I Get Patriotic and Religious with Australian Young Adult author Jacinta Maree

jacinta Profile picI Skyped with Australian Young Adult author Jacinta Maree, and I was the first American she has ever talked to face-to-face. I hope I represented the great country of the United States of American adequately. While we talked, I ate beef jerky, slurped on a 64 oz. Big Gulp full of a Monster energy drink, and cleaned my 7mm Remington hunting rifle. I had my bible prominently placed, but we’ll get to religion. Oh, yes, we will.

But first, more about Jacinta!

Self-confessed chocaholic Jacinta was born and raised in Melbourne, Australia, with her loving family of five. Even as a child, Jacinta had an itch to write. Writing was the one constant hobby she clung to, also trying her hand at piano, flute, tennis, horseback riding and drama. Jacinta works full-time in the family business and spends her afternoons either playing basketball, reading, writing, or hanging out with friends. She is always happy to try something new; getting her real estate license, practicing ninjitshu, Zumba and parkour to name a few. For her future, Jacinta sees herself writing. It is a large part of her identity and something she hopes to continue. Aside from her love of stories, she loves Japan and its unique and beautiful culture and history. From their delicious sushi dishes right down to their kimonos and wooden sandals. She is also a huge cat person and loves to snuggle up in front of the fire for a good movie or book. Her favorite genres are paranormal and fantasy but she also loves anything written by thriller writer Stephen King.

And here is where we get more on her debut novel, My Demonic Ghost. What’s the story, morning glory?

My-Demonic-Ghostfonts2Rachael has traveled to Whitehaven to visit her father, a trek she cannot help but dread given his recent descent into madness. Upon her arrival she realizes his deterioration has not only been mental, it’s been physical as well. His death comes as no surprise, but what she discovers soon after, is shocking when his burden becomes hers. Lock is a banished spirit who must attach himself to a human host in order to hide from those who would drag him back to hell to be destroyed. When he meets Rachael he finds more than a host, he finds an ally. Together they must defeat each of the seven sins in order to guarantee Lock’s safe passage into the Third Realm, a loophole in creation that would allow him to escape hell and have peace at long last. Through their unlikely friendship, other banished spirits flock to them in hopes of a peace they hadn’t dreamt possible.

Six months in the making, this interview was epic! We talked about atheism and God–which of course are subjects I adore as much as Americans adore semi-automatic assault rifles–Wrestlemania, beer, and monster truck rallies. And Jesus.

So let’s get to it! Hit me baby one more time.

Aaron: So, Jacinta, how did you hook up with Heather Savage? I interviewed her and she is the essence of awesome. Tell us a little about how that worked.

Jacinta: Heather Savage has been a fantastic mentor and role model since the moment I met her. Obviously due to the large distance of earth and water separating us, I could only get into contact with Heather over email but even so she managed to inspire me to become a better writer. I had been searching for reliable editing help to improve on my manuscript when I stumbled across Staccato. From the kick-off, Heather had been honest, helpful, cheerful and energetic when dealing with me (and my thousand and one questions). We would speak everyday about philosophy, karate, parkour and publishing. Call it luck or fate, I am very grateful to have met her and the team at Staccato.

heather savage

Aaron: You said when you were taken on by Heather, you wept. I was too shocked for tears when I got my first book deal. I usually save all my tears for Doctor Who, but yeah, anyway, why do you think you had such an emotional reaction?

Jacinta: I had been rejected and ignored by many Australian publishers before I reached Heather and so I had expected to get rejected again. I was careful to keep my hopes down. It’s hard not to take rejection personally and a way to protect myself I presumed rejection from everyone. I just kept telling myself, every no is just getting you closer to that yes. So when she dropped the bomb on me I wasn’t expecting it. It kind of hit me like a football to the nose; tears were swelling before I could comprehend what I was crying over. For a while I didn’t dare tell anyone outside my immediate family in case it was ‘too good to be true’.

Aaron: Like me, you had a hidden phase, where you wrote a bunch and didn’t show your work to anyone. Which project would you pick from your hidden phase that would make the best movie? Who would direct? What would the story be? Actors? Actresses? Soundtrack?

Jacinta: Oh no! The folder of shame. The only story that actually took form was one I had completed when I was in year seven. It was a strong 180 pages long and revolved around high school girls, witchery and the earthly elements. I had called it ‘Magic Goes Six Different Ways’ and it was about six unlikely friends who were born with supernatural powers embedded in their bodies. When they all formed together at their new high school, it was like a trigger had been tripped causing all the girls to slowly transform into super beings. It’s… ridiculous. No wonder I hid it.

