*I'm always thinking about ways to improve and add to the "ReadWonder" blog.
*It amazes me how far it has come in the last several years, but it is my hope that it continues to grow and improve.
*After reading the novel Finding Perfect, I had some great interactions with Elly Swartz via Twitter. Last Monday I featured my first author interview with her and had so much fun with that process.
*Here is the link to that first interview...
An Inside Look #1 Interview
*I knew after reading The Serpent King, I had so many thoughts and questions for the author. It was one of the best young-adult novels I had read in a long time. I reached out to Jeff and he was just as kind and gracious as Elly and said "sure" to the interview.
*Here are the questions I asked Jeff and his responses. I couldn't be more thrilled with this second edition of "An Inside Look" blog post...
1. How did
you come to “know” Dillard (Dill) Early?
I first came to
know Dill in 2005. I had just bought a piece of recording equipment and I
started improvising a little song on my guitar to test it. I suddenly realized
I had something and began to write lyrics. What emerged in about 15 minutes was
the story of a high-school-age young man who watches trains pass by on Saturday
nights in his rusty small town. He dreams of something bigger; of leaving. I
didn't know it at the time, but that was Dill. Turns out, I hadn't finished
telling his story.
2. What do
you think is Dill's most admirable quality?
He refuses to pass
on the hurt he's been dealt in life to other people.
3. Is there
anything you wish Dill would have changed or done differently in his story?
I can't really wish
that as an author because bad choices by characters make for terrific narrative
tension. So all of his bad choices were intentional on my part.
4. What do
you think Dill can offer to other young adults and/or adults that are
experiencing similar situations to what he went through?
An example of
someone who seeks ways to leave a toxic life without leaving everyone he is
behind too.
5. How did
you “research” Dill and the circumstances he found himself in?
Dill is a composite
of many people I've known in my life or whose existence I posited based on
observations. I drew some upon my religious upbringing (which was very
different from Dill's--I had great parents) to imagine the ways a religious
upbringing could be an unhealthy experience.
6. Do you and
Dill share any similarities?
We're both
musicians. We're both drawn to misfits. We've both had to find our own path to
belief. We share a sense of beauty and a love for broken things.
7. What was
the hardest scene to write about Dill?
I can't answer this
without spoiling. But the second hardest was when his mother explicitly blames
him for sending his father to prison.
8. Who do you
think was Dill's biggest supporter and why?
I'm tempted to say
Lydia, but I think Lydia, Dr. Blankenship, and Travis were all there for Dill
in different, but equally important ways.
9. Why do we
humans try to please our parents before we please our true selves?
I think on some
level we recognize the sacrifices that even bad parents make for their children
and we're driven by some sort of sense of obligation to please them, even if
it's at our own expense.
10. What do
you think Dill is doing as this present time?
I have an idea, but
you'll have to wait until my second book (which is not a Serpent King sequel)
to find out.
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