Today I welcome author Patricia Stoltey to my Historical Fiction blog. Readers, pull up a chair and let's talk about books.
Joyce: Hi Pat, and thanks for taking the time from your busy schedule to answer some questions for our readers. I’m always curious as to when an author began writing, and how long it took to get published.
Pat: We’re not going to count the box of really bad poetry and short stories I wrote in my 20s and 30s, are we? My first attempt at a novel was The Troubleshooter, an action-adventure tale my brother and I wrote in the mid-80s. That book never made it to print, but Books in Motion turned the umpteenth revision into an audiobook in 1999. That only took thirteen years. Not bad for a first novel. The first draft of my second novel, an attempt at international intrigue and suspense, sits on a table in my office, waiting for me to decide it’s worth a rewrite from beginning to end.
My writing life improved in fall 2003. I’d retired from a demanding job in the real world and realized I had to find more to do than read novels and crochet afghans, I took a novel-writing class from a local author. When the class was over, several of the attendees got together and formed a critique group. The novel I started for that class was The Prairie Grass Murders, published in hardcover in 2007.
Joyce: How did you break into publishing, Pat?
Pat: After completing the4th draft of The Prairie Grass Murders, I unsuccessfully pitched it to an agent at the 2004 Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers Colorado Gold Conference. After a few more queries also proved unsuccessful, I did another major revision, then pitched that 5th draft during a critique workshop at the 2005 conference. This time I received valuable feedback from the editor running the workshop, as well as an invitation to submit after revising the manuscript once again. Draft number six was the winner. My contract with Five Star/Gage led to a hard cover edition aimed at the library market.
The Prairie Grass Murders was also an audiobook with Books in Motion and a mass market paperback reprint with Harlequin Worldwide. The second Sylvia and Willie mystery, The Desert Hedge Murders, is now available in hard cover and as a Harlequin paperback.
Joyce: What genre or sub-genre do you write? Why did you choose this genre?
Pat: I focused on amateur sleuth mysteries for my first two books. I read a lot of mysteries and admired the way good authors think up plot twists, plant clues, and create great characters. I kept wondering if I could do that, so I finally gave it a try. I discovered it’s not as easy as it looks.
Joyce: (laughing). Nothing ever is, is it? So, tell us how much time you devote to writing each day.
Pat: I don’t write every day and that’s a problem I’m trying to overcome. After our books are published, we often get caught up in book promotion and spend way too much time at social media, personal appearances, conferences, and other opportunities to connect with readers. In the past, I’ve called myself a binge writer because I spend months thinking about a book without putting anything on paper, and then sit down and write like crazy until I finish a first draft. Lately, I haven’t even done that. It took me more than a year to get the revisions done on my last novel so I could start submitting to agents.
Joyce: Can we get a sneak peek at what you’re working on now?
Pat: Doing the queries and submissions for a historical women’s fiction, which has a working title of Wishing Caswell Dead. I’m clearing up my schedule and cleaning my desk. I have the first draft of a suspense novel sitting on the floor, waiting for my subconscious to tell me how to fix problems with the plot. And I have that idea in the works for a new Sylvia and Willie mystery. I’m still keeping up with my blog, my work with Northern Colorado Writers which includes starting a new critique group next month, and doing guest spots for blogger friends.
Remember when I said I had retired from a demanding job in the real world? I’m working harder now than I ever did before, but I will admit, I love every minute of it.
Joyce: How do you write? Are you a pantser or a plotter? Is it your characters or your plot that influences you the most?
Pat: Mostly I’m a pantser. If I have a complicated plot, I’ll lay out the chapters with two or three sentences as a guide to what needs to happen at that stage of the story, but I never stick to the plan. Characters have a way of leading us down new and interesting paths as we write.
When I started the Sylvia and Willie mystery series, the setting came first because I wanted part of the story to take place in Illinois where I grew up. The plot idea came from the setting, and the characters fell into place last. With the second novel in the series, I already had the characters, so the plot developed from the protagonists’ family relationships.
Wishing Caswell Dead followed a completely different path. The main character came first.
Joyce: What was the most usual way you came up with a story idea? What made you think, ‘hey, I could make that into a story?’
Pat: The historical, Wishing Caswell Dead. First I had a dream about a thirteen-year-old girl in a dated photo. It looked like a tintype. I played with ideas about that girl’s life and turned the dream into a short story about young Jo Mae Proud. When I reread the story after receiving a few rejections from magazines, I realized I had a whole long list of questions about the other characters and what would happen to Jo Mae after the story ended. Now her tale is a 66,000 word novel. Of all the things I’ve written so far, this one is my favorite.
Joyce: I’m wondering how you do research for your books. Also, what’s the most interesting bit of research you’ve come across?
