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What's the point of author interviews?
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Some say it helps with the sale, but I honestly don't know how. Maybe I'm just not curious enough.

I've also seen character interviews, which is a bit weirder, but still....
Also, I was reviewed by a website for women who were attracted to paraplegics and other disabled men. I spoke with some of these 'devotees' and gave them an interview geared specifically about disability in fiction.
I also did interviews about specific pet peeves, like my dislike of info-dumps.
I don't assume everyone likes to read my opinions, but then, these interviews are easy enough to ignore... and there are many people who do enjoy them.

I've also seen character interviews, which is a bit weirder, but stil..."
Martyn,
That, I can understand. There's a specific topic (fiction featuring disabled persons) and already interested persons. This interview has an angle.
What I see too much is bloggers interviewing authors WITHOUT an angle. The author is typically unknown, the work unheard of, and the questions stale.
I need a reason to read the interview. Or maybe, like G.G., I'm just not curious enough.

I'll read biographies, too. There's a difference. With a biography, there's a story there, not merely "Why do you like writing?" or "What's your motivation?"

Can you point me in the direction of a character interview? I'm intrigued.


I like to listen to author interviews. And I also prefer to read author interviews where it's obvious that there is an actual exchange going on between the author and the interviewer (not just answers to a questionnaire).
As far as character interviews go? I never want to read one. Never. (Sorry, Henry and Rudy.)


From a blogging standpoint, a lot of bloggers enjoy featuring and showcaseing authors on their blog, it makes their site more productive and active I suppose.
As for Character Interviews, I've done a few and they are actually quite fun. I didn't hold back and I talked and ranted whereas I wouldn't have if it was me who was interviewed. It's creative, fun and give's a reader an inside look of a character before they read the book.

Of course authors enjoy giving the interviews, and obviously bloggers enjoy writing them. If you are "involved" in the process, or even involved in the writing world, it would surely appeal.
For myself (a non-writer and non-blogger), however, I have never read through one in its entirety. I doubt if I ever will. I just think there needs to be a "draw" aside from reading answers to questions asked and answered by people I don't know, about things I've never heard of.



I suppose that makes sense. To be fair, I ALMOST read through an entire interview with Stephen King once...

The big no no is to spend the interview criticising other authors. Elizabeth George made herself a hostage to fortune by criticising other novelists for not doing research as good as she does. The ransom note has been posted as her research is very poor if you are a Londoner and read her London located novels.

I don't really read them, either.




Or, what can be interesting to beginning authors, how authors do research and their work methods.


Question for you, Jen. Do you read interviews at all?
And if you do read interviews, do you read interviews with:
- politicians
- actors
- comedians
- musicians
- movie directors
- entrepreneurs
- artists (painters/sculptors)
- thinkers (philosophers/scientists)


Question for you, Jen. Do you read interviews at all?"
I do, yes. Let me break it down:
If there's a political issue I care about, I'll read an interview with a mayor, governor, congressman, or secretary of whatever.
Big celebrity faux pas? I might check out an interview with the offending actor, musician, etc.
Musicians, generally? No.
Movie Directors? Only if they have a unique project and an interesting story behind it. (Or if it's M. Knight Shyamalan. I love that guy.)
Entrepreneurs? I have, but I'm choosy. Again, I'll need to know of the person (or their work) beforehand, and care what they have to say.
Artists? I once found a site that featured fictional interviews with deceased artists. I read at least thirty. Probably not what you mean, though.
Um...maybe. Would depend on a number of factors and my level of interest.
Thinkers? Yes.

What I'd like to see is a fresh spin. Something to pull me in first, subtly introducing the author in a way that makes me interested in what they have to say.

Yeah, generic and cliche questions are so boring! "Why do you write?" "What inspires you?" Blah blah, everyone always says the same thing. "At what age did you start to write?" (A lot say since they were 5 or 6, etc.)
I think interviews would do much better with more interesting questions.

that's exactly what I was saying... I did about five different ones and they all pretty much asked the same questions... one did however let me create my own questions and that was more fun...

These are the headlines of author interviews I'd read (if I didn't know the blogger or writer):
1. Is The Exploration of Psychiatric Disorders Too Heavy for Teens?
(Supposing the author wrote a YA novel which explored the impact of mental illness in a child's life.)
2. Winning The Lottery: Why You Really DON'T Want That Payout
(Non-fiction author investigating the "Lottery Curse")
3. The Reality of The Monsters Under Our Beds
(Fantasy author with something along the lines of Monster's Inc.)
4. Abandoning Stereotypes
(Author who has written a non-traditional story in virtually any genre)
Notice these all focus more on the work than the author because, in my opinion, authors get more readers based on what they've written, rather than how they "developed their craft" or whatever.
Just my opinion, of course...




What a hoot!
As far as the OP, I do like getting to know more about an author I may have heard about, but I don't like the form-letter "interviews" that seem to be the norm. It's not an interview if everyone gets the same set of "fill this out and return it" questions. That, to my mind, leaves no room for personality or interaction, which is the entire reason I'd read an interview to begin with.
Martyn V., I enjoyed your interview on Writing in a Dead World because it was about info-dumps in novels and deal-breakers when reading fiction. I also happened to learn a little bit about you and your writing (and heard the word "verisimilitude" for the first time). It was conversational post, and I felt as if I were watching the two of you interact. Those are the types of interviews I like.
I also like it when an author doesn't give the same old answers to different interviewers. Granted, it may be difficult to be creative if the questions are practically identical, but again, this comes back to the interviewers asking the same dumb questions. I want to know something different about you; it doesn't have to be a deep dark secret, but what do you do when you're not writing? If you could be famous for only one book in your lifetime, what would you write about? What's the interview question nobody asks and you wish they would? If you knew me better, what would you buy me for Christmas?
Stepping down from my soapbox now...obviously I feel strongly about this. I have a billion questions in my head, and nobody ever asks them. They simply have people fill out a questionnaire, copy & paste, spelling errors and all, and call it an interview.


