Showing posts with label D.A. Adams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label D.A. Adams. Show all posts

Thursday, March 14, 2013

D.A. Adams Guest Post




The older I get the more I see the importance of confidence, especially for writers.  I started down this road 23 or 24 years ago as an awkward, physically wounded young man full of lofty ideas and grand ambitions.  Please, allow me to give a little background to explain.  On March 7, 1989, I was 16 and a pretty good athlete with the goal of becoming an officer in the Marine Corps. At roughly 3:30 that afternoon, during track practice, I was struck in the head by an 8 lb. shotput.  For those who may not know, a shotput is basically a cannonball.  I suffered a concussion, brain contusion, brain swelling, and physical shock.  By that evening, I was literally fighting for my life, and all of my plans, dreams, and goals were suddenly gone.  Obviously, I survived and recovered, but at 16, I had to reinvent myself completely.

As part of my therapy, I started writing poetry to deal with the emotions of grief, loss, anger, and fear.  While helpful as a therapeutic exercise, the poetry I created was for the most part dreadful. Fortunately for me, however, it led to discovering fiction.  By 20, I knew for certain that I wanted to write stories for a living and dedicated myself to learning the craft.  I began writing fantasy but was soon taught by academia that genre work, all genre work, was for mindless hacks.  If I wanted to be a real writer, a “serious” novelist, I needed to write mainstream, literary fiction.  Being young, naïve, and impressionable, I listened and forced myself to abandon my love of fantasy literature in order to fit into the writing program.

At first, I flourished as story after story poured out, and my confidence soared as my skills developed.  In 1995 at 22 years old and just six years removed from the accident, I earned my first publication credit in Aura, a small literary journal from UAB.  Within the next year, I landed two more pieces in small magazines.  In addition to the publications, I was also contacted by a well-established agent from New York who had seen my first story and thought I had tremendous potential.  Those were his words on the phone, tremendous potential.  My confidence has never been higher than after we hung up.  I was going places.

Unfortunately, he didn’t like my novel, rejecting it outright, and the wind was sucked from my sails briefly.  Though painful, as I look back on it today, he was right.  The novel was immature and boring, so for the next year, I studied and practiced writing harder than any other point of my life.  I wanted to improve.  I needed to elevate my skills to a professional level, so I read and wrote and edited every single day.  My confidence grew once again as I saw myself improving, and I created several stories in that period that I’m still relatively proud of.  Then, I made the decision to return to graduate school.

From the outset, graduate school was a mistake.  For the entire first year, my confidence was dashed by the pettiness, jealousy, and negativity of both peers and professors.  Workshops ran as popularity contests and ego demonstrations.  The writing was secondary.  Personality prevailed, and anyone who stepped out of line with the accepted paradigms of the group was immediately squashed by an avalanche of bullshit.  My confidence was shattered, and I left graduate school in 1999 feeling hopelessly inept and lacking any measure of creative drive.  I gave up on writing as a career and felt hollow without that part of myself.

For at least three years, probably more like four, I didn’t write at all, not in a creative sense.  From 1998 to 2002, my confidence was gone because of the conflicting advice and negativity of writing workshops.  Then, sometime in 2002, as I watched The Two Towers, an epiphany struck me from out of the blue.  I realized that I wanted to write fantasy and always had.  Despite repressing it during my academic years, I still loved the genre, and since I’d abandoned any notions of being a “serious” novelist, I could entertain the concept of creating fantasy works without fear of academia rebuking me.  But my confidence was still broken, so I didn’t start writing straight away.  Instead, I pondered the idea of what I would create if I ever chose to write again.

