Showing posts with label John. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John. Show all posts

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Simon John Cox - Distant Machines

Simon John Cox is with us today to promote his short story collection Distant Machines.



What is your name?
Simon Cox, but I go by Simon John Cox when writing because there's already a Simon Cox writer out there. He wrote something about the Da Vinci Code.

How old are you?
Let's say I was born in the 1970s.

Where do you currently live?
I live in Tunbridge Wells, in the UK.

Tell us a little bit about your life.
When I'm not working as a marketer or writing fiction I spend a lot of my spare time running or doing Taekwon-Do.

When did you first start writing?
I've been writing for as long as I can remember, but I think the first time I sat down and wrote fiction seriously - by which I mean writing a plan and deciding on what the ending would be before even writing a word of the narrative - I was about 24.

What was your very first story about?
I wrote a novel about a fictional Spanish island in the aftermath of the Spanish Civil War (I learned Spanish at school and as a result became interested in Spanish history). The two hated Civil Guards who were posted to the island are murdered, and an investigator is sent from the mainland to find out who killed them. Most people on the island see him as the same as the Civil Guards, but he befriends a local boy and the local priest, and they help him to carry out his investigation. Eventually the people of the island try to kill him and he is saved only by the intervention of the priest, who then confesses to the murders in order to absolve the islanders and to allow the investigator to return to the mainland in safety.

Have you written anything that you were too afraid to let anyone read?
Yes, the one about the Spanish island. Although writing it taught me a huge amount about how to write, it's not good enough.


Did you experience anything you’ve written yourself?
Many of the situations, conversations, relationships, characters etc are based on experiences from my own life, or else on the lives of people that I know. It's inevitable - when we create we only have our own experiences on which to draw.

Who are several of your greatest literary inspirations?
Thomas Pynchon, Gabriel García Márquez, Philip Roth, Charles Bukowski, Margaret Atwood, Alan Moore...a fair old mix.

What kind of education have you received, and how has that affected your writing?
I did a degree in chemistry, which I think was actually a great help. I've found that a logical, "scientific" approach to writing helps me to iron out the inconsistencies and to rework the unrealistic elements; it's a case of writing something and then asking yourself "why would he do that?" and "what would be the consequence of him doing that?" Constantly asking "why" and "how" and "what if", and finding the answers before continuing - it seems to me to be a pretty scientific approach.

How much research time customarily goes into your projects?
I suppose it depends on the setting. Writing the novel set in the aftermath of the Spanish Civil War meant that I needed to do a lot of reading about the war and its aftermath, for example, but by contrast parts of the novel that I'm currently working on are set in Namibia and in a UK defence company, and I've been to Namibia and I've worked for a defence company, so far less reading was required there. My own experiences provide a huge part of the content of my writing, so that research is being done every day.

Who is your favorite literary character?
Depending on your perspective it might be stretching the boundaries of what constitutes "literature", but Rorschach in Alan Moore's Watchmen is certainly one character who I find endlessly fascinating. Violently heroic, rigidly bound by a personal moral compass and ultimately tragic. Plus that cool mask.

Who is your favorite character of your own creation?
There's a character called Azamat who seems to keep cropping up in various pieces of my writing. He's a demon who takes the form of a snake in my novel, he appears as a magician's demonic assistant in The Great Meliakoff, a story from my Hallowe'en short story collection Totentanz: A Macabre Triptych, and he is a jealous god in The Pélissier Scroll, a short story that recently won a competition run by the Diamond Light Source. I think I enjoy writing him because with him I can give vent to all kinds of enjoyable malevolence.

If you were ever to write an autobiography, what would its title be?
"Princess Diana: The Cocaine Diaries". Just because then I'd know that it would sell.

Tell us about your featured book.
Distant Machines is a collection of short stories with a generally speculative theme (I hesitate to describe it as science fiction as there are no aliens or epic space battles, but the stories are all set in the future and all incorporate some kind of technology that we don't currently have). One story is about the implications of "designer" genetic modification; another is about what becomes important in a world in which the oil has run out; and another is about what might happen if euthanasia were accepted to the point that it became a consumer product.

I'd like to point out that the cover was designed by Tony Healey (http://fringescientist.com).

Why did you write that?
I love writing short stories - partly because it gives me a chance to try out different styles of writing, and partly because they act as a kind of "writing holiday" from working on the novel - and the speculative theme just fits with the way my mind works, I think. I said earlier that I have a pretty scientific approach to writing; well, if you ask "what if?", "why?" and "how?" enough times then sooner or later you're probably going to end up in unknown territory. I really enjoy writing about things that don't exist or that haven't happened yet (and in fact will probably never happen). I suppose it's a form of escapism. It's daydreaming, really.

