#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Skye Alexander

I’d like to welcome Skye Alexander to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday!

Favorite things to do when you have free time: Eat lunch or drink wine with friends, take a walk in the countryside, go to art galleries, and of course read.

The thing you’ll always move to the bottom of your to do list: Housework

Hardest thing about being a writer: Spending so much time alone, but it’s a necessary evil in this job.

Easiest thing about being a writer: I know some writers don’t like doing research, but I enjoy it. I learn so much and get wonderful ideas that I can incorporate into my stories. For example, while researching the sixth book in my Lizzie Crane series, I learned about “poison damsels,” usually slave girls who from infancy were fed minute doses of poison so that they built up an immunity to it. However, the poison in their bodies made them dangerous to men who had sex with them, so they were used by powerful men in ancient India and parts of Europe as human weapons to assassinate their owners’ enemies. Fascinating, right?

Something you’re really good at: Astrology and tarot. I’ve been an astrologer for fifty years––I’ve even helped police in seven states solve crimes using horary astrology––and I’ve been a tarot reader and artist for twenty-five years. In several of my books I use tarot readings to plant clues and foreshadow coming events.

Something you’re really bad at: Handling my finances. I’ve never even balanced my checkbook.

Something you wanted to be when you were a kid: Even before I started school, I knew I wanted to be an artist and writer. I began telling stories before I could actually read or write, and I still have drawings I did when I was three that are easily recognizable as various kinds of animals. Fortunately, I’ve been able to spend my life doing what I always wanted to do and to make a good living at it. I’m very grateful.

Something you do that you never dreamed you’d do: Live on a cattle ranch in Texas, which I’ve done for the last nineteen years.

Something you wish you could do: Sing and play a variety of musical instruments. I can’t carry a tune, and although I tried piano, guitar, violin, flute, and harmonica none of them took. (I’m not bad on an African djembe, though.) My protagonist Lizzie Crane, a soprano in a NYC jazz band during the 1920s called The Troubadours, fulfills that role for me.

Something you wish you’d never learned to do: Actually, I can’t think of anything I wish I’d never learned to do, only things I wish I’d learned to do better. My quest for knowledge has led me in all sorts of directions, from art and writing to renovating antique houses to metaphysical and spiritual practices. Every day I learn something, and I hope to keep on learning for the rest of my life.

Favorite places you’ve been: New England, where I lived for 31 years. Old England, especially Glastonbury and Stonehenge. Ireland and Scotland, most of all the Isle of Skye for which I’m named. Barcelona, Rome, Florence, the Greek Isles. New Orleans.

Places you never want to go to again: New York’s subways. Mississippi in the summertime. Any NASCAR race.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: Hitchhiked around Europe for six months when I was twenty-one.

Something you chickened out from doing: Skydiving.

The most magical thing that happened to you: I liked your questions about the funniest thing and the most embarrassing thing that happened to me and tried to answer them, but nothing very funny or embarrassing has happened to me. So, I decided instead to share one of the most magical/romantic things that happened to me and, additionally, one of the scariest. First the most magical: I was hitchhiking through Yugoslavia in 1971, and a young man picked me up. When I told him I was on my way to Greece, he said he had a friend staying on the island of Mykonos. He sketched a map on the back of an envelope and wrote down his friend’s name.

A few weeks later after a series of synchronicity events, I ended up in Mykonos and found the envelope at the bottom of my backpack. Following the hand-drawn map, I walked four miles from the port along a dirt path where (at that time) no cars drove and there was no electricity. The first person I met was the young man’s friend, a white guy who’d been born in South Africa in the late 1940s. He left when he was eighteen due to the racial situation there and walked all the way through the continent. He’d been traveling the world for seven years when I met him, with only the possessions that he could carry on his back. I lived with him for four magical days in a cave overlooking the Agean Sea, before he journeyed on. It was the happiest time of my life.

One of the scariest things that happened to you: In 2005, I moved from the Boston area to live on a cattle ranch in the heart of Texas. Being a city girl, I didn’t know diddly about bulls. One afternoon while walking in a pasture the size of five football fields, two longhorns charged me across that vast, open space. If you’ve never seen these monsters, they have horns longer than my arms and they weigh about 2,000 pounds. Plus, they’re cantankerous and unpredictable.

With no place to run, no place to hide, no cellphone reception, and no other people anywhere, all I could do was yell and wave my arms at the beasts, trying to scare them away. The two longhorns stopped a couple feet in front of me, eyeing me curiously. Praying as hard as I could, I held out my hands and placed a palm on the forehead of each bull. I hadn’t a clue how I’d extricate myself from this situation––maybe I wouldn’t. The bulls started knocking at my arms with their horns and I realized that even if they didn’t mean any harm, they could gore me accidentally. I don’t know how long I stood there like that before I saw an old pickup truck driving across the field. I waved and called out to the driver, who stopped long enough for me to jump into the back of the truck. That night, I went out to dinner and ate steak.

Best piece of advice you received from another writer: Don’t use variations of the verb “to be” more than a few times per chapter, and never start a sentence with “There was” unless somebody’s holding a gun to your head. Her advice alerted me to the importance of active verbs and how they enliven my prose. Something you would tell a younger you about your writing: The writing life isn’t easy and the really good, successful writers work very hard at it. Believe in yourself and don’t give up.

Recommendations for curing writer’s block: When I get stuck, I usually do research. Because I write historical mysteries, I might Google “what happened” on a particular date, which sometimes yields interesting info. I did this when writing the fifth book in my Lizzie Crane series When the Blues Come Calling (scheduled for 8/25 release) to see what happened in Greenwich Village, NY (where my protagonist lives) on June 11, 1926. I discovered that a bohemian tearoom in the Village was raided that night. Its Jewish proprietor, who went by the name Eve Adams, was arrested for having written a book titled Lesbian Love. The police imprisoned her in a workhouse and authorities eventually deported her to Poland where she died in a concentration camp. Eve’s story became part of my book.

