Perils of Pauline Logo

Adventures in Reading

 

Home   Press Room   Her Books   Contests   What's Next?  Adventures in Reading   Adventures in Writing   Letters Home Columns   e Book Store
Contact Perilous Pauline    Perilous Pauline Blogs   All the World's a Page    Perilous Pauline's Recipes
Books We Love   Subscribe to Ezine   My Space    My Shelfari    GoodReads    About Perilous Pauline

 

 

 

Behind the Book: The (mostly) True The Key Cover ArtStory behind the writing of The Key

 

Welcome to the story of how I came to write a science fiction story--curiously devoid of science!

About The Key:

When Air Force Pilot, Sara Donovan, joins Project Enterprise, she knows she’ll be traveling dangerously far outside the Milky Way. What she doesn’t expect is to find is a mysterious, hidden city that might have the answers to her baffling abilities and her mother’s past—a past that wants to pull Sara into the same danger her mother fled.

What doesn’t kill her could make her strong—and bring her happiness in the arms of a seriously cute alien with a few secrets of his own.

The interview:

Me: Well, this is such a weird departure for you, I hardly know where to begin with this interview.

Myself: You could start where you usually do. Or not.

Me: I could, but I think I'll start with where this came from. Where on earth did you get the idea for this book?

Myself: Well, once I finished Out of Time, I started kicking around ideas for the next book. This "kicking" involved watching Stargate Atlantis--

Me: You were researching book ideas by watching television?

Myself: Um...yeah.

Me: Okay...so how did that work for you?

Myself: Well, not so good at first. I started getting ideas for Atlantis and not my book. It got so bad, I decided to write my idea down, just to get it out of my head. It was pretty pointless, since I didn't own the rights to write anything about these characters.

Me: And how did that work for you?

Myself: Well, one hundred pages later...not at all. But I liked the character I'd created that did belong to me, so I decided to try to migrate her to a story I did have the right to write. I tried different approaches. I even tried to take her out of the science/fantasy world, but she had some special things about her that belonged in a fantasy type world, so I pressed forward and suddenly the story just clicked.

Me: Were you able to use much of your 100 pages?

Myself: Not as much as I would have liked. (sigh) But just getting a great character was worth it, IMHO. I love everything about this character. She's pretty much everything I'm not. (grin)

Me: There's something else...different about this book, right?

Myself: (sigh) Yes. It's...long. By the time it is for sale, it might not be as long, but it is longer than any book I've ever written. I didn't mean to do that. It just...happened.

Me: It just...happened? It had nothing to do with you typing, oh, too many words?

Myself: No, it just happened. I'm too lazy to type too many words.

Me: Right. So, moving on, this book, does it contain your signature humor mixed with your signature peril?

Myself: Absolutely. My early readers tell me that they are glad about that, too. I had a lot of fun with the setting, with the characters, even with some of the names.

Me: How do you have fun with names?

Myself: Well, the story is set in another galaxy, so I had to make up all kinds of names. When I could, I had fun with that, but it was also kind of hard.

Me: Does your galaxy have its own language?

Myself: No. I didn't want to go there. I'm lucky I know MY language, no way I could make up another one. Clearly this isn't a book for hard core science fiction readers, unless they are also able to get a bit whacky and have fun--and are able to do without the science component.

Me: Why did you leave the science out of the science fiction?

Myself: You just had to ask, didn't you? (sigh) Basically, science is my worst subject. Even ahead of math. Way ahead. I bought a book about world building and right away knew I was in trouble. They wanted me to do math AND science! So, if you want a meticulously researched book, this isn't it. I made it ALL up. It's all fiction.

Me: There's a funny story about your character, isn't there?

Myself: You know there is. Sara Donovan, my main character can seriously kick butt. Well, one day I was channeling her, trying to get her walk down. I had to go get the mail. Some guys were working on a roof across from the mail box and I guess I was walking like I thought she'd walk and I got whistled at. It was pretty funny. Of course, they were too far away to see how old I was--or they'd probably have fallen off the roof.

Me: You channeled Sara a lot, didn't you? Is this typical for you?

Myself: I usually get pretty deep in my characters, but this deep has only happened to me twice. The other time was Pig in a Park and I thought that was because the book was first person. But Sara clearly wanted this story told.

Me: And it's not over, is it?

Myself: No, one of the characters who didn't get the girl isn't happy about it. He wants me to write a book for him, but we'll have to see. I found him a girl, but not a story just yet...I do wish he'd let me do a few things in my real life though.

Me: Really? I mean, you want to do taxes?

Myself: Okay, so no, but I don't want to go to jail either.

Me: I'm with you on that one.

Myself: I thought you would be.

Me: Now let's talk about the space battle. What were you thinking? We don't know how to write a space battle!

Myself: I know. I kept thinking I could write a space/action/adventure and not have a space battle, all the while the story was moving toward a...space battle. A big one. Then I thought I could do like Jeff Strand did in How to Rescue a Dead Princess and just put "space battle" here, but this isn't that kind of book. Sigh.

Me: So you...

Myself: ...decided I needed a space battle consultant and immediately thought of my son. He's been doing all sorts of space battles on his computer, since he was pretty small. And he's a reader. Good combo.

Me: And he did a great job, didn't he?picture of my son

Myself: Well, great in the sense that it is a great space battle, IMHO. Not so great in that he took all the cool stuff I'd made up and blew it all up!

Me: I think you are exaggerating just a little.

Myself: Maybe a little. But, dang! He was pretty ruthless. And he looks so sweet!

Me: People used to think you were sweet...and then they read your books...

Myself: True...but does that look like the face that could blow up a thousand ships? 

Me: No, it doesn't. Well, we should wrap this up. Anything else to add?

Myself: Just that the book will be available Sept, 2007 and I'm doing a fun giveaway for the e and print release. To be the first to hear about it all, you need to be subscribed to my newsletter. And I  hope you enjoy my BAB.

Me: BAB?

Myself: Oh. Um...my big a** book? Otherwise known as my weird a** book?

Me: On that...high note, we'll end this with what dignity we can muster.

Read an excerpt of The Key

Behind the Book Index

 

© 2007 All rights reserved. Pauline Baird Jones