Is there anything special you would like your potential readers to know?
I think I'd just like to thank those people who have read my work so far, to say that I hope they all enjoyed it, and to say that if they have any comments or feedback that you'd like to make on how I could improve my writing then they should feel free to get in touch - www.simonjohncox.com

What’s a negative trait about other people that you most notice, or that bothers you the most?
Hypocrisy.

Do you ever notice it in yourself?
I don't notice it, and I do try always to be consistent, but maybe I'm hypocritical nonetheless from time to time as well. I hope not.

If you were forced to give something you adore up for the rest of your life, what would it be?
The three things that I adore are writing, Taekwon-Do and my partner, and wouldn't want to give any of those up. I suppose if I absolutely had to give up one then it'd be Taekwon-Do, just because I can't imagine being without the other two.

What is the hardest thing about growing up?
The gradual horrifying realisation that adults don't have any kind of plan and they've just been winging it.

What is something you absolutely must have in your kitchen?
At least one very good knife.

What is pain to you?
Accidentally cutting your finger with a very good knife.

What is your dream house?
I'd like a little isolated cottage out in a fishing village somewhere, with a study that had a large bay window looking out over the sea so that I could set up my desk in front of it and watch the fishing boats go out and come back in again.

Where would you want this house located in our wide world?
Somewhere tranquil, by the sea, but not too far from a decent-sized town. Whenever I've visited Devon and Cornwall I've daydreamed about living there.

You’ve been forced under various circumstances to choose a personal motto. What is it?
For New Year's Eve the year before last a friend asked a group of us to provide three goals that we'd try to achieve within the year, so instead of choosing "own a Ferrari" or "get a promotion" or "uppercut a horse" or whatever I decided to pick three things that would help me out and were definitely achievable, so I went for "be braver", "be more disciplined" and "be more determined". I think I've stuck to them pretty well, so maybe I could use them in my motto as a way of reminding me: Be brave, be disciplined, be determined. But in Latin, obviously: Beum bravum, beum disciplinedum, beum determinedum. NB I don't know Latin.

Have you ever received a present you really hated? If so, what was it?
Not really...I think at worst I've been ambivalent. I think the fact that someone has bothered to get you something is a positive thing.

What’s the weirdest thing you’ve ever eaten? Would you have it again?
Jellyfish, in a Chinese restaurant. It felt like eating slightly gelatinous shredded cabbage, and it didn't really taste of anything much. I only ate it the first time because my friend ordered it; I don't think I'd order it again myself.


Our thanks to Simon for being with us. His work can be found below, merely a click away.

Friday, February 10, 2012

John Rose - Out From the Shadows

It is our pleasure today to have John rose, author and creator of The MonsterGrrls Series. He is promoting the first book in the series, Out From The Shadows.


How old are you?
43 years old; 44 come May of this year.


Where do you currently live?
I live in Greenwood, MS, in a small house with a book collection that is approaching fire hazard status, an enormous amount of DVDs, a very intelligent cat named Igor and a brain in a tank named Alfred.


Tell us a little bit about your life.
I was born in Meridian, MS, about 10 miles from town in a woodsy area that had to be found by anyone wishing to visit. While it was not bad, I saw the flaw in this fairly quickly, and began to work on getting out. I still maintain that the major thrust of human society is not to get back to nature but to get as far away from it as possible.


When did you first start writing?
In school, we often had to write short one-page stories using the list of spelling words we were given that week. Occasionally, my stories were criticized by my teachers for being a little too out there, imagination-wise. I don't know what the hell they were complaining about since they said I had to use all the damn words.


What was your very first story about?
I don't really remember. I do remember that I had a real jones for L. Frank Baum after seeing The Wizard of Oz, so it may have been something along those lines--a story about some other world.


Have you written anything that you were too afraid to let anyone read?
I occasionally write very boisterous erotica. No one has ever read any of it except me.


Did you experience anything you’ve written yourself?
None of my major characters in The MonsterGrrls have a driver's license, which is something I did experience; for some weird reason, no one would help me get my license. One of my college friends finally helped me get it at age 25. However, my characters won't have to wait that long.


Who are several of your greatest literary inspirations?
I was inspired to write by reading things like Mark Twain and Madeleine L'Engle, and later on Stephen King and Terry Pratchett. I realized that someone had to make books, and I thought that would be a good job. But I read just about anything. I'm reading John Connolly's The Infernals right now; it's great.


