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Sam Slaughter – the Writer’s Life

 

1932805_10152273115942354_772377606_oVAH: Today the third and final installment with Sam Slaughter as we talk about the writing life. Sam – are you a full-time writer?

SS: I am indeed a full-time writer, though what I write tends to range widely. I get paid to be a copywriter for a health and wellness company here in Central Florida. That is my Monday through Friday job and as far as writing jobs go, I enjoy it. It is the first (paying) writing job that I’ve held that allows me to work creatively and collaboratively and since so much of my other writing is done by myself, I revel in the atmosphere around me.  In addition to that, I try and write something else (creative work of some sort, or book reviews) every morning before work. I’ve found that trying to do so after spending all day in front of a computer never works so I gave up trying.

VAH: So how do you get going the page/screen is blank?

SS: Stubbornness, sometimes. A glass of bourbon other times. I read somewhere that Russell Banks suggests that three drinks is the perfect amount to drink while writing, if you are into that. Now that I write mostly in the morning, I don’t drink, but I have found it to be beneficial previously.  Running also helps me because it isolates me and the voices in my head, allowing me to focus on something that I could write.

VAH: “Voices in your head,” such a good way to describe an author’s head space! What is your process when working on a new piece of writing?

SS: I hear it or see it or whatever it in my head long before I put anything on paper. Usually it starts with an image or a line and I build it out from there using the typical journalistic questions of who when and most importantly why. As a writer I’m always observing (I think there’s a certain point when you can’t not people watch whenever you’re in public) and plenty of times I’m left going what the hell or why would he do that. Those are the moments I build off because I’d much rather make up a person’s life story using what I can see than hear what actually happened, truth stranger than fiction be damned.

VAH: Getting your work out there – do you have a submission system or plan?

SS: I take what was referred to somewhere as a Hydra approach. I’ll send out a story (usually I’m sending out two or three or however many are ready at the time) to three places. When I get a rejection, I’ll then send it out to two more places, like a hydra getting its head chopped off. I don’t know if this is effective or not, but it makes me feel like I’m being somewhat productive.

VAH: What does your typical writing day include?

SS: When I wake up and drag myself about of bed, I make some coffee and boot up my computer.  I’ll either start a new piece or pull up an old piece to edit.  By around 7:30 I get ready for work. At work, I work on various projects—whatever is needed. During lunch or if I have a free moment, I try and use those to read or write down some notes or sentences on whatever I’m working on.  Night time I usually reserve for reading and just letting my mind wander around whatever it needs to in order to be able to write the next day.

VAH: Sam, what would you like to share about your current work?

SS: Last year I finished my first novel, DOGS.  I am currently shopping it while I work on a variety of other projects, including a second novel. The working title of the novel is Alternate Frequencies and will be an exploration of communication and love, of the desperation born out of not being able to talk to your own child even when he is in the very same room, and the lengths to which a parent will go to show his love. When he is only two, Markus Van Dennen is involved in a serious car accident, landing him in a six-month coma. His father, Chuck, escapes with minor wounds.  Throughout his time in the hospital, Markus’s grandmother sits by his side listening to old time radio shows. When he finally does wake up, life is different for Markus. Whenever he is around people, he sees them talking, but he doesn’t hear what they’re saying. Instead, life plays out like a radio show for him. Some days are dramatic, some unfold like a detective’s mystery, some are just plain funny.  His family, already strained from the previous six months not knowing whether or not Markus would live, are knocked off balance when they realize Markus doesn’t really hear them. Chuck and his wife, Darcy, are at odds over what to do about Markus while their older daughter Jane tries to keep the family together no matter what. Daily, Chuck and Darcy fight over what to do. Both want Markus cured, but amidst their fighting not once do they think Markus might be happy how he is. Jane is forced to watch as Darcy offers an ultimatum, threatening to walk out of the family if Chuck does not agree with her plan. Chuck, forced to show where his devotion lies, must make a decision that will effect the rest of his and his family’s lives.

