ROBUST discussion
Interviews
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Interviewed someone? Someone interviewed you?

http://indieebooks.blogspot.com/2011/...

Check them out!
WOW (Women on Writing) interviewed me after I placed in a flash fiction contest. This is a terrific interview and I hope it gets more people interested in 1) my novel and 2) my new anthology of flash fiction.
http://muffin.wow-womenonwriting.com/...
Thanks for buying my book, Margie!
Andre, flash fiction = 1000 words or fewer.
hint fiction = 25 words or fewer
6-word memoir = as it says, 6 words
These forms require lots of editing and narrow scope.
http://muffin.wow-womenonwriting.com/...
Thanks for buying my book, Margie!
Andre, flash fiction = 1000 words or fewer.
hint fiction = 25 words or fewer
6-word memoir = as it says, 6 words
These forms require lots of editing and narrow scope.

It is a good interview. I have just received a copy of your book and hope to start it soon.

I certainly am! I just downloaded Seb's and Will's books to the Kindle on my phone. Seb's book will be the first adult book that I have read in more than a year. I just wish I could read and write reviews more than I do.

Flash fiction is just ultra-short fiction. The amount varies, but many contests focus on stories under a few hundred words or even shorter.
I did a couple of simple interviews with a couple of my friends:
http://riftwatcher.blogspot.com/2011/...
http://riftwatcher.blogspot.com/2011/...
I have a goal to eventually do a lot of interviews, but my blog doesn't have much presence yet, really. I've only been doing it for about a month. :)
A blog or other netsite is a sort of sitting tautology. Nobody knows it is there because it isn't there regardless of how often you post to it, then you write just one more piece and everyone knows it is there because it is there for everyone, all of a sudden. Back in the early 90s, when the Net was young (we say it but it isn't true -- I used the military net, and then the ARPAnet twenty years before that), I put my syndicated classical music column on the net and for six months or so it built up slooowly to about 10-20k hits pa, which was already a strain on my ISP. Then, suddenly, it was a million hits, then 2.5m a year, and ISPs were firing me left and centre. Eventually I closed it down because it had become more of a burden than a pleasure. I wish all you bloggers that sort of bad luck!
Alain Gomez spotlighted a flash fiction story and then I came on as a guest blogger: flash fiction vs. using the same scene in a longer work.
http://bookbrouhaha.blogspot.com/2011...
"Flash Warden and Other Stories" available now on Amazon (Kindle version, 2 weeks)
http://bookbrouhaha.blogspot.com/2011...
"Flash Warden and Other Stories" available now on Amazon (Kindle version, 2 weeks)

Edited with a new one today: http://www.the-no-hoper.com/blog.html
New spotlight on "Flash Warden and Other Stories":
IndieSnippets web site:
http://indiesnippets.blogspot.com/sea...
IndieSnippets web site:
http://indiesnippets.blogspot.com/sea...

Cynthia: http://tinyurl.com/3uhw4xv
Maureen: http://tinyurl.com/3njckv9
The specialist in near-death is in an endless purgatorial loop:
"The URL you followed redirects back to a TinyURL and therefore we can't directly send you to the site. The URL it redirects to is http://tinyurl.com/3qbghaz."
"The URL you followed redirects back to a TinyURL and therefore we can't directly send you to the site. The URL it redirects to is http://tinyurl.com/3qbghaz."

Matt, everyone else. This is of course open to interpretation by everyone else, as we have no rules, but I see absolutely no reason you shouldn't post the URL and name every time you interview someone. That is what this thread is for. We want to know when a ROBUSTer interviews someone, because the interview has extra credibility since we know the interviewer. It really takes only a second to open the post and decide if you want to go read the interview. Here's a perfect example by J.a. --
Elves Among Us: An interview with YA paranormal author Julia Crane: http://bit.ly/pxFDs2
-- A second to open the post, a second to see "paranormal", a second to hit NEXT. No waste. (Sorry to pick on you, Jeremy; you know what I read of yours; I admire your versatility.)
Thanks for the plug, Matt!
Elves Among Us: An interview with YA paranormal author Julia Crane: http://bit.ly/pxFDs2
-- A second to open the post, a second to see "paranormal", a second to hit NEXT. No waste. (Sorry to pick on you, Jeremy; you know what I read of yours; I admire your versatility.)
Thanks for the plug, Matt!

