It’sĀ been so much fun talking with Deborah Bouziden all month! Our interview will be published in its entirety later this year–without all the asides to show you pictures of Barkis or music videos–so stay tuned for updated links. Here’s the final bit:
DB: When you finish a project, what do you do to reward yourself?
SW: A vacation, a shopping spree, a reading marathon, a ski trip, a dog walk, the ritual cleaning of my study. Plow through a queue of 176 unread e-mail messages. Long, long phone calls to my mom, my sister and my long-distance friends. When I finished Lakeshore Christmas, I went on a ten-mile hike with my dog and my best friend.
DB: Youāve written so many books, how do you feed your muse?
SW: Listen to music. Read. Go to performances. Travel. Stay connected. Cherish your friends who remind you what lifeāand therefore your booksāare about.
DB: What is your favorite thing about book signings?
SW: Shopping for the clothes, planning the travel and meeting the bookseller and the few readers who trickle in. Not so favorite thing? The fact that only a few readers trickle in. I have a theory about this. My readers are readers. They want stories, not the authorās signature. Iām fine with this. There are definitely writers who are a draw at signings, but Iām not one of them.
DB: Book signing nightmare or strangest thing to happen to you?
SW: A guy IĀ thought I was in love with in college showed up at a signing in a far-off city and said, “I still think about you.”
DB: The romance industry has seen many sweeping changes through the years. Do you think they are for the best or detrimental to our industry? What future do you see for the romance industry?
SW: Iām sorry to see writers exploited byĀ vanity presses that make their money by charging the writer. And (okay, this will get me in trouble but I’ll say it anyway) e-publishing doesn’t interest me as a writer–I simply haven’t seen proof of it as a viable commercial vehicle, and I’m a commercial writer who thrives on having readers. Lots and lots of readers.Ā But overall, the future for the industry is bright. Readers crave stories and always will, so the storytellers are safe.
DB: Tell me a bit about your latest project. What is it about? When will it be released?
SW: I just finished Lakeshore Christmas, a hardcover coming in October 2009. Itās a nostalgic, magical love story about the town librarian charged with directing the annual Christmas pageant. Against her will, she is paired up with a bad-boy rocker whoās been court-ordered to help her with the music. After that I”ll be working on The Summer Hideaway, which was known as Lakeshore #7 until I came up with a title.
DB: And now the last and probably most important question of allādo you still keep a bowl of M&Mās on your desk? If not, what happened to get them banned? If you still have them, what kind is your favorite?
SW: What happened to get them banned? Middle age! Where is my girlish figure?!Ā I had to trade the M&Ms for pistachios. I need more protein and fewer carbs. Actually, I need a nip and tuck but I’m chicken.
DB:Ā I counted 43 published books. Is that correct? I think I may be missing a few.
SW: I stopped counting after 30. It was making me feel old. Or like I should be better than I am after all that experience. The truth is, every book feels like a first book to me. I never get over the hurdles easily. Then again, I never get over the excitement. Iām such a nerd.
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Susan,
I have really enjoyed your excerpts from this interview. Today especially. What an honest, real way to answer things. No wonder you can write such readable and enjoyable books. Thank you for sharing ! I also know I have enjoyed this more, as posted in installments – I always love the photos of Barkis and do find the other things interesting that you post about.
Pam
Susan,
I have really enjoyed your excerpts from this interview. Today especially. What an honest, real way to answer things. No wonder you can write such readable and enjoyable books. Thank you for sharing ! I also know I have enjoyed this more, as posted in installments – I always love the photos of Barkis and do find the other things interesting that you post about.
Pam
Okay, I have to ask, inquiring mind wants to know ~ what did your inner voice say when the old boyfriend said that? Here are few I thought of – “too late, it’s been a wonderful life without you!” or “too bad so sad” or
“just keep on thinking about me, it does my ego good _________ (fill in your favourite noun) or …..
Yes, your readers are Readers and we cannot all get to your book signings. I would if I could.
Enjoyed the interview.
Okay, I have to ask, inquiring mind wants to know ~ what did your inner voice say when the old boyfriend said that? Here are few I thought of – “too late, it’s been a wonderful life without you!” or “too bad so sad” or
“just keep on thinking about me, it does my ego good _________ (fill in your favourite noun) or …..
Yes, your readers are Readers and we cannot all get to your book signings. I would if I could.
Enjoyed the interview.
Have enjoyed the interview, I too mourn the loss of my girlish figure. Can’t believe I used to have to try and gain weight! Am so anxious for Lakeshore Christmas. When I first read Summer at Willow Lake I didn’t think it could get any better than Connor and Olivia but it certainly has been a delightful series. I would love to be at a book signing but out here in a small town in the midwest, they just don’t happen. I almost made it to a Debbie Macomber one a year or so ago. Was within an hour and a half of the Kansas City Barnes and Noble but family commitments and the weather just didn’t cooperate. In fact, she wrote on her blog about the sirens blowing while she was there. Just finished The Lightkeeper, just loved that little Mary.
Have enjoyed the interview, I too mourn the loss of my girlish figure. Can’t believe I used to have to try and gain weight! Am so anxious for Lakeshore Christmas. When I first read Summer at Willow Lake I didn’t think it could get any better than Connor and Olivia but it certainly has been a delightful series. I would love to be at a book signing but out here in a small town in the midwest, they just don’t happen. I almost made it to a Debbie Macomber one a year or so ago. Was within an hour and a half of the Kansas City Barnes and Noble but family commitments and the weather just didn’t cooperate. In fact, she wrote on her blog about the sirens blowing while she was there. Just finished The Lightkeeper, just loved that little Mary.
Thank you for this series of posts. They’ve been so helpful. It’s nice to see how a professional works.
Thank you for this series of posts. They’ve been so helpful. It’s nice to see how a professional works.
Count me in for loving the interview series, too! So did you want to make-out with that long lost love in a Bo Crutcher kind of way?
Count me in for loving the interview series, too! So did you want to make-out with that long lost love in a Bo Crutcher kind of way?