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Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Interview of Author Josh Lanyon

Today it's my pleasure to interview author Josh Lanyon.

Latest Book: The Darkling Thrush
Buy Link: http://www.loose-id.com/The-Darkling-Thrush.aspx
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xURp4ndRGXs
BIO:
A distinct voice in gay fiction, multi-award-winning author JOSH LANYON has been writing gay mystery and romance for over a decade. In addition to numerous short stories, novellas, and novels, Josh is the author of the critically acclaimed Adrien English series, including the Hell You Say, winner of the 2006 USABookNews awards for GLBT Fiction. Josh is an Epic Award winner and a three time Lambda Literary Award finalist. Josh is also the author of the definitive M/M writing guide Man, Oh Man: Writing M/M Fiction for Kinks and Ca$h.

Q: What part of the book is the easiest for you to write? Why? What part of the book is the hardest for you? Why?
A: The first draft. Ideas are easy and plentiful, and I actually love revising and rewriting, but that first slogging, dragging first draft? UGH. It’s hell on earth. Getting the foundation of the story down is the hardest part because I want that story to fly with angel wings from conception, and of course that just doesn’t happen. It takes a lot of work to make writing look effortless.

Q: Who is your favorite character in your book and why?
A: Oh well, I will always be very, very fond of Adrien English and Jake Riordan. These were my first series character, and the AE books are still my longest running series, so those characters will always be special to me. As for why? I started writing that series when my life was very much in flux. I had stopped writing for a number of years and was only toying with the idea of getting back into it. My work life was difficult, my personal life was difficult…and Adrien and his adventures offered escape and entertainment. I loved writing those books and I will always love those characters.

Q: Do all your heroes and all heroines look the same in your mind as you “head write”?
A: No. They all look quite different. I just hope they look equally different in the minds of readers!

Q: What hobby do you enjoy when not writing?
A: I try and garden even when I’m writing. It’s great exercise (which all writers need to be conscious of) and it’s very calming. A garden is philosophy brought to practical life. There are many lessons to be learned from gardening, plus it puts us in touch with our senses, and that’s what you want when you write: to be thinking through your senses. How does this smell, taste, feel, look, sound…? So I try to work in an hour of garden time whether I’m writing or not. I really have to, because I am ALWAYS writing.

Q: What’s your strongest point as a writer?
A: If you ask my readers, they would probably say my characters. I think it’s more that I have a literary background and have been publishing in mainstream for many years. My experiences beyond the narrow realm of romance and ebook publishing allow me to put certain things into context -- perspective -- in a way I think many of my peers aren’t able to do. I think it keeps me realistic -- and saves me a lot of frustration, which ultimately pays off in the writing itself.

Q: What genre would you like to try writing in but haven’t yet done so? Why?
A: Well, I finally took my shot at fantasy and spec fiction…I haven’t written a western yet. I’d like to try a western!

Tell us where to find you: website(s), publisher’s page(s), blog(s), Facebook page(s), etc. List them all!
http://www.joshlanyon.com
http://jgraeme2007.livejournal.com
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/JoshLanyon
http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/359194.Josh_Lanyon
http://www.facebook.com

BLURB:
Fed up with his desk duty in the Imperial Arcane Library, book hunter Colin Bliss accepts a private commission to find The Sword’s Shadow, a legendary and dangerous witches’ grimoire. But to find the book, Colin must travel to the remote Western Isles and solve a centuries’ old murder.

It should be nothing more than an academic exercise, so why is dour -- and unreasonably sexy -- Magister Septimus Marx doing his best to keep Colin from accepting this mission -- even going so far as to seduce Colin on their train journey north?

Septimus is not the only problem. Who is the strange fairy woman that keeps appearing at inconvenient times? And who is working behind the scenes with the sinister adventuress Irania Briggs? And why do Colin’s employers at the Museum of the Literary Occult keep accusing Colin of betraying them?

As Colin digs deeper and deeper into the Long Island’s mysterious past, he begins to understand why Septimus is willing to stop him at any price -- but by then, it’s too late to turn back.

EXCERPT:
I set off for the scene of the ambush, slowly driving along the old coast road, keeping an eye out for the stone shaped like a druid or a chess piece. The wind was blowing so hard, the old coupe shook as though we would be knocked into the sea. Electricity crackled in the air.

The land was mostly flat along here. It seemed to me that Mago would have had plenty of time to realize a detail had been sent from the castle. Would he have recognized them as a danger? If he had had time to realize what was happening, would he have tried to prevent the grimoire from falling into the wrong hands?

The coupe crested the small hill, and I saw the stone. It was indeed shaped like a bent and hooded man -- very like one of the chess pieces that Mrs. Morrison had set out for Septimus and me two nights ago.

I pulled to the side of the road, got out, and walked the rest of the way. I could see no place along here that Mago might have hidden a book. Unless he had thrown it into the bog nearby. Had he determined that the book was better destroyed than falling into the wrong hands? If so, he had had a lot in common with Septimus and the Vox Pessimires.

I stood for a moment, visualizing it -- visualizing Mago as he realized he was being pursued: the distant thunder of horse’s hooves, then the scrape and whisper of footsteps on sand, climbing closer, ever closer, the whip of torches in the wind, a smear of yellow in the blackness.

He would know almost at once he was trapped. What would he do? I looked around and spotted a track leading down to the beach.

I followed it until I came to a graveyard in the machair.

