I Go Geek and Get Gushy With Thriller Writer Linda Rohrbough

This has been the fortnight of Linda Rohrbough. I blogged about her last week, we talked on the phone, and now the interview. I can’t say enough about what Linda Rohrbough has done for me. I am gushing. Because if you’ve met Linda Rohrbough, you know what a dynamo she is, how kind, how giving, how smart, how funny, how incredible. If you haven’t met Linda Rohrbough, and you are a writer, you will meet her. Because she is ubiquitous. Omnipresent. Omniscient. Eternal. Yeah, Linda Rohrbough is an incarnation of Vishnu. Is that blasphemous? I don’t care. I am now going to pour yak’s milk on her effigy and burn clarified butter in her name. Okay, that is blasphemous.

Linda Rohrbough has been writing since 1989, and has more than 5,000 articles and seven books to her credit along with national awards for her fiction and non-fiction. New York Times #1 bestselling author Debbie Macomber said about Linda’s new novel: “This is fast-paced, thrilling, edge-of-the-seat reading. The Prophetess One: At Risk had me flipping the pages and holding my breath.” The Prophetess One: At Risk recently won two national awards: the 2011 Global eBook Award and the 2011 Millennium Star Publishing Award. An iPhone App of her popular “Pitch Your Book” workshop is available in the Apple iTunes store. Visit her website: www.LindaRohrbough.us.

Now, Linda has been in the publishing game for a long time. But fiction, well, her first book, The Prophetess One: At Risk, came out last year. It’s a thriller, yo, not supernatural, just a thriller, but it’s been given awards and it’s been given praise, and here we are, to talk about it.

Here is the link to Amazon, but don’t go there yet. No, because Linda is going to tell you all about her book.

Aaron: Talking books is talking in pitches. And Linda Rohrbough does a life-changing pitch session, and no, I am not using hyperbole. There has been zero hyperbole in this whole darn blog so far. Um, that might have been hyperbole there. Anyway, so, Linda, what is your pitch for The Prophetess?

Linda: Let me add here, before I get started, that Aaron is fun to read in print. But when he does his hyperbole in person, he does it with his pony-tailed, tongue-in-cheek manner that charms a crowd in a fresh way. I thought a group of writers listening to him speak at a conference last year were going to fall out of their seats they were laughing so hard. His delivery is half the fun. So if you get a chance to hear him in person, take it. Now on to my pitch . . .
In a quiet Kansas college town, a very pregnant computer programmer uncovers gifts from God that lead her across middle-eastern terrorists who are training lost teenage boys to be assassins. She learns that not only does her unborn child need her, but he needs her husband, too. And the theme of the book is, “Men are important in the lives of children.”

Aaron: Another pitching question, I ain’t done yet. Like the bio said, you have a pitching app even. Okay, let’s say you were approached by a biker gang, leather, chains, tattoos of “Cuz my mama didn’t love me” on their arms. And they say, “Writer, eh, whatcher book about?” How would you pitch to them? In other words, does your pitch change given your audience? How so? Give examples?

Linda: It does. If I’m talking to women, I emphasize the paranormal aspects. That’s what you and I as writers call it, but the average Joe calls it that knowing in your gut. So I’d start the pitch by asking, “Have you ever had a feeling you just couldn’t shake that something bad was going to happen?” They always nod yes. “So does my heroine in The Prophetess.” Then I launch into my pitch. But I pause at points to give them a chance to respond, which isn’t usually much – a nod, a “wow,” or some acknowledgement. Because I want to be having a conversation, not a monologue.
Now in the case of your biker dude, men, even biker dudes, are taken by the idea that the books’ theme is men are important in the lives of children. In fact, I’ve had men take the book away from their wives and hog it until they’re finished – just because of that single statement. Men know they’ve been ousted from the lives of children and they instinctively want to know why a woman would say that and how it plays out in the novel.

Aaron: And yeah, question #3, still pitching. If you were going to do a super bad pitch of your book, what would that sound like? Give me the awkward, newbie, writer pitch.

