Rachel Aukes

How did you become a writer?

I wrote stories as a kid and even won a contest, but then life got in the way. I went to college and earned a degree in computers so I could make a living. It wasn't until I was in my late thirties and miserable at my job that I considered doing some I wanted to do for a living rather than do for the money. It was during that time of introspection that I read one of Sherrilyn Kenyon's books (titled Dream Chaser, ironically) that struck a chord. It had a storyline similar to a story I had, and I thought, "Why the hell not?" I started writing my first novel that day. That was eight years ago. Last year, I quit the day job to write full time. For the first time in my love, I absolutely love my job. 

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

I grew up on comic books and science fiction novels, so those as a whole shaped my mindset and passions the most. I've always found the "what if" of speculative fiction fascinating, and so the stories I write are always in the genre I want to read. After I began writing professionally, I found an understanding of the writer's life in Stephen King's On Writing. 

When and where do you write?

I'm a full-time writer, so I write Monday through Friday and sometimes on the weekends. I usually take the evenings off to spend time with my family, though writing deadlines sometimes get in the way of that. 

What are you working on now?

I'm writing the first book in a new series coming out from Aethon Books in late 2019. The Flight of the Javelin series is a spin-off of the Fringe series, with Throttle, the kick-butt, paraplegic captain playing the lead role. I'm having so much fun with this series!

Have you ever suffered from writer’s block?

To me, writer's block is the same thing as procrastination. I'm very, very good at procrastination and often find myself working long hours the week before a deadline. I need to get much better at protecting my writing time. 

What’s the best writing advice you’ve ever received?

Jonathan Maberry once said that writers should help other writers. We're all in this game together, and helping another writer doesn't mean we'll lose our spot in the game. Being a writer can feel like a solitary career choice, but it doesn't have to be. Connecting with kindred spirits and helping others are the best ways to stay sane and to network in the industry. You never know when a writer you helped two years ago invites you to be a part of his latest anthology. 

What’s your advice to new writers?

There ain't no such thing as a free lunch. It's an old phrase, but it didn't really stick with me until I read it in The Moon is a Harsh Mistress by Robert A. Heinlein. TANSTAAFL essentially means that if you want to write a book, you have to work at it. It takes a lot of words to fill a novel, and that equates to many hours at a keyboard. Talking about writing a novel is never going to get it written. Writing the novel is the only way to get it written. 

Rachel Aukes is a science fiction writer with over a dozen books in print, including 100 Days in Deadland, which made Suspense Magazine’s Best of the Year list. She is also a Wattpad Star, her stories having over six million reads. When not writing, Rachel can be found flying old airplanes with her husband and an incredibly spoiled 50-pound lap dog over the Midwest countryside. Rachel lives in Iowa.

Kelley Armstrong

How did you become a writer?

I've been writing since childhood.  I was an early reader and very quickly wanted to start writing my own stories. In my twenties I started working on novels, and would sporadically send out query letters and sample chapters, but never got anything more than a form letter rejection. So I gave up and concentrated on improving. In 1999, I sold Bitten, which became my first published novel, but wasn’t my first novel.

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

I've been a voracious reader all my life, and I'm sure every novel influenced me in some way, but the biggest conscious influences were Stephen King and Anne Rice. From King, I learned how to make the supernatural seem natural, and from Rice came the idea of making the "monster" the protagonist.

When and where do you write? 

I can write anywhere—I’ve learned to do that—but most of my work is done in a cabin at the back of our property. Complete quiet, no cell phone or internet to disturb or distract me. I do my best writing in the morning. Afternoons aren’t bad, but evenings are horrible. By seven, my brain is too tired for anything but business work.

What are you working on now? 

I’m editing a standalone thriller. I have one coming out in June (Wherever She Goes) and I’m putting the final touches on a follow-up before I deliver it to my publishers.

Have you ever suffered from writer’s block?

My writer's block is two things.  One: fear. Fear that what I write today won't be as good as what I wrote yesterday or in the last book.  I get over that by reminding myself that nothing I write is cast in stone.  If it’s terrible, there's a nice "delete" button to fix that tomorrow!  The important thing is that I write something that day, or the fear will only get worse. The second reason for my writer's blocks? Not knowing where the story is going. If I don't know what happens next, I'm liable to sit there, lost and panicking, maybe realizing that I've written my story into a corner. That's why I always have an outline--so I always know what happens next.

What’s the best writing advice you’ve ever received?

Sadly, what I remember most is the bad advice, and I got a lot of that—people genuinely trying to be helpful by suggesting changes to my writing that probably worked for them, but led to some serious frustration for me. The best advice, then, would be when someone told me to follow the dictates of my own story and not worry about conforming to anyone else’s rules.