VAH: Thank you Sam, for taking some time with Three by Five and sharing about your writing life.

Sam Slaughter was born and raised in New Jersey and currently lives in Central Florida.  He was educated at Elon University and Stetson University. He has fiction and nonfiction published or upcoming in a variety of places, including McSweeney’s Internet Tendency, Midwestern Gothic, The Circus Book, The Review Review, and Heavy Feather Review.  He is the Book Review Editor for The Atticus Review and a Contributing Editor at Entropy. He was recently awarded the 2014 There Will Be Words Prize and his first chapbook, When You Cross That Line, will be published in 2015.

Social Media:

Twitter:  @slaughterwrites
Instagram: @slaughterhouserising
Website: www.samslaughterthewriter.com

Sam Slaughter Sampler:

1) An excerpt from DOGS, published at Revolution John

2) Part 1 of the story “Fame in the Graveyard,” published at The Circus Book

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Sam Slaughter – What the Writer Reads

 

148859_910208288313_845933055_nWriter reads

VAH: Sam, who is your favorite author?

SS: It sounds cheap and like thousands of other white males out there, but I’d have to say Hemingway.  Having studied his prose as a grad student and having read countless stories and books by him, something about the prose always speaks to me. The parataxis is intriguing and his background as a cub reporter jives with my own, though I don’t have anywhere near the amount of experience that he did.  There are other things, but I feel I’d fall into super nerd fan boy speak and I’d rather avoid that.

VAH: Imagine you’re stranded in a snowstorm, or stuck on a deserted island. What books would you hope to have with you or hope to find?

SS: First, I’d rather be stuck on a deserted island—there’s something very literary and less freezey-to-deathy about that. The immediate thought is to bring something practical like How to Survive on a Deserted Island or 79 Military Practices to Keep You Alive. Beyond that, though (because who wants to be practical?), I’d bring The Complete Short Stories of Ernest Hemingway, The Complete Stories of Flannery O’Connor, Brillat-Savarin’s The Physiology of Taste, and if allowed, a set of encyclopedias. I’d also take the biggest tome of blank paper I could. I think all of those books have their various methods and, at least with the encyclopedias (and Physiology to an extent) there would be some practical knowledge to pull from them. I’d need a balance of practical and impractical to survive, I think.

VAH: What is the most memorable book, story or poem you’ve read?

SS: Green Eggs and Ham by Dr. Seuss. Being named Sam, it comes up a lot in one’s life. When you combine that with the fact that I enjoy cooking, it is near inescapable. It’s memorable because of its omnipresence in my mind. (It doesn’t/does help that I have the character tattooed on the inside of my arm as well.)

VAH: What author or books keep you up at night because you can’t put them down?

SS: Like many others, I read the last Harry Potter book in a little under 24 hours. I also read the memoir Crazy For the Storm by Norman Ollestad in the same amount of time. There aren’t specific books or authors that will always keep me up. I once read the better portion of a book on Roman history in an attempt to fall asleep. It didn’t work, but I learned a lot about Nero that night.

VAH: I’ve actually not read Harry Potter, but I’ve done similar with Outlander books.

Which reader are you – always finish what you started or put it down and move on if you don’t like it?

SS: I finish books even when I don’t like them. Even if I hate it, I force myself to go on. The only explanation I have is that I’m a stubborn individual and don’t like losing, even if its to the voices in my head telling me I couldn’t follow through on something. It’s something I’m working on.

 

 

Sam Slaughter was born and raised in New Jersey and currently lives in Central Florida.  He was educated at Elon University and Stetson University. He has fiction and nonfiction published or upcoming in a variety of places, including McSweeney’s Internet Tendency, Midwestern Gothic, The Circus Book, The Review Review, and Heavy Feather Review.  He is the Book Review Editor for The Atticus Review and a Contributing Editor at Entropy. He was recently awarded the 2014 There Will Be Words Prize and his first chapbook, When You Cross That Line, will be published in 2015.

