Showing posts with label Interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Interview. Show all posts

Interview with Lydia Kang, Author of The November Girl


I'm excited to author Lydia Kang on the blog today. She was gracious enough during her busy book release schedule to answer some questions for me. Lets get to know Ms. Kang and her books. Read on!

So, what have you written?

THE NOVEMBER GIRL is my recent YA novel, which is literary fantasy. I’ve also written YA sci-fi (CONTROL and CATALYST), and an adult historical mystery, A BEAUTIFUL POISON.

Give us an insight into your main character. What does he/she do that is so special?

Anda is half human, half lake. Which means that she’s battling two forces within herself, and they are directly at odds with each other. Part of her needs love and humanity, and part of her wants to destroy humanity.

What are you working on at the moment?

TOXIC! It’s my next YA novel, a space novel about a girl trapped on a dying ship, and the boy who’s trapped there too for his last mission.

Which actor/actress would you like to see playing the lead character from your most recent book?

I think Elle Fanning might have done a great job!

When did you decide to become a writer?

About nine years ago.

Do you read much and  if so, who are your favorite authors?

I love Jennifer Donnelly, and Maurene Goo, Mindy McGinnis, Sarah Fine, Elle Cosimano, among many others. I have a lot of favorites!

What book/s are you reading at present?

Big Magic, by Elizabeth Gilbert. It’s about creativity.

What advice would you give to your younger self?

Keep doing what you’re doing. You’re okay. You’re beautiful, and you’re smarter than you think.

If you could have been the original author of any book, what would it have been and why?

The Hunger Games. I loved that series!

What advice would you give to aspiring writers?

Keep writing, and remember to find the joy in your work.

How can readers discover more about you and you work?


 
 
I am Anda, and the lake is my mother. I am the November storms that terrify sailors and sink ships. With their deaths, I keep my little island on Lake Superior alive.
Hector has come here to hide from his family until he turns eighteen. Isle Royale is shut down for the winter, and there's no one here but me. And now him. Hector is running from the violence in his life, but violence runs through my veins. I should send him away, to keep him safe. But I'm half human, too, and Hector makes me want to listen to my foolish, half-human heart. And if I do, I can't protect him from the storms coming for us.
The November Girl by Lydia Kang Publication Date: November 7, 2017 Publisher: Entangled Teen
 
 
Lydia Kang is an author of young adult fiction, poetry, and narrative non-fiction. She graduated from Columbia University and New York University School of Medicine, completing her residency and chief residency at Bellevue Hospital in New York City. She is a practicing physician who has gained a reputation for helping fellow writers achieve medical accuracy in fiction. Her poetry and non-fiction have been published in JAMA, The Annals of Internal Medicine, Canadian Medical Association Journal, Journal of General Internal Medicine, and Great Weather for Media. She believes in science and knocking on wood, and currently lives in Omaha with her husband and three children.
 
 

Interview with an Author | Ed McDonald is on the Blog

I have had the amazing opportunity to ask the author of Blackwing a few questions about writing, being an author an life in general. Luckily, I was able to snag am ARC copy of this awesome book and couldn't put it down. Check out the interview below... 

So, what have you written?

Blackwing is my first published work and will be hitting US shelves in October. It’s available on Amazon and the other usual sites for preorder now. I also run a blog at www.edmcdonaldwriting.com and have had a number of guest-posts featured on blog websites during July.

Where can we buy or see them? 

You can read my guest posts at some of the blogger websites on the graphic below:

Image result for blackwing blog tour

Give us an insight into your main character. What does he/she do that is so special?

Ryhalt Galharrow is forty, a functioning alcoholic who has conflicted feelings about the things that he has done in the past. He’s not very honest with himself and wants to believe that he’s heartless because things would be so much easier if he could let things go. He’s a big guy, measured, not very friendly, but he’s deeply loyal to the few friends he can stomach. Oh, and he’s also in eternal servitude to an immortal called Crowfoot who exists as a raven tattooed on Galharrow’s arm, and whose method sending him orders is distinctly painful.

What are you working on at the moment?

