Check Out this Q & A with Ken Atchity on CMash Reads

Guest Author KENNETH JOHN ATCHITY

 Guest Author, Partners In Crime Tours, Showcase



 








WELCOME KENNETH JOHN ATCHITY






KENNETH JOHN ATCHITY
The author of The Messiah Matrix, Kenneth John Atchity, at the age of
ten began instructions in the Latin language from a multi-lingual
Jesuit mentor and went on to continue his study of Latin, and to begin
Homeric Greek, and French at the Jesuit high school, Rockhurst, in
Kansas City, Missouri. He won an Ignatian Scholarship to Georgetown
University in Washington, D.C., where he graduated as an
English/Classics major and won the University Honor Program’s
prestigious Virgilian Academy Silver Medal for his nationally-tested
knowledge of Virgil’s Aeneid.




At Georgetown, he added to his four years of high school Homeric
Greek with studies of Attic and Koinaic Greek as well as further studies
in Homer and four more years of Latin. He spent his junior year summer
at King’s College, Cambridge.




Atchity received his Ph.D. from Yale in Comparative Literature, after
adding Italian to his seven languages, focused on the study of Dante
under Harvard’s Dante della Terza and Yale’s Thomas Bergin. His
dissertation, Homer’s Iliad: The Shield of Memory, was awarded the
Porter Prize, Yale Graduate School’s highest academic honor. His mentors
at Yale included Thomas Bergin, Thomas Greene, A. Bartlett Giamatti,
Richard Ellinger, Eric Segal, and Lowry Nelson, Jr.




He was professor of literature and classics at Occidental College in
Los Angeles, 1970-87, served as chairman of the comparative literature
department, and as Fulbright Professor to the University of Bologna. His
academic career included books on Homer and Italian literature, and
dozens of academic articles and reviews. During his years at Occidental,
Atchity was a frequent columnist for The Los Angeles Times Book Review,
where he reviewed the novels of Umberto Eco, Doris Lessing, Gabriel
Garcia-Marquez, Carlos Fuentes, and many others.




In a second career Atchity represented writers of both fiction and
nonfiction, accounting for numerous bestsellers and movies for both
television and big screen. In the tradition of Dominick Dunne, Sidney
Sheldon, and Steven Cannell he has drawn on his professional experience
with storytelling to write The Messiah Matrix.



Connect with Ken at these sites:



[image error]      [image error]     [image error]    

Q&A with Ken Atchity
Do you draw from personal experiences and/or current events?

As all novelists do, I draw from both. Oddly enough my novel unwittingly
predicted the pope’s resignation and the election of an Argentine
Jesuit. But it also reflects my adolescent experiences growing up
Catholic and wondering if God would really send someone to hell for
eating meat on Friday or stealing $5.00 worth of peas instead of $4.99
worth.




Do you start with the conclusion and plot in reverse or start from the beginning and see where the story line brings you?

I do both. I start wherever the sharpest image begins and work backwards
or forwards accordingly. That’s the beauty of this computer age—you can
go either way. Write the scene you feel like writing today, and put it
wherever it’s supposed to go later.




Your routine when writing? Any idiosyncrasies?

Although I’m a morning person, I write any time of day I can steal an
hour or two from my editing, managing, coaching and producing. On an
ideal day, I write from five to seven a.m. Over the years I’ve taught
myself to write anywhere, and particularly love writing on the plane. I
use a stopwatch to make sure I get my two hours in every day.




Is writing your full time job? If not, may I ask what you do by day?

I’ve never written full time. I write when I have something to say or
have a story to tell, which has, I admit, gotten to be more and more
often. My day job is coaching other storytellers on how to get their
stories to their maximum audiences in today’s challenging and changing
world—and editing, managing, representing, and producing stories.




Who are some of your favorite authors?

Aside from my own clients, my favorite authors go back to Homer, Virgil,
Dante, Shakespeare, Cervantes, Sterne, Wallace Stevens, Thomas Hardy,
Melville, Garcia-Marquez, and Carlos Ruiz Zafón.


What are you reading now?

Preparatory to writing The Hong Kong Reversion, I’m rereading Ian
Fleming’s wonderful James Bond books as well as James Patterson, and
Viktor Frankl’s Man’s Search for Meaning.  I read all day, for joy, for
research, and because my dayjob is helping storytellers find their
audiences.




Are you working on your next novel? Can you tell us a little about it?

I’m currently working on AFI, Inc., the first in a series of memoirs,
prior to completing The Hong Kong Reversion, a thriller set in Hong
Kong.




Your novel will be a movie. Who would you cast?

I’d die to have Claire Danes as Emily Scelba.




Would you rather read or watch TV/movie?

Yes.




Favorite food?

My grandmother’s Syrian beans.




Favorite beverage?

Vodka martini.









ABOUT THE BOOK
The Messiah Matrix by Kenneth John Atchity is a fast-paced
contemporary thriller in which a young Jesuit priest becomes
romantically entwined with a vivacious archaeologist as they pursue the
hidden history that links Jesus Christ with Augustus Caesar. A year
before it occurred, the novel predicted the resignation of the pope and
the election of an Argentine Jesuit to succeed him. In a story that will
leave readers breathless and hungry for more, Atchity weaves a
compelling tale about the foundations of today’s Roman Catholic Church
lying deep in the religious rituals of the ancient Roman Empire.


From the first page to the last The Messiah Matrix takes the reader
on a riveting adventure from the ancient city of Caesarea in Israel to
Rome’s labyrinthine catacombs and beyond, and provides gripping evidence
for all those who have ever wondered about the historical existence of
the Christian Savior. The Messiah Matrix is a tour de force of modern
drama and intrigue, classical scholarship, and early church history that
will change the way you understand the birth of Christianity.




The Messiah Matrix may prove to be one of the most controversial
novels ever written. Graeco-Roman scholar, professor, and producer Dr.
Atchity is perhaps the only author alive today capable of creating this
ground-breaking work.
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on October 07, 2013 10:09
No comments have been added yet.