About Skye:

Skye Alexander is the author of nearly 50 fiction and nonfiction books. Her stories have appeared in anthologies internationally, and her work has been translated into fifteen languages. In 2003, she cofounded Level Best Books with fellow crime writers Kate Flora and Susan Oleksiw. So far her Lizzie Crane mystery series includes four traditional historical novels set in the Jazz Age: Never Try to Catch a Falling Knife, What the Walls Know, The Goddess of Shipwrecked Sailors, and Running in the Shadows. After living in Massachusetts for thirty-one years, Skye now makes her home in Texas.

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#WriterWednesday Interview with Skye Alexander

I’d like to welcome author Skye Alexander to the blog for #WriterWednesday.

Things you need for your writing sessions: A least an hour or two of uninterrupted, quiet time. In the morning, a cup of coffee; late in the afternoon, a glass of wine. And the company of my beautiful Manx cat Zoe.

Things that hamper your writing: People wandering around the house, making a racket. Lately I’ve had a lot of construction guys doing repairs and they’re distracting. My ex-husband used to just burst into my office––even if I put a Do Not Disturb sign on the door––never understanding that once the train of thought pulls out of the station, there’s no calling it back.

Things you love about writing: Pretty much everything. I love doing research. I love hanging out with my characters. I really love it when the story flows through me effortlessly and I’m just the designated typist.

Things you hate about writing: When the Muse decides to take the day off without letting me know ahead of time.

Hardest thing about being a writer: Being alone so much, although it’s a necessary part of the job.

Easiest thing about being a writer: I don’t have to commute, wear a business suit and pantyhose, or deal with bitchy coworkers.

Something you’d like to do: Go on a tour of England’s sacred sites.

Something you wish you’d never done: Gone out with some of the guys I dated when I was younger and less discriminating than now.

Things that make you happy: Hanging out with my friends, playing with my cat, sitting by the ocean, watching sunsets, dancing, writing, reading, playing my drum, music, flowers, art.

Things that drive you crazy: Truck drivers who ride my bumper at 75 mph, neighbors who let their dogs bark for hours on end, waking up at night with a great story idea and forgetting it by morning.

Things you always put in your books: Music. Colorful locales. At least one cat per book. At least one character who’s gay. Interesting and/or obscure historical information (my novels take place in the mid-1920s). For example, the first automatic gates were devised by an Egyptian inventor named Heron nearly 2,000 years ago––he also designed a coin-op dispenser for holy water. How could I resist putting that in?

Things you never put in your books: Child or animal abuse.

Things to say to an author: I always try to say something positive and encouraging, especially to new authors. If they ask, I offer constructive suggestions. I also tell them writing isn’t easy and urge them to stick with it through disappointments and frustrations. I’ve heard that Faulkner’s The Sound and the Fury got 60 rejections before a wise publisher brought it out. It’s one of the most highly acclaimed novels in American literature.

Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: Don’t give up your day job. I really hated your book/protagonist/plot. (However, one of my beta readers told me she hated the ending of the third novel in my Lizzie Crane mystery series and her criticism inspired me to write a much better one.) Whether or not the author kills you off fictionally in a book, remember that anything you say to a writer is fair game and may appear in some form in a future novel.

Favorite places you’ve been: Barcelona, Florence, Rome, Stonehenge, Ireland, the Scottish Highlands, the Greek islands. I also love Maine and the North Shore of Massachusetts where the first four novels in my Lizzie Crane series are set.

Places you never want to go to again: Some of the rough neighborhoods in Boston, Houston in the summer, Bosnia, Acapulco, the New York subway, any NASCAR race.

Favorite books (or genre): Historical fiction, historical mysteries

Books you wouldn’t buy: Books about war, books with a lot of violence in them (although I really like Dennis Lehane’s books, so go figure), westerns, contemporary romances.

People you’d like to invite to dinner (living): The Dalai Lama

People you’d cancel dinner on: Kim Kardashian

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: Hitchhiked around Europe for six months with my sister when I was twenty-one, with no itinerary, no cellphone, no contacts.

Something you chickened out from doing: Firewalking

The nicest thing a reader said to you: Recently I got a real, paper letter from a high-school girl who said reading one of my books gave her confidence and helped her connect with her personal power. Compliments like that are my favorites because one of my goals is to encourage young people––especially young women––to value themselves, to pursue their dreams, and to think for themselves.

The craziest thing a reader said to you: I don’t know if this person was really a reader, but she posted a negative review on Amazon about me for a book I didn’t write. Sometimes readers suggest changes they think I should make in my books. One told me the house in which the third novel in my Lizzie Crane mystery series is set should have a mile-long winding driveway. I pointed out that the historic mansion, built in the 1700s, is located in the heart of Salem, Massachusetts, where all the grand houses are only steps to the street and each other––I lived a few blocks from the actual house for eight years. Not satisfied, she replied, “Well, it doesn’t sound like a mansion to me.”

About Skye

Skye Alexander is the author of nearly 50 fiction and nonfiction books. Her stories have appeared in anthologies internationally, and her work has been published in more than a dozen languages. In 2003, she cofounded Level Best Books with fellow authors Kate Flora and Susan Oleksiw. The first novel in her Lizzie Crane mystery series, Never Try to Catch a Falling Knife, set in 1925, was published in 2021; the second, What the Walls Know, is scheduled for release in September 2022. Skye lives in Texas with her black Manx cat Zoe.

Let’s Be Social

Website: http://skyealexander.com

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