Pete likes writing, animals, potato chips, and cheese. Midnight Riders is his first published
novel, although he can also proudly say he finally finished Helix Crashing, the fantasy novel he has
been working on for over a decade. In addition, he has written Across the Barren Landscape, a
collection of linked Western short stories. He also writes plays, both dramatic
and comedic.
When he is not writing, Pete tends to ignore everyone around
him and obsess over sports.
- At any given
time do you work on only one story at a time and maybe plot out the next
one or are there many ideas racing around your head?
I start out with the dream of working with one thing, but whenever I am working on one thing, I have the best idea in the world for something else. Something completely different. As a result, I have about 20-30 docs open at any given time. Therefore, I accomplish very little.
2. Is there a genre you haven't written in but would like to? Or wish you could
write in?
I would write more horror.
I would write more horror.
3. Do you add an element of romantic suspense in your stories?
As little as I can get away with. It depends on the stories and characters, but I certainly don’t try to add it. In fact, this is probably the first thing I wrote with even a hint of romance.
4. Say you have unlimited funds: What kind of writing office/cottage would you create for yourself?
First off, I would build a medieval castle, Conwy-style. I would take that castle and smash it into the cliff face in Sorrento. I would build a random balcony and chill out there, writing.
5. If you could turn your novel into a TV show, which novel or series would you do? Where would it be set? Network TV (ABC, NBC, CBS), Cable (AMC, BBC, Lifetime) or Premium Cable (HBO, Showtime, Starz)?
This book would make a good comedy. The characters lend themselves to an ongoing storyline, but I would probably hate whomever they cast. It should go on HBO, but then there would have to be random sex.
Not too long ago, in a
town that, depending on your current location, is either not super far or
actually quite close…
It is a time of chaotic
hormones.
Two nerdy gents home for
winter break have discovered a female gamer at a midnight release.
During the break, the
gamer trio manages to reveal the game’s secret boss, a hidden enemy with enough
power to destroy anything in its path.
Pursued by other gamers
who want to be the first to beat this boss, George and Katie race to level up,
and, in so doing, restore decency and sexual activity to their personal galaxy…
Where to Buy: Amazon
Excerpt:
“These
graphics suck,” George says and I look back at the screen. We’re standing in
the middle of the Estate, colorful orbs quivering ahead of us. We each have to
choose our starting advantage. Waterfalls shimmer in the distance and the
sunlight streams over multicolored stones in the courtyard.
“Amateurs,”
Lanyon concurs. “I mean, they couldn’t have five
waterfalls?”
“Your
ironic wit is mind blowing, but choose your damn orbs,” I tell them. I
consider. Magic, defense, offense, stealth, and charisma. I always go for magic
as a black mage, but I wonder if a druid needs something else. Screw it. I need
charisma in real life, too.
“Charisma?”
Lanyon asks. “No one ever picks charisma.”
“We’re a
party of a thief, druid, and a bard. We’re screwed regardless.”
“You two
underestimate the mighty power of my lute,” George argues.
“Did you start with charisma?” Lanyon asks.
“Hell,
no. I have charisma in spades. I started with stealth.”
“Great.
A stealthy bard,” I sigh.
“She’s
right,” Lanyon concedes. “We’re screwed.”
However,
it actually isn’t bad at all at first. We power through the Estate and make it
to the Yobanaria Dale with no resurrections and all at level ten. I’m
impressed. George hasn’t actually fought anything,
but he has some pretty awe-inspiring charm mastery already. I think I might
have a serious crush. He seals the deal when he buffs my hailstorm spell without
even being asked.
“Can you
guys watch El Thiefelo? My mom wants me to eat supper,” Lanyon says.
“Yeah,
we’ve got it,” I tell him. “The first boss is in the elven ruins anyway, so we
should grind a bit. I think he’s a twelve.”
George
and I explore the Dale, taking out bats and Joba spores. It’s fairly quiet,
except for when we combo with his charms and my spells and he yells out, “Eat
lute, bitch,” but it’s nice. We work well, almost inherently understanding each
other. I’ve never been able to play this effectively with anyone. I try not to
think about his eyes. Stupid boys, being cute and stuff.
By the
time Lanyon comes back, we’re all at level 12, although Lanyon leveled up just
by standing by a door while we played. Still, we are ready to take on Balsa the
Proud. As a black mage, it took me about nine seconds. Trees don’t like fire.
However, druids don’t have the same level of black magic and all elemental
magic is weakened by the need to draw from the elements nearby. Sadly, trees
seem to avoid storing fire runes in their villages. I expect this to be a
little more challenging. It might even take fifteen seconds.
“First
boss. Also known as the freebie bitch to sucker the young folks into a false
sense of security,” Lanyon announces as he runs into the center of Balsa’s
lair. The cinema plays and then, in a moment of pure absurdity, El Thiefelo is
squished as Balsa steps on him.
Pete will be giving away two signed paperbacks of the book, four swag packs,
and four ebooks of choice of Pete's from Smashwords to
randomly drawn commenters at the end of the tour (10 winners).
3 comments:
Thanks for hosting!
I loved Pete's comment to question #1. So many writers are all about the productivity, so it's refreshing to see one admit he doesn't get much done.
Nice interview
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