Authors get their best feedback from author events

 

Authors get their best feedback from author eventsJay Leno has commented a number of times in interviews that it’s important for stand-up comedians to continue their stand-up work even when they no longer have to. Getting in front of a small live audience is a valuable experience, because it keeps you sharp and provides an opportunity to understand what people like and don’t like about your work.

My books were published last year and I’m new to book marketing, but I’ve noticed that Jay Leno’s advice also applies to authors. The more I talk to readers about my books at events, the more I learn what they enjoy about my writing. It’s information I don’t get in a book review or an email. It’s real, instinctual feedback that they provide with their words, facial expressions, laughter, applause, and physical energy.

Last night at an event where I was one of five authors on a panel, I introduced new information about the way I write and discovered more than I could have imagined. This is what I shared:

  • My stories will always have a strong sense of place. The story’s location will be one of the characters. I want readers to connect to the story’s location via their senses, e.g., smell, touch, sight, etc. This comes from my love of travel.
  • I write fiction to communicate an idea. My book THE MEDIUM communicates: it’s comforting and healing to connect with someone you love on the Other Side. My book THE HERMIT BOOKSTORE communicates: there’s no such thing as a coincidence.
  • My story ideas and themes date back to my childhood when I first became interested in things most people can’t explain. For example,
    • when you walk into a room and can feel that something is wrong
    • a feeling of deja vu when you travel to a place you’ve never been but it feels familiar
    • receiving a sign from or connecting with someone on the Other Side
    • feeling the influence of a full moon
    • a coincidence that doesn’t feel like a coincidence, either when it happens or a few months later when you’re thinking about it
  • I refer to these events as “mysteries of the human experience”. We feel them. We experience them. We know they happen. But we can’t explain them. My stories will always include these types of events because they are part of being human (whether you notice them or not).
  • I think it’s important to write stories about these types of events, because it helps people validate their own experiences.

While sharing this information I learned that readers better understand the types of stories I write, and they enjoy reading about characters who have these experiences. It also adds a bit of mystery to the story, which everyone enjoys.

How research helps a fiction writer develop a sense of place

Reiff's Auto Museum
Reiff’s Auto Museum, Woodland, Calif.

Whether you are a reader who enjoys stories that take place in the 1950s, or a writer who is writing a story that is set in this time period, you will want to visit this place. I only live 30 miles from Mark Reiff’s Gas Station Museum in Woodland, California, yet had no idea it existed. What a thrill it was to hear about it from a friend!

It made me think about the writing process and the importance of research. To see, touch, smell, hear and sense the vibe of the time or place where your story evolves is invaluable (at least it is for me when I write). All of these sensations become part of the book and help your words develop pictures in readers’ minds.

Before I wrote THE MEDIUM, I traveled to Savannah, Georgia, and explored the city’s Historic District for two weeks (read more about my visit here). Also, a visit to an old farmhouse in California’s gold rush country inspired my novella, THE HERMIT BOOKSTORE.

It’s not always possible for writers to travel to their story location; therefore, they rely on other research methods, such as reviewing online blogs, local newspapers and magazines, maps, travel books, or talking with people who are familiar with a region.

Every good novel worth reading requires some research. And it happens to be one of my favorite steps of the writing process.

Why I love to read author interviews

Author Interviews

There are two writing magazines that I enjoy reading, The Writer and Writer’s Digest, and my favorite segments are the author interviews.

There is so much you can learn about an author from an interview that’s not on the back cover of a book or an author’s website. In particular, I think it’s fascinating to read about an author’s writing process and what influences his or her writing. And if I enjoyed the interview and have not read any of the author’s books, that’s an added bonus; I like discovering new authors to read.

If you are like me and enjoy reading author interviews (where secrets are often revealed), please enjoy these two interviews:

  • Kathy Reinhart, Ink Drop Interviews & Reviews, interviews author Linda Westphal: Define a great book; Tell us about the picture on the cover of your book THE MEDIUM; Tell us about the theme running through your book THE HERMIT BOOKSTORE; and, more – View the interview
  • Lisa Montanino, Accidental Bohemian, asks author Linda Westphal about writing, reading, life – View the interview