Tom Young

How did you become a writer?

To tell the truth, I can't remember not wanting to be a writer. I think I got the fever as soon as I could read. For many years I worked as a journalist, and I enjoyed the decade I spent with the Associated Press. But I always wanted to write fiction. Along the way I published the occasional short story or essay. During my career as a reporter, I also pursued a parallel career as a flier in the Air National Guard. As you might imagine, life changed for me after 9/11, as it did for anyone in the military. While flying airlift missions over Afghanistan, looking down at that forbidding terrain, I often thought to myself: This would be a really bad place to go down. 

Well, they say your best fiction comes from what hurts you the most or what scares you the most. The frightening prospect of getting shot down in Afghanistan led me to the plot idea that became my first novel, The Mullah's Storm. I workshopped the manuscript for The Mullah's Storm at the Sewanee Writers' Conference in 2008, and things began to fall into place from there.

Name your writing influences (writers, books, teachers, etc.).

Some of my favorite authors include Hemingway, Twain, and the French author and aviator Antoine de Saint-Exupery. Favorite modern authors include many of the Southern writers, such as Charles Frazier, Ron Rash, and Jill McCorkle. (I know; those authors are way out of my genre. But I'm very much a creature of the South, and I really enjoy the region's literature. In fact, I think all writers should read widely outside their genre. I even read a lot of poetry because I think we prose writers can learn a lot from the way poets use words not just for their meaning but for their sound.) 

One of the best books on fiction writing I know is Writing the Breakout Novel, by Donald Maass. 

As far as teachers are concerned, I've had some great ones, and I've had some not-so-great ones. But I can tell you this: ignore any teacher who discourages you. If you really want to become a writer, no matter how much you have to learn, you'll get there if you stick with it.

When and where do you write?

On a typical day, I go to a local coffee shop and start my morning my writing there. Very old school--longhand on a notepad. Later in the day, I'll transfer that morning's writing to my desktop computer, and that process becomes the first phase of editing.

However, I've written everywhere--on airplanes, in cars, on beaches, in parks. If you want to become a professional writer, you need to be able to write every day, pretty much anywhere, whether you feel like it or not.

What are you working on now?

I'm currently working on a new thriller for Putnam. My two main characters, Air Force flier Michael Parson and Army veteran Sophia Gold, will face a new adventure in North Africa.

Have you ever suffered from writer’s block?

Not yet (knock on wood). Here's how I keep writer's block at bay: Every day I tell myself I have to write at least one page. Some days I produce a lot more than that, but even on a bad day I can force myself to write one page. That keeps my momentum going. And even if you do only one page a day, at the end of a year you'll have a hefty manuscript.

What’s your advice to new writers?

Attend as many writers' conferences and workshops as your schedule and wallet will allow. You'll hone your skills and meet agents and editors who can help you. 

And write every day, if possible. There's nothing magic about writing; it's a learned skill. But you have to keep at it.

Tom Young served in Afghanistan and Iraq with the Air National Guard. He has also flown combat missions to Bosnia and Kosovo, and additional missions to Latin America, the horn of Africa, and the Far East. In all, Young has logged nearly five thousand hours as a flight engineer on the C-5 Galaxy and the C-130 Hercules, while flying to almost forty countries. Military honors include two Air Medals, three Aerial Achievement Medals, and the Air Force Combat Action Medal.

Young is the author of three novels set in the Afghanistan war: The Mullah's Storm, Silent Enemy, and The Renegades. His latest novel, The Warriors, will be released on July 11. In civilian life, he spent ten years as a writer and editor with the broadcast division of the Associated Press, and flew as a first officer for Independence Air, an airline based at Dulles International Airport near Washington, D.C. He holds B.A. and M.A. degrees in Mass Communication from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Sue Halpern

How did you become a writer?

I became a writer by being a reader. I started visiting the library every Saturday from about the age of five on, having fallen in love with books. At some point I started getting interested in not only the story, but how the writer made the story work. I was the kid who read the last page first. 

Name your writing influences (writers, books, teachers, etc.).

In college I studied with John Hersey, who impressed upon us that writing was about voice and immersed us in different writers' voices. When we read Flannery O'Conner I decided I wanted to become a fine lady writer from the South. The only problem was that I wasn't fine, or a lady, or from the South or, at that point, a writer. But I kept reading for voice, even so. I loved discovering Grace Paley, Annie Dillard, the poetry of Wallace Stevens and William Carlos Williams.

