Josh Rosenblatt

How did you become a writer?

When I was 28 years old I was unemployed and broke and I had no idea what I wanted to do with my life. I’d been raised in a family of grammar sticklers and figured I could probably do all right as a proofreader, so I started calling around to local newspapers and magazines looking for work. Having no experience, though, the only offer I got was an unpaid internship at Austin’s alternative weekly newspaper, the Chronicle. As luck would have it, once a year the Chronicle would give its non-writing staff the chance to write previews of movies that were screening at the South by Southwest festival, and my first year I was assigned an unintelligible eight-hour avant-garde documentary that hadn’t been shown in a theater since the 1960s. I watched the entire thing that night and spent the next five days agonizing over a 200-word review that I wouldn’t get paid for, of a movie that no one was going to watch. 

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

My biggest influence, the one I don’t think I’ll ever shake, is Philip Roth. His ability to balance cynicism, moral seriousness, and a visceral sense of humor, combined with his capacity for creating a sense of rolling energy with words, has always been something I marvel at. There’s just so much life in his writing. I have other influences but they’re all fighting for the No. 2 spot in my heart.

When and where do you write? 

Unlike other writers who have to begin and end their writing sessions at particular times and particular desks, I tend to take a pretty impromptu approach to working. When I’m in the middle of a project, ideas can appear at any time—while I’m watching a movie or riding the subway or sleeping—and when they do I always try to stop what I’m doing to write them down, knowing from hard experience that nothing will engender self-loathing quite like losing a great idea.

What are you working on now? 

I loved everything about writing my first book, and more than anything I want to write a second one. Unfortunately that means having an idea, which I currently don’t. So right now I’m working on coming up with one—a scientific process that consists primarily of staring at walls.

Have you ever suffered from writer’s block? 

I don’t think I’ve ever suffered from true writer’s block, the kind that leaves you worried that you’ll never write another good sentence again. I’ve gone through rough patches, of course, agonizing my way through passages and paragraphs and even entire chapters only to toss them out in disgust. But I’ve never felt debilitated.

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

I remember reading somewhere that Philip Roth taped to the wall above his typewriter a piece of paper with the words “Don’t Get Up” written on it. That seems like pretty good advice for a writer, though I don’t follow it myself. I get up all the time.

What’s your advice to new writers?

I don’t think there’s anything I could say that would help.

Josh Rosenblatt is the author of Why We Fight, published by Ecco. His work has appeared in VICE, The Austin Chronicle, and The Texas Observer, among other publications. He lives in Brooklyn, New York.

Julie Langsdorf

How did you become a writer?

I was an incessant reader as a child, and started writing as soon as I learned how to string words into stories. I plotted out a few novels in elementary school, and wrote short stories during my teenage years. When I graduated from college, I worked as a features writer for magazines and newspapers for my day job, and wrote fiction after hours. I’ve tried to give it up a few times, but it’s like any addiction…

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

I’m a huge fan of, in no particular order: Evan S. Connell, Elizabeth Stout, Richard Yates, Tom Perrotta, Kate Atkinson, Jess Walter, Alice McDermott and Meg Wolitzer among countless others.

When and where do you write?

I am a morning writer. I work at an antique, Mission style desk in front of French doors with a view of a beautiful tree and the gorgeous old coop across the street. I often get distracted by the birds on the branches--cardinals, blue jays, or, the other day, a dove who sat on the railing about two feet away from me and stared at me till I got back to work.

What are you working on now?

I’m working on a new comedy set in another fictional Maryland town. This novel, like White Elephant, is told from multiple perspectives and deals with a topical issue.

Have you ever suffered from writer’s block?

Yes. Even thinking the words “writers block” makes me tremble. I think it’s just a form of anxiety. Every time, I panic that I’ll never write again, but it always passes. Sometimes I need to stay at my desk and ride it out, but other times I need to step away from the computer for a while, to just live my life, experience all the world has to offer, and to trust that the words and ideas will flow again. 

