PAUL ALBANO
- GUEST AUTHOR -
G'day folks,
Today, I interview an inspiring author who also happens to be a social studies teacher.
Welcome, Paul ...
1.
TELL
US A LITTLE ABOUT YOURSELF AND YOUR WRITING JOURNEY.
I am a graduate from University of Connecticut and am
currently a social studies teacher. During college, I started to write short
stories and found that I really enjoyed it, leading to writing a novel after I
received my bachelor’s degree. However, I view that one as a “practice novel”
but would like to revisit the story in the future. I then went on to write
several more novels and attempted to find a literary agent. Being that the
business is so subjective, it was extremely difficult to find one, so I
optioned for the independent route for now and self-published a novel in 2017
with a few more planned on being released in the near future. Just a couple of
weeks ago, I had a manuscript accepted by Page Publishing, which should be out
in six to eight months. It’s about a conman who escapes his life of crime and
heads to Italy where he has family yet ends up getting involved with the mafia.
2.
WHAT TYPE OF PREPARATION DO YOU DO FOR A
MANUSCRIPT? DO YOU PLAN EVERYTHING FIRST OR JUST SHOOT FROM THE HIP?
When I first started writing, I attempted to plan out a
lot of the story. A list of overly-described characters. A laundry list of
events. Exactly how the story would end. Yet, I found that my story diverted
greatly from my initial outlines and they would actually become useless to me.
What I do is simply have a list of characters, a sentence or two describing
what the story is going to be about, and maybe a couple of major events that
need to be embedded in the story. After that, I start writing and more times
than not the story unfolds on its own. I will then write down important details
that are a part of the story so to not have continuity errors and continue to
write until I finish. Rarely do I ever plan out the ending anymore unless it’s
without a doubt what I want and fits the narrative. In fact, a majority of the
time I have no idea how the story will end while I’m writing it.
3.
WHAT
DO YOU ENJOY MOST ABOUT BEING A WRITER?
I just love coming up with stories and being able to
alter reality in any way that I want. With writing, limits do not exist. That
is the beauty of fiction. I can create anything I want and, as long as it is
something I am completely happy with, it will be totally acceptable.
4.
WHAT
IS THE HARDEST THING ABOUT BEING A WRITER?
For me, the hardest thing about being a writer now is
growing an audience. I know that eventually I will have a large audience and
faithful following; I’m that good of a writer. What is hard is to get people to
buy or check out a book from a relatively unknown author. It’s a risk on their
part but they need to know it’ll pay off for them and they’ll have no regrets.
They’ll keep coming back for more.
5.
WHAT
IS YOUR GREATEST WRITING ACHIEVEMENT?
I have not yet reached my greatest writing
achievement, but I know what it’ll be. There has been a story in the back of my
mind for years, and I finally wrote the first novel of this particular story
two years ago but am not planning on releasing that or any other novel in the
series until they are ALL complete. It will honestly be one of the greatest
tales ever put on paper, and I owe it to myself to make it perfect and not
leave anything on the table or have any doubts in my mind when it is finally
out there. I had mentioned the story to a reporter of a local newspaper that it
may take as long as five years to see the light of day. That was two years ago;
I suspect anywhere from five to ten now because it needs to be perfect.
Anything less than that is totally unacceptable.
6.
WHAT
ARE YOU WORKING ON AT THE MOMENT?
Right now I have a few projects going on at once,
which is something I’m actually not a fan of. I rather start and finish one
before proceeding to the next story. I am currently building my author website
and organizing at least four novels which will become Ebooks between now and
probably March or April of 2020. It depends on when the book with Page
Publishing is released. After that, I need to make a decision on what to do
next with another completed novel and one that is close to being done.
Following that, I am leaving it up to the people to decide which story they
want next and will hold a vote on my website that will launch soon.
7.
WHAT
INSPIRES YOU?
