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10 QUESTIONS FOR…paranormal fiction author F.P. Dorchak

Author interview with F.P. Dorchak

 

 

 

photo by Kim Claybaugh

photo by Kim Claybaugh

 

 

 

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I’m a tech writer and live in Colorado and I write gritty, realistic, paranormal fiction. No, not vampires, as “paranormal fiction” seems wont to mean these days.  We’re talking past lives, supernatural nastiness, remote viewers, and UFOs.  That kind of paranormal.  Anyway, I attended Northern Arizona University, in Flagstaff, Arizona, and studied physics, astronomy, German, and philosophy, and served seven years in the U.S. Air Force as a missile warning and satellite operator. I get up BEFORE the crack of dawn to work on my manuscripts, and recently acquired literary agent Cherry Weiner.  Cherry is currently shopping around my supernatural mass murder and UFO conspiracy machine manuscripts.

 

1. Tell us about your latest book.

My latest manuscript is about an astronaut trapped within a damaged space station who gets caught up in the UFO conspiracy machine. I used a lot of real stuff from growing up in upstate New York to my time in the Air Force.  Yeah, there’s lots of made-up stuff, too, but I’m not telling what’s what.  :-]  It takes place in Colorado Springs, New Mexico, and New York.  Oh, yeah, and in Earth orbit.

2. How did you get started as a writer?

I’d love to say I was born with pen in hand, but a lot of mothers might cringe at the thought.  I started writing at the age of six, my mother tells me.  Wrote and drew about Civil War battles, because I felt I’d been a Civil War soldier (see my website for more information about…), but it wasn’t until about fourteen or fifteen that I actively began writing short stories.  I loved horror and the supernatural so wrote about flesh-eating tables, gargoyles, vampyres, and all-things weird.  I attended college and my writing went on hold, but I picked it up around 1986, and soon took a Writer’s Digest correspondence course, instructed by James Kisner.  I wrote a lot and read a lot.  Joined a couple critique groups for a few years (got kicked out of one cause of the nastiness I wrote), kept writing, and attended writing conferences. In 1993 took second in the SF/F contest at the first PPWC.  I have since been published in the US, Canada, and “the old Czechoslovakia,” now the Czech Republic, with over a dozen paranormal short stories in various small-press magazines, and self-published my first novel, Sleepwalkers, in 2001 (http://www.fpdorchak.com/Sleepwalkers.html).  Except for one Amazon.com review (http://tinyurl.com/l7×2qs), the rest are great. Can’t please everyone, huh?

3. What does a typical day look like for you?

I come-to in the middle of some secluded Michigan back road (in my jammies), cut out that dang implant I can’t seem to get rid of for the umpteenth time, and hitch my way home.  Okay, not really.  Up at oh-dark-thirty, write for a couple hours before my day job.  Work like a dog for “The Man and Woman” (I have dual bosses–takes two to manage me, don’tcha know…).  Hit the gym later in the day, do whatever are the chores du jour, try to relax a little before bedtime, and start it all over again.  Yeah, baby, life is great!

4. Describe your desk/workspace.

A small home office with a couple whiteboards covered in items-o-interest, a wall with pictures and stuff from my time in the Air Force, family photos.  Earth and moon globes.  A corkboard packed with notes.  Shelves and floor space littered–I mean covered–with “research material.”  A small desk with my needed writerly machinations, and pictures of my adorable and charming wife (did I mention “adorable” and “charming”?).  An overstuffed filing cabinet.  WAY overstuffed.  I think it’s supposed to represent an analogy about me.  Or something.

5. Favorite books (especially for writers)

Your standard Elements of Grammar and Strunk and Whites, but where’s the fun in those?  I devour books on Weird Shit (can I say that on our six-second delay?), like UFOs, past and future lives, NASA and Secret Society conspiracies, most works by Stephen King.  The mega volumes of the Seth material.  THERE’S some funky reading, my friends….

6. Tell us 3 interesting/crazy things about you

You don’t have enough already?

1) When I was a kid, I actually wrote an entire story around the OUTSIDE of our house.  Don’t worry, it was in pencil.

2) I attended acting and modeling classes with the John Casablancas Agency; attended “go-sees” (auditions) in the late eighties.

3) I believe I’ve lived before.  Many times.  (Like you didn’t see THAT coming?)