Aaron: So you’ve had lots of projects, but what drove you to finish and polish up My Demonic Ghost? Why did that project make it?

Jacinta: The connection I had formed with My Demonic Ghost had saved it from the sinking ship. It just wouldn’t get out of my head no matter how long I spent away from it; it was like some consistent cough. My Demonic Ghost is unique and it has a powerful message behind it. I felt like if I didn’t tell this story then no one ever would.

Aaron: So for your character Lock, how did you get into the mind and soul of a fourteen-year-old boy? Did you watch lots of Star Wars and browse through lots of lingerie catalogs?

Jacinta: Ha ha ha, no I didn’t venture that far into the mind of a boy but I had studied theatre during my VCE so it was a bit easier for me to step into the shoes of other characters. I may not have dived into the interests of the common teenage boy but I did take every sentence Lock said and every reaction very seriously. He’s an incredibly strong character, one that I had based off Casper The Friendly Ghost movie originally before he started to morph into his own self. His personality came out naturally, like I had been friends with him for my entire life without knowing it.

Aaron: Every interview, I ask people what they don’t want to talk about, and you were trying to shy away from the religious aspect of your book. But you were a good sport and agreed we could talk a little about it. Okay, just a little. I love this stuff! And yeah, the angel in my book starts off as an atheist, and I myself am a Catholic-Hindu-Atheist. No. Really. Anyway, I’m dancing around the question. So we’ll just go there. You mentioned that the God in your book is corrupt. How so? And could you ever write a novel where you show some sort of divine force in a more positive light?

Jacinta: It is possible, I guess, but it’s not something that interests me. It’s been done to death. I want to write something unique and intriguing. My Demonic Ghost was an experiment for me; can I make angelic beings bad and have an audience cheer for the demons? Are people even interested in a story told from the monster’s side? It would’ve been easy if I had written the Banished spirits as noble, misunderstood creatures but I didn’t want that. I wanted them to be rude, temperamental, vicious and scary. I wanted them to have all these horrible demon qualities as well as good human traits and see if I could make the readers fall in love. The god is corrupted by greed and power, which is funny because that is a very human fault for a divine being to be guilty of.

uniformAaron: Like me, you went to a private Catholic school, all-girl. Well, I went to an all-boy, but you get my point. Going to all-boy Catholic school left me with an unhealthy interest in existential atheism, Star Wars, and lingerie catalogs, but I digress. How do you think your school affected your writing in My Demonic Ghost, or did it?

Jacinta: If I hadn’t gone to a Catholic School, ‘My Demonic Ghost’ probably wouldn’t have existed. I am an atheist, but even so, the possibility of spirits and the afterlife have fascinated me. And being an atheist may have helped with any spiritual conflict a person may encounter when trying to depict a God as bad. I wasn’t targeting any religion of course, hence why I created an afterlife system from scratch. I just borrowed ideas such as Angels, Demons and of course the Seven Sins.

Aaron: Last question, and this where you can let your creativity explode like a nuclear bomb dropped into the middle of a tsunami. You said you were a cradle writer and that you have no idea how you came to start writing. You didn’t have any relatives or friends who wrote, but you started it up like a bad habit. Make up a story, paranormal or not, that explains why you started writing at a very young age.

Jacinta:

True Version: I think my obsession with the written word had started when I was given one of those children’s books for my birthday, where the name of the protagonist is changed to the child’s name. I had been put into a book and the adventure of the ‘Jacinta’ inside that world was so incredible I wanted to explore more and more. So I started to write and I found it came naturally to me. My spelling, on the other hand, did not, so I was a writer who couldn’t spell. What are the odds? I had written my first story when I was in grade two and ever since I’ve kept going.

Fun Version:

I was born with a terribly embarrassing problem. Every time I tried to speak, my words would form knots in my mouth. I had become a one-man freak show, stuttering and blurting out the wrong words and stumbling through my sentences like a clumsy waiter. I would practice in my head every night, breaking the sentence down so I was able to pronounce it properly the next time I spoke. My delays in natural speech gave the other children the impression I was slow, so in the end I just stopped speaking all together. By the time I had reached the age of eight I had forgotten how to speak altogether.

When I couldn’t speak to my family, I instead wrote. I wrote everything I was thinking, everything that I was seeing and doing and soon my words formed stories. Through the written path, I wasn’t an outcast but a hero charging into battle on top of a dragon. I was a mystical princess charming the birds to do tasks for me. I was powerful and confident. Through literature I was able to gather my confidence back up to take on the task of speaking. Day by day, I got stronger and I would practice in secret, reading my stories aloud in a confident voice. For the first time in a long time, I was able to greet my mother at the door with a gentle ‘Hello’.

