Pump Up Your Book Chats with Lynn Voedisch

Lynn Voedisch is a Chicago journalist and fiction writer with many years experience working for newspapers and magazines. She is a member of the America Society of Journalists and Authors and the Society of Midland Authors, where she is one the board of directors. She started out as editor of her college newspaper at Grinnell College, Grinnell, Iowa, and went on to work for WBBM-TV, Chicago; Pioneer Press in suburban Chicago, the Los Angeles Times, and spent a 17-year stint at the Chicago Sun-Times. She was an entertainment reporter and technology reporter there and helped develop the newspaper’s fledgling Web site. The site and staff won Best Innovation from the Inland Daily Press Association and the Dvorak Award for Web content.

She has been on television (“Chicago Tonight”) and radio (WBEZ-FM) talk shows, discussing arts topics that affect the city. After leaving the Sun-Times, she pursued a freelance career where she was published in the Chicago Tribune and in the Industry Standard, Grok and Connect-Time (all technology magazines). She also did arts stories for Dance Magazine and the Tribune. A short story of hers, “Wili,” was published inFolio literary magazine in Winter, 2001. She is now working on fiction. Her first novel, “Excited Light” (ASJA Press, $14.95) is available at Amazon.com, bn.com,booksamillion.com and can be ordered at any Barnes & Noble store. Her current novel, “The God’s Wife” (Fiction Studio Books, $9.99 e-book, $16.95 paperback) goes on sale Aug. 9.

Visit her website at http://www.lynnvoedisch.com/TheGodsWife-LV.com/Welcome.html


On “The God’s Wife”

Q: Can you tell us why you wrote your book?
A: I’ve always been fascinated with ancient Egypt. I saw a show on the Discovery Channel about the God’s Wife of Amun and thought, “What a great idea for a book!” From that point, I started researching the topic and I was off and running.

Q: Which part of the book was the hardest to write?
A: No part was any harder than the other. Really, copyediting and getting out all the typos was the hardest part.

Q: Does your book have an underlying message that readers should know about?
A: Yes, the book is about two women who share one split soul and is about how the universe must put their soul together. A few people have been missing this theme and reading the book for plot only.

On Writing

Q: Do you remember when the writing bug hit?
A: I was in fifth grade and my teacher gave us little flash fiction exercises to do. When the parent-teacher conference time came around, my teacher told my parents that I was a gifted writer and they should encourage me to become a professional writer. I was in seventh heaven.

Q: What’s the most frustrating thing about becoming a published author and what’s the most rewarding?
A: The most frustrating thing is having to spend so much time doing publicity! The most rewarding is reaching people I’ve never met with my stories. That makes me feel all warm inside.

Q: Do you have a writing tip you’d like to share?
A: Whatever you do, don’t give up, especially when you’ve been handed some tough criticism. The minute you give up, you may never get going again.

On Family and Home:

Q: Would you like to tell us about your home life? Where you live? Family? Pets?
A: I live three blocks from the Chicago border in a suburb that’s pretty urbanized. We have a cluttered, cluttered house, many stuffed full of books. I live there with my husband, but my son (just graduated from law school and looking for a job) comes by and stays with us frequently. We have two beloved cats.

Q: Where’s your favorite place to write at home?
A: I have a big easy chair in the family where I write with my laptop. But I do all my first drafts by hand. Then when I transpose them into the computer, I already have a second draft. Works for me!

Q: What do you do to get away from it all?
A: Sounds like a cliché, but I go for long walks. When the weather turns bad, I go to the shopping mall, not so much to shop but just to walk around.

On Childhood:

Q: Were you the kind of child who always had a book in her/his hand?
A: LOL. I was the original bookworm. I must have read every Nancy Drew mystery and wanted to be a mystery writer. Funny that I can’t figure out how to write a mystery now. But I must have checked every book out of the library.

Q: Can you remember your favorite book?
A: From childhood? No. They were all favorites. The Nancy Drew series was a favorite.

Q: Do you remember writing stories when you were a child?
A: Yes. I wrote one called “Laura’s Mysterious House” for school but couldn’t figure out how to end it. I knew it was bad even then.

On Book Promotion:

Q: What was the first thing you did as far as promoting your book?
A: I wrote to a radio station and was booked for a show that features offers. It came off really well.

Q: Are you familiar with the social networks and do you actively participate?
A: I’m familiar with Facebook and Google +1. So far, Facebook is working really well for me.

Q: How do you think book promotion has changed over the years?
A: Yes, There is much more going on online. Since my book is primarily an e-book, I can’t get much interest from the traditional press, but I’ve been getting lots of interest from blogs and Internet news sites. Technorati.com gave me a rave.

On Other Fun Stuff:

Q: If you had one wish, what would that be?
A: I should say world peace and stuff like that. But I wish I could live in a warm tropical place with no winters and have peace and quiet to turn out lots of books.

Q: If you could be anywhere in the world other than where you are right now, where would that place be?
A: Right now? Italy. I just love Italy.

Q: Your book has just been awarded a Pulitzer. Who would you thank?
A: I would thank my husband, who took me to Egypt and made the book possible, and I’d thank Lou Aronica, the publisher who wrote to me and asked me for a manuscript that he could publish with Fiction Studio Books.


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