Add You
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Writing and Speaking > Writing > Interview with Author David Keck, Part One

Tags

  • influenced
  • remember
  • fortunate enough
  • writer thats
  • creative writing

  • Links

  • The Lowdown On ECommerce: Making All The Pieces Fit Together
  • When Refinancing Your Home - An ARM Or A Fixed Rate?
  • Just Be Yourself... Easier Said Than Done
  • Add You - Interview with Author David Keck, Part One

    Outsourcing or Allowing Illegal Immigration
    Many people insist that there are jobs Americans will not do. Indeed, this is factual and yet if they paid me $200.00 to pick apples per hour, I bet I might get some exercise and go lose some weight. The issues will illegal immigration and outsourcing are indeed economic in nature.We often complain about both and yet if you do not outsource you need to bring people in who can do these jobs. If you do not allow illegal immigration then you need to outsource. Some say lets not do either, and yet the world does not work that way. Why? Well currently with unemployment at 4.9% we are pretty much at maximum employment.
    at the scary bits).

    Eventually, I read what everyone reads. I gobbled up Tolkien in one long weekend (ruining a perfectly good family camping expedition by suddenly refusing to put my book down). I’ve enjoyed Patrick O’Brian and Graham Joyce and Douglas Adams and Elmore Leonard. And I’ve a great love of good lyrics as well. Maybe all of that shows.

    Mary: Has your environment and/or upbringing impacted your writing?

    David: I grew

    How To Start Your Own Residual Income Tree Starting Tonight
    I'm sure by now you are aware of the effects of the residual income.It is an all-empowering concept for those who have mastered it.There are many ways to start a residual income stream:1) Dealing In Real EstateThis is out of the league for most people. You would have needed to acquire a massive income before you can deal with this. Still, I know of people who dread paying property managers or having to maintain houses.Instead of buying real estate, however, you can sell real estate. Still, this requires a lot of work, sales skills, and moving around the country. It isn't what I call rea
    David Keck, author of In the Eye of Heaven, has graciously answered my questions on writing and publishing. I enjoyed his responses very much. David is a Canadian, currently residing in New York, where he teaches at a Junior High. In the Eye of Heaven was published by Tor Books on April 4, 2006, and is available in paperback as of March 6, 2007.

    On Writing

    Mary: What is your writing background, and when did you first consider yourself a writer?

    David: I’ve wanted to be a writer for a very long time. When I was a kid, I used to fill newsprint pads with cartoons and drawings – always telling one story or another. When I went to university, I chose my courses based on what I really wanted to do someday. I took courses in anthropology, psychology, philosophy, pre-history, history and writing. I was even fortunate enough to take a creative writing course from a woman who went on to win a Pulitzer Prize a year or two later.

    Now, as for when I first considered myself a writer, that’s a longer story. I have been writing with an eye to getting myself into print since I was teenager and, when I began, I had very little luck. In fact, I am among those who managed to pile up mountains of rejections early on. And we are living in a time when even excellent writers are often working other jobs during the day. All of which has meant that I’m very reluctant to run around calling myself a writer even now.

    Mary: Who or what has influenced your writing, and how?

    David: Like a lot of people, I had an obsessive passion for science fiction in television and the movies as a child. I saw Star Wars in the same theater that my piano teacher once played along to silent movies. I watched Star Trek in the afternoon when I got home from school (often wincing through my fingers at the scary bits).

    Eventually, I read what everyone reads. I gobbled up Tolkien in one long weekend (ruining a perfectly good family camping expedition by suddenly refusing to put my book down). I’ve enjoyed Patrick O’Brian and Graham Joyce and Douglas Adams and Elmore Leonard. And I’ve a great love of good lyrics as well. Maybe all of that shows.

    Mary: Has your environment and/or upbringing impacted your writing?

    David: I grew u

    Get Your Share of Old Business
    Lets face it...winning new business is fun. Particularly in service firms where there is substantial personal involvement required to gain clients. But the jubilation of landing new accounts often leads to problems.While you're focusing on gaining new clients, settling them in, and organising the recently won project, what about your other clients? Remember them...you know, the ones that still want you to do work for them. Their requirements may not seem as exciting as they once were, but you cannot afford to ignore them.It is often the case that service firms do not have a formal sales development plan. Th
    onsider yourself a writer?

    David: I’ve wanted to be a writer for a very long time. When I was a kid, I used to fill newsprint pads with cartoons and drawings – always telling one story or another. When I went to university, I chose my courses based on what I really wanted to do someday. I took courses in anthropology, psychology, philosophy, pre-history, history and writing. I was even fortunate enough to take a creative writing course from a woman who went on to win a Pulitzer Prize a year or two later.

    Now, as for when I first considered myself a writer, that’s a longer story. I have been writing with an eye to getting myself into print since I was teenager and, when I began, I had very little luck. In fact, I am among those who managed to pile up mountains of rejections early on. And we are living in a time when even excellent writers are often working other jobs during the day. All of which has meant that I’m very reluctant to run around calling myself a writer even now.

    Mary: Who or what has influenced your writing, and how?

    David: Like a lot of people, I had an obsessive passion for science fiction in television and the movies as a child. I saw Star Wars in the same theater that my piano teacher once played along to silent movies. I watched Star Trek in the afternoon when I got home from school (often wincing through my fingers at the scary bits).

    Eventually, I read what everyone reads. I gobbled up Tolkien in one long weekend (ruining a perfectly good family camping expedition by suddenly refusing to put my book down). I’ve enjoyed Patrick O’Brian and Graham Joyce and Douglas Adams and Elmore Leonard. And I’ve a great love of good lyrics as well. Maybe all of that shows.

    Mary: Has your environment and/or upbringing impacted your writing?

