Pop Up Swap is Back! With Author M.D. Neu!

 

The Pop Up Swap is back! Well, from so long ago, I’m probably the only person on earth who remembers it ever existed. So let me explain…

A couple years ago I had this marvelous idea to exchange manuscripts and dialogue with fellow authors whose work I admire, and who write in similar genres, and it would be a scintillating, fresh approach to the typical author interview one finds in the blogosphere. Plus it would provide an opportunity for my readers to get to know some of the authors in my life. Here’s my Pop Up with historical fiction author Elin Gregory, for example.

I called it a pop-up because I knew it could come and go quickly and be a bit unpredictable. Life happens, and I generally don’t have a ton of time to do big features here at my site. That most definitely proved to be true, but this year I found new motivation and some new friends who were willing to do the swap. Yee-haw!

So for the rebirth of the Pop Up Swap, I politely asked strong-armed fellow NineStar author M.D. Neu (Marvin) into reading each other’s work and interviewing each other based on that. He read Irresistible and you can find my interview with him here. A bit about M.D.…

M.D. Neu is a LGBTQA fiction writer with a love for writing and travel. Living in the heart of Silicon Valley and growing up around technology, he’s always been fascinated with what could be. Specifically drawn to sci-fi and paranormal television and novels, M.D. Neu was inspired by the great Gene Roddenberry, George Lucas, Stephen King, Alice Walker, Alfred Hitchcock, Harvey Fierstein, Anne Rice, and Kim Stanley Robinson. An odd combination, but one that has influenced his writing.

Growing up in an accepting family as a gay man, he always wondered why there were never stories reflecting who he was. Constantly surrounded by characters that only reflected heterosexual society, M.D. Neu decided he wanted to change that. So, he took to writing, wanting to tell good stories that reflected our diverse world.

When M.D. Neu isn’t writing, he works for a nonprofit and travels with his biggest supporter and his harshest critic, Eric, his husband of nineteen plus years.

I had read and reviewed Marvin’s vampire novel The Calling for Queer Sci Fi about a year back, and we subsequently connected at NineStar’s author Facebook page as well as Twitter. I always enjoy getting to know fellow LGBTQA+ authors, especially the ones who write fantasy. Many thanks Marvin for letting me rope you into this! Oh, and here’s a link to my review of The Calling fyi.

And let’s get started!

AP: Hi Marvin! Thanks for taking part in the swap! I read your vampire story The Calling a little while back and really enjoyed it.

MN: Thank you for having me. I always enjoy chatting with fellow authors.

AP: I think I understand the appeal of gothic horror a bit as a writer, having written shifter fiction myself (Werecat). Besides it being a fun, atmospheric genre, it makes for an interesting milieu in which to tell gay stories because of the romantic themes, the hidden worlds, and the sense of ‘otherness.’

What drew you to writing a vampire story?

MN: For me it’s always been the ‘what if.’ I wanted to know if vampires were real how could they exist, especially in modern society were one viral video and it would be all over. Plus, I’ve always had a thing for vampires so I figured why not combine the two; my love of vampires and my wondering how they could exist today with all our technology.

AP: You have an interesting premise for vampire living in that it’s fairly approachable for the average person like your hero Duncan. There are ‘marks’ he must go through, and those are physically unpleasant for sure while his body goes through violent changes. But vampires have worked out a way to get blood without killing, making it more palatable with flavors like chocolate and cinnamon; and they’re involved in charitable causes, and they keep a lot of human traditions like celebrating Christmas. What would you say was your intention with that portrayal?

MN: Oh, I had a lot of fun with all that. The idea came back to the whole thing of how would they exist and operate in our modern society. It’s all about adapting or dying. The vampires in my world have learned humans don’t like being the bottom of the food chain, and they know if humans ever found out vampires were real, we humans would hunt vampires down and kill them. Despite all the vampire’s gifts, humans have the numbers and my vampires know it. So, the vampires have learned to play our games and live by our rules.

Remember, vampires in my world can’t just create anyone to be a vampire. They have to share a bond, and it’s part of the calling (the process of selection). Plus, my vampires were all human so why not keep the human traditions they know and like? Just because they are vampires doesn’t mean they don’t know how to have fun and enjoy life. It makes them more human, which I think they would need to be to survive, especially nowadays.

Now when it comes to working in charitable causes. That is just Juliet and Duncan. Not all of the vampires are that altruistic. Victor has many businesses he controls. Kirtus is a financial consultant and tax accountant who works a lot with both humans and Immortals. Other vampires have other jobs, and really that is born out of the need to live. They need money and ways to launder money so having jobs and owning companies gives them that ability. Again it all goes back to adapt or die.

