Tuesday, January 31, 2023

New Books This Week:

Wednesday Edition


The Drift

by C.J. Tudor

Ballantine Books

Hardcover


Hannah awakens to carnage, all mangled metal and shattered glass. Evacuated from a secluded boarding school during a snowstorm, her coach careered off the road, trapping her with a handful of survivors. They’ll need to work together to escape—with their sanity and secrets intact.


Meg awakens to a gentle rocking. She’s in a cable car stranded high above snowy mountains, with five strangers and no memory of how they got on board. They are heading to a place known only as “The Retreat,” but as the temperature drops and tensions mount, Meg realizes they may not all make it there alive.

Carter is gazing out the window of an isolated ski chalet that he and his companions call home. As their generator begins to waver in the storm, something hiding in the chalet’s depths threatens to escape, and their fragile bonds will be tested when the power finally fails—for good.

The imminent dangers faced by Hannah, Meg, and Carter are each one part of the puzzle. Lurking in their shadows is an even greater danger—one with the power to consume all of humanity. 


Check back tomorrow for more new release books


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Monday, January 30, 2023

New Books This Week:

Tuesday Edition


Waco Rising: David Koresh, The FBI, and the Birth of America's Modern Militias

by Kevin Cook

Henry Holt and Co.

Hardcover


In 1993, David Koresh and a band of heavily armed evangelical Christians took on the might of the US government. A two-month siege of their compound in Waco, Texas, ended in a firefight that killed seventy-six, including twenty-five children. America is still picking up the pieces, and we still haven’t heard the full story.


Kevin Cook, who revealed the truth behind a mythic, misunderstood murder in his 2014 Kitty Genovese, finally provides the full story of what happened at Waco. He gives readers a taste of Koresh’s deadly charisma and takes us behind the scenes at the Branch Davidians’ compound, where “the new Christ” turned his followers into servants and sired seventeen children by a dozen “wives.” In vivid accounts packed with human drama, Cook harnesses never-reported material to reconstruct the FBI’s fifty-one-day siege of the Waco compound in minute-to-minute detail. He sheds new light on the Clinton administration’s approval of a lethal governmental assault in a new, definitive account of the firefight that ended so many lives and triggered the rise of today’s militia movement. Waco drew the battle lines for American extremists—in Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh’s words, “Waco started this war.” With help from sources as diverse as Branch Davidian survivors and the FBI’s lead negotiator during the siege, Cook draws a straight line from Waco’s ashes to the January 6, 2021, riot at the US Capitol and insurrections yet to come.

Unmissable reading for anyone interested in the truth of what happened in Texas three decades ago, Waco Rising is chillingly relevant today. Here is the spark that ignited today’s antigovernment militias. 


Children of Memory

by Adrian Tchaikovsky

Orbit Books

Trade Paperback


Earth failed. In a desperate bid to escape, the spaceship Enkidu and its captain, Heorest Holt, carried its precious human cargo to a potential new paradise. Generations later, this fragile colony has managed to survive, eking out a hardy existence. Yet life is tough, and much technological knowledge has been lost.

Then strangers appear. They possess unparalleled knowledge and thrilling technology – and they've arrived from another world to help humanity’s colonies. But not all is as it seems, and the price of the strangers' help may be the colony itself.

Children of Memory by Arthur C. Clarke Award-winning author Adrian Tchaikovsky is a far-reaching space opera spanning generations, species and galaxies.




Check back tomorrow for more new release books


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Sunday, January 29, 2023

New This Week:

Monday Edition


Under the Whispering Door

by TJ Klune

Tor Books

Trade Paperback



When a reaper comes to collect Wallace Price from his own funeral, Wallace suspects he really might be dead.


Instead of leading him directly to the afterlife, the reaper takes him to a small village. On the outskirts, off the path through the woods, tucked between mountains, is a particular tea shop, run by a man named Hugo. Hugo is the tea shop's owner to locals and the ferryman to souls who need to cross over.

But Wallace isn’t ready to abandon the life he barely lived. With Hugo’s help he finally starts to learn about all the things he missed in life.

