Happy Friday everyone! This week I caught up with bonkers Canadian born author Joseph Picard...no not Captain Picard...Joseph...nevermind.
Anyway, Joseph spoke to me about his life, how he got into writing and his books including forthcoming title, The Rubberman's Cage. Read on! Joe's humour is infectious and his stories are intriguing.
1) Can you please start by telling us a little about yourself? Where are you from and how did you get into writing?
I was born on the east end of Canada, and have
moved a ton of times (more than 20 before I was 16) back and forth
before settling down on the west end, in a suburb outside of Vancouver.
I
used to write when the whim hit me, for as long as I can remember. I
always liked making things that other people can (hopefully!) enjoy.
I've done music composition, I've dabbled in groups to create video
games, I've put out a lot of art, but a few things got me focused on
writing above all other undertakings.
I was struck by a car while cycling to work in 2001,
and became a paraplegic. I suddenly had a lot more time. I was also
suddenly on some really heavy medication, making dumb ideas look
suddenly reasonable. I had slightly improved my art, leading to my
favouring some drawings with long descriptions, and they kept piling up,
and getting longer. Eventually I decided I had to organize them in my
head with a short story about the characters who had been getting drawn
so much.
Poof, short story. But I really liked the
characters, so poof, sequel. And another. And a prequel. These four
stories were edited together to form one book, which eventually became
Lifehack. Suddenly the idea of a book wasn't so far out there. And it's
just kept going like that.
Also, when I became a father, I knew I had to give
up a lot of hobbies for the sake of time. Music and art lost; writing
won and now I have two kids. As a stay at home dad, when people ask about
writer's block, I can't help but chuckle. People with writer's block
have free time. While I'm making lunches, changing diapers, making runs
to the school, etc, etc, I have plenty of time to consider the next turn
in my current project.
2) How many books have your published to date and what genres are they?
Three.
Lifehack, Watching Yute, and Echoes of Erebus. They're science fiction
and some have been called them "hard" sci-fi, though they're fairly
character-based. The three books are a series, though they vary in tone
and theme a bit. They all take place in the same country, and deal with
the same over-reaching flow of events- nanotechnology, and abusing it to
some nasty results, such as zombie-like critters. I took pains to make
them all readable separately, though of course some things can be better
appreciated if you've read them all. Echoes of Erebus marks the end of
the series, and the next book is its own entity.
Oh, and I should mention the recently released "13
Bites". It's a supernatural-themed anthology by 10 authors, and I have
two short stories in there. One of them relates to Lifehack, (but can
stand alone) and the other is a contemporary story about an office
worker who turns to some darker Romani powers to get a little revenge.
The rest of 13 Bites is by writers I've met on Facebook, and they range
from girzzly to heart-warming.
Echoes
of Erebus. The hero, Sarah, finds out that her life, and her own mind
and body, are a simulation. She finds this out when at the perceived age
of 22, her 'father' (reduced to only an A.I.) begins educating her
about his crimes from Lifehack. He intends to do something good, to
create her as something positive to put into the world. He builds her a
body, (mostly out of dead fish,) using nanotechnology, and guides her in
his own way to find a place in the world. To do this, he moves his mind
into a corner of her brain to keep her company. ('Helicopter' parenting
much??) Despite early successes in making friends and getting a job,
difficulties arise because she's made out of technologies that have been
strictly banned. Similar technology is still being abused, linked to
gruesome pit fights, and a variety of massacres.
And there's a friendly lizard.
Indie.
When Lifehack was coming together, I researched traditional publishing
and found that I could submit to my favourite 50 publishers- in
various formats, some double spaced, some single spaced, some 1.5
spaced, some 1.354536 spaced, some on tapioca coloured paper, some want
the whole thing, some want the first chapter, some want chapters 2, 3,
and 7, some wanted a kidney, blah blah blah,.. all of them on paper back
then, no one wanted a file...then mail them off! Then wait up to a
year before hearing if any of them even received it! No thanks! So,
indie it was to be. The plusses and minuses are many but so far I
haven't been tempted to go over to traditional for any future projects.
Yup! I'm half way
through Rubberman's Cage. The protagonist "Lenth", lives in an
apartment-sized environment with three "brothers". They have no
idea that there's an outside world, and very little understanding that
other people exist. And no idea what a woman is. They have a room where
they work a job with an unknown purpose, they eat the same cakey-things
every day, lock themselves in cuffs to sleep, and the silent,
rubber-suited person in the ceiling electrocutes them when they don't do
what they're supposed to. And this is what normal is. Always has been.
Until one of them dies, and Lenth starts to wonder. He ends up exploring
above the Rubberman, in places he didn't know existed, meeting people
with different ideas of where they are, why, or how things are supposed
to be.
And they're all wrong.
And they're all wrong.
No comments:
Post a Comment