Social Media:

Twitter:  @slaughterwrites
Instagram: @slaughterhouserising
Website: www.samslaughterthewriter.com

Sam Slaughter Sampler:

1) An excerpt from DOGS, published at Revolution John

2) Part 1 of the story “Fame in the Graveyard,” published at The Circus Book

More Sam Slaughter on the 13th of the month.

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Three by Five Welcomes Sam Slaughter

Welcome to Sam Slaughter, this month’s highlighted author.1932805_10152273115942354_772377606_o

Writer beginnings

VAH: Sam, let’s begin with why do you write?

SS: I write because at this point I can’t not. My mentor, Mark Powell, described it best, I think. He said at one point that if he goes for a long period of time without writing, he starts to feel physically ill. I’m going to steal that. I get antsy if I go more than a day or two without writing. Hearing stories and lines and whatever else in my head all the time, writing is a release for that, like opening a faucet or whatever other cliché you want to put in there. It feels good to write (even though it can be torture at times to sit in front of a blank screen) and so I keep doing it.

VAH: When did you start writing?

SS: I started writing because, as a kid, I always told stories. They were mostly to myself, in the safety of my own room as I played with my Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles action figures, but they were stories nonetheless. In public places, I would make stuff up constantly, wanting to sound more interesting than I was. Looking back, I can only imagine how crazy I probably sounded. In eighth grade I remember one particular assignment that really sealed the deal for me. We had our weekly spelling list—this may have been a marking period list, it was pretty long as I remember—and we had to write a story using all of the words. I wrote some fantasy tale

VAH: What are influenced your development as a writer?

SS: I have two different lists for this, really. First are the authors that I was reading when I was much younger—the ones that made me want to write in the first place. Among them, Brian Jacques, Jonathan Kellerman, RL Stine, Christopher Pike, and Caleb Carr come to mind. These writers wrote compelling pieces that were not hard to grasp. I read more because I was always interested. If I didn’t have that bunny hill education in reading, I probably wouldn’t have gotten to the point that I’m at now. If I would’ve jumped right into the canon, there’s a good bet that I would’ve hated reading and writing. I didn’t start reading a lot of “classics” until late in college, when I felt I was finally smart enough to understand them. I wasn’t in some cases, but what can you do? You can’t win ‘em all.

The second list of writers, after I started to actively pursue “literary” fiction writing, is the list more likely to pop up on my shelves these days. TC Boyle, Chuck Palahniuk, Flannery O’Connor, Kurt Vonnegut, Pinckney Benedict, Ricky Moody, Anthony Bourdain (his nonfiction, not his fiction), Steve Almond, and Rick Bass.

If I were to add any to that second list now, they’d be: Ron Rash, George Singleton, Ernest Hemingway, Lorrie Moore, Alice Munro, Karen Russell and Denis Johnson, among many others. I realize my taste in writers is terribly uniform and I’ve been working on changing that in the past year.

VAH: What do you remember about your first story or poem?

SS: The first story I wrote was about a bartender of a medieval tavern-turned-hero. I believe he had a sword that could either freeze an enemy or light them on fire. He saved a damsel at some point. Beyond that, I don’t remember anything else about it. I wrote it when I was in eighth grade for an assignment in Spelling, when we had to use a list of words in a story. At the time, I was into fantasy role-playing and, for some reason, I thought being a medieval barkeep was cool so all my heroes were bartenders.

VAH: What is the favorite piece you’ve written to date?

SS: My novel, Dogs, is up there because I learned what it meant to write a novel.  As far as pieces that are or will be published, I really enjoy my story “Welcome to Milwaukee” which will be out in 2015 in Midwestern Gothic. The idea came from a trip I took to Minneapolis one time and it stuck with me until I finally wrote it down.

