Showing posts with label #Q&A. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #Q&A. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 12, 2018

MayFly by Jeff Sweat - Q and A Spotlight




Book Description:
A futuristic thriller that pits teens against teens.

Jemma has spent her life scavenging tools and supplies for her tribe in the their small enclave outside what used to be a big city. Now she’s a teen, and old enough to become a Mama. Making babies is how her people survive—in Jemma’s world, life ends at age seventeen.

Survival has eclipsed love ever since the Parents died of a mysterious plague. But Jemma’s connection to a boy named Apple is stronger than her duty as a Mama. Forced to leave, Jemma and Apple are joined in exile by a mysterious boy who claims to know what is causing them to die. The world is crumbling around them, and their time is running out. Is this truly the End?



Q and A with Jeff Sweat:


Q: Why write dystopian fiction? 

Jeff: Dystopian writing, and speculative fiction in general, has always been lumped in with genre fiction. Which isn’t wrong, but it also minimizes how important speculative fiction can be. It provides a way to look at our own world through a completely new mirror. It lets us focus on one aspect of human nature—in this case, the importance of age to a stable society—and stretch and bend and twist it until we get a truer sense of who we really are. I’m less interested in the grim and futuristic aspects that can be a part of dystopian fiction and more interested in what it says about who we can become.


Q: Tell us about your writing process. 

Jeff: My writing process is shaped primarily by my time as a journalist, where we were taught over and over to eliminate deadwood. Every word on the page is carefully placed, but I tend not to get precious about them. I try to think about the words I use and ask myself: has this been said before? Instead of saying “her heart raced,”which is a useful shorthand but also a cliché, I try to think about what my character is actually feeling. I have a journalist’s aversion to adverbs. I’m not sure how many are in Mayfly, but I’d be surprised if it were much more than 10!

Rhythm of the words is really crucial to me—a lot of times I’ll read what I’ve written out loud to make sure the paragraphs almost pulse. I’m inspired by riding motorcycles, oddly—when you pass by cars on a motorcycle, you can’t focus on each one, and so you see a little blur and a little chuff of sound. Then you look at something, just for a moment longer than normal, and then it fades into a blur. I try to capture that feeling when I write.

I try to write every day, even if for just a little bit, because that way the story never leaves my mind. I’ll typically write for a while, go walk my dog until I can sneak a peek of the LA skyline, which somehow activates the portion of my brain that thinks about story. The next day’s story usually comes to me then, and I dictate it to myself or run and home quickly take notes. That’s the way the creative process works, I think—it never comes right at you. Creativity always lives in the margins.

Q: Tell us about the custom GIPHY campaign (and what's a GIF anyway?

Jeff: This is is GIPHY’s first-ever book promo campaign. Giphy is the source of most of the GIFs you find online, the animated clips from video that you look for when you want the perfect reaction. I met the CEO of Giphy Studios about a year ago and found out how they’re supporting movies, musicians and brands. I asked, “Have you ever supported an author before?” She said, “No, but we’d like to?”

The challenge of promoting a book via GIFs is that there’s no inherent visual to work around, as there would be with a movie or TV show. One approach was to create reaction GIFs (the most common type of GIF searched for) around frequent search terms—but featuring people reading Mayfly. The other approach was to create a series of objects that would be important in the world of Mayfly—most notably, Jemma’s hatchet—and shoot them almost like a post-apocalyptic QVC channel!



Q: What’s this experience been like? You’ve worked in advertising for a long time and are now promoting your book!

Jeff: The hardest part was finding the time in an industry known for its long hours. I wrote Mayfly with a full-time job and three kids. The only time to write was after 10. I had to create a standing desk to keep from falling asleep. Even then, I dozed off on my feet. I finished my novel at 12:10 a.m. drinking from a glass of whisky and a mug of coffee in equal measures.

Working in advertising and PR gave me a pretty good foundation of how to help market my book, although there was (and is) a lot I had to learn about the advertising industry. I think most authors work really hard to promote their books even beyond what a publisher can do. I’m just fortunate to have the expertise and connections to go further!


Q: Tell us about Mayfly's Los Angeles scavenger hunt. This seems so cool! 

