5Qs with Scott Nicholson


1.) When did you first consider yourself a writer?

A.)  I have always thought of myself that way but very rarely refer to myself that way in public, even though I am now a full-time writer. But I've never been "just a writer." I've always had other passions, professions, and hobbies.

2.) What is the hardest part of writing?

A.)  Persistence and commitment. Writing is little more than putting one word after another, over and over.

3.) How did you feel upon publication of your first completed project?

A.)  I had a number of short stories published before my first novel, so I had my stack of rejection slips to dance upon. But I also knew there was a lot of hard work ahead.

4.) In addition to writing, what else are you passionate about?

A.)  I was a painter and rock musician, and now gardening is one of my passions, but I could see getting back into painting. I am a partner in the ebook promotion site eBookSwag.com and it is exciting and promising.

5.) If you could ask any author, living or dead, one question, what would it be?

A.)  I'd like to ask Mark Twain what he thinks of the 21st Century. I am sure he'd have a grand time making sport of Facebook!

More information about Scott can be found at his website:

5Qs with Bryan Hall


1.) When did you first consider yourself a writer?

A.)  The minute I finished my first short story.  If you put pen to paper – or fingertips to keyboard – and create something then you're a writer. Success means different things to different people, for sure, but as far as just being a writer I consider anyone who's done something like that to be one.


2.) What is the hardest part of writing?

A.)  Confidence.  I read a blog from Neil Gaiman once where he talked about being three quarters of the way through a book and realizing it was pure and utter crap.  That nobody would want to read such drivel and that if they did they wouldn't understand it or would realize how terrible it was.  He told his agent (or publisher) that and they said "Oh you're at that part".  It happened to him every time – that moment of doubt that shut down his ability to keep writing.  I'm sure that's not the exact story word for word, but it's a good approximation of it.  And that same thing happens to me at a couple of points during anything I'm writing.  Keeping my confidence up can get tricky sometimes. 

3.) How did you feel upon publication of your first completed project?

A.)  Excited, for sure.  Almost in disbelief, as well.  I got very lucky in that the publisher I'd hoped would pick up my book did so rather quickly.  I'd reached the goal that I'd set for myself and was honestly in a bit of shock that it had happened.  Once the release came the reality of it set in.  It was very surreal.  Even now, a release does the same thing for me.  It's a good feeling to know that your stuff is getting out there in the world.

4.) In addition to writing, what else are you passionate about?

A.) Hobby-wise I keep bees and play video games.  I also read voraciously.  Other than writing those are my main pursuits, but I don't know if any of them can come close to what I get out of writing.


5.) If you could ask any author, living or dead, one question, what would it be?

A.)  I'd ask Clive Barker if he had any plans to get back to his roots and do some real old-fashioned horror writing like he used to.  I know he has to write what he's inspired to, but I'd really love another volume of The Books of Blood or a novel like The Damnation Game. 



Bio:
Bryan Hall is a horror and dark fiction author living deep within the mountains of North Carolina in a home he desperately wishes was haunted. Growing up in the Appalachia’s, he's soaked up three decades worth of legends, stories, culture, and characters - many of which weave their way into his work. When not writing, reading, or relaxing he can usually be found at his beehives.

He is an affiliate member of the Horror Writers Association and his debut novel Containment Room 7 was released by Permuted Press in 2011. Most recently he is also the author of The Southern Hauntings Saga from Angelic Knight Press. Additionally, his short fiction collection Whispers from the Dark is available on Amazon. You can find him online at www.bryanhallfiction.com.

His latest release The Vagrant can be found here:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0087APS98

5Qs with Wednesday Lee Friday


1.) When did you first consider yourself a writer?

A.) From age 5-11, then not again until my 30's. There was this whole, wide swath of time when I didn't think I could ever "really" be a writer. I thought I needed someone else to tell me I was a writer, instead of just getting the hell out there and writing. Glad I finally figured it out—but wish I'd started 20 years earlier.

2.) What is the hardest part of writing?

A.)  The obvious answer is finding the time to write. For me, it was also believing the work is finished enough to let it be seen by other people. And of course, finding people who actually want to read what you've written. Turns out, writing a novel is the fun, easy
part.

3.) How did you feel upon publication of your first completed project?

A.)  Let down. I was expecting some magical transformation out of obscurity. I thought
strangers would buy my book just because it existed. I had a very, VERY skewed
perception of what publishing was going to bring to me.

