ARMAND ROSAMILIA
- GUEST AUTHOR -
G'day folks,
Today, I interview an interesting author from Florida.
Welcome, Armand ...
1. TELL
US A LITTLE ABOUT YOURSELF AND YOUR WRITING JOURNEY.
My name is Armand
Rosamilia, I love M&M’s, not walking on the beach, coffee and romantic
comedies. Oh, I’m also a full-time author of crime thrillers, horror and
contemporary fiction, too. I’m also a podcaster and an excellent kisser. If I
do say so myself.
2. WHEN
AND HOW DID YOU BECOME A WRITER?
I owe it all to two
things: being a horrible child, and Dean Koontz. Actually, my mother probably
should get the credit. I was a wild child, always fighting with my brother.
We’d get punished and I’d have to spend days or weeks trapped in my parent’s
bedroom while other kids got to play outside. I started reading Phantoms from my mother’s massive
paperback horror collection and it hooked me.
3. WHAT TYPE OF
PREPARATION DO YOU DO FOR A MANUSCRIPT? DO YOU PLAN EVERYTHING FIRST OR JUST
SHOOT FROM THE HIP?
I am a total pantser. I
start with the most basic idea in my head. Sometimes I only have a working
title, or a cool first line. Maybe a scene I want to flesh out, or even an
ending I want to see if I can get to. I find outlining to kill the fun of the
story for me, so I just wing it and see what the characters do.
4. WHAT
DO YOU ENJOY MOST ABOUT BEING A WRITER?
Not working for anyone
else. Being able to control my own destiny to a point. Mostly, though, being
able to sit around in my underwear all day and eat M&M’s while everyone
else has to leave the house and put pants on like nerds.
5. WHAT
IS THE HARDEST THING ABOUT BEING A WRITER?
The days when all I
want to do is watch Netflix or read. There’s no one here watching over me. I
can literally do whatever I want. Most days the fear of my wife questioning me
when she gets home from her job or the fact of not writing and making money
means I have to get a ‘real’ job again is enough to put me to work. Most days.
6. WHAT
WERE YOU IN A PAST LIFE, BEFORE YOU BECAME A WRITER?
I was famous, just like
everyone who’s ever said they have been reincarnated or had past lives. Isn’t
that the right answer? I imagine I was the squire for King Arthur or maybe
Braveheart. Someone important like that. I got to carry their heavy garbage
around and try to hit on their groupies.
7. WHAT
IS YOUR GREATEST WRITING ACHIEVEMENT?
They’re all great and
motivating. Every sale. Every book in print. Every interview I do. Every fellow
author I interview on my Arm Cast Podcast. If you put a gun to my head and told
me to pick one: the day my mother read the first Dirty Deeds crime thriller book and told me how much she loved it.
That was special.
8. WHAT
ARE YOU WORKING ON AT THE MOMENT?
I always work on
multiple projects at once. I have five campy horror books due to a publisher in
the next year. Writing Dirty Deeds 8.
Finishing the last book of my Chelsea
Avenue trilogy for a publisher. Co-writing two different books with other
authors. I have two nonfiction projects I will be starting in September. I have
three different novels I write a chapter on each month for my Patreon. Lots of
short stories for anthologies coming up, too. Yes, I am busy.
9. WHAT
INSPIRES YOU?
Fear. The absolute fear
of having to go out and get another job if this stops working for me. I did
retail management for over twenty years and hated every minute of it. Every
employee. Every customer. Every day wasted doing paperwork that didn’t really matter.
Whenever I start to slack I remember those mind-numbing weeks of eighty or more
hours for awful pay and it motivates me to write and write some more.
10.
WHAT GENRE DO YOU WRITE?
For a long time it was
mostly horror and mostly zombie fiction. I expanded into nonfiction over the
years with subjects I like, and then contemporary fiction. Writing crime
thrillers is relatively new for me, having only gotten my first book deal in
2016 with the genre. Right now it is my favourite and I love writing it.
11.
DO YOU HAVE ANY TIPS FOR NEW
WRITERS?