AP: I thought you did an amazing job establishing Duncan’s voice, and it’s extra amazing because he’s not such a big personality or a snarky hero. He’d rather blend into the background, but I still found his forthright storytelling really engaging, and the fact he’s such an agreeable, non-presupposing kind of guy, you want to root for him.

Though there’s one thing he’s adamant about I found curious. He doesn’t like queer politics and makes the point a couple of times that gays should be “people first, not gay first.” Did you see that as a defensive position—not wanting to draw attention to his gayness—or is it a deeper part of his make-up—believing the only way forward for progress is for queer people to “act less queer?”

MN: I really wanted to go for an Everyman with Duncan. I wanted him to be your brother, your neighbor, your friend, or that stranger you see on the street that you don’t think twice about. That said, the point I try to make, not only with Duncan, but all my characters, is that queer people are more than their queerness. We are all people first with the queerness secondary. Why should it matter who any person loves or how they show their love? It shouldn’t. It also shouldn’t be the most interesting thing about them. I don’t see it as a defensive position, more of a general philosophy Duncan has. If that makes sense.

AP: So I want to follow up about “people first with the queerness secondary.” I did get that vibe from the book, and not just in the queer context. Since the vampires are literally in hiding and spending a lot of their time very carefully trying not to rock the boat with humans (the “light” vampires I mean, who are the primary focus), they’re also following that mantra in a sense.

via GIPHY

[just a little vampire interlude]

MD: In the book, yes. The light vampires don’t really stir things up, and they are in a position where they don’t have too. It’s kind of the same with the Dark. They deal with humans and live with them, but humans don’t really factor into what is happening in their world unless it comes to being exposed. There is good motivation to stay hidden, they don’t want to cause a war which would end up killing a lot of people and the vampires wouldn’t win, at least they don’t believe they would win.

When my characters talk about being people first and whatever second it has to do with how they see the world. At one point Juliet asks Duncan why didn’t he tell her he was gay when they met. His response is ‘why does it matter? Would you have done or treated me any different?” When she says she wouldn’t, she realizes he’s right, she wouldn’t have done anything different so why does it matter to her? It’s a question and answer she hadn’t thought of and I think in the context of the story it makes a nice moment between the two of them.

What I want to show in the book is how ordinary being queer is. We talk about how we all want to be treated equal, so that is what I strive to portray in my stories. Unless it’s part of a character’s issues, queerness will be treated as ordinary and a non-issue. Showing one’s queerness is important to some people, but in my books the queerness comes second because it shouldn’t matter. If we want to live in an equal society then we need to look past what we see and focus on the contents of one’s character. That’s what’s important in my stories. You’re queer. GREAT! Yay! Now what? Can we have an adventure? I want to show the what happens after you know the character is queer. I want to show the adventure, not the coming out.

AP: I also like stories where the main character’s queerness is already established, and I found the focus on Duncan’s vampire trials refreshing. I read a lot of coming out stories and a lot of tortured queer stories when I was “new” to being gay in my twenties, and part of it is that—[cough], twenty some years later—my reading interests have changed. I’m more interested in how queer people navigate other kinds of situations, and I think of that as another dimension of positive representation.

You mention worldview being part of that decision to portray queer characters as “people first with their queerness secondary.” One of the reasons I was drawn to try out this author-interviews-author thing with you, is we have a lot in common, being white, married, gay men who write gay fantasy. Also, we both grew up in middle class families that were pretty supportive. I won’t call us “older men” – I turn 50 this year – but we’re both Gen Xers. Add to that, we both like fantasy that’s more adventure vs. fantasy being a context for exploring coming out or gay relationships.

Yet from your book, from this discussion, it’s interesting how we developed somewhat different worldviews. Like, I wouldn’t describe my writing as “people first, queerness secondary.” I don’t see a separation between the two or an ordering of those characteristics, i.e. don’t queer people have an essential ‘personhood’ already? Plus when you talk about character, that comes from myriad life experiences including queer experiences. For example, if I were writing my autobiography, I see lots of ways my queerness would be pretty essential to understanding who I am. Being married to a man is one obvious aspect, but my passion for social justice is another, as well as I’d say my curiosity about people who are different from me, choosing to live in a diverse, urban community over where I grew up, and my interest in traveling to an extent.

Even my development as a writer was linked to being queer in part. I started as a shy, withdrawn kid who escaped through writing fiction, and as an adult, while few of my stories are directly about overcoming queer oppression, I’m inspired by subverting heteronormative stories, reclaiming them for queer readers.