Sam Slaughter was born and raised in New Jersey and currently lives in Central Florida.  He was educated at Elon University and Stetson University. He has fiction and nonfiction published or upcoming in a variety of places, including McSweeney’s Internet Tendency, Midwestern Gothic, The Circus Book, The Review Review, and Heavy Feather Review.  He is the Book Review Editor for The Atticus Review and a Contributing Editor at Entropy. He was recently awarded the 2014 There Will Be Words Prize and his first chapbook, When You Cross That Line, will be published in 2015.

Social Media:

Twitter:  @slaughterwrites
Instagram: @slaughterhouserising
Website: www.samslaughterthewriter.com

Sam Slaughter Sampler:

1) An excerpt from DOGS, published at Revolution John

2) Part 1 of the story “Fame in the Graveyard,” published at The Circus Book

More Sam Slaughter on the 13th of the month.

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Valentines I Heart Books Blog Hop – Fear is Your Friend

blog hop tag 300Welcome to the Valentines I Heart Books Blog Hop!

Last year about this time is when No Red Pen: Writers, Writing Groups & Critique published. Inspired by my experiences in formal and informal writing workshops and writers’ groups, No Red Pen was a labor of love for other writers, especially those starting out. The book is a free download currently from most online Ebook retailers with print versions available online. No Red Pen is a toolbox for becoming a provider of effective, useful critique in a respectful manner of both the work and the writer. For this blog tour, I’ve posted below a chapter from the book. Enjoy.

Chapter 4 from No Red Pen: Writers, Writing Groups & Critique – FEAR

Fear is a huge reason why people don’t join a writer’s group or seek out criticism, yet we know that feedback is essential to the writing process. Fear keeps writers from ever moving a manuscript from the drawer to the mailbox. Fear gets in the way. A writer venturing into the world of critique groups or returning after a poor group experience has a valid emotion when experiencing fear. Let’s not belittle the power of fear.

Fear, however, can also be a friend. Fear is a little voice that taps you on the shoulder and says, “Psst, pay attention.” Fear in a critique group is fear of failure; fear no one will like the writer, the work will be rejected, the people will be mean, the feedback will hurt, the process will be too difficult…There are many, many reasons to fear the unknown in venturing into a group of people, usually strangers (at least in the beginning) to whom the writer will expose her product of imagination or experience and hard work. One of the biggest fears an emerging or new writer has is that no one will like the work that has been labored over and poured out with heartfelt dedication.

“This is my heart and soul,” the writer says, “Do you like it?” Meaning of course, do you like me?

For a writer that wants to improve, the first step is letting go of that fear. Recognize that the writing is not the writer’s identity. The writing is not the writer’s self. The writing is just words on a page that create an experience for the reader to share and immerse oneself within. The writing ( even when you are telling a story where you are the main character) is not about you, the writer.

Letting go, in any aspect of life, is just plain difficult. It is not like we have a little button to click in the brain, the Letting Go Button. Letting go is a huge psychological process. Like any skill developed over time, with practice, the skill of letting go becomes if not easier, then more streamlined, faster, unconscious in its effort.

Successful letting go requires acknowledgement that there is something to let go of. In terms of joining a critique group, the writer must make the movement from not being in a group to joining and participating in a group. When fear is the obstacle in the way of the movement, and that fear is not acknowledged, all manner of other reasons will manifest: – no time, don’t know how, don’t know where to find one, don’t know what to do in one, the work isn’t ready… If you really want to join a group, none of these issues is a true obstacle. Let’s face it, “The work isn’t ready.” That is the whole point of the group, to help get the work ready! So, let’s go back to fear and letting it go.

Acknowledge that fear is the problem in the way. If you can focus specifically on what you are afraid of, that may be helpful though it’s not all that necessary at this stage. Notice how attached you are to that nice, comfortable fear? It’s what you know, it’s what you’ve been with for a while. Really, isn’t that fear a little like a buddy you’ve had with you a long time, sort of your teddy bear for not doing things? Think about letting that fear go be on its own now without you. Oh, there, did you feel that – that little twinge of guilt? That reflex of loyalty to what you’ve always known?

