An Author’s Inspiration
By Minerva
Spencer
I get this question a lot and I wish I had a concrete
answer. Unfortunately--or fortunately, depending on how you feel about
mystery--my brain creates stories at the oddest times.
I might be feeding my chickens and come up with the
answer to a problem that has been bothering me for days. I often think about
writing in the shower or on a walk or, especially, if I’m driving somewhere
alone. I never turn on the radio so the silence and monotony in the car makes
my brain start working.
So, I am not inspired by a specific event or thing, I
think I come up with ideas when I’m not actively focusing on something else. I
am also one of those writers who doesn’t know what she will write until after
I’ve written it. I am amazed by what my fingers type on some days! Where did my
clever hands come up with these ideas? Because my brain had no part in it.
When the writing urge strikes me I try to give it full
rein. So I might write for 14 hours straight. I think my record is 60 pp in one
crazed sitting. But most of the time I get out a couple thousand words a day.
And then there are those days when getting a few words down is like bleeding.
My characters reveal themselves to me slowly. They aren’t
taken from real life--unless I subconsciously collect bits and pieces--they are
pretty much their own people. Most of them don’t look like real people,
although I have to admit my hero from DANGEROUS my debut novel, looks a LOT
like Ian Somerhalder, but a more mature and dignified version.
I came to writing late in life--at age 45--and I’m now
50, so I’m still learning a lot every day. I try not to examine my process too
closely for fear of “jinxing” it. I know a lot of writers are very organized
and methodical and have steps in their process. I wish I could do that, but it
is a different process each time and inspiration has taken many forms. I’ve
noticed that listening to another author talk about how they write almost
always inspires me. I don’t know what it is, but I LOVE hearing how writers get
the words down on the page.
Wherever I find my inspiration, I just hope I am lucky
enough to keep finding it!
-->
Barbarous
(The Outcasts Book 2)
He
could be her ruin
Hugh Redvers is supposed to
be dead. So the appearance of the sun-bronzed giant with the piratical black
eye patch is deeply disturbing to Lady Daphne Davenport. And her instant
attraction to the notorious privateer
is not only wildly inappropriate for a proper widow but potentially
disastrous.Because he is also the man Daphne has secretly cheated of title,
lands, and fortune.
She
could be his salvation
Daphne Redvers’ distant,
untouchable beauty and eminently touchable body are hard enough to resist. But
the prim, almost severe, way she looks at him suggests this might be the one
woman who can make him forget all the others.
His only challenge? Unearthing the enemy who threatens her life . . .
and uncovering the secrets in her cool blue eyes.
Minerva Spencer
Minerva Spencer's
brief author bio will tell you she has been a criminal prosecutor, college
history teacher, and B&B operator. What it doesn't tell you is she also
worked as a dock worker, ice cream manufacturer, reader for the blind, motel
maid, and bounty hunter.
Okay, so the part
about being a bounty hunter is a lie.
Minerva does,
however, know how to hypnotize a Dungeness crab, sew her own Regency Era
clothing, knit a frog hat, juggle, rebuild a 1959 American Rambler, and gain
control of Asia (and hold on to it) in the game of RISK.
DANGEROUS, the
first book in Minerva's Outcasts series, is available for pre-order and debuts
June 26, 2018. The Outcasts is a Regency Era series that features uncommon
protagonists who face exciting challenges and unusual situations.
Read more at:
www.MinervaSpencer.com. You can also sign up for Minerva's newsletter at this
address, but no annoying pop-up window will nag you to do so.
Like you, Minerva, I think inspiration can creep up when you are not looking for it!
ReplyDeleteHahaha! I'm hoping it creeps up on me today!
DeleteSuch a interesting post, Minerva. Thank you for sharing your inspirations with us!
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful cover, so romantic!
ReplyDelete