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Interview with Author Frank Zafiro

Sunday, August 22nd, 2010

Frank Zafiro is the author of the River City crime novels and also writes mainstream fiction under the name Frank Scalise, which is his actual name. Born and raised in Spokane, he joined the U.S. Army after high school graduation and served in Military Intelligence. He’s been a Spokane police officer since 1993 and has served as patrol officer, corporal, detective, sergeant and lieutenant. His current title is captain.

Zafiro has written seriously since he was thirteen, starting out with short stories and poetry. Last week I reviewed his River City series for Bark. If you didn’t read that post, let me summarize: I’m a big fan.  As Frank’s latest stalker groupie, I emailed him with a bunch of questions about his journey towards publication and being a writer while working full time. The interview was posted on Bark yesterday, but I thought the readers of this blog would also like to be inspired by Frank’s journey and his wise words.

When and why did you begin writing? 

When?  Well, like most writers, I began pretty early.  Maybe eight or so?  But by ten, I knew I wanted to be a writer, so that is the age I usually give in response to this question.  To be honest, I don’t ever remember I time where I didn’t want to be a writer. 

Why? The same reason almost each of you write…because I’m a writer. 

I know that sounds like I’m being a smart alec, but I’m really not.  Much in the same way that a musician plays music or a carpenter works wood, I write because it is who I am.  I’d write even if I couldn’t get anyone to read what I’ve written.  I am a writer.  I write.  I suspect that most of the people reading this understand perfectly.  The rest probably think I’m being pretentious. 

Are there any particular authors/books you looked/look to for inspiration?

I think this is an answer that has changed over the years.  As a youngster, I read a lot of science fiction and fantasy, so I looked to people like Frank Herbert, Piers Anthony, Terry Brooks (and don’t forget Spokane’s own, David Eddings!) for inspiration.  As time passed, I broadened my reading and found others.  I have to say, though, that Stephen King has been an inspiration for a long time.  Not just his personal story (and his book, On Writing), but the masterful way that he writes.  Yeah, no one will confuse it with high brow literary fiction, but he has a way of capturing an image, an action and an emotion that I think we can all learn from. 

On the crime fiction front, I have looked to Waumbaugh, McBain, Block, Lehane…all the masters, as well as people like Steve Hamilton (his Alex McKnight series rocks).  

Is there anything you find particular challenging in your writing?

 Working in the time to get the stories out of my head and onto paper (or pixels).  It’s difficult to juggle a full time job, especially one as involved and “heavy” as mine can be, along with children and a family, and still find the time to write. 

In the writing itself, I think my most challenging area is narrative description.  How do you describe the farm house without simply spending two paragraphs describing it as if it were a real estate ad?  Dialogue is my strongest suit and I think of ways to work description into those threads, but finding the balance between painting a picture for the reader without losing her in the exposition is always a challenge.

Your first two River City crime novels were released by Wolfmont Publishing and then re-released by Gray Dog Press. Could you talk a little bit about your experience with first getting published and then switching publishers?

Actually, the first was from Wolfmont but the second was from Aisling.  Gray Dog is the third (and hopefully final) home of the River City series.

Under a Raging Moon, published by Wolfmont in 2006, was my first published novel.  The publisher was a small press in Georgia, and a fairly new one at the time.  So I guess we were both learning.  I made the mistake of not making sure that certain distribution levels were going to be met (something as simple as being listed in Ingram, and accepting returns).  I also discovered this publisher didn’t believe the second novel would be one that anyone would read, due to the subject matter.  So we had a cold but amicable ‘divorce’ and I took the second book elsewhere (of course, Wolfmont held onto the rights to that first book until they expired in 2008).

Aisling was also a newer publisher but much more progressive.  They did a good job on the cover of Heroes Often Fail and they marketed it well for a small press.  However, the Chief Editor also wrote under several pseudonyms and I suspect that they simply overextended.  So, despite selling more copies in one quarter than the first book at Wolfmont sold in a year…Aisling folded.  They went about it in a rather immature fashion, ignoring emails and phone calls for months as deadline after deadline passed, but ultimately ponied up and released all rights to all of their authors before shuttering the place.

