Tuesday 19 April 2011

A Bywater Visitor

 It's time for a touchdown from another fabulous Bywater author.
This time Jill Malone is dropping in to chat about... goats


Jill Malone grew up in a military family, went to German kindergarten, and lived across from a bakery where they put small toys, like train engines, into chocolate, and the gummi bears were the size of mice.
   In the South, she caught tree frogs, and played kickball. She has lived on the East Coast, and in Hawaii, and for the last 15 years in Spokane with her son, two old dogs, and a lot of outdoor gear. She looks for any excuse to play guitar.
   She took Latin from a hot professor at the University of Hawaii, and had this idea for a novel. Like most writers, she has a sketchy career path.
   Red Audrey and the Roping, her first novel, was a Lambda finalist, and won the third annual Bywater Prize for Fiction.
   Her second novel, A Field Guide to Deception, was finalist for the 2010 Ferro-Grumley, and won the Lambda Literary award.
   At present, Giraffe People, her third novel, is awaiting editorial notes. Or something. If you’re curious, visit Jill's website and read her blog.
http://www.jillmalone.com/

Homestead 
A word about goats. I'd like a pair of them - pygmy goats - for milking and general happiness. Have you ever seen them play? They like slides and climbing. They leap around. There's a youtube clip of pygmy goats frolicking to Nirvana's Smells Like Teen Spirit. I'd like those, please. 
   As an urban girl, I'm mildly horrified to find myself living in the pseudo-country. Four minutes from downtown Spokane, nevertheless, my neighbors keep chickens and a rooster. Also, a pen of black ducks. A porcupine trundles across the road two blocks over, and just at the bend, I see deer most evenings. 
   I live in this valley, beneath the train, and a creek shimmies through, fished by heron and osprey. The beds beyond my porch are filled with tulips. This is the kind of place I imagined sitting at a knot in a tree, and writing something immortal. It was always vaguely immortal, this novel, in my head when I was a child.
   That's when you believe art will be a livelihood. You'll be one of those people who frequents cafes with your cigarettes and your sipping espresso and your casual ennui. 
   Most of us don't live by our fiction. We write because we have stories, and those stories own us. I sit at my computer and the story unravels in this way that I never can explain properly. I'm sitting there, typing, and people speak. I know them. I can hear their various voices. For months, I'll hang with them and experience what they experience. 
   A teacher, years ago, told me she didn't really know her characters until she could go to a restaurant and order a meal they would eat.
   Maybe we just parachute in. Find ourselves in some unknown place, among some unknown people, and have to puzzle it out. 
   Like moving into this house in December, and finding the Japanese travel god the previous occupant left in the closet. Or his paint bucket of coins - foreign and domestic; several water bladders and a coil of climbing rope. An adventuring teacher? A climber who loved World Market? A really thirsty coin collector? Who the hell was this guy, and why did he leave this haven?

Wednesday 6 April 2011

Authors Galorious

I'm home from a wonderful three weeks in Bali and almost back into the writing & publishing swing of things.
   In the meantime I have treat for my blog followers.
   Bywater Books – the publishers of my three-book Kit O'Malley private investigator series – have an incredible 'stable' of authors.
   Bywater itself is a bi-national entity (because LOVE prompted one publisher to move countries!) run by a few amazing women in the US and the UK; and their authors come from America, the UK and Australia (the latter would be me!).
   To celebrate all things Bywater – and the fabulous lesbian fiction they are dedicated to publishing – we, the authors, are going on a blog tour.

This month my blog will feature guest appearances from Marianne K Martin and Jill Malone.
In May I'll be visited by Bett Norris and Cynn Chadwick.
June will see Stella Duffy here - while I'm off visiting everyone else's blogs.
And in July, Sally Bellerose and Lisa Gitlin will be dropping in.
   If you don't already know the works of these great writers I suggest you drop by the Bywater Books website and check us all out and you can follow us on facebook.


Right now, I'd like to introduce Marianne K Martin who, apart from being the author of nine novels, is also a co-owner of Bywater Books.


A graduate of Eastern Michigan University, Marianne taught in the Michigan public school system for 25 years, has worked as a photo-journalist, a photographer, and coached both high school and collegiate teams as well as amateur ASA teams. Her coaching career produced many Tri-County and MHSAA championship basketball and softball teams and championship ASA softball teams. She was founder of the Michigan Woman's Major Fastpitch Assoc. and its president for 10 years. In 1973 she won the precedent-setting case in a Michigan court establishing equal pay for women coaches.
Marianne is the best-selling author of Legacy of Love, Love in the Balance, Never Ending, Dawn of the Dance, Dance in the Key of Love, and three Lambda Literary Award finalists, Mirrors, Under the Witness Tree, and For Now, For Always.  
Her next book, The Indelible Heart, is scheduled for release in May 2011.
Her short stories have been included in a number of anthologies. Her most recent, Fire and Ice, appears in the second edition of the on-line issue of Read These Lips.