4.) In addition to writing, what else are you passionate about?

A.)  Abnormal psychology, sociopolitical issues, carnivorous plants, mentoring young
authors, all things horror.

5.) If you could ask any author, living or dead, one question, what would it be?

A.)  I'd like to ask James Patterson where he gets the balls to call himself a novelist. But
since I don't consider him an "author," I guess that wouldn't count. I'm a horror writer,
am in awe of writers like Jack Ketchum, Stephen King, and Christopher Moore, I would
probably want to ask JK Rowling how in the hell she could kill Colin Creevy. I can't
even discuss it with a dry eye.

For more information about Wednesday Lee Friday visit her website at:

R.I.P Duston Detrick

I'm sorry, this has not been a good week for me.

I lost a friend Monday. I'd only known him for five months, but in that short period of time I had come to respect him. He was half my age yet carried himself like someone much older. Were he still alive I know we would have become best friends. It's been tough to focus on my writing and my blog as result.

5Qs with Lorne Oliver


1.) When did you first consider yourself a writer?

A.)  When I was 10 and the school librarian asked if we knew any Canadian writers.  I said I was one.  She told me to come back when I published a book.  I’ve always thought of myself as a writer, but one of THE moments was when I had to mark that I was a writer on my income tax return.  I got paid $500 for a magazine article that never got published.  It’s the word “author” that I have trouble with.  It sounds so formal.  I would much rather be a writer.

2.) What is the hardest part of writing?

A.)  The “after-writing.”  You’ve been writing for months and months.  The story is great, characters believable, conflict builds and then is concluded, and you write the word END.  Suddenly you’re empty.  It’s like your kids saying they don’t need you any more, they don’t want hugs from you, their too heavy for you to carry when then fall asleep on the couch.  My stomach gets all empty like my heart has just broken.  I’m left holding a pen wondering what to do next.

3.) How did you feel upon publication of your first completed project?

A.)  It was exciting of course.  People could go and see the cover I made, read the words I wrote, but at the same time something gnawed at me saying, “yeah but it’s just an ebook.”  It’s my unwillingness to join the new world and be happy with an ebook.  Printing for me is just not visible in the financial future. 
But yes, I was excited and giddy.  And then I had 3 sales in the first few hours and that was great.  Sure it was my Mom, her cousin on the other side of the world, and the editor who paid me the 500 and never published my article, but it was something.  I wanted to publish more.
4.) In addition to writing, what else are you passionate about?

A.)  I’m a chef so cooking can really crank my tractor.  My day job is cooking so right now I get to do both.  Then there is my family that keeps me grounded.  My kids are my biggest fans.  What did my son say about my book, “I’ve only read two pages, but so far it’s really good.”  He’s nine.

5.) If you could ask any author, living or dead, one question, what would it be?

A.)  “How do you get the voices to stop?”  No, I would ask Stephen King how he writes so much.  I get that he gets paid oodles and oodles so all he has to do is write, but he always seems to have a book coming out.
Otherwise I would like to ask every author if their characters talk to them and tell them the story or if I’m just nuts.

Bio:
I started writing because my school librarian asked if we knew any Canadian authors and I said I was one.  She told me to come back when I was published.  I was 10.  Since then I have been published here and there, the librarian was at my first book launch in an anthology, and Red Island:  A Novel is my first solo book.

I’ve moved across the country from Thunder Bay to PEI to Saskatchewan with even a month long stint in BC.

I am always writing whether it be in pen, on computer, or in the stacks of cardboard boxes hidden inside my head where stories and ideas are stored until they are ready to come out.

Oh yeah, I’m also a Chef, father, husband, and closet Glee fan.

Link to facebook page http://facebook.com/redislandnovel

Flash Fiction Wednesday

Every Wednesday from now on I'll be posting flash fiction. Brief tales less than 500 words. If you'd like to see some of your work here drop me a line. Comments are open so tell me what you think, and be honest, I've got a thick skin. To get the ball rolling I give you:

Death
by
Rick Schiver


A lot had changed since that summer. They had grown older yes, but wiser was still in question. They kept in touch with one another. Cards at the holidays, the occasional letter, and every so often he would get a call from one of them. But as would always happen they would find themselves with little to talk about aside from what happened that summer. For as the years marched on and they followed their individual path, they matured and grew further apart.