Music is one thing that inspires me. I’ll listen to
the lyrics and automatically brainstorm how the song could be a device to tell
a story. Movies definitely inspire me and influence my writing. I tend to sometimes
study movies and figure out why a director does what he or she does or what the
story itself is suggesting. One of my favorite genres to write is horror, and I
love a good horror movie. Unfortunately, most of them these days are recycled
stories or half-baked ideas that studios rush to make because horror is a cheap
genre. A lot of it is just bullshit put on the screen. There’s a lot of
originality out there but poor execution. I’m just thankful there are people
like James Wan and Andy Muschietti who know what a good horror movie is and how
to make one. Rob Zombie is another favorite of mine. His movies are gruesome
and gory but that’s what you have to expect going in when it comes to his
stories. His stories are original to say the least. I’d work with him in a
heartbeat if he ever wanted to put one of my stories on the big screen. In fact
I have a long novel already written that I realized would be perfect for him to
film.
8.
WHAT
GENRE DO YOU WRITE?
I know I can challenge myself to write any genre. My
self-published novel, Since My Last Confession,
is a story I never imagined myself writing, but I was given the premise and
just went with it—though needing to add the murder mystery back story. But, I
typically write thriller and horror stories. I think those are the best genres
to write and read; it allows the reader to not know what to expect next and to
keep them fully engaged to the end. I also enjoy writing crime, especially mob
stories because of my Italian background. The large project years in the making
will fall under this category.
9.
DO
YOU SUFFER FROM WRITER’S BLOCK?
My writer’s block is unique and one of a kind. I
suffer from not knowing which story to write next. I have a list of stories
that have popped into my mind over the recent years. If I stopped coming up
with new ideas and wrote one story a year based on my current list, I wouldn’t
run out until I was 55 (I’m 29 right now). I sometimes even get pissed when
another idea comes about at any given moment because I just don’t have the time
to pump out all these stories. I jot down what it is and it gets added to list.
Some ideas are more developed than others. A few that I thought about starting
but put off are better for it; the idea just keeps developing into something
better and better.
10. DO YOU HAVE A PREFERRED WRITING SCHEDULE?
A majority of the time I write in the morning. If I’m
at a very important part of a story, I will find time later in the day to
continue. There was one novel that I would only work on very late at night. It
is an extremely dark and twisted story, far too long for someone trying to find
an agent. I believe I am going to divide it into three parts and create an
Ebook trilogy out of it. But overall, I do not have a concrete schedule, just prefer
mornings.
11. WHAT IS YOUR GREATEST JOY IN WRITING?
My greatest joy is wondering where the story will take
me next. I don’t find that I am the one writing these stories. I’m just a
conduit, the messenger for the story. It winds up telling itself, and that’s
why I hate outlines and haven’t used them since I first started writing. I
tried this one method I learned in a creativity class in grad school, having a
list of characters, their flaws, and their fate. Needless to say by the end of
part one of a six-part story, everything changed. I love sitting at my desk,
starting to write, and then becoming amazed as to where the story is taking me.
12. WHO IS YOUR FAVORITE AUTHOR AND WHY?
I actually don’t have a favorite author. I read all
different types of stories from all kinds of authors. When I first got into
writing, I’d have to say one of my favorites was Stephen King. I love reading
his old stuff, not much of a fan of his recent novels. Michael Connelly is
another who has piqued my interest lately in terms of crime thrillers as well
as Jeffery Deaver. Dan Brown was
great, but I have to admit he’s missed the mark lately. I try to find novels
from authors I’ve never heard of and give them a chance because I’d want the
same done to me. 99% of the time, I’m glad with my choices.
13. WHAT’S THE GREATEST COMPLIMENT YOU EVER
RECEIVED FROM A READER?
The greatest compliment I ever received was someone
telling me they could not put down my novel. That’s exactly what I set out to
achieve. I want my readers to keeping wondering what is going to happen and
have no choice but to turn the page and find out. And then when they’re done
with that book, I want them to need to read what I come out with next.
14. WRITERS ARE SOMETIMES INFLUENCED BY
THINGS THAT HAPPEN IN THEIR OWN LIVES. ARE YOU?