You talk about making queerness secondary as something of a message to queer people about equality. How do you think you arrived at your particular worldview concerning queer people?

Read My Lips poster

A little queer Gen Xer memorabilia.

MN: When it comes to how I was raised and my coming out, I was raised in a very conservative and moderately religious family. When I came out it was harder on me then it was for my family. They didn’t treat me any different and accepted me for who I am. As conservative and religious as my family is they judge people on character not on who they present to be, who they love, or how they show that love. Sadly, you can’t really say that to people because they don’t believe you. Because they have this belief that all conservatives are bigots. As an example my dad is very politically and socially conservative and yet he wanted to walk me and my husband down the aisle; a lot of people are shocked by that. Some don’t even believe me when I say it, but it’s true and important to me, and that’s why when I write it’s not overly important to represent whether you’re gay, conservative or whatever, it doesn’t really matter. What’s important is how you treat people.

In the case of my family they are people first and conservatives second… does that make sense?

So, that is the world I chose to write about and show. In my novel, it’s never about being queer. It’s about the adventure and the person. I’m not writing a coming out story. My novels and The Calling especially, is about a man who happens to be gay deciding to become a vampire and how that affects him as a person.

At the end of the day all I know for sure is that I treat people how I want to be treated and I think that is something we should all strive for. It is how I write my books, and it is how I tell my stories. I want the reader to have an adventure and enjoy, if it causes them to reflect on life and how they live it great. If it shines a bright light and society and affects change that would be amazing.

AP: Let’s turn back to your story then. How did you come up with the way the vampire world works? I recognized some of the conventions like mind control and the idea of vampire factions, but others were new to me. Did you use particular sources to develop that mythology and ‘world?’

Scary Vampire

Vampire image from Pixabay

MN: When it came to the world building, I studied traditional vampires, and I found they all had some baseline abilities so I started there. Then I dug into what additional powers and abilities they could have and pulled from there, which was a lot of fun. I also decided that vampires don’t reproduce in the way we’ve seen, they don’t get to just pick someone at random, there is more to it, much more, as we learn in the book. Further, I developed a set of rules for the vampire abilities and tried to keep them. For example, Juliet’s ability to calm people and alter mental states does take a toll on her. It causes her migraines. With Duncan his ability causes him headaches, and he gets tired. So, for each of the vampires they have a down side to their ability. It’s not major, but it’s there for all of them. It’s much more in the background and most people won’t even catch it. Especially since most of the vampires in my novel are older.

The mythology was much the same. I pulled from various sources and created my own. The over all goal was, again, how would they be alive now and what would a vampire community look like.

AP: The Calling ends with a host of possibilities for Duncan’s next adventure. Are you working on a follow-up?

MN: Oh yes. I have the sequel almost finished. Then I will start the editing process. The sequel picks up right were book one ends and we go from there. People will get to see just how imperfect all these beings are. The working title is The Called.

AP: How did you end up finding a home for your work at NineStar Press?

MN: Well, after sending out The Calling and getting various rejections, an author friend of mine sent me a message saying that his editor at NineStar was looking for novels from gay men. He asked if I had anything. As it happened a week prior, I had just sent in my manuscript for The Calling. He told me he would let his editor know, but no promises. About a month later I got an email from NineStar saying they wanted to publish my story. It was awesome.

AP: Very cool. I know that feeling. 😊 On a more personal note, some other things we have in common per your bio: I’ve also had a long career working at non-profit organizations (more recently at a non-profit university), and congratulations on your 20th anniversary with your husband! My husband and I just celebrated our 18th this past May.

Regarding the career part, what’s your secret for finding time to develop your craft and write outside of your day job? Did you have training in writing previous to your career with charities?

Regarding the husband part, my husband also reads everything I write, though he’s not as you say my harshest critic. That could be a diplomatic choice. But he’s also pretty modest about being a reader not a writer so occasionally he’ll say how he responded to this or that, though he’s respectful of the creative process (not just for me, for any author). So he’s more of a support than an early reader with whom I vet ideas.

What’s it’s like getting tough criticism from your husband? Also, of personal interest, how do you balance quality time together with your writing time?

MN: Wow, okay let me see if I can answer each question you posed. When it comes to finding time to write while working a 40-hour week. I try and stick to a schedule (which has fallen all to hell the last few months) I tend to write on the weekends when we aren’t doing anything, or in the evening after we have dinner (assuming I’m in the mood). With regards to writer training. Not really. I took a few writing classes in college, but nothing formal. Mostly I’ve written for fun. I would make up stories and go from there. Most of them were rubbish, but some were pretty good. I try and write as often as I can. I also do a little writing for work, not a lot, but some.

