Interview with Nathan Lowell

Read this interesting interview with Nathan Lowell, the author of the “Share” series from the “Golden Age of the Solar Clipper.” Then read my reviews of two of these books: “Quarter Share” and “Half Share.”

Interview with Nathan Lowell:

First, let me thank you for taking the time to share this with me and my readers. I have really enjoyed your books and hope that my readers will also pick them up so they may also.

Q: How did you catch the writing bug?

Lowell: I’ve been dabbling at writing since I was about 10. I always thought that it would be cool to make a living off my imagination and telling stories was always something I had fun doing. After several passes at the slush piles and trying to get shorts into magazines in the 70s, I gave it up as not in my stars. In 2004, I found podcasting and in 2005, podiobooks. By the end of 2006 I knew I wanted to try to tell my own stories. The podcast novel had very low barriers to entry and I liked that it was a direct connection from me to listeners. The stories would have a chance to live or die on their own–without the traditional filtering that comes from commercial publication.
In January, 2007, I sat down to write and I haven’t really stopped (although my production as slowed considerably as I keep tossing more balls in the air and trying to keep them all up there.)

Q: Your tales from the “Golden Age of the Solar Clipper” in the “Share” series have very much of a merchant marines feel about them. What was the inspiration for that type of dynamic?

Lowell: I was tired of the “save the universe” stories. It was a direct response to “blow up something every ten pages and save the universe every fifteen” kinds of stories. While I enjoy military sci-fi, I was looking for something more like the old Heinlein. I got the idea that there had to be other kinds of stories out there. Stories about people who weren’t the ship captains or the lost princes. I wondered what the “red-shirted crewman” did on the ship before he got tapped for the Away Team on the old Star Trek shows. I had a good idea of shipboard life, and built an economic model around the “clipper ships in space” idea. What would happen if the exploration of space were by an airline, not an air force…if we sent freighters instead of frigates? The rest just fell out from there.

Q: Ishmael Wang is a thoroughly fascinating and fully drawn character. His problem solving and natural leadership skills are inspiring. Was there a real life inspiration for him?

Lowell: Ishmael is the perennial “other” … as such he has the ability to see what “common practice” doesn’t work. He’s based on the notion that organizational inertia has a tendency to persist–that is, organizations tend to do what they’ve always done and it’s only through the application of an external viewpoint that they can achieve any kind of real change. As for his leadership skills, he manages a lot like my father used to but I don’t know that he’s modeled on him.

Q: You seem to have become one of the more popular authors among the PodioBooks set. If you were starting out again knowing what you know now, would you do it the same way again? What would you do different?

Lowell: Do again: Pump out content! Connect with listeners. Respond to comments on the Podiobooker blog.

Do different: Buy a digital recorder FIRST. That one thing solves so many problems with the technical production of the stories and it’s usually the last thing people do.

Q: Will you continue to podcast your new projects now that you have broken into print?

Lowell: I’ll always podcast my stuff. The only new project that’s gone to print first was “Light in the Dark” and the only reason it’s not on podiobooks is that it’s too short to make a good podcast. There’s a five episode minimum and at 21k words, that’s only about four. Tony C. Smith at Star Ship Sofa has accepted it and as soon as I get it recorded, it’ll run in his podcast magazine.

Q: Is there a deal pending for “South Coast” to make it to print?

Lowell: Yes. Ridan has agreed to publish both South Coast and it’s sequel, Cape Grace. The timelines stretch into 2013 at the moment so I’m not sure what might happen between now and then.

Q: Will there be more “Shaman’s Tales” following up on “South Coast” and will we be seeing more of Otto Krug?

Lowell: Yes. I’m writing Cape Grace now. That is intended to bridge the gap between South Coast and Half Share. As for any more beyond that? I don’t know yet. It seems to me there might be room at the end of Cape Grace for a closing story about the south coast shamans.

Q: I know you certainly have more projects in progress, so I guess the question is this: now that the “Share” series is complete, what is your next great thrust? Are you planning more series or some stand-alones?

Lowell: Cape Grace is in the works now. The next two volumes of the Tanyth Fairport adventures are in line after that. I hope to put out a few more novellas under the Novel Nibble brand and carry the story of Odin’s Outpost forward. Then there’s the next series of Ishmael Wang adventures. We haven’t really explored that universe very much. Ishmael has been introduced to a side of the Confederated Planets that he’s *known* exists but never actually considered what that means. Now he’s in a place where he needs to consider ideas like “who do the Galactic Marines fight?” and “What exactly does the TIC investigate?” and “How can a person be operating as a spacer when they’re a known criminal?”

My goal is to put out two or three books a year in audio and we’ll self-publish some, put some up for Ridan, and just keep pumping out content as long as people want to listen or read it.