7. Favorite quote

We create our own reality.  TMI yet?

8. Best and worst part of being a writer

World creation.  God complexes.  Mega-use of the imagination.

There’s a downside to any of the above?!

9. Advice for other writers

What are you doing this for, huh?  Find your reason then pit-bull it to death.  There’s no crying in baseball, and there’s no room in writing for the half-possessed.

10. Tell us a story about your writing experience.

Someone once told me that Sleepwalkers helped them remember their dreams…GOOD dreams, for a change…where for a long time had been nothing and nastiness, because of relationship abuse.  There was more to the conversation that I wish I could recall, but, man, I was dumbfounded.  It really affected me.  If I never sold another book, THAT particular one was more than worth it.  It actually HELPED someone.  My fiction helped someone through a dark, brutal period in their life.  Good Lord, how do you top that?  I think about that a lot.

Where can people buy your book?

I have some links to short stories and such on my website (http://www.fpdorchak.com/LiteraryCredits.html), and every so often, I try to keep a semi-regular blog, also accessible from my website (http://www.fpdorchak.com/index.html). If you’re at all interested, stop on by and post a comment.  Take a crack at Sleepwalkers (http://www.fpdorchak.com/Sleepwalkers.html), available from at my website or Amazon.com (cheaper at AuthorHouse–see link on site).  It may not change your life, like my one readers, but it might.  And it just might get you to think a little differently about life in general.  Bret Wright read it twice (read his two reviews, at Amazon.com)–thanks, Bret!  And thank all of you for taking the time to read a little about me.

Frank

All Writing Helps All Writing

F. P. (Frank) Dorchak

SLEEPWALKERS (ISBN 0-75963-950-7)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vupBGqeCx2k

http://www.fpdorchak.com

http://www.authorsden.com/visit/viewblog.asp?authorid=9240

July 23, 2009 Posted by askwendy | 10 QUESTIONS FOR..., author, books, paranormal, sci-fi, thriller, writing | , , , | 6 Comments

Allie Boniface is releasing her 4th novel, “One Night in Napa”

(A second) interview with Allie BonifaceOneNightInNapa300scan0004

Allie Boniface is a contemporary romance author and is celebrating the release of her fourth novel! When she’s not penning her latest adventure, she’s a full-time high school English teacher who lives with her husband in the northern NYC suburbs. Allie is excited to be here today to give readers an inside scoop on her latest novel, One Night in Napa. First, here’s the blurb to whet your appetite:

Journalist Grant Walker has one chance to salvage his job and his relationship with his domineering father. Terrorists have kidnapped a fading film star’s son, and Grant has scored the first interview with the grieving mother. Even better, a new twist has just arrived on the scene: an illegitimate granddaughter who hasn’t been heard from in seven long years.

It’s the story of a lifetime, and all Grant has to do is deliver.

After discovering a terrible secret about her birth, Kira March left home vowing never to return. With her father kidnapped and her grandmother cracking under pressure, it’s up to her to find and destroy all evidence of that secret. Trouble is, a reporter has weaseled his way into the house looking for answers – and he isn’t leaving until he gets them.

Yet as the hours pass, Kira finds herself falling for the very man who could destroy her. And when Grant comforts her in the wake of a midnight tragedy, he remembers why it’s a bad idea to get emotionally involved with an interview subject. Especially when the family name is on the line…

Why Napa Valley? Well, my other two One Night… books are set in the eastern part of the country, Boston and Memphis, and I really wanted a location someplace out west.  Plus, my husband and I spent a few days in Sonoma and Napa Valley on our honeymoon back in 2001, and I found the whole area just charming.  We were lucky enough to take a hot air balloon ride over the vineyards – what a sight at dawn! There is something inherently romantic about rolling green hills, grapes, and beautiful buildings tucked into the landscape. I think my cover artist captured the feel of Napa Valley perfectly.

Why just twenty-four hours? I stumbled onto the idea of a “24-hour romance” a few years ago, during one of my morning runs.  I’m not sure where the idea came from, but I started thinking what if two people met and fell for each other overnight? Sure, most romances unfold over months or even years, but we’ve all heard of those nights when fireworks go off the moment two people set eyes on each other.  I wanted to offer the romance genre something different and explore that possibility.