When the Manager, a curious and powerful being, arrives at the tea shop and gives Wallace one week to cross over, Wallace sets about living a lifetime in seven days.

By turns heartwarming and heartbreaking, this absorbing tale of grief and hope is told with TJ Klune's signature warmth, humor, and extraordinary empathy. 



Check back tomorrow for more new release books


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Friday, January 27, 2023

Author Interview:

Five Minutes with....Dan Epstein


Dan Epstein has been a twitter friend of mine for several years.  He's a tremendously nice fellow and, if you like baseball or rock and roll, his writing is fantastic!



Dan Epstein is the author Big Hair & Plastic Grass: Baseball and America in the Swinging '70s, Stars & Strikes: Baseball and America in the Bicentennial Summer of '76, and (with Ron Bloomberg) The Captain & Me: On and Off the Field with Thurman Munson. He writes about music and pop culture for numerous publications, including Rolling Stone, Revolver, and the Jewish Daily Forward. Jagged Time Lapse, his Substack, offers regular ruminations on his latest musical obsessions; you can read (and hopefully subscribe to) at http://danepstein.substack.com 



After the research is done, do you have a specific process that you follow when doing the actual writing?

I take a can opener to my head, then lean forward and spill whatever's in there over the page. Okay, that's not quite accurate, at least from a literal standpoint, but it's the best description I can come up with. I may have a basic outline/framework going in, or I may not; but once the research is done, I'll always have a pretty good idea of what I want to say and what points I want to hit. The most difficult thing for me is figuring out how to start a piece or a chapter; but once I've got the first paragraph or two down, I'm usually off and running. Then, once I've made a mess on the page, I'll go back and clean things up a bit, see if I left anything out, etc.


Do you prefer writing in the morning, during the day, or late at night?

I generally get my best writing done in the morning (especially if I've dreamed about what I want to write the night before, which actually does happen sometimes), and between 3 pm and 8 pm. Mid-day is a more difficult writing time for me (maybe because more of the day's distractions have surfaced by then), and I find that any writing done after 8 pm usually results in a case of seriously diminishing returns


Do you have a writing nook or do you write wherever/whenever?

  Back before the pandemic, and before my laptop bit the dust, I would often go to a coffee shop, library, etc. just to give myself a change of scenery while I did online research or transcribed an interview. But I've found that for actual writing, be it an article, blog post or book, I do my best work sitting at my desk in my home office. The comfort and convenience of familiar surroundings helps me concentrate (and generally get in the groove) in a way that I can't do while I'm out in public. Plus, taking a break to play with my cats, play guitar or play a record is a great way to get un-stuck whenever I'm at a writerly impasse. 


How many hours a day do you typically write?

Parts of my work days are usually taken up by doing research, conducting interviews, transcribing them, pitching ideas to editors, etc., so it probably averages out to about five hours a day of actual writing. 


If you could give your younger self any writing advice, what would it be?

Don't waste energy trying to write "edgy" stuff, because you'll only look back and be embarrassed by it later. And write from a place of love, not anger or hatred, because you'll write (and feel) a whole lot better if you do.


What does literary success mean to you?

Once upon a time, I thought literary success meant being able to write books full-time for a living, but the publishing landscape has changed so much in the last two decades that such a thing now seems impossible unless I somehow manage to pull a best-seller out of my ass. On the other hand, not a week goes by without at least a couple of emails from readers who tell me how much they've enjoyed my books; plus, it's pretty clear to me by now that Big Hair & Plastic Grass has really changed how 70s baseball is viewed, discussed and appreciated, which is what I hoped it would do when I first began writing it. That definitely seems like literary success to me.


Who are your writing heroes?

In baseball, Roger Angell. My mom gave me Five Seasons for my 11th birthday, and it really opened up my eyes to the human side of the game; reading it, I realized that there was much more to the players than the statistics on the back of their baseball cards, or the generic bromides that they offered reporters. And he wrote from a fan's perspective — not "fan" in the sense of the obnoxious lout whose own identity is completely wrapped up in the success or failure of his favorite team, but "fan" in the sense of someone who could step back and really appreciate the eccentricities and whimsicalities of the game, as well as its beauty, drama and history. 