 

Aaron: Thanks so much to Jacinta Maree!

jacinta2

 

Jacinta’s blog
Her Facebook author page
Jacinta’s Deviant Art page
On Goodreads
Smashwords author page
On Amazon

 

 

But hey, both Jacinta and I are going to Romantic Times Book Lovers Convention in Kansas City, baby, May 2013! She’s road-tripping down from Minneapolis, like a good American, fueling the journey on Cherry-Coke Slurpees and Cheetohs. God bless, America! I can’t wait to see Jacinta and all my friends again!

 

 

I Get Empathic and Stutter with Publishing Icon Heather Savage

I met Heather Savage from Staccato Publishing at Romantic Times this past year and she is a nuclear explosion of power and publication. And caring. Can a nuclear blast be caring? Most definitely, if you’re talking about Heather, who like many of us poor writers, started out in life scribbling and when her day job turned slow, started her YA Paranormal novels, the Empath trilogy. Which lead her into the world of publishing, and while most might have turned all their attention to their own work, Heather started Staccato Publishing, to help the rest of us.

When I asked her which she wanted to focus on, the Empath trilogy or Staccato Publishing for this interview, she said one lead directly into the other, so this is going to be a blended interview. Like a Frappuccino. Yum, it’s summer, Frappuccinos. Okay. Must. Focus.

HK Savage has been a voracious reader of anything she could get her hands on going back to the second grade when she would set her alarm two hours early to read before school. Her passion for the written word has continued and flowed into writing going back nearly as far. Her books have fans in twenty countries on six continents with hopes of attracting attention on Antarctica if for no other reason than to check a box.

Staccato Publishing

Currently, HK is a mother, wife and black belt in Karate as well as an avid dressage rider. Her three dogs: a Doberman she uses for therapy dog work and two ancient Doxies keep her busy when she is not writing or working or whatever else.

In addition to editing for the past ten years in advertising, HK has been an editor for several newsletters over the years; her favorite being for Heifer International where her ideas were put into effect and complimented by those on high. Currently her skills are being focused on clients in the writing world.

Paranormal is her favorite genre and science fiction because both address the possibilities we have not yet realized and the darker things we have. Her favorite premise: “what if?”

Aaron: Heather. Hit me. Our conversations started out with what you studied in college. What did you study? How has that helped you in dealing with writing and authors?

Heather: I started in Biology until I realized it was hard so I switched to something a little easier: Psychology. With a minor in Religion I think the combo is a perfect setup for life and the bizarre writer’s mind that now controls me.

Aaron: Like many, when you get sucked into writing, you become extremely focused. No sleep. No food. IV fluids only. Before you know you are going to get into a project, are you ever reticent, or do you look forward to the obsessive madness?

Heather: Funny you ask that. Next week I’ve cleared the decks to start work in earnest on the follow up to my new series, The Path (March 2012). The Empath Trilogy is done and I’ve put it to bed but people are begging for more Claire and James as well as some of their other favorites. I’m honestly having a hard time getting my thoughts straight. Usually I am singularly focused to the point I turn off the phones and if it weren’t for an energetic puppy I would never even put on pants and go outside. I know that once I’m in that mode it will take over and I will have a terrible time pulling out. It’s almost painful to not be able to write once I get started. The guilt is somewhat assuaged by making dinner for the family and spending a few hours with them before packing them off to bed and staying up all night because “I’m on a roll.” My husband is very understanding.

Aaron: If I were the beleaguered father of three triplet toddler boys still mourning the loss of my wife who died in childbirth, how would you pitch the Empath trilogy to me?

Heather: I’m actually really bad at selling my books. If you were that poor man I would probably offer to watch the kids while you went to get a cup of coffee and do nothing but drool on yourself for an hour. No longer though, seriously, three boys? Sheesh!

Aaron: Since you have a ton of experience dealing with writers, which one of your characters from the Empath trilogy do you think would make the best writer? Which one would make the worst?

Heather: I think the best writer would have to be Henry. He’s crazy old and has had tons of experience and has a lot to be sorry for. His deep secrets and pain would make him a dark, brooding type while his revelation (sorry, can’t give you much but you learn WTH in book 3) would make it an inspiring read.

Worst would be Gina. She’s a little more than a bit player in books 1 and 2 but she’s balls-out crazy. It would read more like a manifesto and no one should read those except as case studies.

Aaron: Why did you start Staccato Publishing? Temporary madness? Cocaine addiction? Or did the angels come a-callin’?

