An
Interview with Karissa Laurel
What inspired you to write Heir of Thunder?
When the song “Viva la Vida”
by Colplay came out years ago, I immediately fell in love with the song and it
gave me instant ideas about a character who once had a kingdom, but lost it.
Right away I asked myself: Who is this character and what could have happened
to make him or her loose his or her kingdom? And what is she doing about it,
now? Those questions eventually evolved into Heir of Thunder.
When or at what age did you know you wanted
to be a writer?
I have always read
voraciously, and I enjoyed writing stories and essays all through my school
years. Occasionally I wrote a single scene or a bit of dialogue, but I never
developed those bits into an entire book. I never considered taking it
seriously until around 2007 when a YA book series was becoming super popular. I
remember reading those books and thinking: Hey, I could do this. So I tried
writing a book just to see if I could complete something from beginning to end.
When I had finished that goal, I tried writing another. Those books never went
anywhere except into my hope chest, but it proved I could do the hardest part:
starting and finishing a novel.
What is the earliest age you remember reading
your first book?
I remember my mom reading to
me at bedtime until I was old enough to read on my own. There’s a recording of
me as a little kid “reading” to her, but I had mostly just memorized the book
(It was “Donald Duck and the Witch Next Door”) and I was reciting it from
memory. That’s how reading begins, though, if you think about it. I can’t say
at what age I started reading on my own, but it was probably around four or
five.
What genre of books do you enjoy reading?
I’m open to reading anything,
generally. However, it should be no surprise that my favorite books tend to be
ones with a fantastical element. Urban Fantasy, Epic Fantasy, Science Fiction,
Magical Realism, etc. Like most people, I read to escape, and I like to escape
into worlds where things can happen that can’t happen in real life. I get
enough real life every day.
What is your favorite book?
Picking one favorite book is
like asking a mother to pick her favorite child, but to name a few... A
Winter’s Tale by Mark Helprin; Harry Potter series by J.K. Rowling; The Golden
Compass series by Phillip Pullman; American Gods by Neil Gaiman; The Handmaid’s
Tale by Margaret Atwood; The Princess Bride by William Goldman; The Lonesome
Gods by Louis L’Amore.
You know I think we all have a favorite
author. Who is your favorite author and why?
Again, picking one is nearly
impossible, but I’ll let it be a tie between Neil Gaiman and Margaret Atwood.
They are my personal golden standard: The masters of craft to whom I always
hold myself accountable, in my own mind. When I read their books, I feel like
they’ve managed to transcend something as mundane as writing and they are
making a kind of real world magic of their own.
If you could travel back in time here on
earth to any place or time. Where would you go and why?
I really enjoy reading (and
writing) historical novels, but I honestly have no wish to go to the past.
Women and minorities were often mistreated. Medical care was poor. People were
generally uneducated, and if you weren’t born into money, life was hard. I really,
really like hot water at the turn of the knob, air conditioning, microwaves,
and good pills for headaches and cramps. I’m spoiled! If I time travelled, I’d
prefer to go to the future in hopes that things are better—that human rights
have improved; health care and quality of life has improved; and I want that
flying car the books and movies have been promising me all these years. Which
begs the question... why don’t I write more sci-fi?
When writing a book do you find that
writing comes easy for you or is it a difficult task?
It totally depends! (I bet
you guessed that was what I would say). Sometimes the words flow and the plot
comes and everything just works. Sometimes I can’t get a word on the paper to
save my life. Some days it’s that I’m just not in the mood, and sometimes it’s
because I don’t know what’s supposed to happen next. But the secret to
finishing a project is to never admit defeat and accept that it’s okay to stop
and think about the book without actually putting down words. Thinking about
what words to write next counts as writing, too.
Do you have any little fuzzy friends? Like
a dog or a cat? Or any pets?
If you don’t count my kid,
who can get a little fuzzy when he doesn’t take enough showers, then I have
only one. Her name is Bonnie and she is a husky mix. I’m not sure what she’s
mixed with—we think it might be a German shepherd—but she fabulous blue eyes
and she howls when she gets excited like huskies do. She also sheds enough fur
on a weekly basis to make multiple clones of herself.
What is your ""to die
for"", favorite food/foods to eat?
In a previous career, I was
a cook and a caterer, so I can make most anything I put my mind to. My favorite
things to eat when I go out are things I wouldn’t dare make or know I couldn’t make
well, and that tends to be dishes from foreign countries. I adore Indian and
Thai food, but I leave it up to the professionals to cook those meals. Another thing that I tend to leave to the
professionals is pizza. I could eat pizza every day, probably. In my house, we
are very snooty about our pizza and usually don’t order it from a chain
restaurant. Instead we get it from a little mom and pop place near my house
called La Roma’s. It’s the best in town, in our opinions.
Do you have any advice for anyone that
would like to be an author?
Being an author is not a
one-size-fits all career, and there is no single right way to do it. Every
author’s path will have some similar and recognizable stepping stones, but each
path will take its own unique direction. Write a lot. Read a lot (a whole,
whole lot!). Don’t think it’s going to happen overnight. Accept criticism and
rejection (if you go down a path that does not include criticism and rejection,
then you probably aren’t doing it right). Keep trying to get better. Never give
up.
2 comments:
Thanks for hosting Heir of Thunder on your blog!
Great Interview :) Great book :)
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