I’m at work on the second instalment of The Raven’s Mark series, of which Blackwing is the start. It’s written, but I’m in the process of doing some significant editing to get it into shape. I’m also working on a few other projects including a YA post-apocalyptic novel, a screenplay for a sci-fii thriller and a script for a graphic novel. Those are all very much in their infancy though – book 2 is the priority.

Which actor/actress would you like to see playing the lead character from your most recent book?

I love thinking about this stuff! Ray Stevenson is my main choice for Galharrow, in part because he’s 6’6 and Galharrow is a big guy. Alternatively, Mike Colter would fill the role pretty well.


When did you decide to become a writer?

I was fifteen. I’ve always wanted to be a writer, but I was doing it through my whole childhood too. There are stacks of comics at my mom and dad’s house that I drew with my brother, exercise books filled with stories I wrote. I think I probably started writing at age 3. My mom told me that I was reading at 2, but she might be making that up…

If this book is part of a series, tell us a little about it?

Blackwing is part of The Raven’s Mark series. Each book stands alone – there’s a full plot that has a resolution – but that all fit together into a larger narrative.

Do you read much and if so, who are your favorite authors?

I don’t get to read as much as I used to. If I’m mentally alert enough to be reading, then I feel compelled that I should be writing instead. But I still get through maybe a book a month. My favourite authors are probably Robin Hobb and Joe Abercrombie, but Joe better not see this because every time I see him I tell him that I’m stealing his place in the genre and I don’t want him knowing that I love his books. We did karaoke together in Helsinki recently, and he can sing as well as write good books. Grrr.


What book/s are you reading at present?

Currently I’m reading Behind Her Eyes by Sarah Pinborough. I love fantasy but I find reading it difficult now, because I’m so hyper critical and deconstruct it all. I am also enjoying Jay Kristoff’s Nevernight – his prose are just brilliant. The last book I finished was Mike Carey’s The Girl With All The Gifts which was excellent.

What advice would you give to your younger self?

Don’t put up with anything that makes you less than happy. Always work harder to make your life better.

If you could have been the original author of any book, what would it have been and why?

Legend, by David Gemmell. It’s the only book that I’ve read seven times, and it literally changed my outlook on life. It still influences me today.

What advice would you give to aspiring writers?

The more you think about your book as a great work of art, the less you’re going to be able to make the important decisions. It is a great work of art, but the Mona Lisa still has the figure centered, there’s still a particular palette of colors used, and Da Vinci used a brush, not his fingers. Writing a novel is as much like building a car engine as it is about dreaming a landscape. The pieces have to fit together. Be practical and pragmatic and listen when people tell you that something isn’t working for them.

How can readers discover more about you and you work?

Buy my book and read it! Or listen to the excellent e-book narrated by Colin Mace. I blog a bit about swordsmanship (which I train) and other writing related stuff.

Twitter: @EdMcDonaldTFK


Thank you to Ed McDonald for stopping by the blog. I thoroughly enjoyed reading your answers and I can't wait for the next installment of the Ravens' Mark series.  

#AuthorInterview with Anthony Ryan @writer_anthony

Today I’m very lucky to be interviewing Anthony Ryan author of The Legion of Flame. Hi Anthony, thank you for agreeing to this interview. So, what have you written? 

The Waking Fire - The Draconis Memoria Book I 
The Legion of Flame - The Draconis Memoria Book I 

Blood Song - Raven's Shadow Book I  
Tower Lord - Raven’s Shadow Book II 
Queen of Fire - Raven’s Shadow Book III  
The Lord Collector - A Raven’s Shadow Novella 
The Lady of Crows - A Raven’s Shadow Novella 
A Duel of Evils - A Raven’s Shadow Short Story 

Slab City Blues  
(Slab City Blues Vol. I) 
A Song for Madame Choi (Slab City Blues Vol. II) 
A Hymn to Gods Long Dead  (Slab City Blues Vol. III) 
The Ballad of Bad Jack  (Slab City Blues Vol. IV) 
An Aria for Ragnarok  (Slab City Blues Vol. V) 

I've had the opportunity to read The Waking Fire and The Legion of Flame. I can't wait to dive into your other series.