Yes. Many of my stories are either influenced a little
or a lot. I won’t say how much per each story but eventually, I think people
will start to figure out what is and isn’t a part of me. We will leave it at
that.
15. DID YOU HAVE YOUR BOOK / BOOKS
PROFESSIONALLY EDITED BEFORE PUBLICATION?
I did have my first self-published novel edited and am
currently getting a stand-alone and trilogy edited and prepared. Those are the
four Ebooks that I mentioned earlier. I am also on working on editing my novels
myself and studying how an editor looks over a manuscript, what the process is,
and what I need to do to become better at that.
16. DESCRIBE YOUR PERFECT DAY.
I wake up, probably early because I’m so used to
getting up early I can hardly sleep in anymore. Workout, get ready for the day,
and then definitely eat something. I have to eat in the morning. I don’t know
how people can say they can’t eat in the morning. Then, I’d work on whatever I
want or need to get done. Whether it’s a novel or something else based on my
work. From there, the day is unpredictable and I’d just go with the flow.
17. IF YOU WERE STUCK ON A DESERT ISLAND
WITH ONE PERSON, WHO WOULD IT BE? WHY?
I’d have to say my future wife, whoever that may be.
But since I’m not married yet, I’m torn between two people. Either Tom Hanks
because that guy was a cast away for four years and could definitely provide
some entertainment (he made a goddam volleyball come to life!). Or, I’m taking
Gordon Ramsay with me because not only do I love to cook too but I’d want to
put his skills to the extreme test. Let’s see what he can make from just a few
coconuts and salt water.
18. WHAT WOULD YOU SAY IF YOU HAD THE CHANCE
TO SPEAK TO WORLD LEADERS?
Get your shit together.
19. WHAT ARE YOUR PLANS FOR THE FUTURE?
My website will be launching soon after I self-publish
my next novel called Five Ways to Kill,
an Ebook that revolves around a hitchhiker getting involved with a hit-man and
being driven around a horror-plagued city for the night. I have a thriller
trilogy—more like a dystopia—that will be released at some point in early
January, the first book that is. Hopefully I can start to really attract an
audience and grow a fan base. I’ll commit to any publicity as well. All
publicity is good publicity. What I intend to do the fullest is strive toward
that ultimate goal of wring for a living.
20. DO YOU SEE YOURSELF IN ANY OF YOUR
CHARACTERS?
Sometimes I do. Many times, though, when I’m writing,
I try to be in the mindset of the character and wonder what he or she may do in
any given situation, not necessarily what I would do. But there are a few
characters that are like me in many ways. One future novel in particular has
five characters, and each one represents a part of me. It is almost finished,
but given the subject matter of the story, it has taken a toll to write
consistently. The story developed out of nowhere. I was mindlessly typing away
at something and then the story just grew out of three pages of nonsense. I
breezed through the first 40,000 words in three weeks, but it has taken me over
8 months to have written the next 40,000 words. I hope to finish it before the
year ends.
21. DOES THE PUBLISHING INDUSTRY FRUSTRATE
YOU?
Absolutely. I think it is one of the most unfair
systems out there. It does not allow talented writers to showcase their work,
only the lucky few that get representation and then get picked up by a
publisher. I believe if you work hard at it like I do, then you should be able
to do this as a living and not have to wait and wonder if it ever will.
22. DID YOU EVER THINK OF QUITTING?
If I said “no” then I’d be a liar. A handful of times
I’ve sat staring at my laptop wondering why the hell am I continuing to write,
and this is after contacting hundreds of agents with either no reply or a
generic rejection. Again, I blame the industry and what it’s become—far too
saturated with people who think that just because they own a laptop they can
type out a masterpiece. It doesn’t give the actual talent out there a chance.
23. WHAT WAS YOUR FAVORITE MANUSCRIPT TO
WRITE? WHY?
My favorite manuscript to write was the first novel in
my planned crime saga that will take me years to complete. I look back at that
manuscript now and realize a lot more work needs to be done, but it was a great
accomplishment to finally get that story on paper.