Jeff: Mayfly is the story of a few brave kids going out into a world that’s covered in clues and codes in search of the answers that might change their fate. It’s also set in a very real city—it just takes place in the future. I wanted to be able to share with readers the world I’d imagined. This has led to Mayfly Quest: Decoding Ell Aye, a parallel story that puts readers in the shoes of Mayfly’s main characters so they can solve puzzles our lead characters missed. This unlocks bonus content, untold stories, and even prizes. While the quest is mostly digital, it’s got some real-world elements for die-hard fans to come find an experience. And the real-world elements are built to draw in people who haven’t heard of Mayfly, letting them know there’s a quest afoot.


Q: Generation K: What is it, and why might they be more inclined to read Dystopian Lit? 

Jeff: We did something unusual for Mayfly—one of my advertising agency clients, North, created a “customer journey” of potential Mayfly readers. One of their fascinating insights is that there’s a subsection of Gen Z that researchers call Generation K—as in, Generation Katniss. They view life almost as if it were a dystopian landscape, and so are primed for stories that seem to illustrate their struggle for safety, health and human rights.

The best example of this has been the Parkland survivors and how they’ve stepped up to provide leadership where adults have failed. The dedication to my book reads, “To the children who hold the world together, whether they asked to hold the world or not.” I never thought I would see it lived so literally!


About the Author:


Jeff Sweat has made a living from words his entire career, starting out as an award-winning tech journalist for InformationWeek magazine and moving into marketing.

He led the content marketing team for Yahoo and pioneered its use of social media. He directed PR for two of the top advertising agencies in the country, Deutsch LA and 72andSunny. He now runs his own Los Angeles–based PR and marketing agency, Mister Sweat.

He grew up in Idaho as the middle of eight children—seven boys and one girl—and attended Columbia University in New York. Jeff lives in a big blue house in Los Angeles with his wife Sunny and their three kids, two cats, and a racing greyhound.

He loves to travel and writes everywhere he goes, even when there's not a desk. He likes karaoke, motorcycles and carpentry. He was once shot in the head with a nail gun, which was not a big of a deal as it sounds. But it still hurt like crazy.

Thursday, January 26, 2017

Altar of Resistance by Samuel Marquis - Author Spotlight Interview



Book Description:

The gripping story of the Italian Campaign and Nazi Occupation of Rome in 1943-1944 through the eyes of the Allies, the German Occupiers, Pope Pius XII and the Vatican, and the Roman Resistance. Book 2 of the bestselling, award-winning WWII Trilogy.


In this second thriller in the bestselling WWII Trilogy, the Eternal City of Rome during the Nazi Occupation of 1943-1944 is a besieged city. In this perilous wartime setting, Rome is a tinderbox of four conflicting parties:

• The Allies—represented by Major John Bridger of the American-Canadian First Special Service Force—trying to capture Rome as the first Axis prize of war but encountering stiff opposition 

• The Germans—represented by Waffen-SS Colonel Wilhelm Hollmann, the German father of John Bridger—trying to throw the Allies back into the sea while holding Rome hostage and using it as a staging ground and supply line to the front. 

• Pope Pius XII, deeply involved in the plot to remove Hitler from power while struggling to maintain Vatican impartiality, mediate between the West and Nazi Germany, save Rome from destruction, and protect the city’s Jews and others from extermination. 

• And finally, the Partisans represented by Teresa Kruger, daughter of Hollmann and half-sister of John Bridger, who during the German Occupation is transformed from a passive member of Rome’s 
aristocracy to an active Resistance fighter. 

Based on actual historical events and newly released OSS/CIA and KGB documents, Altar of Resistance recounts in detail the long, hard road that led to the Allied liberation of Rome. War is about simple survival, and Bridger and Teresa must battle their father and the Nazi occupiers in the name of freedom; while the Allies’ secret agent—Roman-born Pope Pius XII, leader of the Vatican’s Church of Spies and codenamed the “Chief”—orchestrates events behind the scenes in an effort to thwart German oppression, ensure the overthrow of the Führer, and usher in a viable post-Hitler government.