What made you decide to write lesbian fiction?
It’s affordable therapy. Seriously. I taught in the public school system for 25 years, as closed and closeted a profession as you can find, except maybe the religious sector. Expressing and exploring who I was as an individual, as a whole person, had to be done secretly and during those few hours that I wasn’t teaching, coaching, or losing my mind. It is the need to express the beliefs and thoughts and feelings that had been suppressed for so long.

So what makes a story lesbian?
There was a time when there were so few clearly lesbian books, in which the relationship between two women was clearly a sexual one, that the reader had to ‘make’ the story lesbian. They made the story their own, relatable, by changing the gender, the name, the characteristics of male characters to female. They wrote fan fiction where they changed the intent of the story, the dynamics and the relationships between the characters to fill their need for lesbian story-lines. 
   Readers did this because they longed for their lives to be validated, to be able to recognize themselves in books and movies and TV shows, just as other minorities have longed for the same thing. These were lesbian stories because the readers made them so.
   Now, though, there are many writers, writing stories where the reader sees the world through the eyes of a clearly lesbian character. Every experience, every relationship, every thought that the character has comes from that unique place of how and where she fits into the world. The choices that she makes in finding that fit, whether we like it or not, are affected by her sexuality. Some affected in a good way, some bad, and some in ways that are barely noticeable. But it is what makes the character who she is and what
makes the story uniquely lesbian. In so many stories now, a reader can find bits of herself and parts of her life recognizable in the pages of a book.

I love the cultural and political themes in your novels and was especially impressed by the pioneering work that exposed bullying and adult responsibility in Mirrors. Art and politics are sometimes at odds with each other. How do you happily 'marry' the two in narrative?
You know, it just seems to be a natural fit. Even if we try to ignore it, our lives, careers and relationships are affected by society’s political and cultural climate. As gays and lesbians we face struggles unique to our sexuality, and decisions that involve risks of losing jobs, or family and friends, and physical and emotional harm. When do we come out, when do we lie? 
   Yet whatever our individual decision, at the core of it our needs are universal – we want to be happy, to love and be loved. 
   How we find that, how we sustain it, what we will risk for it, are at the heart of my stories. For me it is all interrelated. I love exploring the ‘in spite of’, the ‘against the odds’ battle for love and happiness and justice. They are real, they happen everyday, and when they are won, they empower us all.

What is your writing process like? Do you write different scenes and put them all together or do you just go from point A to point B?
I never know how a new project will start. More accurately, I never know what will start it. Something eventually becomes the concept for a new story, sometimes it is a vision of a character, at other times it’s a news story or a scene or a phrase that plays over and over in my head. Whatever starts it begins to develop and I start imagining what the next day in the scenario would be like or what must have happened in the past for this character or event to be where it is. 
   I write everything down – an idea, a sentence, a scene. And when
the story takes on a rough development in my head, I put it down in a rough outline form. I don’t stick strictly to the outline, it usually changes. But it helps me start collecting and organizing my notes, many of them written on whatever was handy at the time, and
putting them into chapters. 
   One time I was shingling my dad’s roof, listening to the cows
all lined up at the fence across the road, and something kept developing in my head that I had to write down, so I wrote it on the scrap of wood that I was cutting the shingles on.

If you could have an afternoon with any one of your characters, who would it be and why?
Probably Nessie Tinker. She’s the tiny 90-plus black woman from Under The Witness Tree. Her family ‘breathed the smoke of Sherman’s march’ and with all that she would have experienced in her life she has the most to teach me. I am so enthralled with Nessie, and her voice is so distinct, that I want to know all I can about her earlier life. She will have a book of her own.

Do you have a favorite among your stories?
Each story has things about it that make it special to me. The first, Legacy of Love, for obvious reasons. Love in the Balance because of the emotional connection with my mother; Mirrors and Dawn of the Dance because I taught through those situations; Under the Witness Tree because I learned so much about a part of our history only touched upon in our schools. And so on. So, I don’t think that I could pick out a favorite.

What do you find hardest about writing?
Usually, beginning a new book, staring at that first blank page.
   Katherine Forrest once told me that beginning a new book felt like Atlas carrying the world uphill. And it is tough, we are virtually creating a world and everything in it. Where do you begin?
   What I have found most helpful are those snippets written on all those scraps of paper, and wood, and whatever. Somewhere in that collection is a beginning. It doesn’t always survive long as the beginning of the book, however. A version of it may end up in some other place in the book, or not survive rewrites at all, but it served to kick start me.
   Running a close second in difficulty is getting others to respect time thinking as work time. Sitting for an hour staring into space just doesn’t look productive, but if it isn’t imagined it can’t be written. And it is very easy for others to interrupt a process they can’t see.

