How much of yourself is hidden in the characters in
your book?
I guess pieces of me exist in all of my characters; some more than others. Very few people would be able to connect the pieces though. No one knows me that well.
I carried a
notebook around for twenty years with smatterings of ideas for The Chronicles
of Firma before I ever really sat down to write it. Hopefully it won’t take me
another twenty to get my current book done, but you never know.
Can you tell us what genre you write?
Basically Fantasy
and Science Fiction, although I try to throw some Mystery and Romance into
everything I write as well.
How do you cope with writer's block?
I worry and suffer
a lot, which basically makes it worse. I have no tricks for coping with it.
When I can write, I write. When I can’t, I don’t.
How do you develop and differentiate your characters?
All of my work is
character-based, so characters are developed before much plotting happens. I’m
not sure just how it happens. They speak to me and I get to know them. I put
them in various situations and I see how they behave. If I try to force them down
a path that doesn’t make sense for them, the story just grinds to a halt, so
they also help to drive the plot lines.
Do you have specific techniques you use to develop the
plot and stay on track?
I am a big
believer in outlines. I do a complete and thorough outline for each book, and I
try to stay guided by it as much as possible. Of course, there are times when
the plotline I’ve outlined just doesn’t work – like when it runs afoul of what
the characters would naturally do. When that happens, I change the outline as
necessary. For the most part, though, I make a plan and stick to it.
How (or when) do you decide that you are finished
writing a story?
Well, first I try
to make sure all of the major loose ends are tied up (leaving enough untied for
a sequel if I want). Then I just write until it feels like the characters are
done with the business at hand. There’s no formula. It’s more of an intuition.
Is there a message in your writing you want readers to
grasp?
Well, the messages
vary, but one of the main reasons I write is to give LGBT teens (and adults
too) representation and role models in two genres that are very short on gay
characters. That’s the reason there’s no explicit sex in my books. I want them
to be accessible by teens and also enjoyable by adults, both gay and straight.
Fortunately, I’m slowly seeing more writers doing what I’m doing, so in a few
years hopefully there will be much more diversity in Sci-Fi and Fantasy.
Right now I am
working on a Science Fiction novel about a six-foot-eight teenaged genius named
Jonathan Starlander. That’s all I can say about it right now.
Have you always wanted to be a writer?
Yes, but life
didn’t give me the talent to write prose until I was nearly forty years old. So
I went through the early stages of my life kind of drifting from career path to
career path. I knew I would write one day. I just didn’t know when I’d be
ready.
At what age did you discover your love of writing?
I started writing
poetry at age ten, and I stuck with that pretty much exclusively until I
started writing Orphan’s Quest, the first book of the Chronicles of
Firma trilogy. I never went through the short story phase. I can’t do them.
What is the most difficult part of the whole writing
process?
Outlining. It’s
boring. I admire anyone who can manage a complete, well thought out novel
without an outline. I sure can’t.
What do you like to read?
All kinds of
things: Sci-fi and Fantasy of course, but also mysteries, romances, history,
biography. I do a lot of non-fiction reading to research my books, and it all
interests me.
What writer influences you the most?
Mercedes Lackey. Her Last Herald Mage trilogy inspired me to go
ahead and write The Chronicles of Firma. It showed me that there was a market
for good epic fantasy with gay heroes. For that reason, she’ll always be my
literary hero.
If your book was made into a TV series or Movie, which
actors would you like to see playing your characters?
I don’t have a
clue, but I’d sure like to see it happen.
Where can people learn more about you?
They can read my
books and speculate about me all they want. Other than that, I’m always happy
to have new friends on facebook. I don’t go around spilling my guts all that
often, but you can get a little more of a sense of what makes me tick. My
facebook “me” page is facebook.com/patnelsonchilds.
Is there anything else you’d like to tell us about
yourself?
I think I may have
said too much already. I hate talking about myself. But I really want you to
read my books!
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