Linda: Well, uh, there’s Anna and she met Jack in California and they got like married real fast. And she’s real uncomfortable being pregnant so she can’t wait to get out of Kansas to some beach town when Jack graduates. Only they don’t have any money hardly, and really, he’s not going to make enough to get them there. But she has her dreams – all these fish in her apartment, especially one named Harold, a beta that she keeps in a bowl next to her bed. And now she’s transplanted to this super miserable hot little town where she works as a programmer in the basement of the only hospital. (If anyone is still listening right now, and they probably wouldn’t be, but a newbie would go on with) They go to this couple’s baby shower where Anna doesn’t know anyone and Jack says don’t say any of that weird stuff you’ve been saying. And she agrees, only when they get in there she meets the pastor’s wife and another gal and . . .(okay I’m going to put you out of your misery now and quit).
I call this, “Telling Braveheart.” In my courses, I talk about the time I was riding in the car with my brother from Estes Park to Morrison and he’d just seen the movie Braveheart. So in the awkwardness of the car ride, he decides to tell me the entire movie, start to finish. I thought it would never end. What is it about someone telling you a movie? I still to this day don’t understand anything he told me, even though I have since seen Braveheart. Well, that’s what new writers do. They “tell Braveheart” – try to pitch their story by telling the whole thing, beginning to end, instead of synopsizing the salient points in a manner a listener can understand and follow. Now in defense of newbees, it’s a completely different set of skills to write a book than to talk about a book. Which is why I developed my “Pitch Your Book” workshop in the first place.

Aaron: Now, as we all know, it takes awhile to write a book. The Prophetess has lots of technology in it. I mean, not tons. It’s not written in binary or C++ or anything. But as you revised your book, did you have to update it because of the technology? Did that change key plot points?

Linda: Yep, absolutely. I began the original manuscript over a dozen years ago, and back then every dirt poor college kid didn’t have a cell phone. Very few people had them. So when I got an agent and then an editor interested in the book, I realized I was going to have to address this problem. Because no matter how poor a college kid is these days, there’s a cell phone involved. And a married couple who are as technically literate as these two would each have their own. But it’s a major component of the story that they don’t have phone access of any kind for a period of time. So how to accomplish that? Then I was hanging out with my twenty-something daughter and she lost her cell phone one week and then dropped and broke it the next. And I thought, that’s it. These kids are always breaking and losing their phones. All I have to do is have Jack break his phone, borrow Anna’s and then drop and break hers. Easy as pie. And believable.

Aaron: Okay, my day job is with McKesson, the greatest company on the planet, and as all you nurses out there know, McKesson is huge in the healthcare I.T. department. Let’s say I’m hiring. Let’s say I’m smoking a big cigar, in my corner office, looking for a new recruit. Do you think your heroine, Anna McClintock, would do well in a job interview? What would she say? Would I hire her? What could she do for me? And no, there was no innuendo in that question. Don’t be naughty. The erotica interview was last week.

Linda: Anna ain’t that kind of gal, Mr. Ritchey. (And actually, anyone who knows you knows you ain’t that kind of guy, either.) Anna would ask questions. She would ask what you see the perfect technology person in your organization would bring to the table. She’s too smart to walk into your office and offer to change the operation. She knows you like the operation the way it is, that you’re proud of it, and with good reason. She’ll be smart enough to point to some of the things she’s seen that are impressive to her. But she’d have some ideas for how she could serve your team to get the results you want. Which is why, in the book, she’s uncomfortable with the changes she is proposing to the hospital’s website, but she knows they need to happen. So she goes out on a limb. And you know what happens.

Aaron: How did you come up with the name of Anna McClintock? Are you a John Wayne fan? Um, ‘cause there was the movie, McClintock. I’m showing my age.

Linda: To be frank, I just made it up. Ran names through my head and through baby naming books until I found what felt right. I had the character before I had the name. She needed a short first name. And I like those tough sounding “Mc” start names. Anna is tough. So is Jack, for that matter.