Q: Is there anything else you would like to add before we conclude?

Lowell: Thanks to everybody who’s listened or read, commented or tweeted or sent me email. I never expected such a wide-ranging response to stories where “nothing happens.”

And thanks for having me here, Keith.

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Bennett Place – Oct 8 & 9

Hi folks! Fall is here and the weather is getting nicer for outdoor events. Next weekend, Oct. 8 & 9 should be a great one at the Bennett Place where the largest surrender of the Southern armies took place. As part of the Sesquicentennial observance of the War for Southern Independence they will be hosting “The Road to Secession.”

I have been invited to be one of their historians for this event speaking on the 7th South Carolina as they prepared for and became engaged in the early part of the war as detailed in “The Boys of Diamond Hill.” I will be speaking at 3:30 on Saturday afternoon and 1:00 on Sunday afternoon. I hope to see you all there.

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Half Share by Nathan Lowell

Half Share
By Nathan Lowell
Ridan, Fairfax, Virginia

Reviewed by Keith Jones

Nathan Lowell once again brings a colorful cast to life in Half Share, the second installment of his Trader’s Tales. In Half Share, Ishmael Wang is six months into his time on the Lois McKendrick. Ishmael has fallen into the routine as a mess mate and become fully integrated into the McKendrick. Now it is time for him to move up the ladder a step and become a half share member of the crew. Half Share is proof positive that it is not necessary for a book to be riddled with crashes, explosions, violence, graphic bloodshed or foul language. This book has little or none of this, but Lowell’s outstanding skill as a storyteller frames a tale that is thoroughly fascinating without these things.

Lowell’s writing skills are illustrated by many interesting scenes including what is perhaps the most unforgettable clothes shopping trip in the history of modern literature. The author’s love of literature and unique sense of humor is obvious in the first line of this book – “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times…” – just like in the opening of the first book, Quarter Share – “Call me Ishmael…”

Having listened to the podcast versions of this series before picking up the print versions, I know that as good as these first two books are, the rest of the series puts them to shame. I highly recommend Half Share if for no other reason to see a really great character mature and become comfortable in his own skin.

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UNC Blog Post About “In Due Time”

Check out today’s blog post at the University of North Carolina’s North Carolina Collection. This is in recognition of “In Due Time” being processed in and officially added to the Collection.

Take a look and if you feel so moved, feel free to leave a response on their site.

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September 22, 1861 on Diamond Hill

To read the entries thus far for the Sesquicentennial series for The Boys of Diamond Hill click here.

On Sept. 22, 1861, Pressley Boyd wrote his father from Flint Hill, Virginia. He is sick again and has been sent back to camp. The 7th S.C. is at Falls Church, Virginia. He writes of going up on Munson Hill while at Falls Church. From there he was able to see the city of Washington, the federal capital. The 7th was expecting a fight soon, but there had been little action aside from sporadic firing amongst the pickets.

To learn more click on the “Diamond Hill” link at the top. To buy the book you may go to any major online retailer such as Amazon or Barnes and Noble, or you may buy it directly from McFarland Publishers. “The Boys of Diamond Hill” is also available for the Kindle.

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Hamilton’s Curse by DiLorenzo

Hamilton’s Curse
By Thomas J. DiLorenzo
Three Rivers Press

Reviewed by Keith Jones

Most people’s understanding of when and how the political divide began has a very shallow scope. Some when asked would pick a point within their own lifetimes, most others would draw it to a particular administration or period within the last hundred years. The most common answers would likely be Johnson’s War on Poverty or Roosevelt’s New Deal. Some more astute might reach back to the Lincoln administration and the misnamed American Civil War. While those would be getting warmer, they are still several decades away from the origins of the two most significant dissenting schools of American political and economic thought.

In Hamilton’s Curse Dr. Thomas DiLorenzo starkly illustrates how we first began on the long road away from the strict constructionist view of the U.S. Constitution that most of its framers strongly backed to where we are today. The deep hostility between Thomas Jefferson — 3rd President of the United States of America and author of the Declaration of Independence — and the first Secretary of the Treasury for the new nation, Alexander Hamilton would form the headwaters of each philosophy. One wonders why Hamilton sided with the Patriot cause at all upon seeing the monarchical powers he wished to vest with the presidency. He favored a king like executive elected for life with near dictatorial abilities such as personally appointing the governors of each state who would be answerable to him. Under his vision the Senators would be near royalty themselves also with lifetime offices. Of course Hamilton’s views of the economic and taxing discretion of the central government were equally sweeping.