I ask maybe five questions of guest authors I feature on my blog site. My intention is to elicit interesting information that the author hasn't included in his bio. I try to ask one question that relates to something the author has written that amazon.com has included in its "look inside" feature.
I agree that an interview should not be a stand alone feature on a blog site. I also include the author's bio., a brief synopsis of the author's book, and an excerpt of the author's choosing.

If I extrapolate your answer, you read interviews if the subject is interesting and if you know or want to know the interviewee.
However, someone who is an unknown to you, might be know to others who would read the review.
I stayed with a friend who had this huge stack of Playboy Magazine. What I found interesting were not the photoshopped glossy pictures of women, but the rather long interviews in the magazine. At first I only read the interviews with actors and musicians that I knew, but later I started to read all of them, which involved athletes I didn't know (we don't watch US baseball and basketball in the Netherlands) and politicians (US politicians are often considered laughing stock in Europe). What drew me in was that Playboy employs sharp interviewers, who were able to draw out their interviewee to tell them stuff I didn't find in the more superficial 'let me tell you about my latest album/movie/book interview'.
So if I come across a blogger who is good at asking the right questions, I might read interviews with people I don't know, simply because the interviewer is entertaining.
Same way I enjoy talkshows by Graham Norton, but not by Ophrah Winfrey.

The interview was born out of a scathing review on a lazy writer whose book I stopped reading because of an info dump and my blog article on info dumps, so we already had some ground work on my pet peeves before we did the interview.

"
That's exactly why I like his interviews. He'll find someone interesting and then will look into his/her blogs and other social interactions, and tailor the questions to fit each person.


However, someone who is an unknown to you, might be known to others who would read the review."
Absolutely. I won't dispute that.
So if I come across a blogger who is good at asking the right questions, I might read interviews with people I don't know, simply because the interviewer is entertaining.
Again, I won't argue that.
My initial post was prompted by the fact that this has become a standard feature on many blogs and I always felt that a lot of these interviews were more for authors than for readers. When the blogger is new and the author unknown (as is often the case), there should be some effort made to draw in an audience. For the most part, I don't see that effort being made.


Character interviews are lot of fun, both to read and to write. I guess it is a good way to find new reads. Read about Bob the Slayer and you MIGHT be temprted to buy the book. Of course many are not.
I have a few I've run on my blog, my favourite being a ghost horse. I've 'interviewed' him, a few aliens, a couple of detectives, some wizards, and a viking.
Author interviews - either a reader wants to learn about an author - especially one they already follow or looking for new ones or they aren't. It really depends on the questions, which tend to be a bit formulaic sometimes - did you always want to be a writer? When did you decide to be a writer? As an author, I don't like those as the reader of the interview probably doesn't care when I 'decided'. Have a bit of variety, ask opinions on things (like commenting on reviews or their opinions on free books) and try and have a mix of genres.
As a reader I probably wouldn't read an interview with, say, a writer of Westerns, or Christain fiction, but I MIGHT read one from a fantasy or historical author.

I've seen them too, the author interviews that look more like the reading of a curriculum vitae to accompany a job application.

I have a set of questions but there are several and they aren't all the usual ones. I ask authors to pick at least 10. Not everyone picks the same. I guess a lot of it comes from time. Bloggers don't always have time to read a particular author's book(s) and so send generic questions and perhaps don't have time to tailor questions.
Actually the good mix of questions are fun. I have just been sent some to fill in. The blogger asked for 20 at least to be answered, 3 were mandatory (but not the usual stuff) and there were about 60 questions to choose from. Some of them were fairly similar. This has promoted me to think of some more.
I guess it comes down to this - are you interested in reading about an author and how interesting are the questions.
Some people don't. Some people do. Whether it garners sales - honestly I have no idea. It might. I think it may be one of those strategies which work alongside other promotional tools. It may well be correct that authors tend to interview other authors, but that said it may well be partly to support a colleague and partly as they tend to network. Also authors are readers too:) Whether any non-author readers care I can't comment.

https://www.goodreads.com/poll/show/1...

True Season of Love

Doing interviews are not about getting authors to read about other authors. When an interview comes in to us we promote the heck out of the author. It is about getting the author discovered by a reader that may not have heard of them. It is about reaching a new audience.
After the interview goes live on our site it goes out to our newsletter list which is a couple of thousand that are waiting to find new authors and books.
The average author gets about 300-500 new visitors the first day and then a couple hundred the next couple of days as people open their emails and see the tweets we send out. On their interview is a link to their website and to their social media accounts. Besides the book sales they get fans and followers who may buy their book in the future.
I hope this helps why authors do interviews.
To be honest, I don't read interviews of traditionally published authors, either. Unless I want to know when the next book is coming out (which I can easily find out with a one second search), I'm just not interested.
If you like reading these, could you explain what I'm missing or overlooking? I'm genuinely curious.