Read. It sound s basic
and cliché but it is true. Don’t just read your genre, either. Read as many as
you can, to get a feel for how different writers write in different genres. It
has been invaluable to my own writing when I can find tricks and techniques in
genres I don’t write in.
12.
DO YOU SUFFER FROM WRITER’S BLOCK?
No. I suffer from
laziness. If I don’t have a solid idea for what I’m working on at the moment, I
have 57 other open documents to work on. I bounce around each day, some days
writing on three or four stories. Only when I’m really in the zone on a story
or the deadline is looming do I work exclusively on it, and only until it is
done before jumping around again.
13.
DO YOU HAVE A PREFERRED WRITING
SCHEDULE?
I do what I call The
Mando Method. At the top of every hour I drop whatever I’m doing and write for
the next fifteen minutes. As many words as I can in that time and as quickly as
I can get the ideas down. I usually hit about 600 words with each sprint. I try
to do several each day depending on how many other things are floating around,
like promotion, interviews, eating, coffee breaks, podcast issues and emails.
14.
DO YOU HAVE A FAVOURITE WRITING
PLACE?
I like being home in my
office with 80’s metal music blasting in the background. I like being home so I
can drink way too much coffee and make my own lunch. I can write anywhere,
though. I have gone to a coffee shop or a lunch place and written, too. Some days
I’ll go to my wife’s office and sit in an extra room and write all day. I just
need my laptop or desktop and some background noise and I’m set.
15.
WHAT IS YOUR GREATEST JOY IN
WRITING?
When a reader gushes
over one of my books while at a book signing, and they want more of the series
or another book. I love to see the look in their eyes and it motivates me to
keep this going. Hoping someday the answer to this question will be ‘my first
million dollars made from writing.’
16.
WHO IS YOUR FAVOURITE AUTHOR AND
WHY?
Definitely Dean Koontz.
Most of my author friends cite Stephen King as their inspiration, but it was
Koontz for me. Once I started reading his books I never stopped. At twelve or
thirteen I wanted to become a writer and do it for a living. It took me over
forty years to finally make the jump to do it full-time, and I owe Mister
Koontz a handshake for being such an awesome writer and helping me without
knowing it.
17.
WHAT’S THE GREATEST COMPLIMENT YOU
EVER RECEIVED FROM A READER?
In my Dirty Deeds series, one of the characters has something bad happen
to them. My mother-in-law, who reads this series and is one of my beta readers,
got so mad because of what happened I thought she was never going to speak to
me again. I don’t think she could’ve been madder if it was a real person it
happened to. I took it as a compliment, and try to kiss her butt whenever I see
her so she stops yelling at me.
18.
WHAT WAS THE WORST COMMENT FROM A
READER?
I had an early review for one of my
first books, and the reader basically said ‘I read it and it was ehh’ and that
was it. I’d rather you hated the book and told me why. Not getting anything out
of my writing was worse than someone ripping it apart. At least I got a genuine
reaction from someone who hated it. Of course, I would hope everyone loved
everything I’ve ever written or will write, but…
19.
WRITERS ARE SOMETIMES INFLUENCED BY
THINGS THAT HAPPEN IN THEIR OWN LIVES. ARE YOU?
All the time. My running joke is I’ve
killed both my ex-wives in most of my stories and made back some of the lost
money over the years. My current (and amazing) wife will read my stuff and
smile because sometimes she knows where I got a scene or conversation from in
real life.
20.
OTHER THAN WRITING, WHAT ELSE DO YOU
LOVE?
I’m supposed to say my wife and kids. I
also love baseball. I’m a Red Sox fan. I also have season tickets to the
Jacksonville Jumbo Shrimp, the Double-A team for the Miami Marlins. My wife and
I run the team booster club. We even have three players that live with us
during the season. I wrote a book about being a baseball fan and the 2017
season for the team, A View From My Seat.
I am a fanatic.
21.
DID YOU HAVE YOUR BOOK / BOOKS
PROFESSIONALLY EDITED BEFORE PUBLICATION?