I wish saying Eric was my harshest critic was a diplomatic choice on my part. The first thing I gave to Eric, my husband, to read, he told me it read like a text book and he couldn’t get through it. He didn’t say it was awful, but I’m almost 100% sure he would have. Getting criticism from Eric is hard, but it all comes from a place of love and to make the story and my writing better. I know he won’t tell me something is good when it’s not. So, as hard as it is to hear I know it all comes from a place of love and support. The other thing about Eric is, he’s a total sweetheart and would never go out of his way to hurt anyone. So I take all that into account when I have him read stuff.

As for that first time he gave me feedback, it took me about a week to get over it.

When it comes to balancing quality time and writing. I try and make sure that, unless I’m under deadline, that our relationship comes first, so we have movie night if there is anything good we want to see. We travel. We spend time with friends (not as much as we should, but we do). So, I don’t let the writing consume me. He’s also very respectful of my writing time. If I decide to write on a Saturday, he won’t interrupt or bother me, until dinner time. He’ll come in and let me know, which is his way of getting me off the computer. Now if I’m really in the groove I tell him and he will let me work. I think it works quite well.

AP: Excellent. I’ll try to learn from your example. Well, you survived my interview! Big thanks for sharing your time and some inside scoop on The Calling. I’ll make it easy for folks and include some buy links: Amazon, iBooks, BN.com, NinePress Webstore

Connect with M.D. Neu on Facebook, Twitter and his website.

Queering up Your Bookshelf

Happy Spring Folks!

Just a quick note this month, a media alert if you will, while I’m focusing my time placing a couple of finished projects.

Author Alex Harrow had me over at their blog for their Queering up Your Bookshelf feature. We talked about queer representation in literature, my writing process, and what’s up next for me. You can read the article here.

Alex also hosts a monthly Twitter chat on queer speculative fiction fyi. It’s generally the third Thursday of the month at 7:00 pm EST, and you can find it with the tag #queerspec.

That’s all I got for now. Hope everyone is doing well now that spring has sprung. 🙂

 

 

Hot Tips for Writers

An interesting thing that happens once you get published is friends, colleagues, family members, neighbors, and even strangers come out of the woodwork to confess they also wrote a novel, or their husband also wrote a novel, or they’re working on a novel and wonder if you have some advice.

Sometimes, that’s a disastrous lead-in to asking you to read said novel or novel-in-progress, a situation that cannot end well. But if it’s not a pretext for that, hey, why not share some bits of wisdom? We writers do it all the time. It’s become something of an industry really – the “how to write a best seller” book – which, in today’s oversaturated publishing market, eventually will probably lead to endless blogs and books on how to write a how to write book.

So here I am jumping on that bandwagon, but just for the ridiculous fun of it rather than to style myself as a writing guru. Recently, loathsome author Jonathan Franzen wrote a 10 Rules for Novelists piece at Literary Hub, which was somewhat of an inspiration point for me. You can read some other authors’ snarky responses on Twitter in this article in the Guardian here.

I’d argue probably the very best advice for writers came from W. Somerset Maugham, or at least it’s so frequently attributed to him, people have given up fact-checking the matter. The leads must’ve gone cold quite awhile ago considering he’s dead. Anyway, by popular consensus, Maugham famously quipped:

“There are three rules for writing a novel. Unfortunately, no one knows what they are.”

I’ve never actually read anything by Maugham, but if he did come up with that unassailable assessment, I probably should. On the other hand, that kind of tip-giving is no fun when you could instead show off your arrogance or cleverness or gleeful irreverency by publishing a top ten list of your own. Here’s Chuck Wendig’s homespun list (and he’s not a tool):

Now I’m no Chuck Wendig. Just check out my book sales if you don’t believe me. Or, compare our number of Twitter followers, or see how many hits our websites get, or see the reaction of your local bookseller when you drop both of our names into conversation. It will shock and depress you. So that’s actually #i on my Ten Essential Rules for Writers List: Don’t compare yourself to Chuck Wendig.