So at that point, I’m starting to feel like the bad luck crime writer, even though I had good sales and good reviews.  So when I was invited to a local author function at Hastings here in Spokane and met Russ Davis at Gray Dog Press, I was both excited and cautious.  I like the small press experience immensely.  As the author, you are so much more involved in the development of your book.  The editor actually listens to you and follows good advice or ideas.  You end up with something much closer to what you envisioned when you first wrote the thing than I think you might with a large publisher.  Of course, the down side is less distribution and a lower profile.  You most definitely have to consider it a marathon and not a sprint.  Sales will spike a little at the release and then trickle on after that.  If you expect NYC Publisher-type treatment and results, you will be disappointed.  But, as I mentioned, you do get to be part of a much more closely knit team and someone(s) who cares intimately for your novel. 

Having experienced three separate small press publishers (more, if you count the ten different publishers I have worked with by being part of their anthologies), I’ve learned that you should definitely read the contract carefully and don’t be afraid to speak up about what you want in that contract.  Also, don’t be shy about giving your ideas and input, as most publishers of this size are very amenable to suggestions. 

How do you find time writing while working full time?

 It’s tough!  I guess I’m lucky in that I am what I refer to as a “block writer.”  In other words, I don’t seem to be able to sit down and write for one hour a day every day at the same time, BUT I can sit down (when I am able to carve out the time) for five straight hours and rip off a huge swath of story.  It tends to be raw at that point and in great need of an edit, but all the basic elements are there — character, story, plot.  So that’s how I get it done — in surges.

Do you have a support group of readers and/or other writers that help you with your works in progress? If so, what do you most appreciate about them and what do they most help you with?

 I have a couple of writer friends that I exchange work with.  And I have my wife, Kristi.  Everyone brings a different element to the critique process.  My friend from New Jersey, Jill Maser, is a line by line critic.  She hammers every little thing.  Kristi is bigger picture, asking things like, “Are you sure Katie would say that?  I don’t see her being so sad about this.”  These varying perspectives, when I put them all together, really help to put the work into focus and make it considerably better.  This is why I make sure to do an Acknowledgment at the beginning of the novels.  It may seem a tad pretentious for a writer at my stage of the journey, but it is my way of publicly saying thank you to these very important people.

How much time do you spend marketing your books and do you have any good marketing tips?

Every chance I get!  It’s intermittent, though, based on my other responsibilities.  I try to make a big splash when the books come out and then hit the bookstores.  Any chance to be interviewed or attend a book club, I jump on those, too.

And bookmarks.  Readers like bookmarks.

As far as tips go, I think the best advice I can give is never do a hard sell.  Tell people about your books.  Listen to them talk about the books they write or like…and actually be interested!  Make friends with people.  Give them bookmarks.  They may not buy your book that day, but they might later.  Or they might get it from the library.  Or tell someone else that will.  I think that karma has a big role here.  Put out some good karma and just be glad you did.  If it comes back around, and it usually will, great!

Do you have any specific writing tips for people interested in writing series? For example, how do you keep story and character arcs through the sequence of novels?

Most people write a series with a single main character, but River City features an ensemble cast, so my advice is directed more toward that.

I think that if you really “know” these characters, you’ll know whether and how they will change over the course of the books.  Don’t be afraid to let a minor character have a larger role if it works within the confines of the series.  Remain true to the characters — don’t force words into their mouths or actions they wouldn’t take simply because it fits the plot development you want.

What do you know now that you wish you’d known when you wrote your first book?

 Slow down.  When I wrote the first book, I went through the story at a brisk pace.  That’s good at times (many of the reviews were pleased with this), but sometimes you have to stop and savor a moment or stroll more slowly through a scene.  It allows you to develop a richer, more textured story.

Also, don’t try to jam everything you ever wanted to do in a novel into that first book.  Write what works for that book, and believe there will be another that you can work in those other things.

What’s your next project?

Dead Even, a collection of River City short stories, is coming out in fall 2010.  Then, in March 2011, the fourth River City crime novel, And Every Man Has to Die will be released.  I have a number of completed projects (a crime/suspense novel, a mystery novel and a YA novel) that are looking for the right home.  I’ve just barely begun the fifth River City crime novel, Place of Wrath and Tears.  And I’m about halfway through an unrelated mystery novel tentatively titled At this Point in My Life.

Beyond that, I have a couple of long-standing ideas that I’m starting to whittle away at, but it’s slow going.  There are only so many hours in the day, right?

Any other advice you’d like to give aspiring authors?

Since all good authors steal, I will provide a pair of illicitly acquired examples…because they inspired me. 

The first is about process and comes from Gary Provost, who wrote back in 1987 that you should find at least one other writer to partner with, because sometimes (and my experience is many times) another writer will understand what the rest of the world does not.

The second is about tenacity and perseverance.  It comes from Joe Konrath, who told us that there is a word for a writer who never gives up.

