Please welcome today's paranormal guest author Jefferson Smith.  Jefferson is the author of Strange Places.
EJ:  When did you begin writing?
Jefferson:   I first received critical acclaim for a recurring fantasy  adventure serial I wrote throughout the sixth grade. My teacher and  principal both loved it. I submitted my first story to the short-fiction  market while in the tenth grade, thus securing my first official  rejection. But to be honest, I started writing at about the same time I  learned to print and I've been doing it ever since. My career as a  special effects and animation consultant in Hollywood got in the way for  a couple of decades, but I finally found my way back to telling my OWN  stories about seven years ago. 
As a long time explorer of the arts (writing, painting, animation,  composing, etc.) I went back to school to do an unusual PhD program: I  studied creativity theory for a doctorate in Computer Science,  developing a technique for making humans more creative when they use  multimedia software tools. As part of that research, I wrote a musical  score for a strange world, and then I wrote a novel to go with it. The  result is Strange Places, my first published work of fiction, which is  also the first installment of a series called Finding Tayna. I'm now  hard at work on the second book, due out at the end of this year, and  the musical soundtrack CD will be out this spring. Meanwhile, I write  regularly about these strangely intersecting topics (writing tips,  software tools for writers, and creativity theory) on my blog: The  Creativity Hacker.
EJ:  What brought you to the paranormal genre?
Jefferson:   Believe it or not, like all good science geeks, I started  out as a stubborn sci-fi nut. But over the years, I came to realize that  what fascinated me most about those stories wasn't the actual fictional  science part - it was the fabulous mental landscapes and imaginative  story worlds that those authors were creating. More recently, as I've  watched the acceleration of technology and its rapid proliferation  throughout society, I've come to realize that science fiction, as I know  it, is dead. Who needs fantastical predictions about the future of  science when your nearest Best Buy or even Wal-Mart will have new  eye-popping techno widgetry available tomorrow afternoon? We've become  jaded to new technology, and the sciences have become so specialized  that the only people capable of projecting those topics more than 5  minutes into the future are the specialist researchers themselves, who  are usually horrible story tellers.
If you examine most of what science fiction is now doing, it's really  just fantasy, dressed up in technological battle gear. I guess what I'm  saying is that I didn't exactly come to fantasy consciously so much as I  was brought here and abandoned by science fiction. But now that I'm  here, I realize that I have always been here and science fiction was  just an illusion from my youth.
EJ:  If you could be any paranormal or have any one supernatural talent, what would it be? Why?
Jefferson:   No question. I would want to be able to see into the souls  of others and find the one thing to say that would make them fall down  laughing. Not only would this be a fabulous power for a writer like  myself to have (since I work hard to make my writing funny as well as  thought provoking and fantastical) but it would actually be a great  super power, too. No evil genius can fight you if they're too busy  clutching their sides, gasping for breath, and rolling around on the  floor in hysterics. Better yet, nobody can stay mad at a person who can  make them laugh, so I'd be converting all the bad guys into friends  every time we clashed, and it's just a short walk between making them  friends and turning them into good guys. So yeah, that would be my power  of choice.
EJ:  Tell us why readers will enjoy your new release.
Jefferson:   Imagine that you had lived your entire life in a gloomy  orphanage run by cruel nuns only to discover in your teen years that you  might not even be an orphan at all. You'd freak, right? "You mean I've  been washing your laundry and scrubbing your floors all this time, and  somewhere I might have parents who actually love me? I am so out of  here!"
Well, that's exactly what happens for Tayna, my razor witted  maybe-orphan. But leaving that orphanage proves to be just the beginning  of her troubles. Not only does she know nothing about the world outside  the walls, but she quickly learns that her family (if they really  exist) are not even in our world at all, but in another, mythological  world - one she'd never even heard of before that day. So how is she  supposed to find them there?
So you've got this funny but lonely teen, searching for where she  belongs, and kicking butt along the way. If she only knew how much her  fans loved her, she probably wouldn't be so miserable, but then again, I  wouldn't have a book, either. (Note to self: don't tell Tayna how many  people out here love her. It would get weird.)
EJ:  If your book(s) were being made into a movie, who would you cast for the leading roles? Why?
Jefferson:   I think Ellen Page would have made a great Tayna five years  ago, but she's probably too old now to play a believable teen, so I'd  want to use someone new and unknown. There are so many great young  actresses out there and I really like working with people who are just  getting started in their arts careers.
Peter Dinklage would be fabulous for my villain, the creepy Lord Angiron.
I wish I could have put Heath Ledger in to play the quirky and  mysterious Duck Man. He has so many sides to him. I mean, who else could  play a guy who wanders around town in hip-waders and a pink trench  coat, saying inappropriate things to children in one minute, but who  seems to have your back and acts like a trusted but quirky ally in the  next? Since I can't have Heath, I think my second choice might be Jason  Segal.
The real question, in my mind, is who would play Abeni - the  mountain-muscled, dark-skinned Djin adventurer with the kettle-drum  laugh? I can't think of a single actor I have ever scene on film who  would be right for the part, so I'm going to make one up. Take Arnold  Schwarzenegger's body, stuff him inside Denzel Washington for looks and  charm, and then cram Woopie Goldberg down inside that skin to handle the  comedy and the laughing. Yeah, that would be sweet. I shall call him  Denzoopie Schwarzenberg.
Strange Places (Finding Tayna #1) by Jefferson Smith
Raised as a modern-day kitchen slave in an orphanage run by  child-loathing nuns, and now stalked by disturbing strangers, thirteen  year old Tayna gambles everything on a desperate journey of  self-discovery that will lead her to the far corners of two strange and  unfamiliar worlds: one filled with shopping malls and televisions, the  other with Brownies, Djin and magic.
Thank you Jefferson for joining us here today at From the Shadows!
To learn more about Jefferson Smith and his books, please visit his website.
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
Q+A with Jefferson Smith (Strange Places)
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finding tayna,
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Paranormal authors,
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 E.J. Stevens is the bestselling, award-winning author of the IVY GRANGER, PSYCHIC DETECTIVE urban fantasy series, the SPIRIT GUIDE young adult series, the HUNTERS' GUILD urban fantasy series, and the WHITECHAPEL PARANORMAL SOCIETY Victorian Gothic horror series. She is known for filling pages with quirky characters, bloodsucking vampires, psychotic faeries, and snarky, kick-butt heroines. Her novels are available worldwide in multiple languages.
E.J. Stevens is the bestselling, award-winning author of the IVY GRANGER, PSYCHIC DETECTIVE urban fantasy series, the SPIRIT GUIDE young adult series, the HUNTERS' GUILD urban fantasy series, and the WHITECHAPEL PARANORMAL SOCIETY Victorian Gothic horror series. She is known for filling pages with quirky characters, bloodsucking vampires, psychotic faeries, and snarky, kick-butt heroines. Her novels are available worldwide in multiple languages.
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Hi gang. No follow-ups posted here yet, but I thought I'd let you know that I'm watching for 'em, in between imaginary confrontations with several of my more spirited characters who feel they aren't getting enough of my attention. :-)
ReplyDeleteGreat artilce! Love to read about writing path of other authors. It's really hard to make your readers trully enjoy the story while keeping it to your own way of writing. I know that many authors begin to write college essays for money, i'm working as a freelance writer myself in order to develop skills i needed for writing. Can you give some advice about writing in paranormal genre?
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