An Interview with Samuel Marquis 




1. Altar of Resistance is your sixth novel in a little over a year, and the second book in one of three very different series. That’s incredibly prolific—how do you stay disciplined and focused as a writer (especially while maintaining a career as a VP at an environmental consulting firm)? 


It’s not easy to juggle everything, but I do it because I love to write compelling stories. I also happen to have a backlog of seven very good thrillers since I have been at this for a few years and have had two New York literary agents. But the main reason I do it is because my father died a year ago anmy new motto is “I Ain’t Wasting Time No More” in honor of the legendary Allman Brothers’ song. Good stories need to be out there in the world, and it doesn’t matter how they get there. Indie, traditional, hybrid —they are, ultimately, all the same. It’s about the storytelling and nothing more. Compelling stories and compelling voices must be heard, and it doesn’t matter what road they take to reach out and touch readers. 


2. How does it feel to return once again to your WWII series (Book 1, Bodyguard of Deception, was released in March 2016)? Why is Altar of Resistance (Book 2 of the series) an important book? 


I love researching and writing WWII espionage thrillers most of all, but the genre does take a lot of hard work and the book readers tend to be some of my harshest critics (insert laughter). Altar of Resistance is a basically a history book, written as a thriller, covering the German Occupation of Rome and Italian Campaign of 1943-1945. It is an important subject for several reasons. First, the Italian Campaign—or the Guerra di Liberazione (War of Liberation) as Italians prefer to call it—was the only theater of operations that included a major world leader, Pope Pius XII, caught up not only in the middle of the fighting but in the midst of a Nazi occupation and a major plot to assassinate Adolf Hitler. Second, it involved the most diverse assemblage of nationalities and differing races among the Allied and Axis armies during WWII, including not only Americans (including Native -Americans, African -Americans, Hispanic-Americans, and Japanese -Americans), British, an d Germans in the 
fighting, but also Italians (on both sides), Austrians, Yugoslavians, French, Moroccans, Canadians, New Zealanders (whites and Maori), Poles, Nepalese, Indians (all faiths), South Africans (white, Asian, black, Zulus), and in the air forces, Australians, Rhodesians, and others. The war in Italy was a truly multinational and multiracial affair in a truly global war. Finally, the Italian Campaign showcased some of the most furious fighting of the war with over a million total casualties, including more than 300,000 Allied and 500,000 German casualties and over 150,000 Italian civilians killed 
. I wanted to recreate this monumental event in American and world history in a sprawling, epic spy thriller reminiscent of Ken Follett’s WWII novels. 


3. What are the biggest lessons you’ve learned so far during your ambitious and successful publishing journey? 


There is only one reason to be a suspense writer, and that’s to write great stories that resonate and will stand the test of time. Unless you’re a mega -bestselling author, there is certainly no reason to do it for the money. Telling compelling stories, then, is the sole justifiable reason to write novels that meets every litmus test. If you’re doing it for any other reason, you’re in the wrong business. It’s about the art of great storytelling and nothing else. 


4. You mentioned that you are especially interested in military history and intelligence, specifically related to the Golden Age of Piracy, Plains Indian Wars, World War II, espionage, and the War on Terror. What is it about those subjects that fascinate you, and does that fascination influence your work? 


The short answer is that I’ve always loved history, especially the underdogs and iconoclasts of American history. I grew up watching classic World War Two movies and Westerns with my dad like The Great Escape, The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly, The Dirty Dozen, The Wild Bunch, Where Eagles Dare, and Patton. These movies had a profound impact on me and the stories I have come to tell. Because of this, it should come as no surprise that my books have been compared to The Great Escape, Public Enemies, The Day of the Jackal, and old-time Westerns. One reviewer said of my WWII thriller, Bodyguard of Deception:

 “Marquis throws in everything but the kitchen sink.”

 I consider that not a criticism, but a badge of honor, and a tribute to me and my late father and the movies we watched together growing up. Bodyguard of Deception is currently an Amazon Bestseller in Historical Thrillers, as well as a Top 10 Best World War II Spy Book and Top 10 Fiction Book Set During WWII on Goodreads, along with such WWII thrillers as Follett’s Eye of the Needle and The Key to Rebecca, Daniel Silva’s The Unlikely Spy, and Ben Mcintyre’s Agent Zigzag and Double Cross. 