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

Well, I didn’t get this advice directly from the source, but I think Henry James had it right when he said: “Try to be one of those on whom nothing is lost.” It’s important to pay attention to the texture of life, to notice the particulars, to find the humor and poignancy in the world around you if you hope to get it right on the page.

What’s your advice to new writers?

Put your phone away.

Julie Langsdorf’s debut novel, White Elephant, was published by Ecco in March.

Robert Dugoni

How did you become a writer?

Answer: I became a writer because I’ve always loved stories. When I was twelve, my mother, a former English teacher would hand me all these classic books to read. The Count of Monte Cristo, The Old Man and the Sea, Of Mice and Men, and others. I fell in love with stories. As I got older, I began to reader John Irving’s novels, like A Prayer for Owen Meaney and The World According to Garp. I read Patrick Conroy’s books, The Great Santini, The Prince of Tides and The Lord’s of Discipline. I loved Larry McMurtry’s Lonesome Dove.

I fell in love with characters and stories and when I got to high school I had a choice to make. I wasn’t a very good athlete, though I worked hard, but I was a good writer. My senior year I gave up basketball to be editor of the newspaper. I was accepted at Stanford University and wrote for the Stanford Daily, then briefly for The Los Angeles Times.  But all my brothers and sisters were becoming professionals – doctors and pharmacists and lawyers. So I thought I needed more education and became a lawyer. Once a lawyer I again did a lot of writing and speaking. I was telling stories to the court and to juries. Then I woke up one day and realized I didn’t want to be a lawyer. I wanted to be a writer. My wife and I made the decision to try. I moved to Seattle and began writing. It was a long process, but eventually, after many rejections, I got an agent and had my third book accepted – a true story called The Cyanide Canary.

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

See above. Also Stephen King, but more of his contemporary novels. John Grisham and Scott Turow as well. Loved Christopher Vogler’s book, The Writer’s Journey and Sol Stein’s book, On Writing.

When and where do you write? 

I have two offices, one at home and one at the law firm I used to work at. It’s important for me to “go to work” every day. It helps me to treat writing as a job, though the best job ever. Plus I like the feeling of getting out of the house. I keep an office at home if I have things to do during the day – appointments, or signings, or appearances. This is because I can get more done than if I have to commute both directions to my other office. I like to maximize my time writing.

What are you working on now? 

Promoting the release of a new series with Charles Jenkins, former CIA agent from the David Sloane series called The Eighth Sister. Working on the copyedits to the next Tracy book, A Cold Trail, and writing the next Charles Jenkins book, The Last Agent.

Have you ever suffered from writer’s block? 

Not really. I get stuck at places, but usually because I don’t write from an outline and I’m trying to make my character’s job as difficult as possible. For instance, I recently wrote a great series of scenes where Charles Jenkins goes back to Russia but the person he seeks to help is in Lefortovo Prison. I got stuck for two days on how to get the character out of the prison. But I wouldn’t call this writer’s block.

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

“Write every day. If you get stuck, but you know future scenes in your book, then write those future scenes so that you’re always working toward a completed manuscript.” – Mike Lawson, Seattle Writer.

What’s your advice to new writers?

Learn the craft. Learn traditional story structure as espoused by Joseph Campbell and popularized by Chris Vogler in The Writer’s Journey. Learn it, and you’ll save yourself a lot of time.

Robert Dugoni is the critically acclaimed New York Times, #1 Wall Street Journal and #1 Amazon Internationally Best-Selling Author of 17 novels in The Tracy Crosswhite series, including, My Sister’s Grave, the David Sloane series, and the Charles Jenkins series, which includes The Eighth Sister, as well as the best-selling The Extraordinary Life of Sam Hell, The 7th Canon and The Cyanide Canary. He is the recipient of the Nancy Pearl Award for Fiction, the Mystery Writer’s Spotted Owl Award and a two-time finalist for the International Thriller Writers and the Harper Lee Awards, the Silver Falchion Award, and the Mystery Writers of America Edgar Award. www.robertdugoni.com