I'd also have to go with Joseph Mitchell and A.J. Liebling, both of whom wrote so wonderfully and evocatively about life in New York City and elsewhere in the mid-20th century. Mike Royko, too, though as a kid I think I absorbed too much from his crankier columns and not enough from his incredibly perceptive and well-reported stuff like his book BOSS. And also Tom Wolfe; everything he wrote up through From Bauhaus to Our House really made me want to be a writer, though I found all his work from the mid-'80s onward to be fairly impenetrable.


In the music journalism world, Lester Bangs was far and away the biggest hero for me, though some of his pieces have aged pretty horribly, and of course a lot of writers (this one included) produced a lot of unreadable stuff while trying to cop his style and attitude. But then that's kind of like blaming Sgt. Pepper's for the emergence of progressive rock, isn't it?


I would like to thank Dan Epstein for taking the time to answer a few questions about his writing process.  I believe much can be learned from successful writers and their writing habits.


Dan Epstein's substack link



I am always looking for new authors to tell us about their writing process.  Let me know who you'd like to see here.









Thursday, January 26, 2023

New Books This Week:

Friday Edition


Stolen Focus: Why You Can't Pay Attention — and How to Think Deeply Again

by Johann Hair

Crown Publishing

Trade Paperback


In the United States, teenagers can focus on one task for only sixty-five seconds at a time, and office workers average only three minutes. Like so many of us, Johann Hari was finding that constantly switching from device to device and tab to tab was a diminishing and depressing way to live. He tried all sorts of self-help solutions—even abandoning his phone for three months—but nothing seemed to work. So Hari went on an epic journey across the world to interview the leading experts on human attention—and he discovered that everything we think we know about this crisis is wrong.
 
We think our inability to focus is a personal failure to exert enough willpower over our devices. The truth is even more disturbing: our focus has been stolen by powerful external forces that have left us uniquely vulnerable to corporations determined to raid our attention for profit. Hari found that there are twelve deep causes of this crisis, from the decline of mind-wandering to rising pollution, all of which have robbed some of our attention. In Stolen Focus, he introduces readers to Silicon Valley dissidents who learned to hack human attention, and veterinarians who diagnose dogs with ADHD. He explores a favela in Rio de Janeiro where everyone lost their attention in a particularly surreal way, and an office in New Zealand that discovered a remarkable technique to restore workers’ productivity.
 
Crucially, Hari learned how we can reclaim our focus—as individuals, and as a society—if we are determined to fight for it. Stolen Focus will transform the debate about attention and finally show us how to get it back.



Make a Wish

by Helena Hunting

St. Martin's Griffin

Trade Paperback


Ever have a defining life moment you wish you could do over? Harley Spark has one. The time she almost kissed the widowed father of the toddler she nannied for. It was so bad they moved across the state and she never saw them again. 

Fast forward seven years and she’s totally over it. At least she thinks she is. Until Gavin Rhodes and his adorable now nine-year-old daughter, Peyton, reappear at a princess-themed birthday party hosted by Spark House, Harley’s family’s event hotel. Despite trying to avoid the awkwardness of the situation, she can’t help but notice how unbearably sexy he looks in a tutu. Add to that a spontaneous hives breakout, and it’s clear she’s not even remotely over the mortification of her egregious error all those years ago. 

Except Gavin seems oblivious to her inner turmoil. So much so that he suggests they get together for lunch. For Peyton’s sake, of course. It’s the perfect opportunity to heal old wounds. Or it could just reopen them. This is one of those times Harley wishes she could see the future…



Check back tomorrow for an exclusive author interview !