5. Who are your greatest literary influences? 

In terms of literature and literary fiction, I am a great admirer of Hawthorne, Fitzgerald, Hemingway, Steinbeck, A.B. Guthrie, Jr., Michael Shaara, Larry McMurtry, E.L. Doctorow, and Charles Frazier. For non-fiction my roster of greats includes Erik Larson, Robert Utley, Stephen Ambrose, Kevin Duffus, Shelby Foote, Ben Macintyre, S.C. Gwynne, and Hampton Sides. My favorite commercial fiction writers are Frederick Forsyth, Gore Vidal, James Clavell, Dennis Lehane, Barry Eisler, Daniel Silva, Preston and Child, Ken Follett, Stephen Hunter, and Richard North Patterson. I tend to gravitate towards authors who tell stories in the same way I do and to subject matter dealing with my areas of research interest in pirates, the Plains Indian Wars, World War II, espionage, the War on Terror, and modern science with a geological, biological, or paleontological component. 



6. What is the number one thing you want readers to take away from your novel? 

I want people to root for the underdog. All of my books feature underdogs, iconoclasts, and sympathetic villains that are torn up inside on account of the havoc-causing decisions they are forced to make. I also want the reader to come away having learned something, whether it be about WWII spy tradecraft, German POW camps in America, the CIA and modern-day espionage, deep well fracking and earthquakes, political assassinations, or the book publishing industry with warts and all.



Don't Miss the First book in Samuel's World War Two Trilogy



Book Description:

Can the American and British Allies stop a vaunted German spymaster and his U-boat-commander brother from warning Hitler's High Command about the Allies' greatest military secret? It is a secret that could win the war for Germany--or, at the very least, delay the outcome for years with an inestimable cost in bloodshed, physical destruction, and suffering. And it is a secret that the two contentious brothers must grapple with within their own Wehrmacht ranks, as they bring U.S. and British intelligence to their knees on America's doorstep with the clock to D-Day ticking down. From a U-boat on the frigid North Sea to a brutal British interrogation center in heart of London to a
remote German-POW camp and the world-famous Broadmoor Hotel overlooking the high plains and snow-dusted mountain peaks of Colorado, Bodyguard of Deception will keep you guessing until the final chapter.




Samuel Marquis is a bestselling, award-winning suspense author. An Expert Witness in groundwater contaminant hydrology, he works by day as a VP-Hydrogeologist with an environmental firm in Boulder, CO, and by night as a spinner of suspense yarns. His first two thrillers, The Slush Pile Brigade and Blind Thrust, were both #1 Denver Post bestsellers, and his first three novels received national book award recognition. The Slush Pile Brigade was an award-winning finalist in the mystery category of the Beverly Hills Book Awards. Blind Thrust was the winner of the Next Generation Indie Book Awards in the suspense category, an award-winning suspense finalist of both the USA Best Book Awards and Beverly Hills Book Awards, and a Foreword Reviews' Book of the Year award finalist (thriller & suspense). His third novel, The Coalition, was the winner of the Beverly Hills Book Awards for a political thriller.

Former Colorado Governor Roy Romer said, "Blind Thrust kept me up until 1 a.m. two nights in a row. I could not put it down. An intriguing mystery that intertwined geology, fracking, and places in Colorado that I know well. Great fun." James Patterson compared The Coalition to The Day After Tomorrow, the classic thriller by Allan Folsom. Donald Maass, author of Writing 21st Century Fiction and two novels, compared The Coalition to The Day of the Jackal. Other book reviewers have compared Bodyguard of Deception to the spy novels of John le Carré, Daniel Silva, Ken Follett, and Alan Furst. The first thriller in Mr. Marquis's World War Two Trilogy, Bodyguard of Deception is currently a Top 10 Best World War II Spy Book and Top 10 Fiction Book Set During WWII on Goodreads along with such WWII thrillers as Follett's Eye of the Needle and The Key to Rebecca, Daniel Silva's The Unlikely Spy, and Ben Mcintyre's Agent Zigzag and Double Cross.

Mr. Marquis lives in Colorado with his wife and three children and he plays competitive lacrosse, hikes, and skis on weekends when he isn't writing.