Of course, the marketing part of my brain is also the part that has helped me become a lot more focused about including keywords in stuff to both attract people interested and help people not interested stay away. :)
I've gotten a lot better about it. My early titles were stuff like 'Author interview: John Doe'.
And on that note:
What frightens you the most? An interview with horror author Erik Lynd. http://bit.ly/mY5Sr2

http://kates-scribbles.blogspot.com/2...

http://bit.ly/p9hKWk
Succubus Soccer Mom -- be afraid, be very afraid.
On the strength of just that, Jeremy, I'd have hired you as an advertising copywriter.
On the strength of just that, Jeremy, I'd have hired you as an advertising copywriter.

http://bit.ly/uam4ct


It was surprisingly good interview in that he put a lot of thought and effort into his responses.

http://christopherbunn.com/?p=1214
I love her remark about her parents scrimping and saving to buy a set of encyclopedia.
Ever hear of a writer from a home without books?
The best thing any parent can do for his/her/its children is to give them access to books.
Ever hear of a writer from a home without books?
The best thing any parent can do for his/her/its children is to give them access to books.

I loved the cover of the book and the idea of the story sounds like it's right up my alley. I am now following her on Twitter. And, even though I promised myself no more book purchases, alas I must confess: I bought a Kindle copy.
Not sure whether to thank or rue you...

http://www.riftwatcher.blogspot.com/2...

Jeremy puts his finger on why the trad publishers won't want Kat, regardless of how well she writes. Her second book was very different from her first. For the trade to be interested, she'll have to prove first that she can stick to the series she's planning.
Nice interview. I briefly had a 1966 Mustang convertible for an open, summer car, pale peppermint green. I bought it on an impulse on a Saturday morning because it was cheap and in good nick. It was a crude car, so I shortly sold it on. In a straight line it was amazingly fast, but on corners a handful, and the brakes weren't much use. If Kat gets her Cobra, I'll be the first to cheer, and to whisper in her ear to drive it carefully, it's a valuable antique!
Nice interview. I briefly had a 1966 Mustang convertible for an open, summer car, pale peppermint green. I bought it on an impulse on a Saturday morning because it was cheap and in good nick. It was a crude car, so I shortly sold it on. In a straight line it was amazingly fast, but on corners a handful, and the brakes weren't much use. If Kat gets her Cobra, I'll be the first to cheer, and to whisper in her ear to drive it carefully, it's a valuable antique!

I actually am an anomaly in that I'm an American not from NYC who never got a driver's license, and perhaps, as a consequence, don't have much personal interest in cars or motorcycles. Various circumstances conspired together to put in this situation and I keep saying, "Someday", but that someday seems to keep passing year after year.
Surprisingly, it's worked out either okay for me.
I haven't kept a car for almost twenty years. People want to see me, they come here, or send a car for me, and a plane if further away, as I won't fly commercial anymore: too much of a hassle (Osama bin Laden's true legacy -- inconvenient travel).

The Paranormal series is the most commerical of the bunch. I've got to go back home to Ashtabula and read some more history.
I've had 2 Mustanges - they were a lot of fun to drive. More fun than the Camero I had between them. (The Camero was a rust bucket.)
Cobra'a ARE very valuable. I'd have to hit the lottery in order to buy one. I might settle for a '96 Mustange - but I wouldn't sell my soul for it.
Thanks for the interview J.A.!

Nice to hear you are working on a sequel to Treespeaker!
Degrees in Anthropology and History, . If I could do it all again, those would be my two majors. Next time, I suppose...


Katie,
A new sub-genre!"
Now...how do I get Amazon to add it? :)

http://riftwatcher.blogspot.com/2011/...
Books mentioned in this topic
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Mad Gods - Revelation Cancelled? (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
T. Jackson King (other topics)E.L. Farris (other topics)
Either interviews you conducted, or interviews you gave.
You can either post the full review or a URL pointer to it on another site. Samples of both are stickied just below. But you don't need to follow those formats; any other you can think of is also welcome. EDIT: Even before I finished writing that, Sue posted up another format, a list of interviews on Cookie's Book Club to which she intends adding when she does a new interview.
Click on the folder title above, on the new page click on "new topic", and off you go.