Where can we buy or see them?  
Links to where to buy any of my books are on my website: anthonyryan.net

Give us an insight into your main character. What does he/she do that is so special? 
My current series has an ensemble cast but most readers seem to like Lizanne Lethridge the most. She's an industrial espionage agent who gains magic powers by drinking dragon blood.  

I'm super into magic and dragons. I think that's why I loved this series so much.

What are you working on at the moment? 
I'm currently enjoying some downtime after finishing the third and final book in the Draconis Memoria series. I'll soon be starting work on another novella set in my Raven's Shadow world. 

I can't wait to get my hands on both of these.

Which actor/actress would you like to see playing the lead character from your most recent book? 
I think Emily Blunt would make a great Lizanne. 

I can see that. Love Emily Blunt.

When did you decide to become a writer? 
As soon as I found out it was an actual job. I think I was about eight. 

If this book is part of a series, tell us a little about it? 
The Draconis Memoria is a secondary world fantasy set in a world at a mid-19th century level of development where a select number of people gain magical powers by drinking dragon blood.  

Do you read much and  if so, who are your favorite authors? 
I read a lot, though not as much as I used to, probably an age thing. I read a variety of genres, David Gemmell being my favourite fantasy author. I also enjoy the crime novels of James Ellroy, the sci-fi of William Gibson, amongst many others. 

What book/s are you reading at present? 
I'm currently reading 'The Great Ordeal' by R. Scott Bakker. 

What advice would you give to your younger self? 
Stop distracting yourself and write more. 

I love this. Maybe I should tattoo this on my forehead.

If you could have been the original author of any book, what would it have been and why? 
The Lord of the Rings, I'd never need to work again. 

Agreed.

What advice would you give to aspiring writers? 
 Concentrate on finishing your stories rather than fixating on daily word counts. Also, read a lot and remember that every writer you ever heard of is someone who chose not to give up. 

How can readers discover more about you and you work? 
They can visit my website or follow me on Twitter: @writer_anthony 

Thank you Anthony for stopping by Confessions. I've enjoyed reading your responses to my questions and am really excited to pick up some of your other reads. 

Author #Interview with Betsy Schow @BetsySchow @SourcebooksFire @JabberwockyKids

Recently I was blessed to be able to review Wanted by Betsy Schow. You can find my review here. I've also been blessed with the opportunity to have some questions answered by Ms. Schow and I'm excited to share them with you.

When did you decide to become a writer? 

I’d toyed with the idea off an on since I was in Jr High. I enjoyed telling stories, but music was my passion. Unfortunately, that didn’t work out so well. After that I got really depressed and lost myself. Eventually, I found my voice and finally had something to say. And that’s when I wrote my first book. 

Do you write full-time or part-time? 

Part-Time. I’m a mom first and foremost. I’ve got a special needs kiddo so she and the well- being of my family comes first.

Do you work to an outline or plot or do you prefer just see where an idea takes you? 

I used to rigorously detail everything in an outline, but that took out a lot of the joy and wonder for me. So now I plot out the major events. Beginning, turn, middle, plot twist, and ending. I discover the details as I write.

Do you read much and if so who are your favorite authors? 

Before I started writing, I read one book a day. I love Stephen King, Terri Pratchett, George RR Martin, and just about anyone with a good deal of snark.

What book/s are you reading at present? 

The Peculiar Children’s Series

What advice would you give to your younger self? 

You don’t have to be perfect, you just have to never give up.

How can readers discover more about you and you work? 

I’m terrible with the whole social thing. But you can go to my rarely updated website, find me on Facebook, or email me.
Website: http://www.betsyschow.com/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AuthorBetsySchow

Make sure to check out Spelled and Wanted by Betsy Schow.




Interview with M Pepper Langlinais author of Manifesting Destiny

Today I’m very lucky to be interviewing M Pepper Langlinais author of Manifesting Destiny (Changers Book 1)

Hi M, thank you for agreeing to this interview. Tell us a little about yourself and your background?

I was born and raised in Texas, with a large side of Southern Louisiana, which is where most of my extended family lives. I grew up speaking both English and French Creole and eating lots of jambalaya. I eventually got a degree in screenwriting then went on to get a graduate degree in writing and publishing. I worked in publishing for a number of years before deciding to devote my time to working on my own books rather than anyone else’s.