Heather: If only I did coke then I could refuse to ever succumb to sleep. No, I started Staccato out of a need to help. It is the double-edged sword that I endlessly cut myself with. When I started down the writing rabbit hole I learned a lot. Not all of my mistakes were bad and I’ve learned a ton. Hearing other writers struggle as they navigate the landmines made me think that since I came from print advertising and editing, had a decade’s knowledge of printing, and now could add figuring out ISBNs to my repertoire, this progression to full on publishing nut was natural.

Aaron: In the writing community, there are those who read all their reviews, good and bad, and there are those who don’t. Do you read your reviews? I read mine, and I hate them all. The good ones aren’t good enough, the bad ones not scathing enough. But my grasp on reality is tentative.

Heather: I don’t think any fiction writer has a solid grasp on reality. Otherwise they are the Nicholas Sparks of the world and they blow. Did I say that out loud? Sorry. I prefer my mindless drivel a little more, I don’t know, bitey. In the beginning I read them all. The first fifty or so were great and then I got my first 3 star and was inconsolable. Yep, serious neuroses here. If they found a flaw then certainly I was a failure. Nothing I wrote was worth the megabytes it took to store. I’ve stopped reading reviews and have done some signings. The most recent one, a fan drove over an hour in a rainstorm to come see me and said that I was her favorite author and made me pose for a picture; possibly the only picture of me as HK Savage in existence, by the way.

The most meaningful review/comment though came from my husband. He was traveling and wanted something to read. He’d read my trilogy and loved it as well as my standalone, Life Blood (written for my mom who hates paranormal- it’s a paranormal disguised as a thriller). But he took The Path with him. I was thinking of fulfilling a lifelong dream and enlisting in the Navy, going for an Intelligence position. He said that I couldn’t stop writing because I’d found my voice and it was good. Really good. Whether he didn’t want me to go away on deployments, knew I was struggling, or just wanted to be kind I don’t know. But his voice comes back to me when I worry I’m not good enough and the kind people who read my work are out there writing god awful things I’m not reading. Someone likes what I’m saying so if nothing else, I’m writing for him.

Aaron: What is the best part of working with writers and getting their stories out in the world? Notice, I didn’t ask for the bad parts. I’m all about the positive.

Heather: For me it’s about the positives too. Trust me, there are negatives but I see them as obstacles. We are in this to build careers and develop audiences. The first book might take a little while to catch on, but we will find the audience whether it’s out on the internet or hiding in the back room of a Joann Fabric. My favorite part of publishing is sending the advance copy of an author’s first book to them and getting that call or email. We send out bookmarks for each author to hand out as business cards and I ask for a signed bookmark for myself and each member of our staff. They are some of my most prized possessions.

Aaron: Here is where you tell me everything Staccato Publishing can do to make the world a better place. I started with nuclear holocaust, let’s end with a voice of hope and happiness calling out in the wilderness. Yes, hope. Better living through Staccato Publishing. What services does Staccato offer us?

Heather: Staccato Publishing can paint your house, weed your garden, walk your dog. Wait, we’re holding off on that until they threaten to turn the lights off. For now we offer editing (yes, you need professional editing, not Aunt Edna who “reads a lot.”) We’ve recently participated in a local book festival and run both a publishing workshop as well as an editing workshop with our lead editor, Sara Johnson. Both were full and got great feedback. We told them the same things I can tell you. Edit professionally, have someone do your promotions and develop your online personality. Be a reviewer, don’t just pimp your books or people will see you coming and run the other way, calling you a spammer. Staccato edits for those who we publish as well as offering our services freelance. Additionally, and equally important, we do promotions. That’s getting you locked into over 350 bloggers and reviewers and sending out to them weekly. We don’t just hit all of them in the first month. We prefer to build you up so we promote for about 9 months and then let things cool so that when we come in again with book 2 and hit them they say, “oh, I’ve heard that name.” It’s all advertising. You are your own brand and we help to manage that.

Aaron: Thanks so much, Heather!

Heather’s author page at Staccato Publishing
On Amazon

From Amazon, I grabbed the Empath summary:

Claire Martin is a young woman with the unwanted talent of empathy. She’s lived her entire life as a slave to a constant barrage of emotions that aren’t hers. Leaving for college, she hopes simply to blend with the crowd. Instead, she meets Stephen Andrews, a fragile-looking boy who instantly recognizes Claire for what she is. Through Stephen, Claire meets James, a vampire with a talent of his own. As soon as they touch, their abilities connect in a way that has not occurred in over three hundred years, forming a bond that cannot be broken.
Empath is book one in the Empath Trilogy.