Sunday, March 23, 2014

Visiting With Paul D. Brazill

My first interview is with a gentleman that needs no introduction from me that's for damn sure, but he'll get one anyway. He's everywhere you look, involved with everything and willing to help everyone. Paul D. Brazill is universally respected and a permanent fixture in the Thriller and Crime Fiction world. He's a top shelf writer, an editor of great note and an unquestioned supporter of other writers. I'm proud to present a short Q and A session with Paul.
  
1.) In at least 100 words, create a new biography for yourself - without the mention of writing or books.

Paul D. Brazill came into the world kicking and screaming and he hasn’t stopped since. He’s been around a bit but now he’s a bit round. He may not have shot Liberty Valance but he does know a bloke who said he did. He had, once upon a crime, aspirations toward being the one who knocks but Avon refused his application.  Tired of the puerile debate about whether slow zombies are better than fast zombies he has decided to make a film about skipping zombies. Tony Orlando and Dawn Of The Dead will be opening at a cinema near you in the near future.

2.) Did you grow up with artists around you, either friends or family, who influenced or nurtured the expression of art in any medium? If so describe what that was like - and if not, was it the exact opposite environment or somewhere in between?

Not arty at all!  Mine was a completely working class family though my oldest brother became a professional musician playing in hotels, bars, working men’s clubs, cruise ships etc.

3.) Earlier in life, what art form interested you the most; Visual, Music, Theatre, Film or Literature and the written word?

Like a lot of kids I wanted to be a comics artist. I used to draw my own comics. After that, in the teenagehood, it was music. I played in a couple of post-punk bands and really wanted to pursue songwriting.

4.) I think the most important thing to any writer is what the next project is, what’s up ahead and around the next turn, so let us know what that is – but also tell us what you have just finished or have going on right now.

My comic crime novella Guns Of Brixton will be re-published this year by Caffeine Nights and I’m working on a follow up- Holidays In The Sun.

The Italian publishers Atlantis will be putting a few of my globe- well Europe- hopping noir stories together as a novella, probably called The Noir World Of Luke Case.

I’m self-publishing an anthology called Exiles: A Outsider Anthology. It should be out in April. Loads of great writers are involved including Patti Abbot, Kate Laity, Richard Godwin and Pamila Payne.

I should have a story in Kate Laity’s Drag Noir anthology. I have a story coming up over at Shotgun Honey.

5.) What is your personal favorite for a story or book that you have written, from twenty years ago or yesterday. Doesn’t matter. Oh, by the way, why?

I recently re- read Red Esperanto – a Warsaw set noir that was published by Atlantis (Rosso Esperanto in Italian) and will be included in the next Mammoth Book Of Best British Crime.
I like it because it’s fun. Quite over-ripe in parts but all the better for it, I think.

6.) List three of your favorite authors who you don’t know and the one book or story that makes them your favorites.

The Picture Of Dorian Grey – Oscar Wilde
This Sweet Sickness – Patricia Highsmith
Hollywood- Charles Bukowski

7.) Tell me what you believe to be your biggest struggle or challenge is in the writing experience. Is it the universal need for more dedicated writing time, starting, finishing, developing the plot, outlining, dialogue, etc? Or is afterward, editing, marketing….maybe just being satisfied with the final product?

Money, or the lack of it. Money makes everything better. Unless you’re a dickhead.
 
8.) What would you say, in your own experience, has been more helpful in improving as a writer? Reading more people or watching more people?

For me, reading to be sure. The other stuff was and is always there but reading nudges observations of life into the direction where they become a story. Though, I must say, actually writing is the most important thing. What’s the best way to get to Carnegie Hall?

9.)Which of these negative traits do you feel most, if not all of us share as writers (to some degree); Selfish, Arrogant, Needy, Self-Absorbed, Clannish, Insincere or Hypocritical? Those are just some of my own traits so if I missed one, please fill in the above. 

Needy. Needy. Needy.    

10.) The most intellectual question has been saved for last. You’re on death row looking down that Green Mile corridor and there’s no last minute call coming from the Governor either. What is your final meal and drink? And be specific, because well, this is it. The last decision you’ll ever make.

A really hot curry and a really strong lager! They’ll remember me alright …

Friday, March 14, 2014

Blog Reborn

Well, I’m not exactly an experienced interviewer, not even remotely close, but I've decided to try and conduct a series of author interviews. This site, The Write Answers, will now be solely dedicated to that. Yeah I know, there’s already some really qualified people doing this deal, like more than enough people right? Then again one more can’t hurt, so here goes nothing.

Hopefully my 10 questions will allow for some good insight and commentary. I’m going to try to bring in guests I know and respect - but also people I've never met either in person or on social media. They'll read my invitation or request and wonder Jim…who

I’ll even ask some people that are very busy, because they're very successful. People that almost never answer a query of any kind, from anyone, except their agent. Folks that I suppose I will have no business asking and my batting average will most assuredly go down with those folks. That’s okay though and if this little stab at interviewing some interesting people doesn't fly, the sun will still come up in the morning. I'll still be over at Hardboiled Partners in Crime anyway.

I hope you’ll follow along just to witness the potential train wreck of this initiative, if nothing else. I don’t embarrass easy and that’s probably a good thing. Stay tuned for my first guest – which I don’t have lined up yet. * JW