24. HOW WOULD YOU DEFINE ‘SUCCESS’ AS A WRITER?
If you wake up
every morning and know your one and only job is to be a writer—to come up with
whatever you want and turn it into a story—you’re a successful writer. It
wouldn’t matter to me how much I made as long as I could sustain a living off
of my income as a writer. I don’t need to be a millionaire.
25. WHAT SHOULD READERS WALK
AWAY FROM YOUR BOOKS KNOWING? HOW SHOULD THEY FEEL?
They should know
that even if the story is something they believe could never happen in a
million years, there is truth hidden somewhere in that work of fiction.
Whatever I’ve come up with should make them question their world, the people
around them, and the choices that they personally make. Regardless if it is a
crime, thriller, or horror story, I want to scare the shit out of my readers,
psychologically mess them up as they read my book, and then make them crave
more once they’re done with it. My readers should be both afraid and anxious
for what I come up with next. Nothing shocks me, nothing frightens me, and I
will write just about anything as long as the story warrants it. With that
mindset, people should be terrified of and utterly curious about what I
produce, unable to stop thinking about it until they’ve read the story for
themselves.
And that attitude
also goes with, hopefully, a number of future public appearances. I would love
to engage with fans, fellow writers, celebrities, and TV show hosts. I do not
have a filter and will say what is on my mind. That definitely keeps an
audience engaged and to have to wonder what will I do, say, or write next. If
the entertainment world ever developed a poll and voted on who is the most
dangerous person to interview, I’d want that person to be me.
26. WOULD YOU LIKE TO HAVE YOUR
BOOKS MADE INTO MOVIES? EVER WRITTEN A SCREENPLAY?
Without a doubt.
That being said, it would have to be agreed upon that I retain some sort of
creative control, that I be a part of the filmmaking process. Too many times
have I watched a movie and wondered if the filmmakers actually read the book. I
understand there’s a difference in creative interpretation, but people go to
see a movie based off a novel because they liked the novel. Take Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince.
That’s my favorite Harry Potter book
but the movie is absolute shit. It was more like the students were on
Temptation Island rather than at Hogwarts, the Bachelor and the Bachelorette
combined.
Now having said
all that, when I write my stories, I envision the scenes in my mind as though
they were movies. I actually fantasize about writing and directing movies based
off of my work, or at least working on the set of the film and being a part of
making the movie. One director that I believe would be a perfect fit for the
stories I come up with is James Wan. He doesn’t rely on cheap thrills or jump
scares to put the audience on high alert; it’s the tone and manner he directs
his movies that can definitely resonate with my work. I did attempt to write a
screenplay for an original story but haven’t revisited it in a while.
27. HOW MUCH THOUGHT GOES INTO
DESIGNING A BOOK COVER?
Right now, the
nice thing about self-publishing is I can come up with the book cover on my own
and tell a designer exactly what I want on it and what can be left to
interpretation from the artist’s perspective. I think a lot about book covers
and what I want each one to look like. I know the old saying about not judging
a book by its cover, but I want my covers to be badass, and the hitchhiker story
I mentioned earlier has an amazing cover. It’s simple but it’s unique.
28. WHAT’S YOUR ULTIMATE DREAM?
My ultimate dream
is to wake up every day and know my job is to tell stories. It doesn’t matter
to me how hectic my schedule is on any given day. Whether it’s to just simply
sit and write that day or go on TV to do interviews, travel nonstop for a
period of time, or be active on a movie set telling one of my stories, it would
be a dream to do that.
29. WRITING IS ONE THING. WHAT ABOUT MARKETING
YOU, YOUR BOOKS AND YOUR BRAND? ANY THOUGHTS?
I’ll take all the
help I can get to have my name and stories shared with as many people as
possible. It’s a challenge to be unknown by the masses and to get people to
read your stories. I think there needs to be a more efficient way for someone
who wants to write for a living like myself to actually achieve that goal. This
career is not like others where you can apply and interview for a position as a
full-time novelist. You have to be selected and it’s not even based on
credentials but rather if one specific person likes that one specific story you
came up with. It’s bullshit but that’s just how it is. So I need to keep fight
toward that goal of becoming a full-time writer and getting the attention of as
many readers as possible.