Aaron: I must say, what really grabbed me in the first act of your book was how you portrayed your heroine Anna, a young pregnant woman, newly married, struggling to balance the emotions of her husband, the physical stress of pregnancy, and her career. Not to get too personal or serious, but what stylistic choices did you make to flesh out your heroine?

Linda: Stylistic choices. Well, I’ve been pregnant in Kansas while my husband was an engineering student. And I’ve lived in the married student housing. Not at KSU, but at Kansas State, which is not far down the road. I think, though, with any character, you have to slide down inside their skin and look out at the world from their eyeballs. And I did that with all my characters. Like what would it would feel like to be Theo, watching Dr. Moody from the side of the ER? What did the air feel like, the floors, the chairs, what did it smell like? What would it be like to be Dr. Moody, making calls from his desk with the photo of his son within reach? Reliving the tragedy in his life.

Aaron: Now to get a little more serious, being a native Coloradoan exiled in North Carolina (there are worse places to be exiled), did the Columbine tragedy play into your novel in any way? It seems to me, some of the characters and some of the feel of the book reminded me of young, troubled minds, slipping into madness.

Linda: You know we lost my husband’s nephew, Daniel Rohrbough, at Columbine. And I was there right afterward. From the call that evening, after watching the Columbine shooting on the news and thinking I grew up with people who live right there – I’ve been in that neighborhood, walked the path around Johnson Reservoir and through Clements Park, both of which are right behind the school. To the call that evening from my husband’s parents and his brother who said Danny is missing but he would never scare his mother like this, so they assumed the worst. Asked us to come. At the time we lived in Dallas. Boarding a plane with my two kids feeling kind of numb and I wondered what in the world I could contribute to this insane set of events. Then later at the funeral home staring at this young man, I realized how much he looked like my husband at the same age (I’d met my husband when I was fourteen and he was fifteen). I had to leave the viewing room.
Then there were the odd things that my journalist mind just couldn’t let go of. Like how Colin Powell was at the memorial service the next day, on the platform between Amy Grant and Phil Driscoll, in full military dress. But he was never announced and he never spoke.
I followed the news reports for years afterward. How the Columbine shooters said theirs would be the first and best of many school shootings and wondering how could they know that. Noting that they low-level formatted the hard disk drive of their computer before they went out to shoot, as did a number of other school shooters that came along later. But they left a website and pages of letters and documentation, so what was it they didn’t want anyone to find?
This article, run by the Austin-American Statesman, says more about what I found and the connection between Al-Qaeda and school shootings. My heart breaks for those folks in Ohio. But that this is exactly what I’m talking about. I believe it’s preventable when we get educated on what to look for. I’m sure the authorities are going to find out T.J. Lane had lots of alone time on the internet. And I wouldn’t be surprised at all to learn he started a low-level format of the computer’s hard disk drive before he went on his shooting spree. This is a pattern. And it’s about with lost boys who are looking for male role models and are finding them in the wrong places.

Aaron: Uh, well, since we’re getting serious and personal, might we go a little deeper? How did your personal life affect the themes in The Prophetess? So, what are the themes in the book? And why do you think I’m asking questions backwards? Have I switched to Yoda-mode? Your book, you will tell me the themes of, please. Young Jedi. A little humor.

Linda: I’ve already mentioned all the research I did that put all this data in my head. And there were the “what if’s?” I wanted to have someone very helpless to face off with the monsters, that weren’t really monsters but wounded people trying to cope. And how we get to choose what to do with the wounds life hands us. And maybe there is a purpose when it looks like insanity all around. But it was the helplessness that appealed to me. Frankly, I never felt more helpless than when I was pregnant. Plus a pregnant person is custodian of a life and that’s a strength in weakness kind of thing. That felt important too.

Aaron: If there was one emotion you wanted your readers to take away, what would it be? For me, after they read my book, I would want them to feel the uncontrollable urge to buy a dozen more copies to give to their friends. But that’s me. I’m assuming you have less mercenary wishes for your readers as they read those last, few important sentences.

