Home ⁄ Archive by Category "Author Spotlight"

Author Spotlight: Poppy Gee

Poppy Gee is the Brisbane-based author of two literary thriller novels – Vanishing Falls and Bay of Fires – and one of my favourite humans! Not only is she a ridiculously talented writer (she probably won’t like me saying that), she is a big supporter of other authors and an all-round fabulous person.

Poppy has also managed to do the impossible…she has got me hooked on crime and thriller fiction.

As a speculative fiction author and reader, I’m not typically drawn to Poppy’s chosen genre, but that all changed after reading Vanishing Falls. Poppy writes character and setting with evocative precision, without sacrificing story. She carries the reader on an effortless and seamless journey, hooking you from the first page.

I caught up with Poppy recently to chat about all things writing and reading.

Q: Can you tell me about your latest book?

Vanishing Falls is a literary thriller set in a small town deep in the Tasmanian rainforest. In the tradition of the small-town mystery, a woman disappears on a windy, rainy night and the secrets of the townsfolk come under scrutiny as they search for answers about what happened to her.

Q: How did you get the idea for this book?

I like taking a beautiful setting and flipping it to reveal the dark underside. The stunning rainforest villages in Tasmania gave me that starting point. I wanted to write a story containing puzzles within puzzles. The woman’s disappearance is the first crime the reader sees, and it provides the novel’s scaffold but it is not the darkest crime in the story. People commit a crime to conceal a crime, and so on, creating a domino effect.

Q: Have you always wanted to be a writer?

I started writing in a diary from when I was eight years old, almost every day. I love everything about writing, from simple word choice to the rhythm of a sentence, to the incredibly exciting feeling of creating an entire imaginary world.

Q: Can you tell me a little bit about your journey to get published?

I always wanted to be a novelist, and I understood that it was important to have a paying job, so I studied journalism and worked in newspapers and magazines while working on various novels early in the morning or late at night. Eventually, I completed a Masters in Creative Writing, and the manuscript I wrote for that became my first published novel. When I completed the Masters I sent the manuscript to an agent in New York, who signed me, and I’m still with her 11 years later.

Q: What are some of the things you do to promote yourself and your book?

That’s a sobering question because I feel like I don’t do anything proactively to promote myself right now! I write weekly book reviews and share them on social media, which helps to promote other authors. I believe that being a constructive member of the literary community is probably the best way to indirectly promote yourself.

Q: What’s something you wish you’d known before being published?

I have learned that you have to work as hard as you possibly can to polish your manuscript, and then, when you have no juice left in the tank, you still need to somehow find the energy and skill to work ten times harder to polish that draft even more. It’s a massive challenge with no payoff guaranteed. 

Q: What advice do you have for aspiring authors?

Write because you love writing. Write with truth and honesty and with the main aim of creating a body of work that you are personally proud of, rather than judging yourself on all the elements you can’t control such as publishing deals, reviews, sales or invitations to writers festivals.

Q: Can you tell me about your current project?

I have a dark psychological domestic thriller about housewives disappearing in Brisbane which is currently being read by my agent. I have almost finished a psychological thriller set on a private island in the Coral Sea.

Find out more and purchase a copy of Vanishing Falls here.

Connect with Poppy

www.poppygee.com

Instagram: @poppygeenovelist

Facebook: @authorPoppyGee

Twitter: @AuthorPoppyGee

Subscribe to Poppy’s newsletter here

To stay in the know about my books and to receive content like this, sign up here.

Author Spotlight: Lee and Amanda Breeze

One of the best things about being an author is meeting and making friends with other authors. I’ve talked many times here about how authors are great supporters of each other.

Most importantly knowing other authors means you’re never short of good stuff to read, and the work of Lee and Amanda Breeze is no exception.

I caught up recently with this awesome pair of speculative fiction authors, who also just happen to be married to each other.

Q: Lee and Amanda, can you tell me about your latest book?

Lee: Burn the Sky is a post-apocalyptic, sci-fi action-adventure about a 7-year-old girl who survives a nuclear war. It follows her adventures (and misadventures) growing up in a very different and dangerous world from what it once was while the survivors of this world try to piece it back together.

Q: How did you get the idea for this series?

Amanda: Lee was watching an episode of The Expanse and got thinking about what constitutes hard science fiction. He thought he’d try his hand writing some himself and so came up with the idea for a series based around a mysterious piece of alien technology. He first wrote the prologue, set 10 or so years prior, which became a prequel novella and eventually a full-length novel in its own right. And so Burn the Sky was born.

Q: Have you both always been writers?

Amanda: No, though I had thought about it but never got around to finishing any of the stories I started. One story I began when I was 16. It will never see the light of day.

Lee: I used to write short stories for my own entertainment when I was in school, but all those stories are long lost and forgotten.

Q: Did you always intend on writing together and what’s it like working as a husband/wife team?

Amanda: I wrote a blog post about this, called ‘Married with Characterisation’. In short, it explains that I basically got spooked by the term “author’s widow”: a wife who loses her husband to his writing’. I didn’t want that. I wanted to support him, plus after bouncing ideas off one another, I really got invested in the story and figured I could help by adding colour and depth to his ideas. It worked.

Q: How did you come to be published?

Amanda: Lee saw an ad for a new indie publisher in one of the QWC (Queensland Writers Centre) magazines. He investigated it, and after speaking to the publisher decided to hop on a plane (this was pre-COVID) and take his manuscript down to meet with the publisher in person. The publisher liked the concept and saw potential, so they signed us up.

Q: What are some of the things you do to promote yourselves and your book?

Lee: Covid has not helped with promoting our book with the cancellation of many planned events.

We started off with Facebook advertising and self-promoting within groups that would allow that, but recently, we have moved more into our own personal branding and focused on future works. This has allowed us to gain confidence interacting with broader social media groups (on Reddit, Twitter and Instagram) and contributing to emerging writer’s communities.

Now that things are opening back up, we plan to be more involved in face-to-face marketing events like symposiums, festivals, writing groups, book signings and markets.

Q: What’s something you’d wish you’d known before publishing?

Lee: Editing is hard. Much harder than we thought. All those punctuation marks you find out of place after the book is printed just glare at you as if to say, ‘ha ha, you missed me.’

Q: What advice do you have for aspiring authors?

Amanda: This may sound obvious, but learn to write. I mean really learn how to write. Hone your craft. Find an author you enjoy reading and study their work. Pull it apart and understand what is it about their work that intrigues you. Understand the concepts of character arcs, world-building, story development and plot and enjoy the creative process. Remember, even famous authors had to start somewhere.

Lee: There are many elements in writing a good book, so read, write, edit, watch YouTube videos from published authors and editors, join a writing group like QWC and go to their workshops, learn how to edit…and edit.

Q: Can you tell me about your current project?

Lee: Burn the Sky was our first novel. The final part of the two-part duology is due out in August. Following that, we have another, as yet unnamed science-fiction series that follows on from Burn the Sky. Set in the same universe but some years later, it follows the story of a cocky young pilot named Ash who’s found himself captain of a dead ship. The mysterious technology aboard that ship seems to have attracted the attention of several hostile factions. And for good reason, because the organisation he’s working for isn’t what it seems. It has connections with an ancient and superior race who were once thought to have gone extinct. Now they threaten to return. If they do, nobody is safe.

You can find out more about Lee and Amanda at https://leebreeze.com/ or purchase a copy of Burn the Sky here.

To stay in the know about my books and to receive content like this, sign up here.