Just didn't want this to get lost.bookowlie wrote:This book contains a mix of genres - romance, historical fiction, and sci-fi/fantasy. There is also a dose of the Native American culture thrown in. Was there one particular theme that you liked more, even if it was difficult to write? Was there one particular theme that you found easier to write about?
Ask the Author - Kristi Hudecek-Ashwill
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Re: Ask the Author - Kristi Hudecek-Ashwill
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This is super encouraging! I think we all get it stuck in our heads that "real" writers lock themselves in their writing cell and don't come out until the book is done. But you took your time, had babies and had a life, then came back to it. I heard something similar at a lecture by Anthony Doerr about how it took him 10 years to write All the Light We Cannot See. So, you're certainly in good company!khudecek wrote:It's hard to pinpoint an exact time with it. Let me tell you why.
I wrote this book in 1996. I did some editing on it and shelved it. I don't really know why. I got married in 2001, moved to Kansas, had a couple of kids...you know, did the "life" thing.
Fast forward to 2015. My son and I are going through some boxes a year and a half after moving into this house and he pulled out a pile of paper bound in a rubber band.
He looked at it and said, "Hey, Mom. What's this?"
I looked at it and my jaw dropped. "It's a manuscript! Wow!"
I have to confess that I don't remember writing it. As I read it, nothing seemed familiar but I knew I'd written it because I'm the only writer in the family. I didn't remember Cody or Suzanne. I didn't remember anything about it.
I knew it had to be put on my computer, like the rest of my novels and short stories so I started retyping it.
As I retyped it, I added some things, took some things away, renamed it, added a little spice to it, changed the ending and was ready to put it back in the closet. It didn't get that far.
I think the time it took to retype it was maybe a month or so. Editing took much longer. Weeks. Editing always takes longer. Writing the first draft is always the easiest part and the most fun. Editing is a grueling but necessary process. I edited it three times before I submitted it to Scott for his edits. Then it was back and forth for awhile.
I signed my contract on May 24 (keep in mind, the story was already written) and the release day was October 26, 2015.
Thank you for your question. I hope I answered it for you.
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Thank you, bookowlie. I did miss this and I apologize for not answering sooner.bookowlie wrote:Just didn't want this to get lost.bookowlie wrote:This book contains a mix of genres - romance, historical fiction, and sci-fi/fantasy. There is also a dose of the Native American culture thrown in. Was there one particular theme that you liked more, even if it was difficult to write? Was there one particular theme that you found easier to write about?
The Native American theme was the hardest for me to write because I wanted to stay true to the Chiricahua ways as much as possible. The last thing I want to do is to disrespect anyone or be careless enough to hurt someone. Anytime you write something concerning another ethnic group that is not your own, it's easy to cross the line into being offensive. I desperately wanted to avoid that and did a lot of research to ensure that I did.
But I pushed the envelope a little further and threw in the Christianity part of Cody's character. He'd been sent to a boarding school run by nuns and had learned some of the Catholic ways. He didn't forget that as he went through his life and mixed the spiritualism of his people with it. That's why he sometimes he calls upon the Creator and sometimes talks about God. They are the same to him.
The easiest theme to write about was the premise throughout the book: with love, all things are possible. Cody did screw up and caused some readers not to like him or trust him but he did love Suzanne and she loved him. They got their "happily ever after" despite the things they went through.
I hope that answers your question. Thank you for asking.
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.
~~
"The Road Not Taken" by Robert Frost
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I can see how the cultural angle would be difficult to write for the exact reason you mentioned - to be completely accurate in order to not offend anyone. I have so much respect for authors who write historical fiction/non-fiction or any type of book that includes details about different cultures.
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When you pick it up and read it, are you very critical about your writing and can you feel your growth as a writer after so much time has passed?
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I am very critical of my work. After the time that passed between the first draft of Suzanne and the novel coming to be, I could see where I'd at least, changed. The first draft wasn't fit for mankind. There were many technical problems, inconsistencies, and such a flat ending, there was no way I was going let anybody get a look at that.
As I retyped it (my son found the original manuscript in the bottom of a box), I fixed a lot of it. Before I submitted it for the first edit, I edited it three times myself.
I'm still critical of what I write. Maybe it's the nature of the beast when you write. Nothing is ever good enough.
Just as a side note; I haven't read this book in its final form. I'm sure I'll see mistakes that got by the editor or that I didn't catch and it would serve to only embarrass me and make me feel inferior all over again. I will read it again someday but for now, I can't.
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.
~~
"The Road Not Taken" by Robert Frost
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Enjoy your day.
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.