Linda: I was not thinking about an uncontrollable urge to buy more copies. (You are funny.) I did want to take my readers into a world with fast-paced action and have them experience things that would stick with them. For example, it’s an important question to ask did we throw out the baby with the bathwater when men left the lives of their children for the work-a-day world? My husband and I had sort of an unspoken agreement that I would raise the kids while he was off in the corporate world fighting the good fight long hours every day and on weekends and I think that hurt our kids. Or, for example, when we allowed the salaries of teachers relative to the economic conditions to stagnate so a man cannot be a teacher and still comfortably raise a family. I do think it’s important to take another look at what’s going on around us and realize we can make different choices. And to ask ourselves is this what we really want?
By-the-way, readers, you should know Aaron is a devoted dad to his two beautiful daughters. He’s there every day, involved, reading bedtime stories, helping his oldest daughter with her writing (yes, she’s becoming a budding writer as well), playing with them and teaching them shoulder-to-shoulder with his lovely and smart wife Laura. And yet, he does the corporate thing. And is a writer in his own right. He’s a great dad role model.

Aaron: Aw, shucks. Well, the love-fest must now come to an end. Thank you so much, Linda, for the interview! And folks close to Colorado Springs, Linda will be at the Pikes Peak Writers Conference in April, doing her pitching workshop. Her bad example had me laughing out loud! People at the Starbucks glared at me, but let them glare, that’s what I say.
Thanks again, Linda!

Follow Linda on twitter.
Like her on Facebook.
Linda’s Books.

 

Holy Action! Angels and Demons on Film

Chris Devlin, you say?  Really.  Do you know Chris Devlin?  She is an angel.  On Monday, I blogged about angels, real angels, and I talked about Linda Rohrbough.  Who I am currently interviewing.  I could do a week of posts on Chris Devlin.  I would not be the writer I am today without her.  I wouldn’t be half the man I am today.  Not a quarter.  She is the literal wind beneath my wings. Yeah, I’m tearing up right now.  A little about Devlin.  She never sleeps.  She is kind to a fault.  She has lots of friends.  And she helps me.  Lord, does she help me.  Like today.  She is kicking off my Heavenly Friday blog post by blogging on angels.  One more thing about the Devil in Devlin.  She is kind of a media-T.V.-movie-Buffy-the-Vampire-Slayer-Battlestar-Galactica-all-things-Joss-Whedon junky.  And when I say junky, I mean hardcore.  And away we go.  Take it Devlin!

Devlin here. Aw, the things Aaron says. I’m getting all verklempt. Like, Buffy Season 3, prom episode verklempt. Quick, let’s talk about pop culture.

My friend Aaron has written an awesome book about the age-old war in heaven between angels and demons, The Never Prayer. Here are some more badass messengers of heaven and action heroes of hell. (I do more blogging about pop culture at chrisdevlinwrites.com.)

 

Hammiest Lucifer
Tie: Robert De Niro as Louis Cypher (geddit?) in Angel Heart and Al Pacino as the most demony ‘adversary’ of them all in The Devil’s Advocate.

Best Angel Name
Clarence Oddbody; It’s a Wonderful Life

Most Beautifully Filmed Angels
Wim Wender’s Wings of Desire

Hottest Angels
Cary Grant as Dudley; The Bishop’s Wife
Misha Collins as Castiel; Supernatural
Paul Bettany as Michael; Legion
David Boreanaz as Angel: Angel (Okay, he wasn’t really an angel, per se, though he was a demon. And he was certainly hot.)

 

Scariest Demon Ever
The one in Paranormal Activity
Respectable Second Place Scariest Demon Ever
Pazuzu; The Exorcist

Best Gabriel
Tie: Christopher Walken in The Prophecy and Tilda Swinton in Constantine
Walken is, of course, Walken and he does his thing with a wink and a vicious smile as he saunters through the mortal world, looking for an evil human soul. He even blows a trumpet as a glibly homicidal Gabriel. But Tilda Swinton holds her own as another fallen Gabriel in Constantine as she plays in some serious heavenly traffic. Bonus points for the androgynous-fabulous suits.