What’s your advice to new writers?

Keep writing. It’s boring advice, but it really is the most important thing. Do it for the love of story-telling, and likelihood of publication will rise exponentially as you perfect your craft.

Kelley Armstrong is the author of the Cainsville modern gothic series and the Rockton crime thrillers. Past works include Otherworld urban fantasy series, the Darkest Powers & Darkness Rising teen paranormal trilogies, the Age of Legends fantasy YA series and the Nadia Stafford crime trilogy. Armstrong lives in Ontario, Canada with her family.

Adam Nemett

How did you become a writer?

I’m lucky. And I’ve worked hard. Luck: I have incredible parents who spoiled me at bookstores and libraries, lauded my bad childhood writing and supported the slightly better stuff that followed in high school, college and grad school. I have them to thank for making my career possible. Work: I did my best not to squander these opportunities and spent 12 years writing and revising my first novel, repeatedly smashing into the gates of the publishing industry until some kind folks with impeccable taste let me through. 

For the past decade I’ve also worked a fulltime job as a nonfiction author/creative lead for a specialty marketing firm, writing history books under tight deadlines. This taught me how to be a working writer and still carve out time for creative indulgences. 

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

My teachers, especially Elden Schneider and Chris Mihavetz in high school; Joyce Carol Oates, Jeffrey Stout and Cornel West in college; Tom Barbash, Gabrielle Calvocoressi, Holly Payne and Leslie Carol Roberts at California College of the Arts MFA Writing program. My agent Noah Ballard and my publisher/editor Olivia Taylor Smith—their ideas and edits make my work infinitely better. Every book, film, conversation and life experience has been influential, but some favorite writers: Margaret Atwood, Clara Bingham, Italo Calvino, Michael Chabon, Mark Danielewski, Samuel Delaney, Don DeLillo, Katherine Dunn, Roxane Gay, Keith Gessen, Ursula K. Le Guin, Sam Lipsyte, Vladimir Nabokov, Barry Nemett, Rebecca Solnit, Donna Tartt, Justin Taylor and Henry David Thoreau. 

When and where do you write? 

I don’t have a schedule. I write nonfiction for a living (typically 9-6, but sometimes not), and write fiction whenever I spot a window. In coffee shops, on trains, middle of the night, on my phone’s Notes app, in a box, with a fox. I have an outdoor writing studio now, which is great, but I don’t need to be there in order to work. I respect writers who are disciplined enough to have a set time and place, but with two kids and a fulltime job I steal minutes wherever/whenever I can. 

What are you working on now? 

My debut novel, WE CAN SAVE US ALL, was published in November by The Unnamed Press. It’s set at Princeton University during the escalating days of climate change, where a bunch of students form an endtimes cult based on superheroes and fueled by psychedelic drugs. I’m still in the marketing/publicity phase, doing events/interviews and writing personal essays, including one about my grandfather(who may have been Batman), another about my father(a working artist and inspiration), and another about my four-year-old son(a magical lunatic). In my mild-mannered dayjob, I’m writing a book with one of the 25 women CEOs currently leading a Fortune 500 company. 

Have you ever suffered from writer’s block? 

Totally paralyzed by this question. I’m going to watch seven hours of New Girl episodes on Netflix and will get back to you…  

What’s the best writing advice you’ve ever received?

On crafting scenes: “Enter late, leave early.” (usually attributed to William Goldman). See also, Alfred Hitchcock: “What is drama but life with the dull bits cut out.”

On getting published: “Make it a numbers game and prepare to be rejected a lot in search on the one, enthusiastic hell yes. Pick yourself up and keep grinding and do what you do.” (from my supportive cousin, Jason Dressel).

And relatedly, Joyce Carol Oates once told me: “You might just be masochistic enough to become a real writer.” (see below). 

What’s your advice to new writers?

Go get 50 rejections, then keep grinding. Most people can’t deal with rejection, so if you make it through those first 50 you’ve surpassed most of the field, thickened your skin, gotten on the gatekeepers’ radar, and received a ton of useful feedback that’s made you a better writer. Now, march forth. 

Adam Nemett is the author of the debut novel We Can Save Us All (The Unnamed Press) and his work has been published, reviewed and featured in The New York Times Book Review, Salon.com, LA Weekly, The New Yorker, and Washington Post. He is co-founder of the educational nonprofit MIMA Music and serves as creative lead and author for History Factory, where he’s written award-winning nonfiction books and directed global campaigns for Lockheed Martin, Brooks Brothers, 21st Century Fox, Adobe Systems, HarperCollins, New Balance and Pfizer. He lives in Charlottesville, Virginia, with his wife and two kids.