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Interviews > Does anyone want an interview?

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message 1: by Christopher (new)

Christopher Bunn | 160 comments Well, let me cautiously rephrase that. I'm interested in hosting an occasional author for a guest essay. That means I give you a topic and you give me 250-500 words on the topic. I'll then post it on my site.

However...the topics will tend to be on the weighty side, and not focused on your books, but focused on you, your views, beliefs, etc. I'll also put up a link to your site or Amazon page as well (but with a disclaimer that I can't vouch for your books because, honestly, if I haven't read your book, then I can't vouch for it).

If anyone is ever interested, feel free to get in touch on my site.


message 2: by K.A. (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments I'm always interested in posting to a different blog and not about my books. I'm an opinionated critter.


message 3: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
I can highly recommend being on Christopher's site. I've been. It gave me such a reputation for being clever, principled, handsome and thoughtful that I had to take up smoking a pipe to live up to my image...

...until my wife reminded me that the mass-murderer Joseph Stalin also smoked a pipe.


message 4: by James (new)

James Everington | 187 comments I can also recommend Christopher's interviews... Although mine left me with less thoughts about mass murderers than Andre.


message 5: by K.A. (last edited Jul 17, 2012 12:32PM) (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments GEEEZZZEEEE - I wouldn't want to kiss a pipe smoker.

Christpher didn't leave an address...sigh...poor me.


message 6: by Katie (new)

Katie Stewart (katiewstewart) | 1099 comments If you go to his Goodreads dashboard and find his website, his address is on there, Kat. But be ready for some DEEP questions! My brain's hurting trying to answer mine.


message 7: by Christopher (new)

Christopher Bunn | 160 comments I have great faith in you, Katie. Your essay will be dazzling (or else!).

Thank you, James and Andre. You're too kind (that's actually an odd expression--I suppose the inference is that the person being addressed needs to be slightly more cruel). I'm afraid doing those faux live interviews like I did with you was starting to take up way too much time. Hence, my retreat to squeezing the essence out of people (a la Katie). Much easier.

Kat, drop me a note: tunescribbleatmac...


message 8: by Daniel (last edited Jul 17, 2012 07:54PM) (new)

Daniel Roberts (daniel-a-roberts) | 467 comments Hello Christopher, I'd like to give this a shot. :)

I'm emailing you to let you know.

-Dan


message 9: by K.A. (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments Done - looking forward to hearing from you.


message 10: by Daniel (new)

Daniel Roberts (daniel-a-roberts) | 467 comments Katie, I hope he publishes what you sent him. I'd love to read it. :)

As for me, I just sent mine a few minutes ago. I'm cautiously looking out the window for the van and guys in white. Last time I was this honest with my thoughts, my college professor asked me if I was human, and wanted proof. :)


message 11: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
An uncle of mine was a wheel in hospital administration for the whole province (like an American State, but larger). A notorious practical joker irritated me by walking up and interrupting conversations to say, "The men in white coats are coming to take me away," which for some reason used to break up his girlfriend and his claque, but not his sisters or me. So one night, while I was dining with his mother and sisters in a restaurant, and he was dining at a separate table on a voucher that arrived through the post for a free meal for himself and his girlfriend, an ambulance, siren and tyres screeching, the works, slid to a halt outside the restaurant, and three paramedics in white coats ran in, threw him to the floor, folded him extra-roughly a straight jacket, and carted him away in the ambulance. He never made that joke again. But people would call out in the quad, "Hey John, come tell us how the men in white coats took you away!"


message 12: by K.A. (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments Friends like you are dangerous. Hilarious, but dangerous.


message 13: by Katie (new)

Katie Stewart (katiewstewart) | 1099 comments Daniel wrote: "Katie, I hope he publishes what you sent him. I'd love to read it. :)

As for me, I just sent mine a few minutes ago. I'm cautiously looking out the window for the van and guys in white. Last t..."


Daniel, you're quicker than me. I'm still struggling to get my thoughts to make sense on paper. Maybe I'm trying too hard!


message 14: by Christopher (new)

Christopher Bunn | 160 comments I just posted Daniel's piece on creativity. Very interesting and nicely done.
http://christopherbunn.com/an-interro...


message 15: by Daniel (new)

Daniel Roberts (daniel-a-roberts) | 467 comments Christopher wrote: "I just posted Daniel's piece on creativity. Very interesting and nicely done.
http://christopherbunn.com/an-interro..."


Thank you Christopher!


message 16: by Dakota (new)

Dakota Franklin (dakotafranklin) | 306 comments I love an "entropic universe" -- more work for writers and engineers to bring order out of chaos!


message 17: by Katie (new)

Katie Stewart (katiewstewart) | 1099 comments Agh! I'm answering the same question. Does that matter? I'm not going to read Daniel's yet.


message 18: by Matt (new)

Matt Posner (mattposner) | 276 comments Hi Christopher,

I want to do a blog tour in early August to promote a novel release, and would be pleased to contribute to your blog. schooloftheages at gmail dot com is my email address. send me a topic, or a choice of topics, and I'll be all over it.