They had been inseparable the summer of sixty nine. Wilson had been the unofficial leader of the group and it didn’t matter that she was a girl. She was smart, she was tough, and if you disagreed with her she’d show you how strong she really was. The guys didn’t care that she wanted to lead. After all, she always came up with the best idea for what to do at any given moment.

It had been her idea to explore the basements of the abandoned tenement to see if they could turn it into a fortress. She had been serious, leading them like a warrior queen through the many dark rooms, but they had behaved as eleven year old boys without adult supervision are likely to. Racing through the rooms whooping and hollering at the top of their lungs, their voices echoing throughout the shadowy depths of the vacant basement.

That is until they reached the older section of the basement. Here the darkness carried a palpable sense of foreboding that quickly dampened their joy and compelled them to pull together to draw strength from one another. They could sense unseen eyes in the shadows watching them as they passed through each room. But Wilson continued on unafraid, her bravery daring each of them to follow her or else. Or else what? They didn’t want to know.  

It was here they met death for the first time. Up close and personal. Deep within the bowels of the tenement they came across two young men in an argument over an amount of money. Everything happened so fast they had little time to react. Illuminated by a fierce white light the men fought first with words, then with fists and finally with knives that flashed in the light.

They hid in the next room watching through the door as the victor plunged his blade into the other’s chest. The smell of blood and shit filled the room. The smell of death. It was the same smell that filled his nostrils now as he lay in the hospital bed with his life fleeing in time to the beeps of the monitors around him.

He had seen this old man before and he no longer feared him.



5Q's with Rick Hautala


1.) When did you first consider yourself a writer?
A.)  That's a tough one because while I always had what I'd call an "artistic sensibility" (i.e. I didn't fit very well into normal life). At first, I wanted to be a painter--an artist--an illustrator. Then I realized I could do with words what I struggled to do with paints. I think by the time my tenth novel was published, I figured I was a real writer and it wasn't a fluke.

2.) What is the hardest part of writing?
A.)  Ideas are easy for me. And writing is a struggle, but a fun one. Revision is always fun. And editing is tedious but necessary. But the absolute hardest part of writing for me is developing the ideas once I get them. That's where you have to fill in the blanks and piece the story together to get an outline or, at least, a clear idea of where you're going. That is the worst and hardest. After that, it's easier ... but never easy.

3.) How did you feel upon publication of your first completed project?
A.)  I was thrilled, of course, but I was also nervous. I felt like I was an imposter. It was like standing in the middle of a shopping mall with no clothes on. I was insecure enough about my work (and still am) to not allow myself to enjoy ... to savor the moment.

4.) In addition to writing, what else are you passionate about?
A.)  Reading, of course. You can't be a writer and not read--good books, bad books, indifferent books ... every kind of book to see and learn what the craft is all about. Other than reading and writing--my family and politics. My friend Tom Monteleone calls me a "leftie, liberal, tree-hugging, granola-crunching, long-haired hippie." That works for me ... and my politics reflect that.

5.) If you could ask any author, living or dead, one question, what would it be?
A.)  I'd ask Shakespeare not where he got his ideas, but how he developed them ... or I'd ask Hawthorne why he seemed to be depressed all the time ...

Bio:
Under his own name, Rick Hautala has written nearly thirty novels, including the million-copy bestseller Nightstone, as well as Winter Wake, The Mountain King, and Little Brothers. He has published two short story collections: Bedbugs and Occasional Demons. A new collection, The Back of Beyond, is due soon. He has had over sixty short stories published in a variety of national and international anthologies and magazines.

Writing as A. J. Matthews, his novels include the bestsellers The White Room, Looking Glass, Follow, and Unbroken, all of which will be reprinted by Dark Regions Press. His forthcoming books from Cemetery Dance Publications include Indian Summer, a new “Little Brothers” novella, as well as two novels, Chills and Waiting. He recently sold The Star Road, a science fiction novel co-written with Matthew Costello, to Brendan Deneen at Thomas Dunne/St. Martin’s. All of his books and stories will soon be available in major e-book formats from a variety of epublishers.

Born and raised in Rockport, Massachusetts, Hautala is a graduate of the University of Maine in Orono with a Master of Arts in English Literature. He lives in southern Maine with author Holly Newstein, and together, they have five grown sons.

On March 31, 2012, Rick Hautala received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Horror Writers Association (HWA).