With the release of his most recent novel, The Archmage, Ian stopped by The Warrior Muse for an interview.
Tell us a bit about The Archmage.
The Archmage is a sequel to the novel Just Cause, starring the super-speedy Mustang Sally along with the rest of the Just Cause superhero team. In it, I explore the use of magic in a superhero setting. In this case, a character named Wolfgang Frasier has been slaughtering other mages around the world and taking their power for himself. He’s gotten so powerful that there is only one other mage remaining besides him, the hero Stratocaster, who is a member of the Lucky Seven hero team that Sally trained with at the beginning of Just Cause. If Frasier manages to kill Stratocaster, his power becomes absolute and he could plunge the entire world into darkness, becoming its total ruler. This is, of course, his goal. Sally and the other heroes have no choice but to try to stop him, even though his power is so great that he can call armies of the dead out of the ground and turn anyone captured to his side. There’s a nifty bit of time travel thanks to magic going awry that sends the team back to the 1870s, and of course some great intrigue and epic, cinematic battles. At the same time, Sally’s relationship with Jason is growing much more complex and suffering growing pains all its own.
LHP is an imprint I created
specifically for the release of my novel-length work and collections. I didn’t
want to simply release them under my own name as the publisher because with
such a wide variety of genres under my belt, I wanted something to tie them all
together. This way, if someone buys The Archmage, likes it, and looks to
see what else LHP has to offer, they might discover Blood on the Ice or Pariah’s
Moon or Troubleshooters.
You do write in a variety of genres. Tell us about some
of them.
I don’t like to be pigeonholed, so I don’t force myself to
stay in one genre if I’m interested in writing in a different one. This goes
against common wisdom of building a brand, from what I’ve seen on the internet,
so I’m forming my own uncommon wisdom instead. That again ties back to the LHP
imprint by creating a common thread beyond just my name. I follow my muse, so
I’ve gone from superheroes (Just Cause, The Archmage) to funny science
fiction (The Milkman), to cyberpunk (Troubleshooters), to
fantasy/Western (Pariah’s Moon), to urban fantasy sports (Blood on
the Ice), to religious symbolism (Hope and Undead Elvis) and even
more. And if my agent sells The Guitarist, I can add “Mainstream Young
Adult” to my genres.
You have an agent? But I thought you were self-published.
I do have an agent, Carly Watters of PS Literary Agency in
Toronto. She represents my Young Adult work only, and when we discussed the
possibility of her representing me, we both agreed that she could still
effectively represent a portion of my work and I could still effectively
release my speculative and adult fiction without interfering with one another.
I am, in fact, searching for a second literary agent to represent The
Oilman’s Daughter, the epic steampunk/space opera that I coauthored with my
dear friend Allison M. Dickson.
What’s it like working with another writer so closely on
a project?
I’m not sure I have anything better to compare it to than a
successful marriage. We worked very closely together on the project (two time
zones separating us notwithstanding!). We had complete trust with each other,
and were able to discuss what should have been extremely divisive and difficult
issues not only with calm heads, but with a sense of joy that only two opposing
viewpoints between dear friends can bring. The best thing about working with
someone like that is going back through the manuscript and not being able to
tell exactly who wrote which parts. That’s just awesome.
That does sound like a great experience!
One thing that never ceases to amaze me is your productivity. What is your secret for finding time to write and making it happen?
My secret for finding time to write is to always be writing, whether or not I'm actually performing the act of putting words onto a page. James Thurber told this tale, which exemplifies my own philosophy quite nicely: I never quite know when I'm not writing. Sometimes my wife comes up to me at a party and says, 'Dammit, Thurber, stop writing.' She usually catches me in the middle of a paragraph. Or my daughter will look up from the dinner table and ask, 'Is he sick?' 'No,' my wife says, 'he's writing something.'" That's me, totally.
About how long do you typically spend on your stories (short and novel length), from conception to publication?
Short stories I tend to write in no more than a couple of days. When I get one of those ideas, it becomes pretty much all-consuming until I finish it, so I work pretty fast. Novels for me range wildly from taking only a month to several, depending upon how hard I'm working on them and how many other things are going on in my life and my writing/publishing business. I'd say that three months is the average time I spend writing a novel (NaNoWriMo tends to skew that average shorter).
I'm afraid it's time for the last question: What advice do you have for aspiring authors?
Write. A lot. Write some more. Then, for variety, go for a walk. Then write some more when you get back. Show your writing to your friends and family. Ignore what they say about it. Show your writing to someone who doesn't have any reason to sugar-coat their criticism. Take it like Kevin Bacon in Animal House and cry out "Thank you, sir, may I have another?" Then go write some more. Talk to writers further in the process than you are, but don't become a drain. Write some more. Go to conferences. Write some more. Read industry blogs. Write. Turn off the TV. Write. Are you sick of writing yet? If you are, then you're not a writer. Take up a new hobby, like badminton or philately. If you're not sick of writing, try to write so much you'll make yourself sick of it. If that doesn't work, keep writing. Also, learn how to edit, critique, market, produce and publish your own work, query your work to agents, editors, and trade publications. Learn everything you can about the industry and recognize that you will never get to stop learning. And you will never get to stop writing. What, you're still here? It's over! GO WRITE!
Thank you for stopping by on your book tour, Ian!
The Archmage, book 2 of the Just Cause Universe series, launches from all online retailers on September 1, 2012. Exclusive signed editions can be purchased directly from Local Hero Press.
Find Ian on Twitter as @ianthealy, and follow Local Hero
Press as @LocalHeroPress.
On Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AuthorIanThomasHealy
and http://www.facebook.com/LocalHeroPress
Author
website: www.ianthealy.comMay you find your Muse.
8 comments:
Mustang Sally and the superhero team sound like an awesome bunch.
Ian sounds like a versatile writer. I hope he finds a second agent.
Ian certainly sounds prolific. Great interview. Cool idea about the self-publishing brand - it makes a lot of sense... Love the book cover too!
Medeia, I'm willing to bet he will with little problem.
Nick, it's a cool brand, too. Love the logo for it.
Never read much superhero stories but this sounds like great fun! A fab interview, Shannon! Good luck to you and Ian!
great interview will have to check this book out
God I hate that guy!!!! Okay, I really love him, but hate how bad he makes the rest of us look. If you need a great read, grab one of Ian's books, and trust me, you have plenty to choose from.
Great interview.
Thanks for having me, Shannon!
Pat, thank you, and I think this crew is definitely fun!
Becca, hope you love it!
Julie, he really does make all of us look bad! Then again, you're also one of the hardest working writers I know. Kettle, meet pot. ;-p
Ian, it was fun, thanks!
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