For nearly a year, I mulled the concept, sketching notes and developing the world without a tangible goal of writing anything.  At the time, I didn’t believe I had the skills to write one book, never mind the five it would take to tell this tale.  Quite simply, I lacked the confidence to begin actually writing.  Then, something magical happened.  In July of 2003, I saw my first son’s heartbeat on ultrasound, the grainy speck fluttering at 150 bpm, and that long dormant part of me came back to life in a rush.  Watching his heartbeat, I knew the only way I could be a good father was first and foremost to be true to myself, and at my core, I’m a writer.  Within a couple of days, I sat down at the computer and started the first draft of book one.

When I look at the first couple of chapters of that book, I see my lack of confidence.  The narrative is unsure and halting as I felt my way back into writing, and by far, the greatest criticism I’ve faced with the series is the opening chapter being too slow, too full of exposition, and to a degree, I admit I probably should refine it.  However, I also see the subtleties and foreshadowing that lay the groundwork for the entire series, and I’m afraid of losing that foundation if I ever do rewrite it.  More than that, though, I’m proud of what those early chapters represent for me – my rebirth as a writer, my rebirth as a man.  Though not perfectly wrought, they are pure in their approach and mean more to me personally than just about anything else I’ve written in my life.

Today, my confidence stays at a fairly healthy level.  For the most part, I strike a good balance between believing in myself and remaining humble.  Occasionally, at conventions or online, I see other writers who remind me of graduate school, people more concerned with telling others how great they are than anything.  They know the one right way to do things and everyone else falls short.  Regardless of their levels of success, some considerably better than mine, these people annoy me because they are a reminder of those who crushed my confidence, and I have to stifle the urge to take them to task.  Never argue with a fool, as the saying goes.  People might not know the difference.

My point of this whole piece is for others who have been knocked down and worry that your voice is insignificant.  Don’t let anyone rob you of your creative drive.  If you fail, so be it.  At least you had the courage and dedication to create something.  If your work falls short, go back, learn more, and try again.  If some ego-driven jerk insults your efforts, don’t let that drown you in doubt.  Brush aside the criticism and listen to your creative voice.  Put forth your best effort and believe that your audience is out there waiting for you because they are.  There is no one right way to create.  There is no secret formula.  Success is arbitrary and fleeting.  In the end, all that matters is what you create, whether or not you can live with your efforts, and the authenticity of your voice.  Above all, believe that you and your voice matter.



D.A. Adams Bio
D. A. Adams is a novelist, a farmer, a professor of English, and in my estimation, a true gentleman. His breakout fantasy series, The Brotherhood of Dwarves, transcends genre and illuminates the human soul in all its flashes of glory and innumerable failings.
He is active on the Con circuit and has contributed writing to literary as well as fine art publications, and maintains his active blog, "The Ramblings of D. A. Adams". He lives and works in East Tennessee, and is the proud father of two boys, Collin and Finn.
His ability as a storyteller breathes life into every character, and his craftsmanship as a writer makes these stories about relationships; human or otherwise.

Between Dark and Light Synopsis
The stakes are higher than ever in the fourth installment of the popular dwarven saga!
The Great Empire has surrounded the Kiredurks and are preparing to conquer the kingdom, but unknown to them, Kwarck, the mysterious hermit of the plains, has his own plan in action. To the east, he has summoned an elven army and charged Crushaw with leading them into battle. To the south, Roskin will gather an army from the fractured Ghaldeon lands. But to the west, an ancient and powerful evil stirs.
The Great War is about to errupt, if Roskin can overcome the Dark One...
  
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Monday, January 23, 2012

D.A. Adams Guest Post

Urban Fantasy Reviews has been so lucky lately in getting some quality guest posts. I particularly enjoy this one because Adams does a great job articulating how his journey into writing began. Enjoy!


The Journey of a Fantasy Author
by D.A. Adams

The journey for The Brotherhood of Dwarves series has been long and arduous.  It began in my early teens, when my cousin, Sam, introduced me to Dungeons and Dragons.  The central protagonist of the series, the half-elf half-dwarf Roskin, began as a character I played.  Fairly soon, my D&D group decided that I should be the regular Dungeon Master because they enjoyed the elaborate, detailed quests I would invent, so Roskin morphed into a non-player character thrown into certain adventures, sometimes to assist and sometimes to hinder.  Back then, he was a much different persona than the character in the series, mostly because of my growth and maturity as a person, but his core elements were forged 20 years before the series began.

