#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Scott Overton
/I’d like to welcome the talented Scott Overton to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday.
A few of your favorite things: Books, books, and more books. My house is insulated with books. Also my 12-string guitar.
Things you need to throw out: Fifteen jackets (mostly leather). Twenty-five sweaters. Ninety-five percent of the junk I have stuffed into every available drawer.
Things you need for your writing sessions: A keyboard and a healthy supply of good coffee (especially in my Ember self-heating mug).
Things that hamper your writing: Like everyone, the constant availability of the internet is both a blessing and a curse. Has there ever been such a potent distraction? (Sex doesn’t count.)
Things you love about writing: Creating something from nothing, then hearing a reader tell you how much they loved it.
Things you hate about writing: The fact that there’s no magic spell that will carry your words and thoughts from your mind to your reader’s without the obstacles of publishing, distributing, and marketing getting in the way.
Things you never want to run out of: Kleenex. As long as I have boxes of Kleenex all around the house, I don’t feel poor.
Things you wish you’d never bought: Do we have that much space? How about a battery-powered rotating tie rack? Sheesh!
Favorite music or song: I love so many I could never pick one favorite song or genre. But the full-length version of Don Henley’s “Heart of the Matter” is one of the most amazingly well-crafted songs I know.
Music that drives you crazy: I try to appreciate rap, but I just can’t.
Favorite beverage: Home-roasted, freshly ground coffee brewed in a French press.
Something that gives you a sour face: Sour craft beers. I love most craft beers, but I just don’t get the appeal of the sours.
Favorite smell: My wife’s freshly baked bread. Isn’t that in everyone’s Top 5?
Something that makes you hold your nose: We have outhouses on our property, but cleaning the trap of a kitchen sink smells even worse.
Something you’re really good at: Talking to an audience, any audience (I was a career radio host).
Something you’re really bad at: Asking favors. I really hate to inconvenience anyone. It might be my inner Canadian coming out. I’ve always hated phoning people too, in case I was interrupting something. Texting is only marginally better.
Things you always put in your books: A love story. Falling in love is one of the most essential parts of the human experience, and compensation for all the bad things in life.
Things you never put in your books: I don’t write gruesome or gory. Sick people can do horrible things to other people, but that’s not entertainment to me.
Things to say to an author: I loved your book so much! (And I just posted a 5-star review on every online site I know.)
Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: I don’t read and I don’t understand how you can waste your time just making stuff up.
Favorite books (or genre): Lord of the Rings. Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell. Books by Larry Niven or Robert J. Sawyer.
Books you wouldn’t buy: I have no interest in celebrity confessions or salacious scandals. Who cares?
Things that make you happy: Nature makes me happy. The sun on water, the moon on water. Loon calls. The smell of pine needles. Bright stars, northern lights, and utter silence.
Things that drive you crazy: Bad drivers who risk my life as well as their own.
Best thing you’ve ever done: Marrying my wife.
Biggest mistake: Believing anything a boss promised me.
Most daring thing you’ve ever done: (Daring? Or just stupid?) I skated down a hill after an ice storm (and didn’t die!)
Something you chickened out from doing: Sky-diving (though, to be fair, I had a commitment to fulfill at the time, and a young son watching if I’d gone splat.)
The coolest person you’ve ever met: An actor named Don Harron — most people might know him as the comedic character Charlie Farquharson, who appeared on Hee Haw, but he was a true Renaissance man who could do everything and do it well.
The celebrity who didn’t look like he/she did in pictures/video: As a radio host, I met dozens of celebrities and they all looked like I expected. They didn’t all act like I expected. But most were genuinely nice people.
About Scott:
A radio broadcaster for more than thirty years, Scott Overton described that world in his first novel, the mystery/thriller Dead Air, shortlisted for a Northern Lit Award in Ontario, Canada. Now he writes science fiction including his 2020 SF-thriller The Primus Labyrinth, the 2021 SF-adventure Naïda, 2022’s SF-psychological thriller The Dispossession of Dylan Knox, and the 2022 cautionary tale Augment Nation. His short fiction has been published in numerous magazines and anthologies.
Drawing on university training in theatre arts as well as his radio career, he’s also a freelance voice talent, including narrating audiobooks in his home studio on a lake in northern Ontario. His website is www.scottoverton.ca
Let’s Be Social:
Buy the Books https://books2read.com/ScottOverton
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/ScottOverton.author
Twitter @SFtruenorth
Goodreads www.goodreads.com/ScottOverton