    David: I grew

    Five Easy Ways To Consolidate Your Debts!
    Debt consolidation is a process by which you can reduce you debts but combining the different loans you have taken into a single loan, which is repaid to only one lender at a lower interest rate. Its opted by people who are heavily into debts as a result of education loans, high credit card bills, store card bills and so on.How can you consolidate your debts? First you need to make a list of loan payments you have. Find a debt consolidation company who can help you with such consolidation. Once you find such a company and they are ready to help you out, you stand to gain by not having to make six or seven payments
    who went on to win a Pulitzer Prize a year or two later.

    Now, as for when I first considered myself a writer, that’s a longer story. I have been writing with an eye to getting myself into print since I was teenager and, when I began, I had very little luck. In fact, I am among those who managed to pile up mountains of rejections early on. And we are living in a time when even excellent writers are often working other jobs during the day. All of which has meant that I’m very reluctant to run around calling myself a writer even now.

    Mary: Who or what has influenced your writing, and how?

    David: Like a lot of people, I had an obsessive passion for science fiction in television and the movies as a child. I saw Star Wars in the same theater that my piano teacher once played along to silent movies. I watched Star Trek in the afternoon when I got home from school (often wincing through my fingers at the scary bits).

    Eventually, I read what everyone reads. I gobbled up Tolkien in one long weekend (ruining a perfectly good family camping expedition by suddenly refusing to put my book down). I’ve enjoyed Patrick O’Brian and Graham Joyce and Douglas Adams and Elmore Leonard. And I’ve a great love of good lyrics as well. Maybe all of that shows.

    Mary: Has your environment and/or upbringing impacted your writing?

    David: I grew

    Attitude And Objections
    It is amazing how an objection raised in the sales process can make most Agents look like a deer in the headlights: they get that blank look of disbelief that you see just before the front grill of your car connects with deerskin at full speed. If the deer manages to move at all, he does it at the last split second before fatal impact, leaving you to experience heart-pounding adrenaline for the next 30 minutes. Many Agents treat objections the same way that a deer treats oncoming traffic. They are frozen in terror, and move only at the last second before the buyer or seller runs them over.Often, Agents will view
    ant that I’m very reluctant to run around calling myself a writer even now.

    Mary: Who or what has influenced your writing, and how?

    David: Like a lot of people, I had an obsessive passion for science fiction in television and the movies as a child. I saw Star Wars in the same theater that my piano teacher once played along to silent movies. I watched Star Trek in the afternoon when I got home from school (often wincing through my fingers at the scary bits).

    Eventually, I read what everyone reads. I gobbled up Tolkien in one long weekend (ruining a perfectly good family camping expedition by suddenly refusing to put my book down). I’ve enjoyed Patrick O’Brian and Graham Joyce and Douglas Adams and Elmore Leonard. And I’ve a great love of good lyrics as well. Maybe all of that shows.

    Mary: Has your environment and/or upbringing impacted your writing?

    David: I grew

    Sources Of Knowledge - How To Gain Knowledge In Any Field
    We all continually learn new things in life. Constantly increasing our knowledge is essential if we are to progress further or develop ourselves.Whatever field we are involved in, we always have to look for ways and means to expand our knowledge. Increase in knowledge in a particular subject can lead to better understanding, grasp, judgement, intelligence and ability in that area. It can expand our thinking and heighten our expertise on a topic.So how do we go about gaining knowledge? What are the sources of knowledge? Below I am listing a few sources from which we gain knowledge in any field.1. P
    at the scary bits).

    Eventually, I read what everyone reads. I gobbled up Tolkien in one long weekend (ruining a perfectly good family camping expedition by suddenly refusing to put my book down). I’ve enjoyed Patrick O’Brian and Graham Joyce and Douglas Adams and Elmore Leonard. And I’ve a great love of good lyrics as well. Maybe all of that shows.

    Mary: Has your environment and/or upbringing impacted your writing?

    David: I grew up in prairie Canada: a funny part of the world. We cut bows and arrows in the park and swore oaths to the Queen in Boy Scouts. (I remember being very careful not to play war on Sundays). Among my friends, we played with our imaginations more than we played with bats and balls. We told stories and cobbled together toy guns from hockey sticks while the Americans were fighting in Vietnam. Maybe it’s not surprising that people like Steven Erikson and Guy Gavriel Kay grew up in my home town.

    Mary: Do you use an outline?

    David: Outlines are a very useful thing and I fill notebooks with sketches, back stories and brainstorms. The word “outline” conjures images of tidiness and organization – which certainly doesn’t fit my process. In any case, I can’t imagine writing without a pretty solid plan (and a few hundred pages of scribbles for good measure).

    Mary: What conditions do you need to write?

    David: I’ve written under quite a variety of conditions over the years, but I find that there is one ingredient that I can’t do without: sustained time. I usually talk about needing to have ideas percolating in the back of my mind. If I take a week away from writing, I need a long time to get back. Ideas that should be simmering on the back burner go cold, and writing becomes a halting process. A person simply must find time to write.

    Mary: I know you are currently writing "In a Time of Treason", the second book of the Eye of Heaven trilogy. Do you have any other projects you are working on?

    David: I don’t imagine that may writers work on only one idea at a time. Friends of mine and I have been collaborating on an idea for television. Some film has actually been shot (although the product is in the very most preliminary stages right now). The process has been fascinating. Al

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.addyou.info/article/163109/addyou-Interview-with-Author-David-Keck-Part-One.html">Interview with Author David Keck, Part One</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.addyou.info/article/163109/addyou-Interview-with-Author-David-Keck-Part-One.html]Interview with Author David Keck, Part One[/url]

    Related Articles:

    How To Tie in ROI With Your Client's SEO Campaigns

    What Type Of Investor Should You Be?

    Find A Tax Debt Attorney Online

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com