Here, there were no fancy, sculpted tombstones or markers as had been in the churchyard on the cliffs. These were plain granite markers. The graves of poor people. Fisherfolk and crofters. I walked among them, studying the inscriptions that had been protected from the relentless Leodhas wind and elements by Old Magick.

The majority of the dates were from around the same era -- and no date of death was noted later than 1388.

I stood still, trying to absorb this.

Very well. So the graveyard had fallen out of use after 1388. Not so odd, was it? The girl in the tobacconist shop had said it herself. Young people moved away, and old people died. Villages were abandoned. So, then, would be their graveyards, correct?

I began to examine the gravestones more closely. As the evidence accumulated, the hair rose on the back of my neck. Whole families had died the same year. Man, woman, child. Grandparents and babies. Seventy people all dead the same year.

Was it a plague? A massacre?

The final grave I found was set some distance from the others. There was no name, no inscription. It was a simple stone carved with a crude seven-point star.

I stared at it for some time, suspecting that I was viewing the grave of Ivan Mago.

Or whatever had been left of him after the eagles had finished.

At last I turned and walked back to the sandy track. I followed it down the wildflower-covered hillside to the beach, until I came to what looked to be an abandoned village.

The lost village of Marbost?

I gazed at the crumble of white crofts and broken seawall. A broken chimney rose from the grass and wildflowers.

The graveyard would likely belong to this village -- this village that had apparently died in 1388. The same year as Swanhild Somerhairle.

It seemed too great a coincidence.

What connection could this village have to Swanhild? Had the people here tried to offer aid to Ivan Mago? Had they been punished for it? That was the sheerest speculation. Why had Mago come this way, though? Why not the road from Steering? That was the direct route.

I stared out at the little harbor. Mago could have landed here, could have chosen this roundabout way to approach Urquhart’s castle, but the only reason for it that I could see would be to conceal his presence on the island.

To conceal his presence from Agro Urquhart.

Success would require the complicity of this village. Why should he have expected that?

But what could have wiped out this entire village if not violent retaliation of some kind? Punishment for a betrayal? Who was better positioned on the island to bring death and destruction to a lot of people at once than the chieftain himself?

I climbed over a broken, blackened wall and dropped down to the spongy ground below, crunching my way over gravel and shell.

Slowly I wandered among the ruins of the lost village. My uneasy suspicion was confirmed. No natural disaster had broken and blackened these stone walls.

I continued down the road until I came to what had clearly been a place of worship. It looked like the ruins of any chapel, but chiseled into the stone threshold was the seven-point star.

So the village of Marbost, like Swanhild, had followed the old religion. Not so surprising. In the fourteenth century, it was Christianity that had been the anomaly. The conversion in Scotland, as in most of the European Alliance states, had been mostly peaceful.

I circled the building, looking for access. I discovered a break in the wall and climbed awkwardly through. The roof was gone, and sunlight shifted across the sand and seaweed-strewn stone floor.

Otherwise the building seemed empty. I was put in mind of the castle chapel. Two places of worship picked clean to the bones of their faith -- though the faiths were very different. At least as far as any faith differed one from the other.

Traversing the long room, I heard a whisper behind me -- a sound like the scrape of a shoe on a sandy floor. Remembering the alarm of the muniment room the day before, I whirled and saw a shadow standing outlined against the wall. Someone was watching me from just inside the fissure in the wall -- someone had climbed in after me.

“Who’s there?” I called sharply.

The silhouette moved into the sunlight.

Septimus.

I hadn’t realized how alarmed I’d been till I felt the rush of relief.

“You startled me.”

“Did I?” Half his face was still in shadow. He seemed unnaturally still.

“Mrs. Morrison said you’d gone back to the mainland.”

“I returned this morning.”

“Are you following me?” I didn’t think he was, so his silence threw me.

“Yes,” he said at last.

“Why?”

“Because I think you’re going to find the Faileas a’ Chlaidheimh

Well, that made one of us. I wasn’t nearly as hopeful. “I thought you didn’t want me to find it.”

“It doesn’t matter what I want. It’s too late now.”

He sounded grim. I walked toward him, saying, “Look, Septimus, I don’t think I’m as close as you believe, but if I was…do you really think I’m so irresponsible that I’d let it go to the highest bidder? If I do find it, I’ll take it to the Societas Magicke first. I know the Arcane Services would have to have a say in the disposition of such a powerful grimoire.”

He shook his head.

There was something at work here I didn’t understand. Something that turned his eyes black with an emotion alarmingly like grief. I put my hand out to him, resting it on his sleeve. “What’s wrong?”

He pulled me into his arms, half crushing me, and his mouth found mine. Shockingly I could taste tears on his lips.

I pushed away, staring at him. He was crying. His face was wet, though he made no sound. “What is it? Septimus? What in the name of All is wrong?”

His hands grasped my shoulders hard, then seemed to gentle, sliding down my arms to hold my hands. He gazed gravely into my eyes. His tears had stopped.

“I have to kill you,” he said.

7 comments:

Cindy Spencer Pape said...

Josh, this is lovely! Congrats on all the success!

Katalina Leon said...

Wonderful to meet you Josh! Loved the excerpt.
XXOO Kat

jean hart stewart said...

Powerful and beautifully written. Easy to see why you're so well-pubbed. Jean

Josh Lanyon said...

Thanks, Cindy! Much appreciated.

Josh Lanyon said...

Nice to meet you too, Kat! Thanks for the kind words.

Josh Lanyon said...

Jean, what writer doesn't love to hear that! *g* Thanks so much.

April Ash said...

Love that last line...great way to keep readers interested in what's going to happen next!
Marianne/April

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