Follow me on post.news    @bookdude



Wednesday, January 25, 2023

New Books This Week:

Thursday Edition

The Pattern Seekers: How Autism Drives Human Invention

by Simon Baron-Cohen

Basic Books

Hardcover


Why can humans alone invent? In The Pattern Seekers, Cambridge University psychologist Simon Baron-Cohen makes a case that autism is as crucial to our creative and cultural history as the mastery of fire. Indeed, Baron-Cohen argues that autistic people have played a key role in human progress for seventy thousand years, from the first tools to the digital revolution.

How? Because the same genes that cause autism enable the pattern seeking that is essential to our species’s inventiveness. However, these abilities exact a great cost on autistic people, including social and often medical challenges, so Baron-Cohen calls on us to support and celebrate autistic people in both their disabilities and their triumphs. Ultimately, The Pattern Seekers isn’t just a new theory of human civilization, but a call to consider anew how society treats those who think differently.


The Bill of Obligations: The Ten Habits of Good Citizens
by Richard Haass
Penguin Press
Hardcover


The United States faces dangerous threats from Russia, China, North Korea, Iran, terrorists, climate change, and future pandemics. The greatest peril to the country, however, comes not from abroad but from within, from none other than ourselves. The question facing us is whether we are prepared to do what is necessary to save our democracy.


The Bill of Obligations is a bold call for change. In these pages, New York Timesbestselling author Richard Haass argues that the very idea of citizenship must be revised and expanded. The Bill of Rights is at the center of our Constitution, yet our most intractable conflicts often emerge from contrasting views as to what our rights ought to be. As former Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer pointed out, “Many of our cases, the most difficult ones, are not about right versus wrong. They are about right versus right.” The lesson is clear: rights alone cannot provide the basis for a functioning, much less flourishing, democracy.

But there is a cure: to place obligations on the same footing as rights. The ten obligations that Haass introduces here are essential for healing our divisions and safeguarding the country’s future. These obligations reenvision what it means to be an American citizen. They are not a burden but rather commitments that we make to fellow citizens and to the government to uphold democracy and counter the growing apathy, anger, selfishness, division, disinformation, and violence that threaten us all. Through an expert blend of civics, history, and political analysis, this book illuminates how Americans can rediscover and recover the attitudes and behaviors that have contributed so much to this country’s success over the centuries.

As Richard Haass argues, “We get the government and the country we deserve. Getting the one we need, however, is up to us.” The Bill of Obligations gives citizens across the political spectrum a plan of action to achieve it.


Check Back Tomorrow for More New Release Books

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Tuesday, January 24, 2023

New Books This Week:

Wednesday Edition


The End of Drum-Time

by Hanna Pylvainen

Henry Holt and Co.

Hardcover


In 1851, at a remote village in the Scandinavian tundra, a Lutheran minister known as Mad Lasse tries in vain to convert the native Sámi reindeer herders to his faith. But when one of the most respected herders has a dramatic awakening and dedicates his life to the church, his impetuous son, Ivvár, is left to guard their diminishing herd alone. By chance, he meets Mad Lasse’s daughter Willa, and their blossoming infatuation grows into something that ultimately crosses borders—of cultures, of beliefs, and of political divides—as Willa follows the herders on their arduous annual migration north to the sea.


Gorgeously written and sweeping in scope, Hanna Pylväinen's The End of Drum-Time immerses readers in a world lit by the northern lights, steeped in age-old rituals, and guided by passions that transcend place and time. 


Why Don't You Love Me? (Graphic Novel)

by Paul B. Rainey

Drawn and Quarterly

Hardcover


Claire and Mark are in the doldrums of an unhappy marriage. She doesn’t get out of her bathrobe and chain-smokes while slumped on the couch. Mark has lost track of the days and can’t get the kids to school on time. They’ve lost interest in family and order-in pizza and chinese food every night. Mark sleeps on the couch and has trouble remembering his son’s name. He feels like a fraud at work but somehow succeeds. Claire stalks an ex-boyfriend. How could he have left her to this life?

Claire and Mark are both plagued by the idea that this is all a dream. Didn’t they have different lives? When reports of an imminent nuclear war come on the radio, the truth begins to dawn on them: this is not the life they chose.