Published.

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Pippi Longstocking Fraud in the US!

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

Pippi Långstrump with Herr Nilsson

Maybe celebrating Christmas at home in Sweden with my three-year-old nephew and brand new nice has made me extra sensitive to violations against my childhood literary heroes. My English husband certainly thinks so after I treated him to a long tirade this morning about slimy fraudulent business men doing anything for a buck.

The source of my morning anger is Svenska Dagbladet’s article about Astrid Lindgren’s relatives spending hundreds of thousands of kronor on protecting character names from her books on the American market, only to find out that the copyright firm they used turned out to be fraudulent. Saltkråkan AB–the company responsible for Astrid’s estate, lead by her granddaughter Malin Billing–is known for being generous when it comes to using book titles and character names from Lindgren’s books, but they protest when hotels named Villa Vilerkulla open up claiming to be sanctioned by the author or children wigs made out of flammable materials are sold as “official Pippi products.”

Astrid Lindgren is so much more than a role model for me; my admiration is more on the order of worship. She didn’t start writing until she was in her forties and still managed to become an international publishing phenomenon. When she became pregnant as an unwed young woman in 1926, she decided against marriage even though the father of the baby proposed. Instead she left the boy in foster care and worked her butt off to get a career that would support both her and the child. I’m always a sucker for women who do their own thing despite society’s rules and expectations. Throughout her life she was an advocate for children and animal rights, as well as gender and ethnic equality.

The author has a minor planet called after her (3204 Lindgren, discovered in 1978) and the Swedish microsatellite Astrid 1 has instruments named after characters in her books: PIPPI (Prelude in Planetary Particle Imaging), EMIL (Electron Measurements – In-situ and Lightweight), and MIO (Miniature Imaging Optics). After it launched on 24 January 1995, the author said that maybe people should call her Asteroid Lindgren from then on.

Ronja Rövardotter

Like several generations of Swedish children, I grew up reading her children and young adult books. Although Pippi and Emil were a big favorites when I was a child—mostly from the TV shows–my favorite books of hers, probably some of my all time favorite novels, are the young adult stories: Bröderna Lejonhjärta (Brothers Lionheart), Mio min Mio (Mio my Mio) and Ronja Rövardotter (Ronia the Robber’s Daughter). All of her characters are strong-willed and independent boys and girls who struggle with temptation, but in the end always do the right thing—all while having the adventure of their life.

Although I didn’t consciously thing about it then, I’m sure that strong female characters like Pippi and Ronja had a great influence on my perception of what girls’ role and place in society is. Just like Astrid herself, they didn’t take any crap and kicked butt just as well as the boys did.

I hope Lindgren’s granddaughter takes after her grandmother and give those fake copyright company owners a great ass-whopping.

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Yay! I made the final cut for a collection!

Sunday, June 21st, 2009

When I read Rita Golden Gelman’s Tales of a Female Nomad: Living at Large in the World in 2005, I immediately wanted to know more about the fascinating author. Actually, what I really wanted to do right after reading the book was to sell all my stuff, pack a backpack and start living a nomadic life like hers. I had travelled around in South East Asia and Europe for most of 2002 and was very keen on adapting that lifestyle full time. After I calmed down a bit, I logged on to Rita’s website instead of listing all my possessions on Craigslist. What I found is that she’s a fantastic inspiration as well as a fabulous writer. I sent her a note through email and to my surprise she emailed me back with gracious advice about traveling and writing. On the website, I also saw a note about a collaborative travel essay/cookbook project and after some encouragement from my critique group, I sent in a submission. I wrote about my first American Thanksgiving and included the recipe for the chocolate cake I baked for the dinner.

Since then, Rita and Maria Altobelli (who writes about living in Mexico and maintains http://www.mexicoinsmallbytes.com/) selected which essays they liked best, tested all the recipes, found an agent for the project, who then found a publishing house. Today I found out that our editor for Random House’s Crown division picked my essay to be included in the book. The working title of the book is Break Free, Break Bread, Break Rules: Stories and Recipes from the World at Large and should be out next year. All the proceeds, including the advance, will be used for scholarships for vocational education for high school graduates living in the slums of New Delhi.

Today is a very, very happy day.

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Posted in Agents & Editors, Authors I Admire, Essays, Firsts, Inspiration, Non Fiction Writing, Submissions & Queries | Comments »

Another Article Sold to Inland Northwest Homes and Living

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

Back in March, I queried the editor at INWH&L for a profile of a local writer. I just got an email from her saying she wants the article but didn’t have space until now. It will be in the August/September issue of the magazine.