DiLorenzo traces the followers of Hamilton’s school of thought up through the War for Southern Independence and into the modern era. You will see that of the two, while Jefferson prevailed in the immediate scope, Hamilton had the last laugh. Most modern citizens know little about Alexander Hamilton and understand less. Regardless of which side of the political divide you fall on, Hamilton’s Curse will help you understand that the profound differences span back much further than the last fifty years as so many often erroneously speak of.

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Interview with Chris Hartley

Click here to read my review of Stoneman’s Raid by Chris Hartley and please enjoy this interview with the author.

Interview With Chris J. Hartley

Q: What made you decide to start writing?

Hartley: In short, reading. I read (and still read) all the time. Early on, I came to admire the authors of the books I read. Not only did it spark my interest in becoming a writer myself, but it also helped me learn how to write. During my high school career, some teachers complimented me on my own writing and encouraged me to do something with that in my career. I took their advice and went on to get a journalism degree in college. I found that I enjoyed it to the point that I use it both in my day job in marketing communications and in my avocation of writing about military history.

Q: Why did you select the subject of George Stoneman and his famous raid of April 1865?

Hartley: I grew up in Wilkesboro, (NC) one of the communities that Stoneman’s raiders struck in 1865. It occurred to me that there was little written about this raid, even though it was probably the biggest single event in that area during the Civil War, so I set out to correct that.

Q: As a Southern man, did you find it hard writing an account of one of the most famous and destructive Union raids through the South and particularly through Western North Carolina.

Hartley: Not at all. I enjoy research and let the facts stand for themselves, whatever my personal feelings may be in the matter.

Q: Your two books are both about military history, particularly from the War for Southern Independence.  Which were you first a writer or a history researcher?

Hartley: It is a bit of a chicken and egg sort of thing. True stories about normal people doing great things appealed to me, and my parents encouraged that by giving me plenty of books about history and also taking me on trips to historical sites. Thus, I fell in love with history about the same time that I began to write.
 
Q: Does your military history interest as a writer extend to other periods?

Hartley: It does – I am very interested in all periods of American military history.

Q: I see your previous book, “Stuart’s Tarheels: James B. Gordon and His North Carolina Cavalry in the Civil War” has been recently re-released by McFarland Publishers after years of being out of print.  Was writing about the most famous Confederate soldier from your home town a labor of love?

Hartley: There’s a theme here. I like to dig into topics no one knows much about – and also into topics that are “close to home.” So, my Gordon project, in many ways, it was not unlike my Stoneman’s Raid project. General Gordon was one of those unknown actors on the big stage that is the Civil War. He also was born and raised in my hometown, so I set out to learn about his life and times and put it on paper.
 
Q: Do you have any other projects in progress?

Hartley: Yes – I’m taking a break from the Civil War to dive into another passion of mine, World War II. I’m writing the story of a draftee from North Carolina who died in one of the ugliest battles the U.S. Army ever fought, the Heurtgen Forest. I’m lucky to have access to the soldier’s letters home from both training and the front, and it is shaping up to be a sad but powerful story of that battle and what it did to one family. The soldier was my wife’s grandfather.

Q: Is there anything else you would like to add before we conclude?

Hartley: Thanks for the opportunity!

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150 Years Ago on Diamond Hill

To read the entries thus far for the Sesquicentennial series for The Boys of Diamond Hill click here.

On September 10, 1861, Pressley Boyd wrote his father from Fairfax, Virginia. He had recovered from his illness and returned to camp on September 3rd. He details some minor skirmishing between their forces and artillery fire from Union forces from across the Potomac River.

To learn more click on the “Diamond Hill” link at the top. To buy the book you may go to any major online retailer such as Amazon or Barnes and Noble, or you may buy it directly from McFarland Publishers. “The Boys of Diamond Hill” is also available for the Kindle.

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Good day at Bookmarks in Winston Salem

Bookmarks Festival in Winston Salem - Barnhills tent

Keith at Barnhills tent at Bookmarks Festival

Great day hanging out as a guest of Barnhills Books of Winston Salem at their tent at the Bookmarks Book Festival in downtown Winston Salem, NC today (Sept. 10, 2011). Got to meet a bunch of interesting people and sold a few books. I look forward to more such events. Talking to people who like literature is always a treat. So many people these days don’t read and therefore rob themselves of valuable opportunities to expand their minds while entertaining themselves. Mark Twain once said, “The man who doesn’t read good books has no advantage over the man who can’t read them.”

Food for thought when you hear someone proudly proclaim that he doesn’t read. Not being able to read is a shame. Choosing to not read is a sin.

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Bookmarks Book Festival Saturday

Remember to come out to the Bookmarks Book Festival in Winston Salem, NC this Saturday, Sept. 10. I will be signing books at the Barnhills Bookstore tent at 2:00 in the afternoon. Also look for me at the store at 811 Burke Street that afternoon as well.

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