Have you always been a writer or why did you start?
Writing is actually my "third act." I was a college
professor, then a banker/finance manager and now a writer. When I
retired, I thought I should study calculus to keep from going crazy but
that was an insane idea. Then I thought of studying Mandarin (I am
Chinese); soon I got bored with the text books and started translating
"real stuff." One of the items was a famous book called The Romance of
the Three Kingdoms, said to be the best introduction to traditional
Chinese culture. From that study, four years later, came The Battle of
Chibi, my first book.
Who are your favorite writers and why?
I have read Tolkien and J.K. Rowling over and over
because they have created new worlds and write flawlessly. I also like
Salman Rushdie, Larry McMurtry and a host of others I continue to
discover. I am fascinated by the stories and how they are told, unusual
stories told with a difference.
How do you approach cover design?
The covers for my first two books came courtesy of
Createspace and its templates; I published in paperback then. When I
change to publishing in ebook format, I made adjustments, easy with
software today. With my third and fourth books I got more ambitious (and
lazier) and turned to professional help, both with proof-reading and
the covers.
What do you read for pleasure?
These days, almost everything I read is for
pleasure. I have pretty much given up on the news and politics. I do
like to challenge myself and so have read stories about young adults,
even young teens, or the paranormal and some things which one would not
associate with pleasure so much as with learning about how and what to
write. Learning itself makes that a pleasure.
What is your e-reading device of choice?
I like my laptop because it has versions of the
reading apps that allow for the greatest control, but I am learning how
to use similar apps on a 7-inch tablet that I have just acquired.
Originally, the idea was to be able to read lying down, but I find that
that makes me sleepy.
What book marketing techniques have been most effective for you?
None that has brought fame and fortune so far, but I expect to keep learning and trying.
Describe your writing process.
For The Chinese Spymaster which is the novel that
was entirely made up, that is, it was not a translation and/or an
adaptation of some other work, I started with an idea or two that I
wanted to make work. Then I created some characters and they led me to
situations, actions and other characters. I often wrote notes of what I
thought some scenes would play out but felt that if I kept in mind the
integrity of each character the scenes would often develop differently.
By contrast, in writing The Battle of Chibi, I felt obliged to follow
the text quite closely; I did make radical decisions about which
chapters or parts of chapters of The Romance of the Three Kingdoms I
would keep.
Who were the greatest influences on your writing?
More than the writers I mentioned earlier, I think
of my high school senior year English teacher and my college English
teacher. They were both very dedicated and required a five hundred word
essay a week which they would have graded before the next one was due.
My high school teacher even required that the essay be written during
class! But he was less strict about the number of words.
What's the story behind your latest book?
I have heard a great deal about Judge Dee; his fans
are as devoted and loyal as those of Agatha Christie or Nero Wolfe or
Carl Hiaasen. So I thought I would see if I could turn his stories
(written by Robert van Gulik) into a play. (I also have an interest in
community theater.)
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