In a parallel life I would have been an epidemiologist. Ever since I read Guns, Germs, and Steel, I’ve been fascinated by the interaction of plagues and society. (Another book along the same lines that has been in my library for years is Plagues and Peoples, along with Ken Alibek’s book about the bio-weapons lab he ran. It’s called Biohazard and it will keep you up at night.) Laurie Garrett’s book The Coming Plague is a sobering, informative read. You might have seen her interviewed on The Rachel Maddow Show recently. She did not have good news about COVID-19. And the Band Played On, the monumental work about the AIDS epidemic by Randy Shilts (who died of AIDS at 42.) is a must-read.
I’ve been thinking of fictional plague books lately. I’ve read a lot of them, and am wondering what else is out there that I haven’t read. I subscribe to the service K-lytics, which tracks genres in books, and a few months ago dystopian books—particularly ones featuring disasters like plagues and EMP episodes—were all the rage. I’m wondering if people are still fascinated by those “what if” books now that we’re in a real-life plague crisis of our own. Would reading those books now allay anxiety or make it worse? Could anything be worse than refreshing news feeds every two minutes?
Showing posts with label Dean Koontz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dean Koontz. Show all posts
Saturday, March 14, 2020
Thursday, October 4, 2018
Interview with writer Alex H. Singh
In your bio you say you’ve been writing
since you were 18. Were you encouraged to write as a kid? Did either of your
parents write?
Encouragement
would have been wonderful as a pre-teen sadly that did not occur. Neither of my
parents wrote. In fact I was discouraged by the both of them stating writing
can be done by anyone with a paper and a pen. What made me so special? Those
words alone were wood added to the fire within.
I made sure to focus and encourage myself until I managed to finish my
FIRST official novel myself.
Did you start with short fiction or did you
dive right into novels?
My first
book which I hand wrote with a paper and pen was 6 pages and 17 Chapters
long. Obviously, once I got a computer I
re wrote that story which then become over 200 pages with 19 Chapters. I went
big or what was the point of being an Author.
Do you remember the first time you were
paid for a piece of writing? What was it?
My first
novel was picked up by a publisher which I was surprised and excited at that
time. They helped me self publish my
novel and 3 months after I was given a cheque for $300.00. It was for a novel which is now discontinued
but it was called “Secrets of My Past”.
Do you follow a set schedule for writing,
have a process, and have a certain word count you want to hit each day?
Every day,
no matter what I come home, in order to de-istress from the day, I sit down and
depending on my mood I will work on Character or Chapter Outlines for books
pending or work on an existing novel which means I would write about 3-7K
words.
Do you outline?
Yes, of
course without that I would be lost.
What part of writing do you enjoy the most?
The least?
-Dreaming of
my Characters, what chaos I can ensue upon them and how they will get out of
it…alive. I guess it’s the aspect of
creating this new world in my mind then transcribing it on paper.
My least
favorite thing is when I find it hard to shut my thoughts off and I have more
than 1,2,3,4…and growing ideas for different stories or sequels. I find it hard
to focus on the ones I have outstanding with new ideas popping up inside my
thoughts.
Do you reward yourself/celebrate when you
finish a book? If so, how?
I
originally gave myself a goal that if I finished 10 novels I would buy myself a
new laptop which I did. My new goal was if I did more than the last time I
would buy myself an IPAD PRO which I am getting this holiday season as I did
manage to surpass my goal.
To me
having my book in my hand is exciting enough. No need to celebrate every novel,
at least for myself.
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