Why Don’t You Love Me? is a pitch-black comedy about marriage, alcoholism, depression, and mourning lost opportunities. Paul B. Rainey has created a hilariously terrifying alternate reality where confusion and pain might lead people to make bad choices but also eventually freedom…maybe.



Stayed on Freedom: The Long History of Black Power through One Family's Journey

by Dan Berger

Basic Books

Hardcover



The Black Power movement, often associated with its iconic spokesmen, derived much of its energy from the work of people whose stories have never been told. Stayed On Freedom brings into focus two unheralded Black Power activists who dedicated their lives to the fight for freedom.  

Zoharah Simmons and Michael Simmons fell in love while organizing tenants and workers in the South. Their commitment to each other and to social change took them on a decades-long journey that traversed first the country and then the world. In centering their lives, historian Dan Berger shows how Black Power united the local and the global across organizations and generations.  

Based on hundreds of hours of interviews, Stayed On Freedom is a moving and intimate portrait of two people trying to make a life while working to make a better world.  




Check back tomorrow for more new release books


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Monday, January 23, 2023

New Books This Week:

Tuesday Edition


The Devil's Ransom: A Pike Logan Novel 

by Brad Taylor

William Morrow Books

Hardcover


Conducting a routine cover development trip to Tajikistan, Pike and Jennifer learn that Afghanistan has fallen, and there’s a man on the run. One that has done more for the United States in Afghanistan than anyone else. Pulled in to extract him, Pike collides headlong into a broader mystery: His covert company, along with every other entity in the Taskforce, has been hit with a ransomware attack, and there’s some connection between the Taliban and the hack. Given the order to track down the perpetrators, he has no idea that the problem set is much, much larger and more dangerous than a simple attack on his organization. That hack was just a test-run, and the real one is coming soon, engendered by a former NSA specialist in the U.S. government. 

A man who wants to return to the bipolar world of the Cold War, the turncoat has cloaked his attack behind hackers from Serbia and Russia, and if successful, his target will alter the balance of power on the global stage. So far, the specialist has remained one step ahead of the Taskforce, but he has just made one massive mistake: hitting Pike Logan. 



The Guest Lecture

by Martin Riker

Black Cat Books

Trade Paperback


In a hotel room in the middle of the night, Abby, a young feminist economist, lies awake next to her sleeping husband and daughter. Anxious that she is grossly underprepared for a talk she is presenting tomorrow on optimism and John Maynard Keynes, she has resolved to practice by using an ancient rhetorical method of assigning parts of her speech to different rooms in her house and has brought along a comforting albeit imaginary companion to keep her on track—Keynes himself.

Yet as she wanders with increasing alarm through the rooms of her own consciousness, Abby finds herself straying from her prepared remarks on economic history, utopia, and Keynes’s pragmatic optimism. A lapsed optimist herself, she has been struggling under the burden of supporting a family in an increasingly hostile America after being denied tenure at the university where she teaches. Confronting her own future at a time of global darkness, Abby undertakes a quest through her memories to ideas hidden in the corners of her mind—a piecemeal intellectual history from Cicero to Lewis Carroll to Queen Latifah—as she asks what a better world would look like if we told our stories with more honest and more hopeful imaginations.

With warm intellect, playful curiosity, and an infectious voice, Martin Riker acutely animates the novel of ideas with a beating heart and turns one woman’s midnight crisis into the performance of a lifetime.


Check back tomorrow for more new release books

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Sunday, January 22, 2023

New Books This Week:

Monday Edition

Unraveling: What I Learned About Life While Shearing Sheep, Dyeing Wool, and Making the World Ugliest Sweater
by Peggy Orenstein
Harper
Hardcover


The COVID pandemic propelled many people to change their lives in ways large and small. Some adopted puppies. Others stress-baked. Peggy Orenstein, a lifelong knitter, went just a little further. To keep herself engaged and cope with a series of seismic shifts in family life, she set out to make a garment from the ground up: learning to shear sheep, spin and dye yarn, then knitting herself a sweater.