~~
"The Road Not Taken" by Robert Frost
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I'm working on a series with a tentative name of "Craig, the Dad". It's a contemporary romance about a bad boy biker and the woman he falls in love with. Craig is married with a son when the story starts. He isn't much of a father or husband. He likes his booze, loves his drugs, and is promiscuous. Don't judge him too harshly, though. His wife is cheating on him, too and she does drugs and drinks all the time. But even she has a breaking point when another woman abandons her child with Craig's wife because the kid is his. She takes their son and leaves him.
Meanwhile, he doesn't have a clue how to take care of this baby. He learns how to change diapers, mix formula, and dress her from You Tube. But he doesn't want to give up his life of booze, drugs, and women and is leaving the baby with whoever will take her, sometimes for days at a time. He nearly drowns the baby in the bathtub because he left her alone to talk on the phone.
Things weren't going well and he knew he had to do something and hired a nanny.
I think you can guess the rest.
I won't publish this one because I didn't know when I started it that biker stories are everywhere. I do think it's probably been done before and is probably cliche. However, I have several other series that are written and need edited. We'll have to wait and see about those.
Thanks again for the question.
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.
~~
"The Road Not Taken" by Robert Frost
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It actually sounds good.khudecek wrote:Thank you for asking.
I'm working on a series with a tentative name of "Craig, the Dad". It's a contemporary romance about a bad boy biker and the woman he falls in love with. Craig is married with a son when the story starts. He isn't much of a father or husband. He likes his booze, loves his drugs, and is promiscuous. Don't judge him too harshly, though. His wife is cheating on him, too and she does drugs and drinks all the time. But even she has a breaking point when another woman abandons her child with Craig's wife because the kid is his. She takes their son and leaves him.
Meanwhile, he doesn't have a clue how to take care of this baby. He learns how to change diapers, mix formula, and dress her from You Tube. But he doesn't want to give up his life of booze, drugs, and women and is leaving the baby with whoever will take her, sometimes for days at a time. He nearly drowns the baby in the bathtub because he left her alone to talk on the phone.
Things weren't going well and he knew he had to do something and hired a nanny.
I think you can guess the rest.
I won't publish this one because I didn't know when I started it that biker stories are everywhere. I do think it's probably been done before and is probably cliche. However, I have several other series that are written and need edited. We'll have to wait and see about those.
Thanks again for the question.
Good luck in all your endeavors!
Pronouns: She/Her
"In the case of good books, the point is not to see how many of them you can get through, but rather how many can get through to you." (Mortimer J. Adler)
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I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.
~~
"The Road Not Taken" by Robert Frost
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I loved this part of the novel, and I think that it is so cool that you based it on something that actually happened! I have a book of North American folklore, and there is a section about mysterious lights that have guided people. I think that most of the encounters occurred in the Southwest, too. I'll have to grab it off the shelf and look at that chapter again!khudecek wrote:The paranormal aspect of this story is fiction but it was based on something that happened to my grandfather in the Black Hills of South Dakota when he was a child. He and his mother lived on a ranch west of Deadwood and she fell ill in the middle of the night. She needed a doctor. The Black Hills are indeed, black, in the middle of the night. He got on a horse and rode to Deadwood to get the doctor and all the way, there was a light guiding him.falloutlunartic wrote:How do you decide what details to keep in a story and what details to take out?
I wanted to keep that in the story and gosh darn the consequences. I believe in miracles and I believe love conquers all.
I hope this answers your question. Thank you for asking.
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I'm happy that you enjoyed that part of the story. Years ago, I wrote a short story about it. It's one of those stories that I never want to forget.LivreAmour217 wrote:I loved this part of the novel, and I think that it is so cool that you based it on something that actually happened! I have a book of North American folklore, and there is a section about mysterious lights that have guided people. I think that most of the encounters occurred in the Southwest, too. I'll have to grab it off the shelf and look at that chapter again!khudecek wrote:The paranormal aspect of this story is fiction but it was based on something that happened to my grandfather in the Black Hills of South Dakota when he was a child. He and his mother lived on a ranch west of Deadwood and she fell ill in the middle of the night. She needed a doctor. The Black Hills are indeed, black, in the middle of the night. He got on a horse and rode to Deadwood to get the doctor and all the way, there was a light guiding him.falloutlunartic wrote:How do you decide what details to keep in a story and what details to take out?
I wanted to keep that in the story and gosh darn the consequences. I believe in miracles and I believe love conquers all.
I hope this answers your question. Thank you for asking.
What is the name of the American Folklore book you read? I think I'd like to read it, too.
Thank you for your comment.
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.
~~
"The Road Not Taken" by Robert Frost