What kind of education have you received, and how has that affected your writing?
I got the usual standard high school experience, and did two years at a community college and three years at a university. I believe that all of that was beneficial to me, but I remember a lot of my teachers being unimpressed with my taste in authors or my desire to write science fiction, fantasy and horror. They thought I should aim to be William Faulkner, since he is the most famous Mississippi author. But I hated Faulkner because he never could just tell a straight story; instead he constantly went off on tangents. which made the book a chore to follow. If I learned anything from Faulkner, he kind of instilled in me the practice of being willing to edit myself.


How much research time customarily goes into your projects?
A lot of what I do comes from amassed head knowledge and reference. I was the child who would get interested in something and check out half a dozen books on it out of the library in the hopes that one of them would tell me what I wanted to know. The Internet has been very useful, and I often draw pictures of my characters to try to get at what I'm seeing in my head.


Who is your most favorite literary character?
It's a three-way tie between Huckleberry Finn, Meg Murry from A Wrinkle In Time and Sam Vimes from Terry Pratchett's Discworld.


Who is your favorite character of your own creation?
I'm partial to Frankie Franken, my Creature-Grrl. She's got not only a heavy dose of the Universal Monsters in her DNA, but I also went straight to the source:Frankenstein by Mary Shelley. The Creature in that novel is not anything like the portrayals of Boris Karloff and Elsa Lanchester, even though those are iconic. The Creature is an intelligent, thoughtful, philosophical being; everything the movies aren't.


If you were ever to write an autobiography, what would its title be?
It could be called Ed Asner, because I just like that name. Realistically, it would be called And Now, Him. The movie version of this would feature Ham Fong as Chin Ho, despite the fact that there has been no one in my life named Ham Fong or Chin Ho. But there should have been.


Tell us about your featured book.
Out From The Shadows is the first book in the MonsterGrrls series. It begins the saga of four teenage girls who are monsterkind, or members of the overall species of monsters--Frankie, a Creature (or Frankenstein monster), Bethany (a vampire), Punkin (a witch) and Harriet (a werewolf). The Grrls come from their world to go to school with humans, and the story describes how they meet and make human friends and deal with high school and bullies. They are challenged to spend a night in a "haunted" house, and discover that something is there that doesn't like monsters...


Why did you write that?
All of my teachers told me constantly to "write what you know." I know about high school, I know that being a teenager is sometimes far from ideal, and having been a lifelong fantasy/horror/sci-fi fan, I know monsters. The fact that my teachers were expecting something that didn't combine these things has nothing to do with it.


Is there anything special you would like your potential readers to know?
It is perfectly okay to be different--not good, not bad, but okay. And there is nothing wrong with standing up for yourself and what you believe in, and what you know is right. And there is certainly nothing wrong with being weird. Some people make satisfying and fulfilling use of it, such as writing books about friendly monsters.


What’s a negative trait about other people that you most notice, or that bothers you the most?
Sheeplike behavior.


Do you ever notice it in yourself?
Sometimes I do. I often react badly, swiftly, and violently to whatever is causing it.


Do you own any kind of art collection?
I have a large collection of comics, animated cartoons on DVD, and several ToxicToons prints by Eric Pigors, who is a noted horror artist and former Disney animator. I also love movie posters--any kind of strong graphic images really resonate with me. And I love the work of Vincent Van Gogh.


What is the hardest thing about growing up?
Realizing that you are not experienced enough to be sophisticated in the way that you wish you were, and that there unfortunately must be a period of awkward and stupid in young love.


What is the biggest lie you’ve ever heard?
"This is going to be easy."


What is something you absolutely must have in your kitchen?
A good chef's knife, a stockpot and an iron skillet.


What is your dream house?
A huge Victorian Addams-Family-style house.


Where would you want this house located in our wide world?
On a high hill overlooking a quiet suburban area that occasionally cowered in fear at the strange noises and weird lights coming from the top of the hill on full moon nights...


You’ve been forced under various circumstances to choose a personal motto. What is it?
Constant and true.


What’s the weirdest thing you’ve ever eaten? Would you have it again?
Fried calamari. In a second.


What’s the first thing you would do if you could become invisible?
It would involve an extremely high caliber of vengeance.


What is the kindest thing that anyone has ever done for you?
Listening to me and encouraging me as I work with these four Grrls and the world(s) in my head. Other than that, feeding me usually goes a long way.


Our thanks to John for answering our questions. His work is available in paperback and ebook format, so give it a look today.