UK Amazon Kindle Forum discussion

64 views
Agony Aunt > Questions for Author Interviews. What do you like?

Comments Showing 1-12 of 12 (12 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 1: by Skyler (new)

Skyler West (skylerwest) | 25 comments Wasn't sure where to put this, so thought I'd ask in here. I'm going to be doing a series of guest author interviews on my website, but I'd love to know what sort of questions you all wish people would ask the authors.

Put on your reader hat, not your writer hat, and think about the interviews you've read online. Are you bored of the same old style of questions? Or do you still find that interesting? Maybe there are things you'd like to know that are never asked.

Let me know your thoughts, so I can ask them the questions you all want to hear.

Thanks,
Skyler


message 2: by Will (new)

Will Macmillan Jones (willmacmillanjones) | 11324 comments What is your favourite writing place?


message 3: by Yvonne (new)

Yvonne Pat | 42 comments What do you do to motivate yourself when you don't feel like writing?


message 4: by Andrew (new)

Andrew Lawston (andrewlawston) | 1774 comments I tend to think the usual questions work quite well, as long as the author thinks hard about their answers. The trouble is, a lot of writers think they need to play safe.

"Which genre makes you throw up in your mouth?"
"Which writer would you most like to punch?"
"Who is your favourite Nazi?"

You could ask all of the above, and you'd still get a bland set of answers about sunbeams, Jesus inspiring people's work, everyone being lovely, and not needing a trad publisher any more anyway.


message 5: by Michael (new)

Michael Brookes (technohippy) I've been doing a similar thing, take a look at the ones I've done so far: http://thecultofme.blogspot.co.uk/


message 6: by Grace (new)

Grace Elliot (httpwwwgoodreadscomgraceelliot) | 82 comments I always think a pithy question that gets straight to the point, is good as a reader ie.

"Why should we buy/ read your book?"

"What makes your book different from all the others out there."

G x


Patti (baconater) (goldengreene) | 56525 comments Oh yep. Excellent question Grace.


Patti (baconater) (goldengreene) | 56525 comments I also like the way you took the pith. ;)


message 9: by Alex (new)

Alex Hunter | 104 comments How about:

"If you were a critic, what would you write about your book(s)?"

"When writing, do you generally stay 'in your comfort zone' or do you sometimes challenge yourself?"


message 10: by Paul (last edited Oct 12, 2012 07:08AM) (new)

Paul (paullev) | 196 comments Which do you think is the best story/novel/article/essay that you wrote, and which do you think is the worst?


message 11: by Nick (new)

Nick Wastnage (nickwastnage) | 196 comments I've read a few and done a few. I think the best are when the interviewer does a little research into you, and asks questions like, 'Can you tell us what is your favourite moment/scene in your book.' The reader can then begin to get an insight into the author. That way, it's interesting to the reader and helps the author promote their work.


message 12: by Jim (new)

Jim | 21809 comments Just to follow up Nick's comment. It really helps if the interviewer has actually read some of what you have written. Not necessarily all of it, but ideally at least one representative piece


back to top