I would like to introduce Douglas Carlyle, the winner of the B.R.A.G. Medallion.
Douglas please tell us about your book, In
Search of the Fuller Brush Man.
The novel is highly
biographical, yet “fictionalized.” It has very little to do with the Fuller
Brush Man per se. My mother died of cancer in 1987. She kept a journal while
she was dying. Her last written words were “Fuller Brush Man”.
The plot centers around
Sean Marcum who searches for the meaning of his mother’s last words. She used
to teach him all of life’s lessons via riddles, and he is certain this is her
swan song she intended for him to decipher. There is a problem. Sean is lousy
at riddles and puzzles. His search turns into an obsession that leads him year
after year from one dead end to the next.
Add to this Sean’s
mid-life crisis, then the death of his first true love, Kim, and Sean is in
real trouble. But wait! Kim and Sean remained close all their adult lives, and
it turns out she never let go of him. In fact, she penned a novel about their
failed relationship. She was extremely close to Sean’s mother, she is a master
at riddles, and she knows what Sean’s mother meant by her last words. The
answer is contained within her novel.
Is there a message in this story you want
readers to grasp?
There is nothing more
important than a long-term relationship with a person you love.
Where there any research challenges for this
story?
Since it was largely
biographical, facts about persons, places, settings were easy. The most
difficult part about that is this. I know these persons, places, and settings
intimately, yet the reader does not. I have to translate the detail I know so
well into meaningful narrative and conversation, yet not go overboard in word
count.
What is the most surprising thing you learned in
creating your story?
This novel really molded
my way of writing. First, I need to have some idea of a plot. Next, I create
characters. I have to find images of my characters. Those I select, I put in an
album of sorts. I am a visual person, so I have to know hair color, body type,
facial hair, bust size, eye color, facial expressions, style of clothing, the
type of vehicle they drive, and so forth. All of this is cataloged. After this,
I write the conversation. This is what moves the story along. Finally, I
develop the narrative that intermingles with the conversation, and pulls the
entire novel together. It’s not an exact science, but this is more or less my
recipe. When I write in this manner, I can be very productive.
What is your next book project?
It is titled, Vinegarone. The manuscript is complete
and my editor has returned it to me for correction. It will be on the market
within the next few months, no later than October 1st.
What is your greatest strength as a writer?
My editor says I am
excellent at conversation. I agree wholeheartedly. My greatest strength after
that is modesty.
What do you think contributes to make a writer
successful?
There is a distinction
between an indie-author like me, and those who are “mainstream” published. I
write what I want to write, the way I want to write it. Agents don’t like me
because I won’t bow to their rules, set by the major publishers. For example,
the sage advice I’ve been given includes, but is not limited to:
a)
A first-time novel can
be no longer than 80,000 words.
b)
Subsequent novels cannot
be more than 100,000 words.
c)
You can only write in
one genre.
d)
Take that story you’ve
been dying to write, finish it, then put it on a shelf. Nobody wants to hear it.
e)
Write what is selling.
f)
Don’t write conversation
using colloquial speech.
g)
Don’t turn your hero
into a villain at the end.
Who or what inspired you to become an author?
I’ve always been able to
write well. I am an electrical engineer by degree and vocation. I got an “A” in
college, freshman rhetoric! I learned a lot from that man.
The catalyst to publish
was in some ways selfish, in other ways it my way to deal with sorrow. As I
mentioned, my mother passed more than away 20 years prior to publishing this
novel. The character “Kim” in my novel is based upon my high school girlfriend
who in fact succumbed to breast cancer. She began writing a novel back when we
dated 40+ years ago. A few years before her death, she still had yet to finish.
It remained unfinished at the time of her death. It helped me heal to write the
end of her novel for her within my novel. True, I made it all up, but that
worked for me, and it made a hell of a good story.
I had hoped to complete
it before she died. Unfortunately, she passed away a six months before I was
able to get the book on the market. I dedicated the book to my mother and my
old girlfriend.
What is your favorite quote?
I could be trite and
pick a short one. Sean and his wife Dixie are arguing. She says,
“Could you obsess
over computers or cars or golf or women in lingerie or something half-way
normal? No! You obsess over a company everybody over the age of 50 has
forgotten, and nobody under 50 has ever frickin’ heard of!”
But,
more importantly, I want to stress what I say inside the rear cover. It reads,
My
mother died of pancreatic cancer on March 12, 1987. She kept a journal. In it,
her last written words really were Fuller Brush Man. As far as I am concerned,
I know what she was talking about.
I
was fortunate to have had a relationship with a truly wonderful woman during
high school and my first years of college. She died of breast cancer on June
30, 2010. Though we parted ways many years ago, I can’t help but think of how
she, along with my mother, perhaps unknowingly, helped shape me to be the
decent man, father, and husband that I am today. She married a better man than
me, and raised a lovely family. Their life together will be a lesson of love in
and of itself for all time.
I
will never be able to thank these two women enough. And I can never again
embrace them. But as a tribute to them, I hope all who read this book come to
understand, as I have, the beauty of a long-term relationship.
What advice would you give to an aspiring
author?
a) Write what you want to write. If you chase what you think will
sell, your writing will reflect that.
b) Inspiration comes when
it comes. Don’t go looking for it.
c) You have to hone your writing skills.
Author Bio:
We are delighted that Stephanie has chosen to interview Douglas Carlyle who is the author of In Search of the Fuller Brush Man, one of our medallion honorees at www.bragmedallion.com. To be awarded a B.R.A.G. MedallionTM, a book must receive unanimous approval by a group of our readers. It is a daunting hurdle and it serves to reaffirm that a book such as, In Search of the Fuller Brush Man merits the investment of a reader’s time and money.
IndieBRAG
Thank you Douglas and IndieBRAG for the pleasure of this wonderful Interview.
Stephanie
Layered Pages
Doug Carlyle grew up in Urbana, Illinois where he graduated from the
University of Illinois with, of all things for a novelist, a degree in
electrical engineering. After a circuitous journey that took him through 26
glorious years in the semiconductor industry, he began writing great fiction. He
also married, raised a family, and relocated to the Central Texas Hill
Country.
Never being able to choose just one pastime, today he
continues to practice his 30-year long medical ministry as a paramedic, while
filling in the gaps in his calendar writing, signing, or selling his
books.
You can read more about Doug Carlyle at http://www.dbcarlyle.com/
We are delighted that Stephanie has chosen to interview Douglas Carlyle who is the author of In Search of the Fuller Brush Man, one of our medallion honorees at www.bragmedallion.com. To be awarded a B.R.A.G. MedallionTM, a book must receive unanimous approval by a group of our readers. It is a daunting hurdle and it serves to reaffirm that a book such as, In Search of the Fuller Brush Man merits the investment of a reader’s time and money.
IndieBRAG
Thank you Douglas and IndieBRAG for the pleasure of this wonderful Interview.
Stephanie
Layered Pages
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