When and where do you write?

I have a small office at home where I type, but I write by hand, in a notebook, so I tend to migrate to the living room, or the porch, and lie on my back and compose. But then I take the notebook back to my desk and basically rewrite everything when I am at the computer.

What are you working on now?

I'm poking around at a new non-fiction book--top secret of course--as well as a long piece for The New York Review of Books about how the quants are taking over and eliminating mystery and serendipity from our lives.

Have you ever suffered from writer’s block?

I haven't suffered from writer's block in any profound way, but I find that when I can't seem to "use my words" I pull a book off my shelf, something I love, and read that for a while and it always gets me going. Or I go out and walk the dog or go for a bike ride.

What’s your advice to new writers?

Go to the library or a book store and look around. Understand that many, many other people have written books, and you can, too. Then pick a realistic number of words you promise yourself to write every day--maybe it's 500, maybe it's 200--and stick to it. If you do that, the words will accumulate, and you will have something other than a blank page to work from.

Bio: My first published work, for which I received $75, was a poem I wrote as a high school sophomore. It took a while before I made that much money again. I graduated from Yale and went on to Oxford, where I received a doctorate in political theory. My first job after college was working with people coming out of prison. My second job was teaching ethics to medical students. I've written for a wide range of magazines, from Parade to The New Yorker, from Rolling Stone to Conde Nast Traveler to The New York Review of Books, and have published six books, most recently "A Dog Walks Into A Nursing Home: Lessons on the Good Life From and Unlikely Teacher," about working as a therapy dog team at a public nursing home in Vermont.

Marci Nault

How did you become a writer?

I was born a storyteller and by the time I was four I think my parents were ready to duct-tape my mouth because I had to share every detail about my world. In my teens, I spent hours in the woods penning ideas. Throughout my twenties, I was frustrated that I couldn’t make the words on the page match the vision in my mind. It took quite a bit of mediocre writing to finally find my style and voice.

Name your writing influences (writers, books, teachers, etc.).

I have a stack of books that I keep close when I’m writing: Stephen King’s On Writing, Anne Patchett’s Bel Canto, Joanne Harris’s Chocolate, and whatever book I’m currently reading that has inspired me to write stronger. But my mother was my strongest influence. Having learned writing and grammar from the nuns in the sixties, she’s been a harsh critic forcing me to work harder.

When and where do you write?

I wish I had a routine and I’m working to find one, but my writing comes to me at the oddest times: driving in the car, shopping, on airplanes, hiking in the woods, and unfortunately at four in the morning. Sometimes I write in bed because I have to get the idea down immediately. If I’m distracted I head to a coffee shop; I have about three haunts depending on my mood. I also have a home office that overlooks a park. This is my favorite place to write because I can stare out the window while I create my characters and scenes.

What are you working on now?

My second novel is still untitled. It deals with how our memory creates who we are, but since The Lake House hit the shelves there’s been a tremendous call for a sequel and I’m beginning to consider it.

Have you ever suffered from writer’s block?

It’s more like writer’s fear. When I go into a scene I have no idea where it will take me and it’s an intense emotional ride. There’s also the worry that it won’t be good enough and I know that the ideas are right there if I’ll just open the door, but a part of me wants to keep it clamped shut. Sometimes it will take six hours to convince my mind that it’s okay to write.

What’s your advice to new writers?

Patience! Too many writers race ahead. Great writing takes time. Write, walk away, return, revise, and repeat as many times as necessary. Always read your writing aloud to someone else. Before you query agents get a professional critique. Many times these cost only a few hundred dollars and can make all the difference.

Marci Nault’s debut novel,The Lake House (Gallery/Simon & Schuster) is a Chicago Tribune, Cape May Herald, CBS and Amazon Premier Featured Summer read pick. It’s the story of the unlikely friendship between 74-year-old, Victoria Rose, and 28-year-old, Heather Bregman, set on a small lakeside community in New England.

Marci is the founder of 101 Dreams Come True, a motivational website that encourages visitors to follow their improbable dreams. Her story about attempting to complete 101 of her biggest dreams has been featured in newspapers and magazines nationwide, and she regularly speaks on the subject on radio and television. She loves to talk with book groups through Skype. More information can be found at www.marcinault.com or www.101dreamscometrue.com.