My guest this week is writer, editor and artist Ibby Taylor Greer. I have read three of Ibby's books and have found them to be entertaining, informative and incredibly creative. Welcome, Ibby, and thank you for your insights to reading and writing.
1) What kinds of books do
you like to read and is there one special book that is your favorite overall?
I
read classic fiction (American, British, European novels, and some poetry,
mostly) and contemporary mysteries and thrillers mostly, anymore. As for one
favorite, probably a book I always own or have around and read and reread,
“Smiley’s People” by John LeCarre. A masterpiece of story, characterization,
narrative techniques, and suspense.
2) Who are your favorite authors, past and present?
As for favorite(s), too many to list but here are some I tend to own and reread the most: two of the John Le Carre books, “Smiley’s People” and “Tinker, Tailor,” as being near perfect, well-written spy thrillers. I love the early P.D. James novels, like “Death of an Expert Witness.” I reread DuMaurier for ambiance (“Jamaica Inn”), all the Dick (and now Felix) Francis books because of their independent main characters and how the stories evolve with suspense; I love Rumer Godden’s “An Episode of Sparrows.” I enjoy books set in Britain, and Ireland. Biy I have a few favorite Scandinavian, German, and French novels and memoirs, as well, including Sigfried Lenz’s “The German Lesson,” the Dutch-setting stories for children of Meindert (sp) DeJong; “Eugenie Grandet” by Balzac, all Irish short stories by the whole cast of Irish writers, most of Ann Tyler’s novels. I read everything.
3) Are there any authors who have inspired you to write and, if so, who are they?
2) Who are your favorite authors, past and present?
As for favorite(s), too many to list but here are some I tend to own and reread the most: two of the John Le Carre books, “Smiley’s People” and “Tinker, Tailor,” as being near perfect, well-written spy thrillers. I love the early P.D. James novels, like “Death of an Expert Witness.” I reread DuMaurier for ambiance (“Jamaica Inn”), all the Dick (and now Felix) Francis books because of their independent main characters and how the stories evolve with suspense; I love Rumer Godden’s “An Episode of Sparrows.” I enjoy books set in Britain, and Ireland. Biy I have a few favorite Scandinavian, German, and French novels and memoirs, as well, including Sigfried Lenz’s “The German Lesson,” the Dutch-setting stories for children of Meindert (sp) DeJong; “Eugenie Grandet” by Balzac, all Irish short stories by the whole cast of Irish writers, most of Ann Tyler’s novels. I read everything.
3) Are there any authors who have inspired you to write and, if so, who are they?
Beatrix
Potter, Emily Dickiinson, Mary Stewart, Ann Tyler, Jane Austen, Daphne Du
Maurier, P.D. James, “Carolyn Keene”, Chaucer, Shakespeare, Yeats. Yep,
classically educated.
I identify especially with Mary Stewart, Daphne du Maurier and P.D. James. I wonder if anyone still reads Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier.
I identify especially with Mary Stewart, Daphne du Maurier and P.D. James. I wonder if anyone still reads Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier.
4) How do you choose your characters’ names?
Each
name has another meaning; once the reader gets into the book(s) they start to
see what a name can mean. Example, my character Ann C. Bow, in “Moving Day, A
Season of Letters,” is a name that, in French, is ‘an si beau,’ or, “such a
beautiful year.” Deliberate. In “Moonshine Corner,” Lacey Brew connects things
and stirs up the past and present, “brews” something new; other characters named
Glass, See, and Hill all have names that fit their roles in the novel. If “every
detail counts” in writing, why not let names count?
5) Are you a plotter or a “pantser”?
? Do not know what that is. I plan a novel out in a loose outline, of events,
and then let it happen.
Then I would say you are a little bit of both. Outlining is plotting and a "pantser" is someone who lets the story or characters lead the author.
Then I would say you are a little bit of both. Outlining is plotting and a "pantser" is someone who lets the story or characters lead the author.
6) What kind of writing schedule do you have?
When
working on my own novel, I write mostly all day. When I edit, I do it from about
ten a.m. to 3 p.m. and stop. I am at my best in the mid-morning and early
evening. But “life interferes
7) How do you choose your titles? Do you have a title in mind before you start writing or does something occur after you have begun to write or after you have finished?
Choose the title first.
8) Do you base your characters on real people or are they completely from your imagination?
Both. In “Moving Day,” Ann C. Bow was very loosely based on a delightful neighbor in the apartment building. But she never saw the novel, alas, as she died in 1983 and I wrote it in 1999. In “Moonshine Corner,” I had some character types based on friends, with their permission (partly as a gimmick for selling books!), but all the characters were fictitious.
.
9) Have you used real life experiences in your fiction or is everything from your imagination?
9) Have you used real life experiences in your fiction or is everything from your imagination?
Both, especially relationships. But most of it is pure
fiction.
10) When did you realize that you wanted to be a writer ?
When I read my first books as a little child, of maybe 5. Beatrix Potter was
read to me when I was very young; I still have the books (first editions from
early 1900s, and figurines, fairy tales of all kinds, and select Little Golden
Books (which I also still have)
11) What books have you published and where can readers find them?
All
my books are available on amazon.com or directly from me. Check either Ibby
Greer, Elizabeth T. Greer, or Ibby Taylor Greer. Address: P.O. Box 4687,
Roanoke, VA 24015. etgreer@cox.net. And www.moonshinewidow.com
1.
“Moving Day, A Season of Letters,” Brunswick Pub., 1999, an epistolary novel set
in Boulder, CO.
2.
“Paper Faces, Babyboomer Memoir,” Brunswick Pub. Free verse and photos.
2000.
3.
“Moonshine Corner, Keys to Rocky Mount,” time-warp historical novel, ghost
novel, and love story. Epilogue of family genealogy and history,
2014.
4.
“Thomas Keister Greer: Youth, WWII Marine, Early Legal Career,” written by my
late husband and edited and published by me. 2014. Memoir, photos, annotations
by me.
5.
“Old-Fashioned Stories and Poems, For Children and Everyone.” 2014. Small
lyrical poems and art, several stories, including, “The Gingerbread Angel, An
After-Christmas Story.”
Questions
for fun:
12)
What is your favorite color?
Blue
13)
Favorite flavor of ice cream?
Peppermint Stick
14)
Favorite cookie and/or candy bar?
Homemade chocolate-chip, Snickers
15)
Favorite movie?
“Dr. Zhivago” and “Brideshead Revisited” (the BBC series with Jeremy
Irons) and "Shakespeare in Love"
16)
Favorite TV show?
“Honeymooners” for dialogue and comedy; “Who Do You Think You Are?” because I am
a genealogist
17)
Favorite place to write: a coffee shop; favorite place to read: a
library
Thank
you, Pat!
And thank you, Ibby, for a most intriguing, interesting and entertaining interview!
2 comments:
Very interesting post, and thank you for sharing. I'm afraid I haven't read most of the classics, and I know I should. You've inspired me.
Marja McGraw
Thanks for commenting, Marja. Ibby had problems with posting but I wanted to let you know how much she appreciated your comment.
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