During my senior of high school, I discovered through the school newspaper that I enjoyed writing, so I decided to pursue it as a career and chose to write fantasy because it had been such a positive influence on my life.  The character Crushaw was born during my early and quite clumsy attempts to write.  I had grand dreams of developing an epic masterpiece around this escaped slave who becomes a nearly invincible warrior.  At the time, I didn’t recognize the Robert E. Howard influence, but now I see that all of the Conan books I had devoured were the genesis for Crushaw.  However, again, the character in the series is a much different one than what I envisioned as a late teen.

Then, I went to college to learn the craft of fiction, and for three years at the University of Memphis, my instructors drilled into my head that genre work was for mindless hacks.  If I wanted to have a “real” writing career, I had to write mainstream literary stories.  Being young and naïve, I listened to them and set aside my “childish” dreams of creating epic fantasy.  For the next several years, I diligently focused on developing my storytelling skills and wrote exclusively in a literary style, and while I did produce a handful of short stories that were well-crafted, I struggled to find my voice.  When I went to graduate school, that same notion was reinforced tenfold, and my creative spirit was completely dampened by the experience.  By my late 20’s, I had grown so frustrated, I gave up on writing as a career because I simply couldn’t find my voice.

Then, while watching The Two Towers, an epiphany hit me like a thunderbolt from a blue sky.  The professors who had, with their best intentions, steered me away from all genre work, had also stifled my true creative desire, which was to write fantasy fiction.  Still, at that point, my confidence was so fragile, I didn’t think I had the talent to write anything.  Instead of writing, I thought about what kind of book I would write if I ever chose to give it a try.  I mulled the idea and compiled pages and pages of notes.  At first, I thought about dusting off Crushaw and telling his story as I had originally planned, but because I had changed so much as a person, I found that character too simplistic and stereotypical.  He would have to change if I were to write about him.  Then, I remembered Roskin and thought about writing some of the D&D adventures he had endured from my DM days, but again, that character was too flat.

The moment of inspiration for combining those two characters into one story was the closest I’ve come to a true religious experience.  I saw them both clearly, Crushaw aged and disgraced, Roskin young and arrogant, and knew that I had found something that interested me.  For nearly a year, I built the framework for the series, and from the beginning, I saw it as five books.  Still, I had no intentions of actually writing anything.  At that point, it was merely a hobby, something to occupy my imagination while I taught composition and business communications at a private college.  The true turning point for me, my rebirth as a writer, came when I saw my first son’s heartbeat on an ultrasound.  On that grainy screen, there was this little speck of life, fluttering away at 150 bpm.  Watching that, my creative energy, which had felt extinguished for so long, burgeoned back to life.  I knew in my heart I was a writer and this story I had been constructing as a hobby had to be told, so either that night or the next, I sat down at my computer and began writing the opening chapter for The Brotherhood of Dwarves.

To me, the biggest strengths of the series are the characters’ growth through each book, the intense action scenes, and the smoothness of the narrative voice.  Also, because I wanted the series to be young adult appropriate, there is no profanity or sexual content in any of the books.  As a father, that was very important to me, creating a story that my sons could read without me feeling ashamed of the language or gratuitous sexploitation to draw in readers.  Instead, I’ve tried to develop a story that keeps reader wanting to know what happens next through plot twists and dramatic tension.  So far, the vast majority of feedback from my readers has been positive, and most have expressed that each book is better than the one before.  Now that Seventh Star Press has reissued the first two books, I hope the series reaches a broader audience and more people are able to share in the adventures of these compelling, complex characters.


For more information about D.A. Adams and his series, The Brotherhood of Dwarves head to these links!