Continuing a new feature at Here Be Magic - periodic interviews with
the Authors who create the magic. Our next interviewee is Nicole Luiken, whose most recent book is Gate to Kandrith.
I wrote my first
book when I was just 13 years old (on a manual typewriter, eep!) and have had
eight YA novels published. I'm a
stay-at-home mom with three kids and live in Edmonton, Alberta. I read a ton of books (about 200 a year)
mostly romance and SF/Fantasy.
What
prompted you to start writing?
I wrote my first
book when I was thirteen, mostly because of a library book--Guide to Fiction
Writing by Phyllis A. Whitney. I read
the book cover-to-cover, got all fired up about writing and decided to write a
novel. What can I say? It was summer vacation, I lived on a farm a
two-mile bike trip from my nearest friend, and I was bored. I wrote one page a day and 100 days later I
had a novel. I liked writing books so
much I just never stopped. I wrote
through high school, college, full-time jobs and with a newborn in the
house. I often joke that it's impossible
for me to go more than three days without writing.
What’s
your writing process? Where do you write?
I usually spend
about a month plotting out the novel, brainstorming scenes, writing down
snippets of dialogue, developing the characters and eventually outlining. The first draft takes me 2-4 months depending
on whether I'm writing YA or adult and then I usually let the book sit for a
bit. When I feel I can come back to it
with fresh eyes, I read the whole novel making notes on what I like and what
isn't working, and then I replot it.
After that things get complicated, because I essentially do the 2nd and
3rd drafts at the same time. I race
ahead instituting the big plot changes, revising old scenes and inserting new
ones in the afternoons, but do scene-by-scene polishing/honing/adding
description (my bane!) in the mornings and evenings.
I write on my
netbook on the kitchen table for first and second drafts. Plotting and 3rd draft polishing is done by
hand on printed double-spaced pages on a clipboard in the living room or
sometimes while my child is at the playground.
(The mom version of writing in a coffeeshop.)
Which five
people (real, fictional, historical) would you invite to dinner and why?
Suzanne Brockmann,
Lois McMaster Bujold, Patricia Briggs, Sarah Rees Brennan (real people) They are all authors whose books I love.
Miles Vorkosigan
(fictional character) I don't crush on
movie stars, but I am definitely a little in love with Miles. Sigh.
Though perhaps I won't invite him to the same dinner as Lois as he may
be a tad upset with her for complicating his life.
How do you
celebrate when you finish a novel?
Dance around with
my four-year-old then go out to dinner.
(Mmmm, Italian... Must type
faster.)
Quickfire :
Favorite TV Show:
Fringe
Favorite
Movie: The Princess Bride
Morning person or
evening person: Afternoon. I neither roll out of bed at the crack of
dawn, nor stay up past midnight if I can help it.
Favorite food: Spaghetti and meatballs, if you're talking
main dish, otherwise chocolate, chocolate, chocolate.
Favorite time of
the year: Late spring, once things have
greened up, but the mosquitos haven't hatched yet.
Favorite song: Eye of the Tiger
Finish
this sentence “I believe in the Magic of
escaping into a good book."
What
are you working on next? I am
currently working on the sequel to Gate to Kandrith, tentatively titled Soul of
Kandrith.
What
one question do you want to ask your Readers today? How old were you when you first discovered
your vocation/passion?
Where can your Readers find you online? I have a Nicole Luiken facebook fan page and
a Goodreads account, on twitter I'm NicoleLuiken, and my website is www.nicoleluiken.com
You can find Gate to Kandrith at Amazon Carina
We do/have done a lot of the same things. Writing first novel on typewriter? Yup. (I didn't get very far and didn't FINISH a novel until 10 years later.) Print the whole thing out and write on it? Check. Endless re-watches of The Princess Bride? Yes! Have you tried reading your work aloud? That's one thing I do as well.
ReplyDeleteFor as long as I can remember I've been a passionate reader. My passion for writing took longer to develop, but I can't imagine a better job.
ReplyDeleteTia: Too funny. My boys can quote whole swatches of The Princess Bride we've watched it so many times. I've tried reading aloud, but found that it doesn't sound that much different than the way I 'hear' it in my head when I read.
ReplyDelete