In appreciation for the service you provide for readers and authors, I'm awarding you the Versatile Blogger Award. Details here:
ReplyDeletehttp://paulinebairdjones.blogspot.com/2012/05/got-versatile-blogger-award-and-paying.html
Thanks so much, Pauline, for the award and the kind remarks. I left a comment on yours, but not sure it "took".
ReplyDeleteThank you, Pauline, for your comment. I also posted on your informative blog.
ReplyDelete