Most Intentionally Funny Demons
Evil Dead II

Most Unintentionally Funny Demon
Azazel; Fallen

Best Sid Vicious Leather-Cool Demon
Pinhead; Hellraiser

Hottest Homo-erotic Subtext
Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt; Interview With The Vampire

 

 

 

 

 

Demon We’d Most Like to Play Kitten Poker With
Clem: Buffy the Vampire Slayer

Best Vision of Hell
The scorched-and-burned post-apocalyptic Mad Max movie on fire in Constantine.

Okay, who’d I miss? Who are your favorite demons, angels and those where you can’t tell the difference?

I Get Sweaty, Scared, and a Little Demony with author Betsy Dornbusch

I gotta say, this latest interview had me sleeplessly walking the alleys and streets of the rougher parts of west Littleton. Westside, yo.  I was going to interview Betsy Dornbusch.  She’s not just a writer, she’s a veteran writer.  I’d seen her at writer’s conferences and she is ferocious.  But in a good way.  She’s tough, she’s smart, she has savvy.  And she writes, under a pseudonym–gulp–erotica.  Would interviewing an erotic writer tarnish my YA persona?  Could I keep my interview PG-13?  Would there be nudity?  Would I have to show some skin?  I’m okay with that last one, but really, would time and space break apart?

I am a small man, easily frightened.  Betsy was wonderful.  She has two, count ‘em, two new books out, with sequels in the works.  She’s one of those lifelong writers, completing her first novel at the tender age of 13.  When I was 13, I could hardly spell.  I was a deaf-mute at 13.  A fragile child, prone to spells of…well, never you mind about my spells. But enough about me.

From her Amazon bio.  Betsy Dornbusch’s most recent book is Sentinel: Archive of Fire, the first of her urban fantasy series featuring demons rebelling against Asmodai, King of Hell. Her short fiction has appeared in many print and online venues, including the anthology Deadly by the Dozen and, under the pen name Ainsley, Sexy Briefs; Tasty Little Tails. Also writing as Ainsley, she has a space “operotica” series, Salt Road Saga, the first of which is  Lost Prince. The second book in that series, Battle Royal, will be released in late 2012. She’s an editor with the ezine Electric Spec and is the sole proprietor of Sex Scenes at Starbucks where you can believe most of what she writes. In her free time, she snowboards and air jams at punk rock concerts.

So two books on tap.

 

Lost Prince  Okay.  Sci-fi/space opera/erotica.  I’m thinking Han Solo and Leia on Endor, the celebration fires burning low, the Emperor dead.  A kiss, a caress, a lingering, smoldering look.

And Sentinel: Archive of Fire, which has awesome cover art and hot twin demon guys, and is not, I repeat, not erotica.  It’s straight up Urban Fantasy, yo.

 

 

 

So we’re talking books, business, and babes.  Well, prolly not babes, but you never know.  I’m a married spud!  I’m a married spud!  I started out quoting Toy Story.  That should keep this exchange innocent.

Aaron: I’ll start off clean.  Do you prefer Times New Roman, or Courier New?  Please explain and keep your answer safe, innocent, and virginal.

Betsy: Actually, I like to rock it Bookman Oldstyle. Sounds like a smooth American malt whiskey, doesn’t it?  Oh, so much for innocent…

Aaron: Okay, frak the clean questions.  Let’s get dirrrty.  So the Lost Prince has sex, and the Sentinel: Archive of Fire, not so much sex.  But I’m assuming there is a love scene in Archive of Fire.  I mean, even Willow on Buffy the Vampire Slayer tried to seduce her werewolf boyfriend.  When you aren’t writing erotica, and you have a love scene, do you write the scene graphically first, then go back and take out key words and phrases, like tumescent (kidding), or do you write it with the shades drawn first time around?  Put another way, do you raunch it up and then cut back, or leave out the raunch in the very first draft?

