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A short (26 question) interview with Gene
Question
When did you first discover you were going to be a writer? How old were
you and what is your earliest memory about it?
Answer
Age eight, "The Big Fish", a fictional account of my friends Craig Weaver,
Scott Coons, Alan Rydan, and Marvin Hudson, all with me on a fishing trip,
the kind my family often took then. Wrote it on the sofa in the livingroom
one summer morning, wanting to capture it because it seemed "good" somehow.
I'd recently moved, between the end of second grade and the start of third
grade, from Munster, having attended the Mountain House School in Cresson,
to Ebensburg, Cambria countyıs seat. The friends I wrote about were all
Cresson kids I'd known, so a touch of nostalgia must have colored the story.
Scott Coons remained my best friend through junior high, with us shuttling
back and forth for weekend visits and during the summer for longer stays.
Marvin was a nut, always acting wildly silly, and so was treasured,
especially when swimming; his hyperactive Creature from the Black Lagoon
slayed us every time. My first meeting with Craig, the first day of first
grade I think, was when he walked up to me, timid at age six, and punched
me in the stomach. "Now hit me back and we can be friends," he said. So I
did. The crux of "The Big Fish" was that Craig, ever the devil, said the
word, "Damn", in the story, much to the chagrin of the rest of us. Yes,
crossing lines, flaunting convention, and being a tad profane colored even
my very first remembered written fiction. I can only blame it all on
Craig Weaver.
Question
What's your favorite written work?
Answer
Probably Bleak House by Charles Dickens. A genius at the top of his
form, at the height of his powers, ad libs 50 main characters and an
astounding structure for serial publication. Inimitable.
Question
What is your favorite written work of your own? What is it about? Why is
it so meaningful to you?
Answer
Often it's the one I've just finished or the one I'm working on, but I do have
a fondness for the first novel that just jelled. Dead to Rights is about
mind control, the nature of reality, and doing the best with what limited
means we have. It means alot because so many of the scenes work on different
levels. My subconscious was humming for that one.
Question
Are your characters often based on real people?
Answer
I do portraits very rarely. Usually the characters come to me via my
subconscious and I meet and understand them along with the reader.
Question Who in your own life inspired you most?
Answer
My family, I suppose. I'm not much for hero worship or unbridled
admiration.
Question
Was there a particular teacher or mentor who encouraged or helped you
to be a writer? Do you remember something specific they said or did?
A moment when it clicked?
Answer
David "Chase" Sanborn, my sixth grade teacher, discovered I wrote and
marched me one day after school uptown to the offices of the Mountaineer
Herald, Ebensburg Pennsylvania's newspaper. He asked if they could use
some filler, and so I began publishing at age 11. Mostly poems and a
few short essays, but it was a start, and showed me it could be real.
Also, it was the first and only practical reaction anyone had shown to
finding out that I wrote.
Question
What is your favorite genre to write? To read?
Answer
This changes over time, and I phase through most genres in both reading
and writing. I suppose mystery/suspense holds a central place, and forms
a good platform for any genre, if one is to be read.
Question
Can you sum up mankind and/or its history in one word or phrase?
Answer
Human nature versus better intentions.
Question
How about its future?
Answer
Some of us tried.
Question
Who's your favorite writer, both living and of all time?
Answer
Charles Dickens is my favorite of all time. Also like Anthony Burgess.
Living? Maybe me, maybe Thomas Pynchon. Or Harlan Ellison. Or Ray
Bradbury. Too many come to mind.
Question
Favorite painter?
Answer
I like that Picasso mastered all known forms, then created several new
ones. As Beethoven did, as Miles Davis did, in music, and as Dickens
did in writing. But probably Monet, or Cezanne, who painted more as
I do, or Salvadore Dali, for his draftsmanship and surreal imagery, or
Ian Miller, for his jagged, woodblock effect. Again, too many come to
mind.
Question
Do you work in a studio when you write?
Answer
If writing by hand, it can be anywhere, on a clipboard. I've written in
moving vehicles, during parties, anyplace by hand. My computer's on a
desk beside the fireplace between the kitchen and the entranceway in our
raised-anch style house. Hallway to my back. Place doesn't matter that
much to me, and conditions matter only a little. When writing, I'm
transported anyway, into the fiction. You often have to ³wake² me from
writing so Iıll come eat.