What’s next? Well, I’m excited to have another contemporary romance releasing with Samhain Publishing later this year, Summer’s Song. It’s about a woman who goes home to her small town after leaving 10 years earlier when her brother was killed in a car accident. In the middle of settling her father’s estate, she begins to experience strange flashbacks…which eventually lead to her discovery of what actually happened the night her brother died. The hero, a hunky carpenter working on the house she’s inherited, has demons of his own to face: his mother’s ex-husband, who is stalking them across the country. There’s no time for romance with everything that’s happening in the tiny town of Pine Point…or is there?

I’m also currently in the early stages of a fourth One Night… book, One Night in Savannah. It’s about a lawyer who writes a best-selling novel about a true event that happened when she was in college – the death of a sorority sister. The hero, who attended the same college, wants to turn her book into a stage play – but he wants to change the events to mirror what he believes actually happened that night. I hope to explore the issue of what happens when two people remember a traumatic event much differently – and are attracted to each other in the meantime!

Can we see a peek inside One Night in Napa? Sure, here’s one of my favorite excerpts. It happens around midnight, after Grant and Kira have been shut up together inside the March mansion for hours. After a glass of wine and some heartfelt conversation, the two polar opposites find an attraction growing…

 

“Okay,” she said after a minute.

“Okay what?”

“You can take my picture.”

His breath stopped. “Seriously?” More than an interview, more than a front-page story, framing that face in just the right light left him off balance.

“Yeah.” She ran her fingertips down his chest. “Before I change my mind.”

Grant had no idea what had changed it to a yes in the first place, but he wasn’t about to argue or question. He dragged out his favorite Nikon and two different lenses. He scanned the room. He looked back at her, fragile and wide-eyed. Then he frowned at the glass and dark granite that lined the kitchen. “Not here.”

“No?” She looked around. “Out in the foyer, maybe? The parlor?”

The lights flickered a third time, and Grant wondered how long before they lost power altogether. He fought the need swelling inside him, turning his legs to jelly. He had to keep his head together. He had to act like this wasn’t the fucking chance of a lifetime, like it was just another evening of taking a few shots. “Okay.”

She had already brushed by him and was waiting at the foot of the staircase when he reached the cavernous space.

“Here?” She looked behind her, up the circular sweep of carpet.

For a moment, Grant’s vision blurred, and all he saw was Kira pressed against him, her fingernails etching lines in his skin as he peeled away layers and tasted the curve of her collarbone.

“Walker?” She waved a hand in front of his eyes. The vision disappeared.

“Sorry.” He studied the shadows of the great room and shook his head. “In there.” He pointed to the parlor.

She nodded and padded into the room on noiseless feet. She stopped for a moment in front of the fireplace, then sank onto the hearth and crossed her legs on the white marble.

Thunder crackled, and the house groaned under its own weight. Grant barely noticed. He kneeled on the sofa and started with her face. Heart-shaped chin. Round dark eyes. No smile. He zoomed out for a view that took in her entire delicate frame. She sat with her arms wrapped around her knees, drawn up to her chest. Protecting something, he thought. Keeping out the camera, even though she’d been the one to suggest the photos in the first place.

He dropped the camera. “Can you—” He motioned to her hands, hoping she’d read his thoughts.

Her eyes filled, but she dropped her arms and let them fall onto her lap. “Sorry. Better?” It was a whisper. She shook the hair from her eyes, and he saw anguish, anger, stubbornness in the way her gaze glittered and moved across him.

He changed angles, moving to her far left side, until all he could see was her sharp profile and the darkness beyond. His throat tightened. God, she was beautiful. His fingers twitched. He continued to shoot, changing position an inch or two at a time. He stopped only once, to switch to black and white film.

The minutes passed, and she relaxed by degrees. By the time he found a place to balance on the opposite side of the fireplace, she’d loosened her grip on her ankles. Her smile became true again.

“You like this,” she said. “More than the journalism, I’d guess.”

“What gave it away?” He lowered the camera and grinned. She cocked her head and gave him a flirtatious pout that seared him in the gut…

 

Want to read more? One Night in Napa is now available from www.mybookstoreandmore.com . And if you like that story, check out One Night in Boston and One Night in Memphis, available in print at the same website.

Wendy, thanks so much for having me here today!

July 23, 2009 Posted by askwendy | 10 QUESTIONS FOR..., author, books, fiction, romantica, writing | , , , , | No Comments Yet