Betsy: There is a love scene in Archive of Fire. I’d say it’s gone the other direction in that it’s gained some, er, detail since I started writing erotica. Everyone has a love interest in the Sentinel series but most of “it” goes on behind closed doors. That said, if I think showing the action in a love scene is integral to the plot, then I show it. That’s key in writing erotica…in Lost Prince the sex shows a progression in the relationship. (Actually, in most proper erotica, the story revolves around the sex).  Also, I write for adults primarily, though when I was twelve or so I’d launched into reading the adult market. Of course when I was twelve there was no real YA market, and very few middle grades with cool girl protags.

Aaron: If you wrote a crossover novel where the characters of Lost Prince fought the characters of Archive of Fire, who would win?  Ah, the seductions.  The intrigues.  The drama.  The bloodshed.  How would it all play out?  I mean, laser swords and blasters versus magic, fangs, and fear, well, is it an even match?  Any illicit love affairs?

Betsy: Funny that you say that, since I actually play-write with a friend in an online world in which characters from Archive of Fire and her book all mingle. They’ve gotten married, had kids (gulp), fight, and yes, sometimes have illicit love affairs. We also get to indulge ourselves with things like having them sit down and eat leisurely meals together, which is like the kiss of death in today’s quick-paced fiction market. It’s a free range playzone for us to develop characters. Saxen, a character who figures prominently in  AOF’s sequel, Archive of Earth, (see what I’m doing there…?) was invented entirely in this world.

As for tech vs magic… Aidan doesn’t have magic. He is a Seer. He can read minds and predict the future, though erratically because he’s immature and untrained. But those things make for a pretty handy skillset in a fight. The demons in Sentinel fight other demons… They are rebelling against Asmodai, a king in Hell who has 72 legions.  Sentinel is one of those legions, but they rebelled to protect humankind. They are trained to fight from a young age, have first rate modern weaponry, plus in the second book Aidan learns to wield balefire (think napalm from Hell).

While Katriel and Aric are a formidable fighting team, as regular old humans they’re ultimately much easier to kill than the demidemons who are immortal and tough as nails. I think the demons might win, especially given Kaelin is a crack shot. He’d say there are few problems a well-placed bullet can’t solve. Actually, he wouldn’t say it out loud, but he’d think it. And Aidan would read his mind and spout off about it. Then Kaelin would get mad and beat him up again…sigh. Sibling rivalry is so tiresome. The book starts out with them having an argument.

Aaron: If you met me, and thought I was brilliant (big if there, I know), and I was looking for a venue for my short stories, how would you pitch Electric Spec to me?  If anyone skipped your bio, those wretches, Electric Spec is an ezine where you work as an editor.  How would you entice me to submit to you?  If I were brilliant.  Big if.

Betsy: The magazine stands on its own merit and I invite anyone to check it out. As for pitching to writers, each of our issues gets thousands of hits, so you’ll be read. But mostly, we’ve been around six years and we know our shi—um, we know our business. We edit every story and our slush pile is growing with every issue and is very competitive. Electric Spec aside, writers have traditionally cut their publishing teeth on short stories. It does several things: hones your writing, keeps you current with releases—(last year I had 3 short stories, I think, and two books, this year…not so much). Short story sales show agents and editors you’re serious and career-minded. Also novelists are frequently asked to be in anthologies so writing them is a good skill to cultivate. I was asked to be in a free anthology last year and had to write a story in two days for it. The anthology has since been downloaded over 10,000 times in the past few months, resulting in an upsurge in sales for me. I wouldn’t have been able to bang out a story so quick if I hadn’t spent a solid year writing and selling short stories only. Short stories are something I want to get back into writing, but they are excruciating for me for some reason. And being a pureblooded creative, I’m a procrastinator, natch. Hence, Facebook and the blogging scene. Even books are easier to write cuz they can meander. Finishing books is hard.