But I am still a writer, goddammit. Let’s give credit where credit’s due. I’ve written eight novels (with varying results), and some of my titles have been runners-up at awards programs, and I was once recognized by a reader on the street. So yes, over the years, I’ve acquired some useless things to say on this subject. Thusly, for all the writers out there, and wanne be writers out there, I give you these gems that have served me well:

  1. Do not ever agree to read someone else’s work for the purposes of giving advice. Don’t give advice. Just don’t. Unless you want to be a very lonely person.
  2. Bad habits complement a writer’s lifestyle very well. Have you considered taking up smoking? A porn addiction? Really any bad habit that will plunge you deeper into alienation and self-loathing will do.
  3. When you find you’re repeating the same words and phrases in your manuscript, you may actually be on to something. Laziness and overextertion are possibilities, but let’s try to stay positive. My favorite overused words and phrases are: “abundant,” “strategoi,” and “he grinned.” Not so terrible, right? Season your manuscript judiciously with your darlings, and if no one else wants to eat it, well, there’s more for you.
  4. Some say: write drunk, edit sober. I actually favor the opposite. It helps take the edge off of rereading my work.
  5. If at all possible, do not tell people you are a writer. No interesting conversation ever follows that disclosure. Really, it’s just awkward all around.
  6. The Internet is your friend. Your only friend. The kind of friend who exposes all your vulnerabilities publically, calls you in the middle of the night to bail them out of jail after starting a bar fight, persuades you to try all the latest, worthless fads for improving your life, and is short on money when the restaurant bill arrives. Parental controls aren’t a bad idea.
  7. Find time to wallow in self-pity. An Australian Shiraz and The Real Housewives of Orange County pair well.
  8. If you must write in first-person, present, try not to be too transparent about the fact you’re really writing about yourself. We can see you behind the elf ears and leather leggings.
  9. Font choice can make all the difference.
  10. Finally, and really my only serious piece of advice: Be nice to other writers. It costs you nothing.

 

Did you know I also write reviews?

Yes, it’s true. When I’m not sneaking in time to write my own stuff, I’m apt to be found poring through a book, and I caught a bit of a review bug a few years back which I’ll blame on Goodreads. The site is awesome in my opinion. It’s a great place to get book recs and to talk with readers who are also fans of the genres and authors that I like. I’m an organization nerd so I also love that you can catalogue what you’ve read and reviewed. I wish it had existed when I was in grade school. I’d have a whole history of my life in books!

Well, instead I have a history of what I’ve read over the past ten years (a little spotty for the first couple). If you’d like to connect with me there–and I hope you will–here’s my Goodreads profile page.

Meanwhile, I’ve taken on some review work at other sites, and I thought it would be cute to pass that along. You can follow my reviews at New York Journal of Books, Queer Sci Fi, and Out in Print. I get called on a lot to review fantasy titles, though I’ve branched out to other genres from time to time. My most recent review at Out in Print was a reprint of a gay pulp erotic pirate novel, for instance. I like discovering unusual titles and helping to spread the word about LGBTQ+ #OwnVoices books.

Feel free to pitch a title to me if it falls into that latter category. I’ll probably say no, which I guess is pretty harsh, but I want to be realistic about expectations. Between reviewing for three sites, getting reseach in, and finding time to read for pleasure, I’m massively backlogged most of the time. But I promise not to be mean if you decide to try me!

If you’re looking for reviewers, here’s a few suggestions…

Reedsy has a searchable book review blog database you can find here. It covers the full spectrum of genres.

There’s also The Book Blogger List that has a comprehensive list of categories.

And, I just discovered this one while writing this post: Book Sirens has a blog directory. 

I’ll also mention, for my ongoing project An Introduction to Gay Fantasy, I’m always looking to build up my curated list of titles, particularly books written before 2000. So fire away with suggestions. I have the lofty aim of collecting “noteworthy” titles, which I define in lots of ways: awards, industry praise, diverse portrayals, #OwnVoices, and “ground breaking” characters and/or ideas about gender and sexuality.

 

My interview at WROTE

Hey, hey! Head over to WROTE podcast to listen to Baz and Vance interview me about Irresistible, historical fiction, queer media, romantic comedy and more.

I think it’s hysterically funny. You might just get a smirk or two out of it, but judge for yourself. There’s a rapid fire question part at the end that really exposes how dialed in I am to the latest in technology and lifestyle. But this was definitely one of the most enjoyable media thingies I’ve done over the years, and I have to give a huge shout out and thank you to Baz Collins and Vance Bastian for giving me time to introduce myself to their listeners!

Here’s where you can listen to it, and share it all over the place:

Andrew J. Peters

WROTE stands for Written On The Edge, and the podcast runs weekly discussions about LGBTQ storytelling in all genres and mediums. Their guests have included some of my favorite authors like Scott Pomfret, Jerry Wheeler (who also was my editor on two novels), Joe Okwonko, and ‘Nathan Burgoine, among many others. Very entertaining stuff, and I’ve been spending my idle time catching up with episodes.