What are your ambitions for your writing career?

I recently was a guest at the InD’Scribe conference and did my first signing, and I’d like to do more—attend conferences as a guest author/speaker and do signings. Those are my practical ambitions. In general, I’d like to have engaged readers—I enjoy hearing from them and wish I did more often.

Which writers inspire you?

Arthur Conan Doyle, certainly, given that my career first really got started with Sherlock Holmes stories. My novel The K-Pro was called “Neil Gaiman for girls” by one reader, and it’s true that I have enjoyed Gaiman’s work in the past. I think my spy novel was inspired by John Le CarrĂ©. As for Manifesting Destiny, that probably came from reading so many books aloud to my kids. In fact, a recent Amazon review stated “I would recommend it to fans of Harry Potter and Percy Jackson,” which is exactly the stuff I’ve been reading to my children. I certainly feel honored that someone would shelve me with such great works.

So, what have you written?

Well, way back when, my first officially published works were a short story in Future’s Mysterious Anthology Magazine and a poem in the journal Rosebud. And then for about six years I was barely writing except a blog called Letters to Rob (you can find the PDF of it on my site now; it was a series of open letters to musician Rob Thomas and got picked up by Atlantic’s music boards for a while). Once I was working in publishing full time, I didn’t have the energy to write my own stuff any more. But when I left, I found I needed that outlet again. I dipped back in by starting with some well-received fan fiction (which is how I’d originally cut my teeth as a writer, but that’s another story), and then I tried self-publishing a Sherlock Holmes story. It was the story that got me into grad school, in fact, and it did better than I expected, maybe because I had zero expectations for it. I published some more Sherlock Holmes stuff, then branched out to some other things as mentioned above: a fantasy based loosely on my own experiences working on film sets and informed by my minor in Classics and mythology (The K-Pro); a 1960s spy novel (The Fall and Rise of Peter Stoller; a scripted version won a screenwriting award); an anthology of short stories (The World Ends at Five). And most recently Manifesting Destiny, as well as the short story “Aptera” which appeared on Aurora Wolf this past June. I’ve also had a 15-minute play produced and then turned into a short film known as “Adverse Possession.”

Where can we buy or see them?

You can find links to everything on my site: http://PepperWords.com.

Give us an insight into your main character. What does he/she do that is so special?

My main character in Manifesting Destiny is Cee. She’s sixteen and has a crush on her best friend Marcus, but he’s gay. The story takes place in the future, and society has evolved in such a way that most—but not all—people morph at some point in their adolescence. They are able to transform into some kind of animal, but they never know which one until it happens for the first time. Cee discovers she has a snarky dragon named Livian living inside her, which is a problem because dragons are supposed to be extinct. Marcus and her other friends urge Cee to get rid of Livian, have him removed by a ruling Clan known as the Magi. The story is fundamentally about embracing your true self regardless of pressure to conform. Also, it’s about taming your inner dragon and controlling your emotions.

What are you working on at the moment?

A couple things. For one, the sequel to Manifesting Destiny, which will be titled The Great Divide. And on the lighter side, a Regency romance titled Brynnde.

Which actor/actress would you like to see playing the lead character from your most recent book?

I don’t even know! The problem with Hollywood and “the industry” is that it takes so long to get things moving, and when you’re talking about young characters, the actors and actresses age out so fast.

When did you decide to become a writer?

I grew up thinking I would either be a magazine editor or a film director. Yet I always loved to read and write, and I was always a storyteller. I’m not sure at what point it occurred to me that I could maybe write for film instead. Even when I started college, I was still thinking I’d be a magazine journalist, but things outside my control conspired to put me in the radio-television-film school instead. Still, I never thought I’d be only a writer. It’s why I got a publishing degree—I assumed I’d be working in publishing if I weren’t going to be working in Hollywood. Not until I quit all that did I say to myself, “You know, maybe I’m just a good, old-fashioned writer.”

Do you write full-time or part-time?

Ostensibly it’s my full-time job, but with three kids the truth is I’m splitting my time between work and family.

Do you have a special time to write or how is your day structured?

