A little over a year ago, I did a ten-day countdown to the release of Bulletproof, the third stand-alone novel
in my Clay and Tanner Thomas series. People sent in questions, and I responded
to two or three each day. I saved my responses on my web page and happened to
look at them a couple of days ago again, which led me to make this post of six
of my responses. I hope you enjoy them—and maybe you’ll become interested in
the book. Thanks for stopping by.
These questions are from
fellow author Nely Cab, whose name I love, and whose questions I’m not so
thrilled about, but here goes. First one - Have you ever milked a cow? (I have
and it feels so nasty touching udders). This is an udderly ridiculous question. I know…horrible,
predictable pun that I just uddered but I couldn’t resist. I grew up in the
country and one of my best friends was a dairy farmer, so yes, I’ve milked a
cow. I’ve even gone so far as drinking straight from the udder…I know the gross
picture you all are currently imagining…but it was sprayed, not sucked.
:) Second one - Do you know how to make cheese? On
two separate fieldtrip/excursions, I’ve made cheese. It was such an exciting
endeavor, I recall wishing I lived in Colonial times. I do remember one time
discovering cheese-like chunks at the bottom of a carton of milk…does that
count? I think I was responsible??? Third one - Is cheese or cow
milking mentioned anywhere in Bulletproof?
If yes, where? If no, why the heck not? I just completed a document
search using my Word “find” feature, and inexplicably there were no hits on
cows or cheese. But there was a giant, a midget, and a skunk. Do I get
half-credit?
What is your ultimate
pet peeve? (posted by Jenny Bynum) You said pet peeveS, right? #10 I hate it when
people merge onto the expressway slowly! #9 I don’t like it when I leave a
message and the person never calls me back!! #8 I hate when sportscasters say
stupid things like, “It’s their first national championship in four years”…like
they’re supposed to win every year, or like their second championship in five
years is inadequate!!! #7 I get irritated when I give something to someone and
they don’t say thank you!!!! #6 I get perturbed when politicians overspend and
mismanage my tax money and fix the problem by raising my taxes!!!!! #5 Drivers
with road rage are a pet peeve. Don’t they realize their cars are weapons of
destruction? My wife didn’t cut them off on purpose!!!!!! #4 I really don’t
like to hear people say, “I seen it!!!!!!! #3 While I’m on it, why do people
say, “It don’t matter” when I think it really do?!!!!!!!! #2 I don’t like it on
Facebook when people tell me they’re drinking coffee or cleaning their toilets
or eating frog legs or counting their floor tiles. I really don’t want to
know!!!!!!!!! #1 I’m bothered by people who take the time to give a one-star
review. Why? Why not just load viruses on people’s computers and let your dogs
bark outside all night!!!!!!!!!! You know what’s funny about this answer and
all the emotional exclamation marks? I’m really a very easy-going guy and none
of these things really bother me much at all…well, except the viruses and
taxes…and bad grammar. :)
What’s the funniest
story you have based in the classroom? (posted by Becky Johnson) I don’t know if this is the funniest
story, but it’s the one I want to tell. I had this girl in class. I’ll
call her Amanda Forr, though that’s not her real name. She was ditzy and proved
it often with absurd questions. One day in class, I was going over a log-in
procedure for a computer test we were required to take. I explained that they
were to use the first initial of their first name and the first four letters of
their last name as their log-in I D. Immediately “Amanda’s” hand went up. Her
question? “What if you only have three letters in your last name?” Well, I
patiently explained that I assumed in that case the person would only have to
put in three letters, but I also
stated that I didn’t have any
students with only three letters in his or her last name, so it really didn’t
matter what the procedure would be. But Amanda was not to be denied, and she
replied, “Uh huh.” She held her hand up so I could see her as she counted with
her fingers for all to see. “F … O … R … oh, my name has four letters.” This is
a true story, and I find that I worry about the poor girl.
Do you listen to music
when you write? If so, what inspires you? (posted by fellow author, Stacey Rourke) Listening to music definitely inspires
me. For instance, I learned deductive reasoning from Thin Lizzy who sang,
“Tonight there’s gonna be a jailbreak…Somewhere in this town.” Hey, guys…I’m
guessing that this supposed jailbreak will happen somewhere near the jail. I
learned geography from Sade’s “Smooth Operator.” She sings, "Coast to
coast…L.A. to Chicago." Chicago, Massachusetts, I assume. I learned rhyme
from Des’ree’s “Life.” She sang, “I don’t want to see a ghost. It’s the sight
that I fear most. I’d rather have a piece of toast. Watch the evening news.” I
get my creative juices flowing from songs like “Who Said” by Miley Cyrus.