Matt


message 19: by Daniel (new)

Daniel Roberts (daniel-a-roberts) | 467 comments Katie wrote: "Agh! I'm answering the same question. Does that matter? I'm not going to read Daniel's yet."

It shouldn't matter Katie. In fact, your views on Creativity will be just as meaningful as mine, and in no way less of a contribution. ^_^

I;m still looking forward to reading it.


message 20: by Katie (new)

Katie Stewart (katiewstewart) | 1099 comments I've read yours now and wish I could have made mine half as interesting!


message 21: by Sharon (new)

Sharon Tillotson (storytellerauthor) | 1802 comments Katie, if anyone knows about creativity, it is you. You will do fine!


message 22: by Christopher (new)

Christopher Bunn | 160 comments Puh-leez, Katie! Your essay is great! I'm going to put it up tomorrow if I get a free moment.

Having people write on the same topic, like creativity, is quite fascinating. Different perspectives. It's like we're all peering through our own little keyholes at the same world, but different angles.

Matt, sounds good. Go ahead and email me so I've got you in my inbox. tunescribbleatmacperiodcom


message 23: by Daniel (new)

Daniel Roberts (daniel-a-roberts) | 467 comments Katie wrote: "I've read yours now and wish I could have made mine half as interesting!"

Christopher said it very well, and is all too true. ^_^

Thank you for the compliment, Katie, but don't sell yourself short, my lady. All of us here use creativity as our canvass, the words our paintbrush, metaphors and style our color. What we create are pictures for the mental theater, and everyone of us owns our unique style.

So yes, Katie. I eagerly await to see what you've rendered for us. From Christopher's early reaction, it's worth the wait. :)


message 24: by Sharon (new)

Sharon Tillotson (storytellerauthor) | 1802 comments Well done, both Christopher and Daniel!


message 25: by Christopher (new)

Christopher Bunn | 160 comments Here's Katie's take on creativity:
http://christopherbunn.com/katies-ste...


message 26: by Daniel (new)

Daniel Roberts (daniel-a-roberts) | 467 comments Christopher wrote: "Here's Katie's take on creativity:
http://christopherbunn.com/katies-ste..."


Katie's take on Creativity is exactly what I expected: An excellent view that's expressed with high skills of reasoning. Well done, Katie, my applause should be the loudest in the crowd.

For we writers, such a subject is a multi-fauceted diamond. No matter how you turn it and look through a different angle, the quality of impression remains the same.

While I am not surprised at Katie's ability to wordsmith an excellent piece, such things restores a measure of hope within me, especially for the human race. ^_^

Now you all know why I was highly interested in what she had to say on the subject!


message 27: by Katie (new)

Katie Stewart (katiewstewart) | 1099 comments I'm flattered, Daniel, but I still think yours was better written. :)

I don't think I'll ever go back to study. Writing serious stuff is really hard work!


message 28: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
Two very different, and very interesting, takes on the same subject. I won't pretend I was expecting anything less. I see no reason not to extend the same high standard I apply to myself to all my associates as well. I'm never surprised when they live up to expectation.

I wonder if Margie has seen Katie's remarks about creativity wrt children and education.


message 29: by Sharon (new)

Sharon Tillotson (storytellerauthor) | 1802 comments Well done, Katie! You managed to be creative in bringing a different perspective on creativity.

Christopher must be pleased!


message 30: by Christopher (new)

Christopher Bunn | 160 comments Yes, very much so. I'm not a psychologist by any stretch of the imagination, but I do enjoy peering into people's minds.


message 31: by Katie (new)

Katie Stewart (katiewstewart) | 1099 comments Thought you might enjoy reading this, Christopher... from one of the most creative minds in the world -
http://www.fastcocreate.com/1680999/4...


message 32: by Christopher (new)

Christopher Bunn | 160 comments Great article. Thanks for posting that, Katie. I've never seen that perspective before. It makes a lot of sense (and coming from John Cleese!).


message 33: by Sharon (new)

Sharon Tillotson (storytellerauthor) | 1802 comments Thanks for the link, Katie.

Funny, I was just wondering today why I have been procrasting on starting the new book I outlined a good year ago. It's because I am in tortoise-brain mode. Whew! What a relief!

Seriously, that is a great article. I agree with what Cleese says... And I know there is a missing piece which has not been revealed yet, or I would be compelled to write, right now!


message 34: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
The smartest writers have the best reasons for not writing.


message 35: by Christopher (last edited Jul 30, 2012 06:14PM) (new)

Christopher Bunn | 160 comments Greg Downs, author of the Song of the Aura series, bravely wrote an essay on the moral responsibility of authors:
http://christopherbunn.com/greg-downs...