You have to if you want to succeed. I’ve
mentored several authors over the years and the big thing I stress is having
other eyes on your work. Never think you’re good enough to self-edit. You’re
not. I work with a great editor who runs through everything I write before I
submit it to a publisher or self-publish.
22.
DESCRIBE YOUR PERFECT DAY.
I sleep in until nine and the coffee is
magically ready. I go through emails and there are no problems, just people
praising my work and how handsome I am. Then I do ten Mando Method sprints and
get in over seven thousand brilliant words. Lunch is delivered and it is
Chinese food and pizza. More coffee. A package arrives at my doorstep and it is
a box of new books for me to read and blurb, and I’ll love them all. My wife
comes home from a great day at work, we have a delicious dinner and watch the
Red Sox win the World Series before several vigorous hours of lovemaking and
then sleep takes me… too much?
23.
IF YOU WERE STUCK ON A DESERT ISLAND
WITH ONE PERSON, WHO WOULD IT BE? WHY?
Author Chuck Buda, my co-hosts for The
Mando Method Podcast. We’re born two days apart, he’s an awesome writer and
person, and we have the same twisted sense of humour. Of course, we’d kill each
other within a few weeks and then think of all the meat the winner would have…
I mean… we’d have fun.
24.
WHAT WOULD YOU SAY IF YOU HAD THE
CHANCE TO SPEAK TO WORLD LEADERS?
I’d get them to buy my book, or at least
have a copy on the podium as they try to destroy the country and the world with
your egomaniacal actions. Hopefully someone will notice and make my book a
best-seller, which will happen seconds before the warheads are tossed around
the planet. Decades later the apes will rule…
25.
WHAT ARE YOUR PLANS FOR THE FUTURE?
Short-term I’m going to grab another cup
of coffee. Long-term I’m going to enjoy my life. Write more books. Go to more
baseball games. Travel a lot and sell some of these books I have piled up in my
house. Eat lots of M&M’s.
26.
WHAT ARE YOUR VIEWS ON BOOK TRAILERS? DO THEY SELL
BOOKS?
Honestly… no. Not that I’ve ever seen.
They look amazing and a lot of work has gone into most of them, but I never buy
a book based on one. I don’t know anyone who ever has. They do look cool,
though.
27.
DO YOU SEE YOURSELF IN ANY OF YOUR
CHARACTERS?
I see a lot of my insecurities and
quirks in many of them. If I had to pick one it would be James Gaffney from the
Dirty Deeds series. He’s pushing
fifty, balding, overweight, sometimes lazy, and very snarky. When my wife first
read the first book she said it was me. Completely. I always tell her it isn’t
me, but she knows better.
28.
DOES THE PUBLISHING INDUSTRY
FRUSTRATE YOU?
Not as much as it used to. I am a
hybrid, so I do some self-publishing and also work with the small press. I have
dabbled with the Big Five at times, too. I prefer to work with different
presses and use it to expand my audience. I get how publishing has changed over
the years. I had my first story published in 1988 while a senior in high
school. I’ll be fifty in November. A lot has changed. Heck, a lot changes every
three or four months now. I try to roll with it and not be the grumpy old man
yelling for the kids to get off my damn lawn.
29.
DID YOU EVER THINK OF QUITTING?
Not seriously. I have gone through
depressing times when the money wasn’t enough to buy a Happy Meal. I’ve
struggled with depression and pushing myself to the limit without seeing any
return. I’ll win and moan about it, swearing I will go back to retail
management and find happiness. All lies. I suck it up and find a project I’m in
love with and it’s all better. For awhile, anyway. Ahh, the joy of being a
creative person…
30.
WHAT WAS YOUR FAVOURITE MANUSCRIPT
TO WRITE? WHY?
I co-wrote The Enemy Held Near, a haunted house novel, with Jay Wilburn. It is
my strongest story because writing with a writer I admire and respect, he
brings my game up so far. I didn’t want to disappoint him. I love the story and
the subtle nuances we added to it.
31.
HOW WOULD YOU DEFINE ‘SUCCESS’ AS A
WRITER?
Being able to do what you want to do without any regrets.