30. ARE YOUR BOOKS SELF-PUBLISHED?
As of right now,
yes. I have the one self-published paperback and am going to release probably
four Ebooks in the next several months. However, I am still hoping and trying
to find representation. Or, another idea I have is to grow my company, Option
13 Entertainment, into a business that employees independent-contracted agents
and expand from there.
31. WHAT IS OPTION 13 ENTERTAINMENT?
It is an
entertainment company that I founded earlier this year. Every one of my future
novels will have an “Option 13 Entertainment Presents…” page followed by the
title. Think of the way a movie’s opening credits begin. That’s what I
envision. It’s also a promotional platform. Once I start to launch my website
and other social media accounts, I plan to have separate accounts for Option 13
Entertainment. I honestly don’t know what it may become but the possibilities
are endless. In a perfect world, it will be both used to publish and promote
stories and also serve as a film studio company.
32. WHY THE NUMBER 13? ISN’T THAT BAD LUCK?
I am 100% Italian,
and in the Italian culture, the number 13 is their lucky number. It’s actually
the luckiest number and brings about the best fortune, so that’s why I chose
it. Also because the number 13 is creepy and gives off that curious vibe.
That’s reflects my writing so it’s a perfect fit.
33. DESCRIBE YOURSELF IN FIVE
WORDS.
Never going to
stop writing.
34. WHAT PISSES YOU OFF MOST?
That’s a long list
to choose from. I guess I’d have to say the writing industry. Not to repeat
myself but, holy shit, it is not easy to get started in that industry at all,
and it does piss me off to put in a lot of effort and time into a story only to
be rejected by someone because it simply did not appeal to them at first
glance. I hate it when the criteria for submissions say something like: “send
your first five pages.” And that’s it! Yeah, I know the start of the story has
hook you, but I’ve read more than few novels where the beginning is generic or
bland or boring as hell, but the story as whole is great and those details in that
initial tedious beginning were actually necessary and paid off in the end. I
sometimes find myself thinking that I could write better than what’s in my
hands. BUT someone gave that author a chance and it all worked out in the end. Agents
and publishers need to take more risks and branch out to reach independent
authors; they are missing out on some great talent out there.
35. WHAT IS THE TITLE OF THE
LAST BOOK YOU READ? GOOD ONE?
The last book I
read was called The Demonologist. It
detailed the paranormal cases of Ed and Lorraine Warren. I am a huge fan of The Conjuring movies and have always
been interested in those sorts of topics. It was a great read and will serve as
part of my research for a character I plan to develop an on-going series
around. I won’t divulge more than that because it is a very unique character
and something that isn’t really seen in the literary world. I think it’s
because people are either too afraid to write about it or they simply lack the
ability to make it worthwhile.
36. WHAT WOULD BE THE VERY LAST SENTENCE YOU’D
WRITE?
The End.
37. WHAT WOULD MAKE YOU HAPPIER THAN YOU ARE NOW?
CARE TO SHARE?
It’s simple yet
redundant: to be happy. I won’t bore you with what will help me achieve that
but what will make me happier is to be happy. But rest assure, my writing style
and storytelling will never, ever change.
38. ANYTHING YOU’D LIKE TO ADD?
I know that I can be successful in the literary world.
Right after I self-published my first novel, my cousin joked and said “Now
you’re the Godfather of the Literary World.” I laughed it off at first, but
realizing how much work I put into my writing and continuing put forth the
effort to make every story perfect, my cousin was 100% right. I don’t want to
be the next this author or the next that author. What happens then is people
will automatically assume you are going to not only mimic the type of stories
they tell but mimic their success, and after one little bump in the road (they
happen to everyone), the public will second-guess you in a matter of minutes. I
don’t want to be the next anything. I want to be me because I know that’s when
I’m my best, and I am the Godfather of the Literary World. They just don’t know
it yet.
Clancy's comment: I'm very pleased to have interviewed the Godfather of the Literary World. Happy to be your right hand man, Paul. Well done.
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