I think it's a very controversial topic for authors. I've tested the waters very gently at the Kindleboards with this one several times. Fairly decided reactions each time. I mean, seriously, what happens when you start talking bout moral responsibility of authorship when you're in a community leavened with plenty of authors who write erotica or stories ultimately driven by nihilism or post-modern despair? Must everyone be so painfully tolerant?

I might be stepping on toes here with that. If I've offended anyone here, hey, I love you and I'd be happy to have you over for dinner, but it doesn't mean I agree with everything you do. Conversely, I wouldn't expect others to automatically agree with everything I do and believe. C'est la vie. Life's too short to leave it unexamined. Plus, with my old malady laying me up in bed for the next 30 days, the question of Worth is plaguing my thoughts like Thompson's ghostly hound.

Sorry. I'm really rambling. Must be going a bit stir-crazy from being clapped up in bed.


message 36: by Patricia (new)

Patricia (patriciasierra) | 2388 comments Sorry to hear you're not feeling well. Thirty days in bed is a l-o-n-g time.


message 37: by Patricia (last edited Jul 30, 2012 06:21PM) (new)

Patricia (patriciasierra) | 2388 comments By the way, your link didn't work.

Edit: Never mind. I see what's wrong ... there's an extra word in the link.

Another edit, to add: I just read the link. I couldn't disagree more. Authors have a responsibility to their art. Period. Messages belong in telegrams (remember those?). Sermons belong in church. The author's vision and story, regardless of what they happen to be, belong in a book. It's up to readers to decide if, for them, the author succeeds. No author should write with society's watchdog perched on his (or her) shoulder.


message 38: by Christopher (new)

Christopher Bunn | 160 comments I'm only five days in and it's already a long time. Sigh. Woops. Thanks. I'll fix the link.


message 39: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
Thirty days in bed sounds serious.

I take the view that a writer, and particularly a novelist, is an intellectual. Therefore he will take a view, and the view can easily make enemies.

That doesn't go down well with writers who will turn themselves inside out pandering for a single sale.


message 40: by Christopher (new)

Christopher Bunn | 160 comments I will be stark, raving mad by the time this is over. On the other hand, I'm reading a lot of books. I'm averaging three a day.


message 41: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
Send something controversial to ROBUST, then tell all your mates where to find it.


message 42: by Christopher (new)

Christopher Bunn | 160 comments Ha!
Actually, I've retreated mostly to my childhood books. I'm convalescing in a guesthouse on my folks' ranch and have raided their library of stacks of old books. Nothing controversial, just comforting.


message 43: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
I bought a table easel, paints, palette knives, brushes, charcoal, chalks, a book of canvas leaves, etc, just in case I have to stay inside or even upstairs. I haven't painted since I was in my twenties and haven't actually touched any of that stuff in the months since I bought it, but it's there. My wife doesn't believe I will make any art except on the computer, but I'm prepared for that as well, having bought a small light keyboard to go with the high resolution iPad Dakota gave me. I also have the usual Wacom art tablets, but most of them are big and clumsy, meant for laying out A3 (poster oversize) pages. We have Adonnit Jot pen coming, which apparently gives relatively precise control over the iPad screen. We'll see.


message 44: by Patricia (new)

Patricia (patriciasierra) | 2388 comments Christopher, I'd sell what's left of my soul to have the ability to read three books a day. It takes me forever to get through a book. I'm happy to hear you have so many stories to see you through the remainder of your recovery.


message 45: by Christopher (new)

Christopher Bunn | 160 comments An art tablet...I'm green with envy. Prudence, however, dictates I not get one. Art is not my forte.

Ever since I was a kid, I've read really fast. Whenever we did Read-a-thons at school I would always take first place. Very unfair. The only downside is that good books go whizzing by.


message 46: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
In the long ago and far away I worked for a man who revered education. He didn't have much. He was a veeeery slow reader, who would go back and reread parts of every page to be certain he understood it before he would turn the page. Aaargh. If one tried to hurry him, he'd say, "I am sitting at a table with a bunch of pee aitch dees -- and I'm the only fucking student!"


message 47: by Patricia (new)

Patricia (patriciasierra) | 2388 comments I edit as I read, move sentences around, mentally rewrite whole sections. No wonder it takes me so long to get through a book.


message 48: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
So many crap writers about who really need an old-fashioned editor, It is a wonder you ever finish a book, Sierra.


message 49: by K.A. (last edited Jul 31, 2012 10:35AM) (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments Well, Penguin bought Author Solutions - maybe they intend to fleece some more sheep - under the pretext of offering 'editorial' services.


message 50: by Daniel (last edited Jul 31, 2012 11:50AM) (new)

Daniel Roberts (daniel-a-roberts) | 467 comments K.A. wrote: "Well, Penguin bought Author Solutions - maybe they intend to fleece some more sheep - under the pretext of offering 'editorial' services."

Author Solutions is one of the worst 'Vanity' Presses that ever operated and didn't get burned to the ground by pitch fork waving, torch bearing mob.

Penguin didn't do themselves any favor, there.


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