During the school year it’s much easier. I take the kids to school, go for my morning walk, come back to my home office (known as Little London) and write until it’s time for the kids to get home. Of course, I also do things like laundry and dishes and sometimes have to run errands… Then, in the summer when the kids are home, it’s almost impossible to get any writing done. I, ahem, have to write off the writing, which is very difficult and frustrating for me.

Do you write every day, or when you have time?


I try to write every day, even just a little, though weekends are family time and so I may or may not get writing done then depending on what else we have planned.

Do you work to an outline or plot or do you prefer just see where an idea takes you?

I don’t outline. It feels too restrictive. I start and I go with it until I hit a barrier. Then I flow chart. I have a notebook on my desk, and I write questions to myself like, “Why does So-and-so do this?” Or, “What happens if So-and-so goes here?” And then I chart possible answers and decide which makes sense for the character and the story.

If this book is part of a series, tell us a little about it?


It’s the first in a proposed trilogy. I hesitate to call it dystopian because the world I’ve created is very peaceful. In fact, the main character is loath to upset the apple cart because it would mean ruining that peace. She makes decisions based on a desire NOT to start a war, but… Other factions have different ideas. 

Do you read much and if so who are your favorite authors?

I’m always at least reading one thing, often more than one. I go in cycles in regards to authors. In middle school I was all about Michael Crichton and Dean Koontz. In high school I went through Stephen King and Anne Rice. In college it was Neil Gaiman and Nick Hornby. I went through a John Le CarrĂ© and Kathy Reichs phase. Nowadays I’ve been enjoying Tana French, Kate Morton, Ben Aaronovitch, Alison Weir… And I’ll always, always love Shakespeare and Jane Austen and [almost] anything Sherlock Holmes.

What book/s are you reading at present?

I’m making my way through Tana French’s latest, The Trespasser.

What advice would you give to your younger self?

To start sooner. I feel like I’m making up for lost time.

If you could have been the original author of any book, what would it have been and why?

Oh, you mean is there a book I’ve read where I’ve said, “I wish I’d written that”? There are dozens! But maybe Michael Dibdin’s The Last Sherlock Holmes Story. Because wow, just wow.

What advice would you give to aspiring writers?

Not to compare themselves to other writers. I find that’s when I start to doubt myself and feel depressed—when I look at what other authors have accomplished and feel like I’m somehow less than them. I keep a timeline on my whiteboard in my office now that shows all the milestones in my writing career. I find it helpful in being able to see how far I’ve come. 

How can readers discover more about you and you work?

Visit my website, sign up for my newsletter, Like my Facebook page, follow me on Amazon. And I especially love it when people ask me questions on my Goodreads page.
Book Links: All linked here: http://pepperwords.com/?page_id=1687

Thank you very much for taking the time out of your busy schedule to take part in this interview.

Thanks for hosting me! 

Changers: Manifesting Destiny

Sixteen-year-old Cee has a hopeless crush on her best friend Marcus. Unfortunately for her, he’s gay. In the wake of Marcus’s older brother leaving home to join the Aerie, Marcus has become increasingly distant. Then, when Cee discovers she has a troublesome dragon named Livian living inside her things grow even more complicated.
Marcus urges Cee to go to the Magi to have Livian removed, but the more used to Livian Cee becomes, the less certain she is about letting him go. Should she change her natural self for the crush who will never love her anyway?

Excerpt:
Heat spread through her. Cee’s face elongated, her arms extended, her nails formed into claws, and her feet became suddenly very heavy. The bony spires erupted from her shoulders, and Cee was compelled to double over to allow the wings to grow.

Throughout, Cee fought the urge to resist, though her instinct was to do just that. She wondered what she looked like, caught a glimpse of red scales, and realized her eyesight had become sharper. All the details of the trees around her impressed themselves upon her brain: the cracks and flakes in the bark, the saw-tooth edges of the leaves, and every little spot and insect thereupon.

How big was she? Cee realized she was at eye level with the middle of the trees. She looked down and saw her friends pushing themselves even harder against the trunks, making way for Cee’s—or Livian’s, she supposed—tail as it snaked by.