Aaron: You’ve been blogging since 2004.  In blog time, that is roughly 3.5 million years.  Right around the start of Facebook (2004) and well before Twitter (2006).  Did it take you long to jump into the new social media, or did you know, right away, yes, this is the future?

Betsy: I think I knew. I tend to jump in (I got on gmail back in the day, and Google+ more recently, as soon as I could wrangle an invite and yes, I’m terribly behind on adding folks to my circles, sorry!)  I think G+ is the wave for the truly creative among us, especially the technically creative. (There, a prediction.) Facebook can’t scale and hasn’t for a long time…most people have no idea how much they’re missing from their internet based feeds. I got on Facebook in Aught-6 or 7 I think, and found it to be a huge timesuck so I dropped my account. I reestablished an account in… 09, I think? It’s still a timesuck and it alternately annoys and amuses me. Like this morning someone got waaay too serious about something political I posted. Annoying. But then people say the funniest things. I’m on Twitter but more as a “post-through” as it’s set up to hit my other social media. I rarely read Twitter. It consists of nearly all links. Yawn. It does come in handy at the huge cons to figure out where the parties are though! I use social media (SM, soc-med, so-me…what are the cool kids calling it these days?) to establish myself as a brand. Social media does not sell books. It doesn’t have that kind of reach. G+ is set up differently with the circles and may yet achieve the reach traditional media has; I think that might be one of the goals, knowing Google.

The demise of blogging saddens me. Not that blogs are going away, there are still more badly written blogs than awful self-published Kindle titles, but I miss the in-depth discussions on blogs. Facebook doesn’t compare and anyone who says it does never really blogged in the heyday of it, when friendships were formed. I made one of my bffs online through blogging, back in the day. But it does amuse me that you think I started so long ago. I have tech friends who were blogging almost 20 years ago!

Aaron: Speaking of social media, did you ever make a mistake that you thought might be devastating to your writing career? The reason why I ask is that I’m terrified of breaking internet etiquette rules.  No, seriously, terrified.  See the intro. Scared, little man here.

Betsy: I always cringe when I get into hotheaded political discussions (and I often remove them from Facebook).  I was anon for a number of years at Sex Scenes, which lent me a certain freedom. We all were anon, and it was all free-love and free-hate all the time, man. When I started selling stories, my names started getting linked up in the googles (Sex Scenes at Starbucks and my real name). Then my picture was put online in a Locus spread so I was well and truly blown. Now I’m pretty out there, figuratively and literally, and I don’t make apologies for it. People who don’t share liberal social politics wouldn’t like my stuff anyway.

That said, I am very conscious I have to manage a public persona (to a small public but still). Some of that persona is a little out-there; I can push the limits online and I find it enhances my popularity. And I’m pretty liberal socially. If you aren’t you probably wouldn’t like my stuff so much anyway. I try not to worry about it too much.

Aaron: Do you think writing and the desire to write is a curse, or a blessing?  A burden, or a blessing?  A wretched task we are enslaved to do every day whether we want to or not, or a blessing?  Not that I have any strong opinions.  Just curious about what other, happier writers might think.

Betsy: It’s both a disease-riddled, spouse-annoying, compulsion on par with digging our own graves and a holy, God-given redemptive gift. I find both chains and wings on the empty page. But mostly for me, writing is a license to be weird. The worst part is the demons keeping me up at night. I’m not big on sleep anyway so I get a little territorial about my shut-eye. The demons could care less. They just barge right in. Typical demons.

Aaron: I’ve been watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer, obsessively.  Okay, well, maybe not obsessively, but I’ve been streaming it off Netflix for 72 hours straight.  Is that obsessive?  Anyway, in Archive of Fire, are your demons like the demons coming out of the Hellmouth on Buffy?  If you haven’t watched the show, hum for a little bit, while I shuffle my index cards.  Or, explain how demons work in the world of Archive of Fire.  Are they spirits that take corporeal form?  Or are they physical beings that come into our world from hell?  Or a mix of both?

