I would say telekinesis. The idea of being able to just reach out and
grab something with my mind makes the inner lazy bum in me giddy. But I have so
many questions about this ability? Would I be limited to the strength of my
body when moving things with my mind? For example, could I lift a building, or
only another person? Would I get tired just as when I’m lifting at the gym?
Would it hurt like it did for Charlie in Stephen King’s Firestarter, or worse
cause nosebleeds. I can’t stand seeing my own blood.
What is one thing your readers would
be most surprised to learn about you?
Whenever I meet somebody new they are always surprised by my age. I’m
older than I look, or so I’m told. When they hear I have two grown children,
both out of college, they are shocked. I always tell them that I have a
portrait in my attic that looks horrific like Dorian Gray, only nerdy.
When writing descriptions of your
hero/ine, what feature do you start with?
Descriptions of characters are difficult for me to envision in the
beginning, so I usually start with a familiar personality or somebody I know
and work from there. For example, I started with a picture in my head of the
antagonist in Neurogarden looking like Natascha McElhone, and it was much
easier to get her onto the page from there.
Actually writing out the description, I nearly always start with the
eyes. So much can be revealed through the eyes, and it is a perfect metaphor
for capturing what is seen and what is hidden within.
Are you a plotter or a pantser?
I start with every intent of being a plotter. I get the idea of the
story nailed down. I pick out my characters, write up bios, outline the main
elements of the plot, all of that so I can feel like I have enough of a story
to start the arduous task of writing a novel. As soon as I have that, and I’m
confident that I have what I need, I get started and it pretty much all goes
out the window. The story and characters take their own paths, and I am just
the conduit to get them out there.
I guess you could call me prepared pantser, at least until the editing
phase, when the plotter returns to rein in some of the shenanigans that my
characters get up to.
Did you learn anything from writing
this book? If so, what?
While I have always respected novelists for the sheer willpower to get
their work written, polished, completed, I don’t think I really understood the
work that it takes to write a full novel. My previous work was exclusively
short stories. I never felt I had a story that needed 60,000 words or more to
tell, but when I had that story in Neurogarden, it was a lot of work to get it
done.
I learned to be diligent, and to make time everyday to get the work
done. I learned that no matter how much I dread a particular scene that is
causing me difficulty, for whatever reason, I need to push through or the story
will never be told, and with so much already completed, I want to know how it
ends so there is no turning back.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
BLURB:
Where can you run when there is no place to
hide?
Brenna Patrick is a brilliant technologist
specializing in neural-cognitive functions and AI. She has cracked the code to
solve one of the most troublesome problems in the field, and turned that into
the multi-billion dollar NeuralTech Corporation.
Working quietly with the U.S. Department of
Defense, NeuralTech is poised to leapfrog the competition with a revolutionary
system for tracking people, starting with the world’s most wanted terrorists.
But there are only so many terrorists in the world, so who’s next?
When a pair of Columbia graduate students,
Jenny and Leo, stumble on the dark secret of NeuralTech’s success, it kicks off
a tense game of cat and mouse. As they fight to defeat the powerful forces
arrayed against them, nothing less than the fate of humanity hangs in the
balance…
NEUROGARDEN is a roller-coaster ride of a
thriller, one that will have readers pondering the nature of memory, and of
reality, long after they've read the last page.
Amazon Buy Link:
https://www.amazon.com/Neurogarden-NeuralTech-Corporation-Book-1-ebook/dp/B08F7BWCDZ
AUTHOR Bio
and Links:
Ever since reading Douglas Adams back in my
formative years, I have had an interesting relationship with humor, science
fiction, and technology. My first computer was a TI-99/4A, so yeah, I’m old,
but only until scientists have cracked the code on transplanting our brains
into shiny new vessels.
My body may be showing signs of wear, but I’m
keeping my brain tight.
When I am not dreaming of far off worlds and
writing, I am living a semi-normal life working in New York City, and watching
movies with my wife and her spastic cat, Moss.
Relevant
Links:
Web site: https://www.bryonvaughn.com
Facebook: https://facebook.com/bryonvaughnauthor
Instagram: https://instagram.com/bryonvaughn
Twitter: https://twitter.com/bryonvaughn
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Thanks for hosting!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for hosting!
ReplyDeleteSounds like a great book.
ReplyDeleteHappy Friday! Thanks for the great tour, I’ve enjoyed following it and I’m looking forward to reading Neurogarden.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed following the tour and getting to know you a bit and learning about your thrilling book, thanks for sharing and I hope the tour was a success!
ReplyDelete