Orenstein hoped the project would help her process not just wool but her grief over the recent death of her mother and the decline of her dad, the impending departure of her college-bound daughter, and other thorny issues of aging as a woman in a culture that by turns ignores and disdains them. What she didn’t expect was a journey into some of the major issues of our time: climate anxiety, racial justice, women’s rights, the impact of technology, sustainability, and, ultimately, the meaning of home.

With her wry voice, sharp intelligence, and exuberant honesty, Orenstein shares her year-long journey as daughter, wife, mother, writer, and maker—and teaches us all something about creativity and connection. 



Daughters of Victory

by Gabriella Saab

William Morrow

Trade Paperback



Russia 1917: Beautiful, educated Svetlana Petrova defied her stifling aristocratic family to join a revolution promising freedom. Now, released after years of imprisonment, she discovers her socialist party vying for power against the dictatorial Bolsheviks and her beloved uncle, a champion of her cause, was murdered by a mysterious assassin named Orlova. Her signature? Blinding her victims before she kills them. Svetlana resolves to avenge his death by destroying this vicious opponent, even as she longs to reunite with the daughter she has not seen in years.

USSR 1941: Now living in obscurity in a remote village, Svetlana opens her home to Mila Rozovskaya, the eighteen-year-old granddaughter from Leningrad she has never met. She hopes to protect Mila from the oncoming Nazi invasion, but when the enemy occupies the village, Svetlana sees the young woman fall under the spell of the resistance—echoing her once-passionate idealism. As Mila takes up her fight, dangerous secrets and old enemies soon threaten all Svetlana holds dear. To protect her family, she must confront her long-buried past—yet if the truth emerges victorious, it holds the power to save or shatter them. A risk Svetlana has no choice but to take. 



Check back tomorrow for more new release books


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Friday, January 20, 2023

Author Interview:

 Five Minutes with....Daniel Paisner


Daniel Paisner has been a twitter friend of mine for several years.  He's a tremendously nice fellow and a great follow on social media.  (bio and author photo taken from author's website)



Daniel Paisner is a journalist, author and podcaster, with more than 70 books to his credit, including 17 New York Times best-sellers. He is the “voice” of Serena Williams, Steve Aoki, John Kasich, Whoopi Goldberg, Denzel Washington, Ray Lewis, Ron Darling, Gilbert Gottfried, Anthony Quinn and dozens of other name-above-the-title celebrities. He is the winner of two NAACP Image Awards for his work with Shark Tank panelist and serial entrepreneur Daymond John, and his novel “A Single Happened Thing” was named an Indies Finalist as best book of the year by the editors of Foreword Reviews. He has been profiled in the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, ESPN: The Magazine and on National Public Radio. New York magazine once called him “the world’s most prolific ghost,” which may or may not have been a compliment.

Over the course of his ghostwriting career, Paisner has taken on the real-life personas of dozens of compelling individuals, including a World Series of Poker champion; the son of a Yanomami tribeswoman; a plus-size supermodel; an FBI hostage negotiator; a three-term Democratic Mayor of New York City; a three-term Republican Governor of New York State; a daytime television talk show host; another daytime television talk show host; still another daytime television host; a #1 ranked women's tennis player; a bilateral amputee mountaineer; an Emmy winner; a Grammy winner; an Oscar winner; a Tony winner; an "Apprentice" winner; two First Daughters; two network television weathermen; an unlikely prisoner of Libya’s civil war; a New York City bail bondsman; an undersea explorer; a world champion surfer; a foul-mouthed, misogynist comedian; an urban fashion mogul; a Cosby kid; an Olympic swimmer; an autistic high school student; an NFL Hall of Famer; and on and on.

Paisner hosts the podcast As Told To, which features long-ish, freewheeling-ish interviews with fellow authors about their experiences ghostwriting and collaborating with notable figures. His “darkly funny and painfully true” new novel, “Balloon Dog,” was published by Koehler Books in June 2022 to not-quite-widespread critical acclaim.

- - - - -

After the research is done, do you have a specific process that you follow when doing the actual writing?