Betsy: They are demidemons, half demon, half human, though our twins’ family have been bred through the ages to be almost pure blooded demon. Mostly they look like super-hot, tall humans with eyes that get a little glowy sometimes. Oh, and they are very bitey. During sex, during fights, their inner animal comes out.

Aaron: What rule of internet etiquette pisses you off the most when someone breaks it?  So I can avoid such a gaff at all costs.

Betsy: When some guy I don’t know (usually a guy…well, most of the time) IMs me on Facebook for the express purpose to hit on me, and especially when they deny it when I call them on it. I’m ten years older than I’m told I look and I’ve been married for twenty years. Don’t waste your time.

Aaron: Speaking of internet etiquette, I got busted for saying I’d want to date Willow from Buffy the Vampire Slayer.  Now, I meant, if I were in high school, and I was that age, and not married, but still, the emails I got.  I shudder.  If you were in the same situation as Aidan and Kaelin from Archive of Fire, which one would you go for?  Or would you go for both of them?  Naughty, it’s so naughty, both of them.  I try and delete, but my fingers keep re-typing.

Betsy: Why is that naughty? I’m pretty much about free love between consenting adults, however it pans out. I’m especially for it in fiction, and if I may climb up on a soap box for a second and direct readers to a blog post about PayPal’s recent efforts at censorship.

As for your question: Two for the price of one, man.

Actually, I don’t know how well Aidan and I would get along. He often annoys the hell out of me. Kaelin would probably feel more comfortable with me because he likes people who talk a lot so he doesn’t have to. In that same vein, there has been some discussion as to which twin is on the cover of the book. I know what I think but we’ll see what readers say.

Aaron: What is an image that comes to mind when thinking about Lost Prince?  For example, when I think of The Empire Strikes Back, the central image I have is Han Solo being frozen in the carbonite.  “I love you.”  “I know.”  And me, crying in the audience.  What pops into your head when you think about Lost Prince?  Uh oh, um, well, within reason.  I mean, don’t get too graphic.  This is me, blushing.  Garsh.  If it’s all too difficult, um, what image do you think of when you think of The Empire Strikes Back?

Betsy: I think it’s when Katriel and Aric are fighting together in her little Salt transport skip that’s retrofitted with guns and some crappy battle tech. First: dogfights in space! Who doesn’t love that? Also, she’s the pilot and he’s the gunner and they’re perfectly in sync. For them it’s almost like sex… maybe it brings them closer than sex, actually. Their real sex is kind of…combative.

Aaron: Last question.  Huge Hollywood producer calls you up, and says ,”Betsy, babe, we wanna make one of your novels into a movie, big movie, and you get to decide which one?”  Would you go with Lost Prince, or Archive of Fire? Which would you choose and why would you choose it?  And would you tell the guy not to call you babe?

Betsy: The Sentinel Series, hands down. I think the arc is interesting and original and the characters are compelling. I’ve been told often it would make great film. Lost Prince is too much a purposeful riff on Star Wars, of which I’m a huge fan. I wrote Lost Prince in homage to that story which gave me so much joy as a kid. (17 times in the theater that summer, baby, most in my school.)  While I’m doling out homage, I’d give a shout out to THE OUTSIDERS by S.E. Hinton. That book greatly informs my work as well. When I put Aidan and Kaelin and their cousins Marc and Jason together in a house on the beach, it’s me trying to relive Ponyboy and Co. all over again. Each of the four books has an artistic theme from pop or old culture. In Archive of Fire it is a painting called “The Execution of Lady Jane Grey.” (google it if you like—like Kaelin says, it’s creepy).

In Archive of Earth it’s Lost in Space. (the boys are watching old episodes on their phones and refer to it a lot). The Outsiders will get its turn too.

Thanks for having me. Stay gold, Ponyboy. Stay gold.

I can only hope to stay gold if I continue to be inspired by such fabulous people as Betsy.  Thanks again, Betsy, for the interview.  In the words of Johnny Beels, “It was spicy good.”

Thanks again.