Yes, we’re very pretty, said Livian impatiently. But we don’t have time for showing off just now.

The massive wings began to move, slowly at first, gathering speed that put the force of the helicopter’s artificial wind to shame. Cee realized she had no control over what was happening. It was all Livian, and she was housed inside him, somehow, along for the ride.

It was equal parts thrilling and petrifying, bursting through the treetops and being free of gravity. Cee would have liked to spend more time experiencing it, but there was the helicopter, like a massive black bug, and Livian went right for it.

Buy Links:
On Evernight Teen’s site: http://www.evernightteen.com/manifesting-destiny-by-m-pepper-langlinais/
On Amazon (US): https://www.amazon.com/Manifesting-Destiny-Changers-Book-1-ebook/dp/B01JQTNUXO/
On Amazon (UK): https://www.amazon.co.uk/Manifesting-Destiny-Changers-Book-1-ebook/dp/B01JQTNUXO/
On Smashwords: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/658363
On B&N: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/manifesting-destiny-m-pepper-langlinais/1124415566
On iBooks: https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/manifesting-destiny/id1145055577
On Kobo: https://store.kobobooks.com/en-us/ebook/manifesting-destiny
On All Romance eBooks: https://www.allromanceebooks.com/product-manifestingdestiny-2084785-140.html

Interview with dancer and film creator Kathleen Rakela

I am honored to share with all of you an interview with dancer and film creator Kathleen Rakela. Like me, she is a dancer who has spread her wings and embraced the world of creativity. Lets find out how she has spanned the gap between dance and film...

First off, I’m curious to know a little bit about your dance career. How did you start and what made you stop?

I grew up in a farming town in Northern California and started ballet lessons when I was six. However, my teacher eloped with the piano player and I had to wait four years until the tap teacher remarried another ballet dancer before starting lessons again. Due to family and school problems I dropped out of ballet for another year. Then, my mother took me to see a production by the Joffrey Ballet and it totally transformed me. I knew I had to dance, became serious and auditioned for the Sacramento Theatre Ballet. Although I wasn’t very good at that point I did the combinations with every row and they put me in as a trainee because I worked so hard. I moved to Sacramento and danced there for a couple of years before going to New York to work with David Howard at Harkness House and the Joffrey Ballet School. I then went back to dance with the Sacramento Theatre Ballet and the Pacific Ballet before realizing that my real gift is teaching, choreographing, and creating original ballets. I moved to LA and, while there, came upon the teacher who eloped with the piano player. She had become an excellent teacher and coached me to become a teacher in the Cecchetti Method of Ballet.

I still actively teach, choreograph and set ballets.

What drew you to film making after dance?

I had an idea to create a western ballet version of “Romeo & Juliet” where Romeo was a cavalry soldier and Juliet a Blackfeet Indian. I spent 3 years doing historical research, visiting Indian reservations and museums and taking history classes at Montana State University. I hired 7 professional dancers from the Bolshoi Ballet, Moscow Ballet and Colorado Ballet and, with other local dancers and actors, created “Romeo & Juliet of the Rockies.” We gave six performances in five towns and it was a big hit with standing ovations everywhere we went.
Anyway, while I was studying at the university I got an idea for a screen play. I went to the film department and asked about taking a script writing class but they said you had to be a sophomore in the film department to take the class.  I felt compelled to write this script so I stayed for two years to take the class but by then I liked it so much that I ended up staying and getting a film degree. I went on to advanced screenwriting and took all kinds of screenwriting classes and received coaching from LA screenwriters.

Do you find any parallels between dance and film making?

There are so many parallels to creating a ballet and creating a movie. In ballet you communicate without words. The movement, the space, the geometry, rhythm, designs, the personality and soul of the dancer along with the music, all work together to create beautiful flowing images. With movies, you create moving pictures with the use of as few words as possible to tell the story and communicate similarly through setting, emotions, expressions, and visuals. Another parallel is in the use of pacing and rhythm. Ballets have a certain pacing and rhythm and so do movies. Also, knowing about music, art, design, sculpture, all those things are intertwined.

