Monday, February 12, 2018

MEET THE AUTHOR - SUSAN TARR


Welcome all.

Today I’m very lucky to be interviewing Susan Tarr, author of PHENOMENA the Lost and Forgotten Children, JACK, just an ordinary dog in the dog house, MIRANDA BAY, and FRIENDS TO THE END. ALMOST AN AUTHOR is due out this year.

ME: Hi SUSAN TARR, thank you for agreeing to this interview. Tell us a little about yourself and your background?
SUSAN TARR: I was born down south in New Zealand. and my working life started in various
psychiatric hospitals in NZ, employed not admitted.
Then the travel bug took over. I sailed to Kenya in a 28 foot yacht, without even considering whether or not I might get sea sick. I did. Dreadful trip. But I continued to crew on other yachts. Deck hand and sail repairer, caulking and painting. A real blokes girl. lol.
I married and lived in Kenya for 10 years--that's where my girls were born.
Europe became a favorite holiday destination but when we returned to NZ, USA and Australia were next.
So, I have travelled extensively and have now settled down into a peaceful life in a country town in NZ

ME: What genre do you write?
SUSAN TARR: Historical fiction based on fact, women’s medical dramas, humor and life.

ME: What are you working on at the minute?
SUSAN TARR: A revamp of MIRANDA BAY. It was first published in 2009. I need to make it more current.

ME: Can you share a little of your current work with us?
SUSAN TARR: Miranda is impulsive and bids on an established property, sight unseen, simply because it bears her name, Miranda. She gets more than she bargained on...

ME: Which actor/actress would you like to see playing the lead character from your most recent book?
SUSAN TARR: Sandra Bullock should play all my female roles. I love her style and personality. She reminds me of my daughter who I base all my 30+yr old female characters on.

ME: While you were writing, do you ever feel as if you were one of the characters?
SUSAN TARR: Always. My characters talk, and act like me. But now I am older, I can only dream.

ME: When did you decide to become a writer?
SUSAN TARR: When living in Kenya, I wrote huge letters home to NZ. They will form the basis of my Kenyan stories when I have time to finish them.

ME: Which writers inspire you?
SUSAN TARR: Louis de Bernieres, Joseph Heller, Marian Keyes, Sophie Kinsella, Jane Green

ME: Do you write on a typewriter, computer, dictate or longhand?
SUSAN TARR: Lap top.

ME: Do you work to an outline or plot or do you prefer to just see where an idea takes you?
SUSAN TARR: I type a million notes. When someone says or does something my new character would, I note it. When I have a plot and title, I start to order my notes, scene by scene. Heuristic is apparently my style. I think it means I make sense out of a mess. 

ME: Do you read much and if so who are your favorite authors.
SUSAN TARR: Psychological thrillers are my current fix. Reading Netta Newbound books first got me addicted.

ME: What book are you reading now?
SUSAN TARR: Paul Cleave's A KILLER HARVEST.

ME: Do you think that giving books away free works and why?
SUSAN TARR: I am in two camps here. If a book is given free it can be perceived as worthless. But an author might gather a brand-new fan and sell other titles to them.

ME: How do you relax?
SUSAN TARR: Hah! I am an active relaxer. I find it hard to sit still. Coffee in a cafe with my writer friends might do it, although we'd spend all our time talking about books and our writing.

ME: What is your favorite quote?
SUSAN TARR: Considerer the ramifications of your words or actions.

ME: What advice would you give to aspiring writers?
SUSAN TARR: Oh, editing definitely. Sometimes in our enthusiasm to publish 5 mins after typing The End, we miss this valuable step. I advise all aspiring writers to set aside their finished MS and come back to it a few weeks later. I promise that when they re-read it they will find unnecessary words and so many bloopers. I also suggest they do not ask family members or close friends to read their work, unless they promise to be totally honest. They LOVE you and will lie through their teeth to be supportive. That doesn't help at all. (With the exception of my hubster. He immediately picks up a red pen and starts dissecting the title!)

ME: What does your writing process look like?
SUSAN TARR: No plot. No routine. Three books in different genres on the go at any one time, so I can flip flop as the mood takes me. Humor versus historical mental health.

ME: What is your least favorite part of the publishing / writing process?
SUSAN TARR: The back matter. All the links and contacts.

ME: Is there a certain type of scene that's harder for you to write than others? Love? Action? Racy?
SUSAN TARR: No, I seem to be able to write each scene by immersing myself in it. Mainly I write from close experience

ME: Did you learn anything from writing your book(s) and what was it?
SUSAN TARR: Oh, yes. Even if a particular character is based closely on a particular person, readers ALWAYS want them to be likeable. So, they can have negative aspects but need positive attributes too. Even if in real life they are just plain nasty.

ME: Name one entity that you feel supported you outside of family members.
SUSAN TARR: My best friend who is also an author. Otherwise it can be a pretty lonely journey.

ME: Which famous person, living or dead would you like to meet and why?
SUSAN TARR: Janet Frame. She was in the Seacliff Mental Hospital during the period I wrote my historic mental health book, Phenomena. Her writing inspired me.

ME: What is your favorite theme/genre to write about?
SUSAN TARR: Women's fiction/drama based on real life events but written as fiction to keep my butt out of court. lol

ME: What is your favorite theme/genre to read?
SUSAN TARR: Psychological thriller.

ME: What secret talents do you have?

SUSAN TARR: Oh dear. I am such a big mouth, I don't think any minor talents are secret anymore.

ME: If you had a superpower, what would it be?
SUSAN TARR: To be all my girls and grandchildren need me to be. And to write books in under 6 months.

ME: Where is one place you want to visit that you haven't been before? Why?
SUSAN TARR: GREECE! I saw The Lotus Eaters years ago. It was a TV series. From then my longing to visit has been strong. Although I visited Europe many times, I didn't make it to Greece.

ME: How can readers discover more about you and you work? i.e. Website: Blog: Facebook: Twitter: Lnkedin: Pinterest: Amazon Author Page: Smashwords: Book Links: (* American, UK, etc.) Goodreads.
SUSAN TARR:

FACEBOOK      TWITTER

GOOGLE+      PINTEREST      AMAZON

ME: Is there anything else you would like to add that I haven’t included?
SUSAN TARR: I am lousy with anything IT. I panic and press the wrong keys. Chaos.


ME: Thank you very much for taking the time out of your busy schedule to take part in this interview.
SUSAN TARR: You are very welcome, Victoria. Thank you for including me. XX

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