I’ve been a full-time author for six wonderful years. I love every minute of
it, even when I’m stressed or freaking out because of a deadline. To me success
is whether or not you’re enjoying what you do for a living. I certainly do.
32.
WHAT SHOULD READERS WALK AWAY FROM
YOUR BOOKS KNOWING? HOW SHOULD THEY FEEL?
I hope they feel something. Ideally I want them to finish
the last line and want to read whatever else I have written they haven’t read
yet. I want them to experience the highs and lows of the story and want more. I
want them to know I did my very best and I hope they appreciate it.
33.
WOULD YOU LIKE TO HAVE YOUR BOOKS
MADE INTO MOVIES? EVER WRITTEN A SCREENPLAY?
That is a bucket list item. I have had several of my books
turned into screenplays over the years but none have gone beyond that. That
would be an amazing thing to have happen.
34.
HOW MUCH THOUGHT GOES INTO DESIGNING
A BOOK COVER?
When I’m self-publishing I will have a basic idea for the
cover at some point during the writing. Depending on who I’m getting the cover
from, I’ll give them a few ideas or thoughts, but nothing too specific. I want
them to surprise me. Usually it’s perfect on the first try if I’ve conveyed my
idea to them correctly.
35.
WHAT’S YOUR ULTIMATE DREAM?
Dirty Deeds turned into
a TV series starring Bruce Campbell as James Gaffney. It would run for several
years and win all kinds of awards. Actors and actresses would want to be my
friend. I’d hang out with super famous people and they’d come to me for advice.
I’d dine in the finest restaurants. Eat M&M’s all day and drink the most
exotic coffees in all the land. Or maybe I just want to continue to be happy
and write books with the amazing family I have… but add the coffee part in,
too.
36.
WRITING IS ONE THING. WHAT ABOUT MARKETING YOU,
YOUR BOOKS AND YOUR BRAND? ANY THOUGHTS?
It is about 80% of my day now. The marketing takes up a lot
of time. Time I could be writing, if you want to be blunt about it. But without
the marketing I might pump out an extra couple of novels a year that no one
would read. You need readers to find your books and read them. Believe in your
brand and you as a writer and a person. I love going to a lot of book signings
and conventions every year so I can meet those readers in person.
37.
DESCRIBE YOURSELF IN FIVE WORDS.
Sexy. Funny. Handsome. Gorgeous. Humble.
38.
WHAT PISSES YOU OFF MOST?
Authors who don’t think long-term and think of this as a
career. They’re too busy being the carnival barker at book signings, forcing
people to buy their book instead of organically selling it, and selling future
books because the reader had a good experience. I am also pissed off at turkey
burgers.
39.
WHAT IS THE TITLE OF THE LAST BOOK
YOU READ? GOOD ONE?
I read an advance copy of Richard Chizmar’s Gwendy’s Magic Feather, the sequel to
the book he co-wrote with Stephen King, Gwendy’s
Button Box. It was amazing.
40.
WHAT WOULD BE THE VERY LAST SENTENCE
YOU’D WRITE?
And they all (finally) lived happily ever after.
41.
WHAT WOULD MAKE YOU HAPPIER THAN YOU ARE NOW? CARE
TO SHARE?
Selling even more books. Even more traveling to see
baseball games. More wonderful years with my wife. Seeing my kids grow to be
amazing adults. Someone names a coffee after me.
42.
ANYTHING YOU’D LIKE TO ADD?
Thank you for the amazing interview. I had a lot of fun!
You can check me out in a buncha places:
Clancy's comment: Well done, Armand, and thank you. I've never tried a turkey burger, but I just might.
I'm ...
Yeah, I hear ya on the turkey burger thing. Who's dumb idea was that? Anywho, it's good that you trust your designers. It's when we are not micromanaged by authors that want what they want with no regard for saleability, that we can do our best work and make your work shine!
ReplyDeleteSound advice, Tamian. I hear you.
DeleteCT
Oh, and, fun interview!
ReplyDeleteYes, with or without the turkey burger, Tamian.
DeleteCT