The profile is of Jamie Leigh Hansen, an amazing writer and friend who writes paranormal romances that takes place in Spokane. I wrote a nine page profile of Jamie for a class last fall quarter. For this article, I had to decide what I really wanted to say about Jamie and then use only 800 words to do it. It was a very interesting exercise. (My writing teachers would tell you that it’s one I really need to learn.) The original essay touched on many aspects of the author. Her background, her family, her writing, etc. For the article I chose to focus mainly on Jamie as an author and incorporate a little bit about her background since it’s a local magazine and she lives in Spokane. It was super hard to be so concise and still paint a clear picture of my friend. I learned a lot about saying much with fewer words. (My husband would tell you he wishes I could learn how to do that verbally too.)

So, look for the magazine around the end of July. If you are a Journal of Business subscriber, then you’ll automatically get a copy. Otherwise, pick one up at any AAA office or other tourist information places around Spokane. Also, pick up copies of Betrayed and Cursed, the first two books of Jamie’s fabulous trilogy.

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The Right Stuff by Tom Wolfe

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

Wow, talk about a testosterone shower. This book is full go from the beginning to end. Here’s the last craft essay I’ll post from the profiles class.

Righteous Now and Then

Tom Wolfe was not present when a lot of the conversations and other events he reports on in The Right Stuff took place. He started writing about astronauts in 1972 for a series of articles for Rolling Stonesmagazine about the Apollo 17 mission and eventually began researching the whole of the space program. The only way to find out what happened during Project Mercury, which ran from 1959 through 1963, and the related events at Edwards (formerly Muroc) Air Force Base during the 40’s and the 50’s were to interview the people that had been there. (And of course to read and watch already published media.) Maybe that is why Wolfe didn’t include very many direct quotes in The Right Stuff. Direct quotes and its fiction equivalent, dialog, usually speed up a story and allow the author to place the reader right in the middle of an event; Tom Wolfe chose to use other tricks to create the same effect.

In The Right Stuff, the author switches tenses when he wants us (the readers) to pay attention to a particular scene and when he wants to speed up the narrative. An example of a “mock dialog” is on page 249, when John Glenn is asked to convince his wife, Annie, to admit Lyndon Johnson into her house. It is line spaced as and reads like dialogue, but none of the sentences are in quotation marks, so instead we get the spirit of what the conversation was like. (Contrast this with the conversation between Pete Conrad and General Schwichtenberg on page 73, which do use direct quotes.) In the Glenn scene, the tense shift from past to present happens on page 248. First we were with Annie in the house where “the curtains were pulled” and “the lawn, or what was left of it looked like Nut City” then, starting with the next paragraph, we’re with John in present tense “Meanwhile, John is on top of the rocket….” The only transition needed is that one little word, “meanwhile.”

Wolfe also often switches tenses when we are in the head of one of the characters, such as in chapter 1 when Jane Conrad reflects on all the funerals she and her husband attended. Another example is the scene where Chuck Yeager is testing the NF-104 on pg. 242. We start out in the past, “At 40,000 feet Yeager began his speed run.” but make the transition into the present by one little phrase “At precisely that moment….” The rest of the scene uses present tense and sentences chopped up by ellipses to place us not just on the page, but right in action inside Yeager’s head.

The effect of Wolfe’s cleverly placed time transitions (and all the other tools he’s using: chopped paragraphs, word choices, voice, etc.) is that it feels like we’re getting the story from the characters in the book. It’s as if we’re sitting in Pancho’s, knocking back a few beers while one of the pilots is telling us a story, or maybe we’re at an AWC tea party, chatting with one of the astronaut wives. (Next time a friend tells you a story, pay attention to how often he or she switches tenses, especially if the tale is about an action filled moment.) Wolfe strengthens this effect by the way he sometimes establishes the time line of the book. He uses direct dates, as on page 172 “On January 19, the day before Kennedy’s inauguration…,” but often he adds a little time transition, so that we feel like we’re there with the character retelling the event, as on page 182 “By now, late February of 1961…,” or as on page 223 “Last year, 1962, they created the new….” The events aren’t in chronological order, but we’re never lost in the time line.

As someone who constantly lost in the order of events and verb tenses in my own writing, I wish I could sit down with Tom Wolfe in a bar somewhere, having a drink while he teaches me how to manipulate time and tenses as effortless as he does in The Right Stuff.

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