I founded Yellowstone Ballet Company in 1991 and have produced and directed 25 annual productions of The Nutcracker, the major classics, Swan Lake, Giselle, and Cinderella, and 8 original full-length ballets. I’ve had the pleasure to work with composers, set designers, costume designers, dancers, actors, and stage crew. When you create a big production with limited resources and limited crew you have to be everywhere and be on top of everything. It is like being one of those icons with 6 arms and many heads.  You also have to understand human psychology and learn to work with divas and personalities. I’m finding it totally natural to move from ballet producing to movie producing.

Tell us a little bit about your film, Rise.

In 6th grade I had a teacher, Mrs. Bresnahan, who totally changed my life and that of my classmates. She would teach us World History by having us cook each country’s food in class, listen to their music, examine their art and learn about their artists, poets, musicians. She had us put on the play The Sound of Music, and taught us all about the Renaissance. She took us on field trips to museums, the symphony, and even to a slaughterhouse where I witnessed the truth about meat processing.

We loved Mrs. Bresnahan. Learning became incredibly rewarding and fun. She nurtured us and we found our self-worth. We wouldn’t miss school for anything. And the whole class became “A” students. But, when we came back from summer vacation for 7th grade, we found our beloved teacher was removed. (Maybe it was the field trip to the slaughterhouse.) How dare they get rid of this great teacher who made each one of us blossom! We were angry! This class that loved school now hated it. We were out of control. Kids ruled. Our poor 7th grade teacher didn’t last long and myself and half the class were expelled. We all began going in a very downward direction. On top of that my parents divorced, and I developed a neurological disorder that affected my left vocal chord. I tried to hide the impediment by withdrawing and not talking. I sought spirituality and other means of communication: writing, painting, sculpting, music, ballet.

Years later, I began putting everything together to write this screenplay. If a class full of good “A” students can become hoodlums when the arts and humanities and a beloved teacher are removed, what would happen if we gave these thing to our at-risk students? So, the class in RISE is my class and Mr. B, the teacher, is my beloved teacher, Mrs. Bresnahan.
  
The movie sounds intense. What drove you to make this film?

RISE is complicated movie. There are many different tracks that it is written on and there are many profound moments that will challenge the audience on different ways of thinking. There are some intense scenes that will get to ones core. The “outcast” of the outcasts, sacrifices himself to save his enemy. He’s the sacrificial lamb. Somehow he knows that in order to save the town he must pay the ultimate price. It is so sad but there is a beauty in the scene that is transformational.

Besides wanting to commemorate a wonderful teacher, I also want to get people thinking about our current educational system. As my younger son went through school I started to see what to me was a disturbing trend. Teachers stopped making up their own lesson plans, and instead started relying on a centralized curriculum and rubrics. My son was having trouble with Algebra and went to his teacher after class for help. The teacher told him to get help on his website. He went to the teacher’s web page and it asked him what method he was using and what rubric he needed help with. I was like, “what the hell are they talking about?” I had never heard of a rubric so I started researching and what I found is shocking. Rubrics were created in the 1970’s but didn’t creep into the educational system until the 1990’s. They are used to standardize education. The US educational system is a 3 trillion dollar business. It seems that Microsoft is behind the systemizing of education to make everything computerized. Once everything is graded by rubrics a robot can take over. Sorry, but the long range plan for these corporations is for robots to take over as teachers. It is not science fiction. All the schools use rubrics now and the teachers don’t realize that by going along they are creating their own noose. Why hire a teacher when a robot that doesn’t get sick or need health insurance can easily correct papers with the rubric system. I hope RISE will challenge people to look at the way we are educating kids.

What has been the most challenging aspect of making this film?

The creative part is my strength and that is solid, but unfortunately I could use some help in the “getting the money department.” We have the story, the creative people, the super actors, the incredible location. It is all there but movie making is expensive. So the fundraising is the challenge.

What has been your favorite part? 

My favorite part of film making is working with other creative people, giving them the framework so they can also blossom and express their own creativity as an actor, set designer, director of photography, costume designer, etc.

What’s in the future for you? Any more films? 

I am interested in profound movies where the audience can have transformational moments. I have several movies in development but they are on the back burner while I get RISE produced.


When and where will we be able to see, Rise? 

Late 2017 or early 2018.

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