“…There's no limitations on imagination. Imaginate." Now when I get stuck,
I just imaginate. There’s a lot of grammar to be learned from “I Don’t Want to
Wait” by Paula Cole. “…say a little prayer for I…And see the peace in every
eye.” Maybe the bad grammar was so she could make a rhyme???? Here’s some
snappy dialogue and quality sentence structure I learned from “Your Song” by
Elton John. “If I was a sculptor, but then again, no.” Because of Soul Asylum’s
“String of Pearls,” I’ve decided not to write while on drugs. “Who's racing to
the delivery room? ‘Cause in the back seat his wife is busting out of her womb,
and the sack breaks, and out come the Siamese twins who grow up to become the
first president with two heads are better than one.” I learned a little about
romance from “Sk8er Boi” by Avril Lavigne. "He was a boy. She was a girl.
Can I make it any more obvious?” I personally don’t think so, Avril. I learned
about character description in “Whenever, Wherever” by Shakira. "Lucky
that my breasts are small and humble so you don't confuse them with
mountains." And if I need concern myself with character description, I should
worry about my settings too. In “So Yesterday,” Hilary Duff helped me to
understand, “If the light is off then it isn't on.'' If not for music,
I wouldn’t have the inspiration to produce quality works of fiction. I’m always
listening and learning.
I have never read your
books so what can you tell me about them that would have me hooked so I will go
out and pay for one? (by Amanda Honea) Do you know about the
opening scene to The Princess Bride
when the grandfather shows up to read his book to his sick grandson? I’ll
answer your question as I review their conversation. The boy asks, “Has it got
any sports in it?" (Yes, Tanner is a basketball player) The grandfather
then replies, "Fencing (No). Fighting (Yes). Torture (No). Poison
(Possibly…there’s a murder in every book). True love (Of course). Hate
(Lots…hateful characters and characters to hate). Revenge (For sure). Giants
(Actually, yes, as well as midgets). Hunters (No). Bad men (Definitely). Good
men (Clay and Tanner are the best). Beautifulest ladies (You bet…the most
beautifulest ever). Snakes. Spiders. Beasts of all natures and descriptions
(No, but there are ghosts as well as porcupines, squirrels, and skunks to add
humor). Pain (Personal and physical). Death (In every book). Brave men (Brave
men and heroes). Coward men…Strongest man (Well there’s a smorgasbord of
interesting characters and some would fit that description). Chases (A couple).
Escapes (Yes, from a kidnapping). Lies (Yes…and there are consequences). Truths
(Yes, of course). True Love (Unquestionably). Miracles (Parapsychology).” Plus all three books have humor. Well, the boy responds with something like,
“That sounds okay. I’ll try to stay awake.” Turns out he liked the book pretty
well. You should give mine a try too. :)
Nely Cab asked,
"What’s “Bulletproof” about?" Finally, a question about my book! Though I’ve enjoyed being tortured (a little), I’ve been hoping it’ll promote
some interest in this book. My two main characters for this third book in the
series are named Clay and Tanner Thomas (father and son). Both have parapsychological
powers, but their abilities differ so they need each other to solve the
mysteries (of which there are two in this book). Clay’s father is critically
injured in the beginning of the novel during a robbery, and then he’s accused
of the crime and Clay is arrested as an accomplice. While investigating, the
Thomases visit a witness who owns a haunted hotel, and Clay is persuaded by a
ghost to also solve his eleven-year-old murder. There is a character who
apparently also has mind-control abilities who is executing numerous robberies
around town, leaving no clues. Clay and Tanner endeavor to uncover the guilty
party for both crimes, which may be related, and numerous suspects emerge,
leading to a suspenseful and surprising climax. The book includes some
unforgettable characters to go along with ones you’ll care for and root for.
There is a smattering of sports and romance, but a bookful (book full?) of
suspense, drama, humor, and quality detectiving (I made that word up—I’m an
author…I have creative license). I hope people enjoy reading this novel as much
as I enjoyed writing it.
Nearly two dozen other
questions were answered that week and can be found on my web page, but I
thought that smattering of questions would entertain you. Thanks again for
stopping by.
No comments:
Post a Comment