  With my ghostwriting projects, I try to work in chronological order.  When I’m interviewing my subjects, I usually start my in-depth questioning with their origin stories: family history, childhood memories, first discoveries of whatever it was that they would become known for or good at.  I find it difficult to write from the “middle out.”  I like to know as much as possible about my subjects at each stage in their lives, before heading around the bend into what comes next. 

When do you write?

  I’ve found that I do my best work in the morning, before I’m greeted by the workaday distractions that invariably find me as the rest of the world starts to wake.  Also, when I’m working on a novel, I try to avoid social media and text messages until I’ve completed my work for the day.  I find that once I slip into a zone where the words start to flow, it’s very difficult to tap back into that state if I’m called away by some pressing (or, not-so-pressing) outside concern.


Do you have a writing nook or do you write wherever/whenever?

  I do have my favorite spots, but they tend to shift depending on what I’m working on, and what else is going on in my house.  Some weeks, I get into a groove where I write at the kitchen table, close to the coffee maker.  Others, I’ll step outside and do my work on the deck behind my house.  Often, I’ll write in my attic office.  When I look at my bookshelf, I can recall where I was when I worked on each book.  But I like to mix it up. 


How many hours a day do you typically write?

  Some days, I’ll write for ten hours.  Some days, not at all.  I’m a fairly expert procrastinator, which means I tend to work best when I’m on a tight deadline.  I guess I’ve learned this about myself over the years, so if there’s ever a good reason not to work on a particular day, I’ll grab at it.  Those idle days add up, however, and the deadlines on some of these celebrity-driven memoirs I help to write are pretty firm, so I’ll usually wind up cranking to get a first draft done on time. 


If you could give your younger self any writing advice, what would it be?

  Don’t force it.  A lot of writers make it a special point of sitting down of working for a fixed amount of time, or a target word count they mean to hit before they close up shop each day.  I’ve found over the years that those are false markers for me.  When it flows, it flows.  When it doesn’t, it doesn’t.  When I was starting out, I didn’t give myself permission to step away from my desk if the work just wasn’t happening for me on a given day, for whatever reason.  Lately, I’ve learned to cut myself some slack.  There’s always tomorrow. 


What does literary success mean to you?

  Success to me means being able to extract a living from this thing.  Some of my books sell more copies than I could have ever imagined, and some sell so few I wonder if it was even worth the trouble to put them out into the world.  But it’s not about any one book, for me.  It’s about getting to do this thing I love doing, on my own terms, in my own way.  As a novelist, I’ve come to accept that I’ll likely never write a blockbuster book that tops the best-seller list, but if my latest novel sells enough copies and garners enough positive reviews to convince a publisher to take on my next novel… well, that’s a win.  And on the ghostwriting front, if the person I’m working with is happy with the book I’m able to present to him/her, that’s a win.  Typically, those books succeed or fail based on the size of my subject’s celebrity, or the reach of their social media platforms, so if our book doesn’t land in a big-time way it usually has to do with the place they occupy in the pop culture firmament at the time it was released.  But if they’re please and proud of the book we wrote together, and if it’s a book I’d be pleased and proud to present as a kind of calling card or audition piece to help me land my next gig, I count it as a successful project. 


Who are your writing heroes?

  Norman Mailer.  His work was endlessly interesting, and constantly evolving, and maddeningly unpredictable.  It’s impossible to recognize the man who wrote “The Naked and the Dead” in the pages of, say, “Tough Guys Don’t Dance.”  And his long-form reporting and non-fiction work was thrilling.  His Pulitzer Prize-winning “The Executioner’s Song” in many ways was a classic example of the kind of work I do to make my principle living – an unorthodox, unexpected collaboration, filtered through the pen and sensibility of one of our most unique voices in American literature, an abundantly talented writer who somehow managed to pare down his prose and stay out of the way of a story that was compelling enough on its own. 


I would like to thank Daniel Paisner for taking the time to answer a few questions about his writing process.  I believe much can be learned from successful writers and their writing habits.


Daniel Paisner can be found on post.news at. @danielpaisner


Daniel Paisner's website