Fear is comfortable. Fear can be cozy. Fear can be a good friend or a frenemy. You get to choose. Once you are aware of your fear, you get to choose what to do with the fear. Let it lead the way, or let it move to the background and while present, fear is not in control. Sometimes we take our teddy bears with us long after we have outgrown them just because it makes venturing out into the unknown easier. Eventually, when we are ready, we put the teddy bear away, on its shelf. You can do the same thing with that fear that gets in the way of joining a critique group.

“I’m afraid to join a writers group.” Good acknowledgement.

“I can be afraid and still join a writers group.” Now you have moved forward and started to let go.

What does fear the friend whisper to you as you move forward?

“Pssst. Be safe. Take care of you.”

What is the worst that could happen?

Complete strangers who have no obligation to say nice things, won’t.

Mere acquaintances, who don’t know or care about little me, will slice and dice my heartfelt story.

These strangers, the competition, the perceived experts will tear me apart.

Oh wait, not me, the work.

So what enables a writer to put her work out there for critique?

Simply, have good boundaries. Like just about every other situation in life, good boundaries in a writing group keep us safe, promote civility and provide guidance for interaction. This is the work and this is the person who wrote the work. The feedback is about the work, not about the person. Not liking the work is not equal to not liking the person.

Boundaries make it safe for fear to not lead the way. A good sense of boundaries in terms of your writing means an understanding of where you, the individual is, and where the writing begins. The individual has many facets and aspects of identity. The writing is a product of the individual’s work, imagination and skill but is not the whole of the writer. Writers have a relationship with their writing and like other personal relationships, the lines can become blurred. Recognize that you, the writer, are not the product, the writing. Separate yourself from what is produced and it will be easier to hear criticism. You will not take the critique personally because you understand the critique is not about you.

Demonstrating a healthy relationship with your writing encourages healthy interaction with those who would offer critique. Have a sense of self that is greater than the writing. Now when you invite critique, you are not inviting criticism of self, merely feedback on the work. Your critique readers will appreciate that as it invites honest feedback that isn’t limited by concern for the writer’s feelings.

Freedom to give honest feedback is not license for abuse, disrespect or insult.

/End of Chapter 4/

Fear is your friend, in writing, and in life since it is telling you to pay attention. Just remember, you’re in charge, so you decide what to listen to when Fear peeks up.

Be sure to check out other participants in the Valentines I Heart Books Blog Tour.



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Principle vs Profit – KDP Select

Amazon’s KDP Select program enables an author to make their Ebook free for select days in a 90 day period. This garners immense free publicity for the author. I often read about books that have thousands of downloads on the free days. While my book is on Amazon, both in print and Ebook, it’s never there free. No Red Pen: Writers, Writing Groups & Critique IS free as an Ebook everywhere else. Why not on Amazon?  Because if I join KDP Select – the book must be pulled from every other retailer.

The book is intended for students and struggling writers, I want No Red Pen to be easy to access. I don’t want cost, even a couple bucks or 99 cents as a barrier. I’m cautious about a “company” store where products are only sold there and nowhere else. I think it is dangerous for writers to allow their access to the public to be controlled by one entity. I’m standing on principle.

And it’s costing me unknown amount of readers.

In 2012, there were 167 downloads over the 11 months the book was available. There were several instances via Barnes&Noble the book saw dozens of downloads in a day. Instructor use? A free book promotion B&N did? Don’t know. Moving to KDP Select would remove the access in the dozen other markets. How ironic, I may have to reduce markets to one if I want downloads and readership to multiply.  Principle may need tossing to the wayside if I want No Red Pen to reach a wider audience.

Not before June, 2013. After that, I may experiment with KDP Select and up the price of the Ebook to $2.99 with as many free days as the program allows.

Principle does not always pan out.

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