Question
Do you often complete a story in one sitting, or does it take several days
of working at it here and there?
Answer
I trust my subconscious, so short stories usually come right out and can be
finished in one sitting. This includes several drafts at once, on computer.
If I write it by hand, then the handwritten version is a first draft I clean
up when I later type it. In novels, I do a finished draft of each day's
stint before moving on. Learned this from Dean Koontz, who, back in the
days of typewriters, advised one get each page into finished form before
moving on. Good advice, it's served me well.
Question
Have you ever written something you dreamed?
Answer
All the time, sometimes directly, other times just the imagery or a
snippet of scene or even just a feeling. I recall many dreams. They
tend to be layered and fairly complex, and I can often recall something
of them when I sit down to write, if the emotional context of the story
parallels the dream enough to warrant it. I'm not yet to the H.P.
Lovecraft stage of dreaming entire stories, though. And the eldritch
creatures leave me pretty much alone, unless I owe them money.
Question
What's your favorite pasttime when not writing?
Answer
I like to read, listen to music, play guitar and flute, paint in acrylics,
watercolors, and sumi, and draw cartoons. Also, I walk, spend time with my
wife and kids, and watch movies or documentaries. Travel is enjoyable, too,
and seeing new sights, meeting new people.
Question
Do any or all of your stories have a particular underlying theme or message?
Answer
Possibly, but I don't know, because I'm the common element. Each story is
approached on its own terms, and in what ever way seems best for it. This
means each one is distinct, to me. However, my motives for writing may
touch on basic themes without me realizing. I think I tend to write about
average folks in extraordinary circumstances, and people struggling in a
chaotic, often belligerant world.
Question
Do you write at the same time each day?
Answer
My novels are written in morning stints. I usually write in the mornings,
but writing can happen any time and anywhere for me. When the story comes,
you write it down. Itıs only polite.
Question
Do you consider yourself a disciplined person?
Answer
In some areas, yes. In others, ha.
Question
Where is your favorite place you've ever lived? Why?
Answer
I've lived all over the world, most notably Misawa, Japan and Erlenbach, Germany.
Stateside, I've lived in Pennsylvania, Ohio, Texas, Mississippi, Georgia, and
now Nebraska. Still haven't found a favorite place, and maybe its the search
that counts. Does "In my head" count?
Question
What one experience would you most like to have, if today were your last?
Answer
A miracle cure and astonishing recovery. Barring that, I'd like to experience
Cosmic Consciousness. To be aware of everything in reality would keep you
occupied for those final seconds, right?
Question
What would you like your peers to think/say about your work when you are gone
from this world?
Answer
I'd hope they'd like it, and be kind about its flaws, and protective of its
strengths. If they think it said something about the human condition, this
plight called life, then that'd be good to know during my flash of Cosmic
Cognizance, eh?
Question
Do you find more inspiration from the joyful moments in life, or from the sad?
Answer
It's a mix, and depends on the story, but I do like to ride out my angst and
anger in fiction. Creating's a result of play, not pain, so my fiction is me
playing with what ever touched me, good or bad.
Question
Is there a particular place you would like to see that you haven't yet seen?
Answer
Macchu Picchu is said to be sliding off its mountain, and I'd love to see it
before that happens. The dark side of the Moon is interesting, and whatıs
under the ice in Antarctica, if anything.
Question
What is the most memorable or favorite gift you ever received?
Answer
A copy of "Pickwick Papers" from the Easter Bunny when I was about 12.
Question
Do you hope your children become writers? Do any of them show an interest or
ability now?
Answer
My three sons have been warned that writing is an avocation, not a profession.
And all three have shown ability. They know to pursue other things, though,
such as being a physicist, engineer, or stage magician. Anything to earn a
living while writing, you see.
Question
What was the most difficult story you ever told. How did it affect you?
Answer
Maybe my father's death, which I didnıt face up to very well, but I try to
deal with difficult things, rather than shy from them, so too many other
examples come to mind. I often deal with pain, loss, and suffering in my
work and try to show a way through, how others cope, what they do to get
by, how they can make things better sometimes. It affects me by showing me
what's inside each story, each moment, each soul. And I hope it makes me
stronger, or at least more patient.