Pat: Back in the 80s when I was working on The Troubleshooter, I spent hours and hours in a university library. Times have changed. Now I do most of my research online. However, my investigations for Wishing Caswell Dead led me to a small prairie museum near Mahomet, Illinois, where I saw actual tools and furniture and farm equipment used in the 1800s. That’s a lot better than looking at pictures in a book or on the Internet.
The most interesting bit of research? I think it was the time I spent learning about the Kickapoo Indian Tribe. Kickapoo artifacts figured in the plot for The Prairie Grass Murders. And there’s a Kickapoo character in Wishing Caswell Dead. This tribe had a fascinating history as they moved from Wisconsin into Illinois and then across the Mississippi to a reservation in Kansas and other settlements in Mexico, yet we don’t read that much about them in Native American history.
Joyce: Thanks for talking with us about your books and your writing career. The Desert Hedge Murders has an intriguing title. I think I’ll start with that one first, and good luck with your next book.
Pat: It was my pleasure joining you today, Joyce. I hope your readers will drop by my blog (http://patriciastoltey.blogspot.com/ ) from time to time to see what’s going on in my writing life. I feature guest author/bloggers from a variety of genres on Thursdays, so it’s a good place to find that next book to read. I’m on Facebook as Patricia Stoltey, and I’m also a big Twitter fan: @PStoltey.
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20 comments:
Joyce, nice to meet you and thanks for hosting Patricia.
Patricia, it sounds as though you are working harder now than ever. I love learning background about how stories come about. I am so looking forward to reading your books. Knowing what all an author has to go through to get published makes the books that much more special to me.
Mason
Thoughts in Progress
Good morning, Joyce. Thanks again for having me here today. Interviews are always fun.
Mason: I'm glad you stopped by. Yes, Patricia's insights as to her writing process was interesting--it puts a face behind the book, so to speak. Glad you enjoyed the interview.
Hi Mason -- You and I were here at the same time, I guess. Thanks for dropping in.
Joyce - Thanks so much for hosting Patricia!
Patricia - Thanks for sharing your story of getting published. I so admire the hard work you've done and even more, your perseverance. Writing well is not an easy thing to do, and I give you so much credit for staying with it. And folks, I can vouch for the great end result. The Prairie Grass Murders and The Desert Hedge Murders are terrific reads. I want to see more of Willie and Sylvia :-).
Hi, Patricia and Joyce,
I always enjoy reading about how other writers got into publishing and about their approach to plotting fiction. I think it's a great achievement to have your mysteries published both in hardcover and mass market paperback editions.
Can't see you crocheting afghans, Patricia...I'm so glad you decided to write, instead!
Great interview, and I love Pat's blog!
-EJW
Thanks, Margot. Even though I've been trying new stuff, I do have some ideas for future Sylvia and Willie mysteries. Sometimes we need to take a break from characters to realize how much we love them. (Gee, that works for families, too!)
Hi Jacqueline -- publishing cozies with Five Star helps get that job done. I found Harlequin folks are great, too, so I hope to work with them again.
Elizabeth, I still crochet, just not as much. I tend to focus on baby afghans and shawls now, projects that go much faster for those of us who don't have much time.
Thanks, E.J. Come on over for coffee anytime.
FYI everyone -- I'm heading off to a writers' coffee this morning, but will be back later this morning to respond to comments.
Great interview. Mysteries are tricky to write but fun to read.
Great interview! It was fun learning more about Patricia.
Holly and Golden Eagle (I love that name), thanks for coming by. It's always a pleasure.
Thank you, Joyce, for hosting one of my favorite authors! I loved the Prairie Grass Murders. I have Desert Hedge on my shelf to read!! I did learn a few more things in this interview about Pat. Thanks again!
Ann
Thanks, Ann. You're a sweetheart!
I love what you said about that prairie museum!
Google is good but nothing can compete with real life and actually seeing the tools and furniture. Amazing.
Great interview and insights.
I did this once but apparently my computer is annoyed with me!
Thank you so much Joyce - I adore reading Patricia's blog and it was great to find out more about her process. Your blog looks like fun too so I'll be coming by again.
thanks Patricia for being so open with how you do what you do!
What a great interview! I loved reading this, and learning more about you and your books.
Terry, you are so right. Local museums often have amazing collections donated by people cleaning out the attic or basement (or even the barn).
Hi Jan -- don't you hate it when electronics fight back? And you're most welcome. Talking about writing is sometimes more fun than actually writing.
Thanks, Sheila. I appreciate you being here.
And thanks again, Joyce, for having me. It's been great working with you.
Nice interview, Joyce and Patricia.
Patricia Stoltey's THE DESERT HEDGE MURDERS is a mystery! This little mystery is not easily solved which made me enjoy that much more.
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