What’s your favorite thing about being a writer? What, for you, totally sucks about it?
I love the creative freedom of writing. It is exploratory and introspective. Through my characters I can go anywhere my mind wants to go. I can be who I am and everything I am not. I can love and hate, deceive and forgive. I can be Asian, or white, or black. I can believe in God or blame God, trust in love or not. 
   What sucks is knowing where you want your story to go and drawing a blank on how to get it there. ‘Writer’s block’, an altogether irritating and appropriate term, makes me anxious and frustrated. The first time I experienced it, with a deadline looming, I asked for advice from someone I respect immensely, Katherine Forrest. She told me to walk away from it for a while and do something enjoyable and relaxing. For me that’s doing something constructive with my hands – yard work, working on the house, etc.
   She also said not to be afraid to ask for an extension to my deadline. As long as this is not overused, asking for an extension is helpful to both the writer and the publisher. Rather than send in a sub-par manuscript or just not meet the deadline, an extension can allow the writer the time they need to get past the block; and the publisher can move up other matters to fill the delay time. It’s important to remember, however, that there is a significant amount of pre-publicity that is done for each book and meeting deadlines is
essential for that. A certain amount of time is built into the schedule to allow for delays along the way, but a book only gets out on time when the writer and publisher work honestly and closely on the timeline. All this having been said, blocking still sucks.

If you couldn’t write, what would you do?
I would be creating something in some other medium. I have an art minor, so I would probably be working in charcoal or pastels (which I don’t have enough time to do much anymore). And if I couldn’t do that, I’d be building or designing something.

On a more personal note, do you have a favorite childhood memory?
I was blessed with some wonderful childhood memories. I can’t really pick a favorite, but here are a few that come to mind. My dad taught me how to whittle and to carve animals out of bars of Ivory soap. And he would drop his lunch bucket as soon as he stepped out of his truck from work and played catch with me. On special weekends, my mom would fix fried chicken and potato salad, make up a bed in the back of the station wagon, and we’d get to the drive-in theater before dark so that we could eat our picnic and play on the swings below the big screen. We kids usually made it through the cartoon and part of the first feature before we dozed off in the back of the car. 
   And I absolutely loved riding the bus downtown with my Aunt Mary to have cherry cokes at the Kresge soda counter.

Sometimes writers work internal issues out through their narratives. Have you ever written a scene or character that “hit too close to home” for you? How did you handle that?
I’ve written a number of scenes that I lived through personally – my mother’s death (Love in the Balance); bullying and the loss of a student to suicide (Mirrors); my grandmother’s death (Legacy of Love)and I handle them the same way I did when they occurred, I cry. For that reason, I never use those scenes at any of my readings. 
   I’ve had a particularly difficult time working through and finishing my latest book, The Indelible Heart. During the past year, in the middle of writing this book that deals with loss and recovery, I lost some important people in my life. It was hard to take my character to emotional places that I was trying to get through myself.

Tell us more about this next book. Is it a sequel to Love in the Balance?
There’s been a lot of reader interest over the years to revisit the characters of Balance, to know where their fictitious lives have taken them. Sequels, though, are difficult, especially a sequel to a love story or romance. 
   What appealed to the readers in the first book is usually the attraction, the thrill of first love between the characters. A sequel is not going to offer that. So, even though readers say they want to know what happens down the road, unconsciously they want to ‘feel’ what the first book made them feel.
   So, I hesitate to call The Indelible Heart a sequel in that sense. What I hope to do is show what ten years of ‘life’ has done to the dynamics of the group of friends and their relationships following the devastating murders depicted in Balance. Not all of the relationships have survived, and each have had to deal with the loss in their own way. But, now they are faced with the possibility that the man who murdered their friends may be granted an early release from prison.
   Sharon Davis becomes the main character in this book. She is irreverent, strong-willed, and passionate. The loss of so many loved ones in her life has left her emotionally vulnerable, hurt, and angry. The precarious balance she has maintained in recent years is now challenged by the possible early release, and by the sighting of a lost love. 
   And a lot has changed over the years – the growth of LGBT organizations, their political voice, the economy – and this group of friends is forced to examine their own beliefs as they struggle to help Sharon.

The Indelible Heart
Twelve years ago, Charlie Crawford shot dead his two lesbian neighbors. Now he’s terminally ill and requesting early compassionate release from prison.
   Back then, Sharon and her friends fought to bring him to justice. Now she has to find the strength to fight again. But the man who killed her friends also took her sobriety. And with it he took her partner, Laura.
   Sober again, all she’s left is a life lived at arms length. She’ll do what she can to keep Charlie in jail. But it’s hard – really hard – to cope with the news that Laura’s back in town.
   Hate has spoiled Sharon’s world. There just doesn’t seem any place for love. But she’s forgotten just how powerful friendship can be. She’ll soon remember.
   Available in paperback and eBook Indelible Heart is the inspiring sequel to the best selling Love in the Balance.

Thanks for dropping by Marianne
More info on Marianne can be found on her own blog. 
And of course she, and the other Bywater authors, can be found on the Bywater Books site.