[Saturday's normally a guest day here at Beyond Romance. Today I've got something a bit different for you-- an interview with YA (and erotic) author Nikko Lee, conducted by my friend and colleague Jean Roberta. Enjoy! ~ Lisabet]
Hi,
Jean. Thanks so much for the interview.
1) Can you tell me a little about your new novel?
1) Can you tell me a little about your new novel?
WolfCreek is about a gay werewolf who finds strength in what makes
him different. Josh finally gets the chance to escape his oppressive
pack; but only if he finds it's next leader. As a rare omega
werewolf, he alone can find an alpha strong enough to control New
England's largest pack.
He teams up with an erratic Amazon in training and a disarming park ranger with a secret. They are no closer to finding a true alpha when a local is mauled to death. In retribution, the Amazons decide to kill Josh's entire pack.
2) Was it hard to switch from writing a sexually-explicit vampire novel to one for new adults?
He teams up with an erratic Amazon in training and a disarming park ranger with a secret. They are no closer to finding a true alpha when a local is mauled to death. In retribution, the Amazons decide to kill Josh's entire pack.
2) Was it hard to switch from writing a sexually-explicit vampire novel to one for new adults?
Most
of my published works have been sexually-explicit. I've found a comfy
home in writing erotica. In some ways, it was a relief to not have to
come up with new and exciting sexy scenes to fill a novel. I think it
will be a bigger challenge in the sequel to Wolf Creek when Josh gets
a boyfriend who has no problem letting Josh know just how
irresistible a werewolf can be. It is a challenge to write sexually
charged scenes with a delayed pay-off, but it makes that moment with
bodies collide all that much more rewarding.
It
was actually a challenge writing about werewolves instead of vampires
because I'd been hooked on vampires for so long. I had to figure out
a number of things like the mechanics of transformation and the rules
of the pack. It was a lot of fun stepping into a whole new mythos.
3)
How is your novel (and possibly other recent novels for new adults)
different from the classics that used to be in every school library?
I'm
still finding my way around the new adult genre. With the rise in
popularity of young adult fiction, many adults are finding stories
about young people making their way in the world and discovering
themselves strike a chord. I don't think we ever stop looking for who
we are and where we belong. That stage of separating from your
parents and being on your own is such a big step but only the first
in a lifelong journey. Admittedly, I haven't been in a high school
library in a while so I'm not sure what's on the shelves now.
Twenty-five years ago when I was in high school, we were reading
Grapes of Wrath and Old Man and the Sea. Don't get me
wrong, there's a lot of literary gold in these classics. But at the
time, their worth was completely lost on me. Those stories weren't
what I was experiencing.
Now
teens and young adults have a wide array of fiction to get lost in
and relate to. The main characters are more relate-able because they
are more diverse and go through more diverse and modern experiences.
Diversity is something we need more of in all genres of fiction.
4) Has motherhood influenced your writing? If so, in what ways?
Pregnancy
had a huge influence on my writing. I published several short stories
last year, all with a maternity bent. It's a terrifying time,
especially being my first pregnancy. I have an educational background
in genetics and spend my work days looking at articles about
developmental defects in mice. So I channelled all that worry and
hope into my writing.
Ten
months into motherhood, I've learned why baby monitors are so popular
in horror movies. There is nothing scarier than the thought of
hearing something unexpected coming from the monitor in the room
where your sweet, defenceless baby is sleeping. Never mind walking up
to their closed door or their near motionless and sleeping bodies.
Now
as a mother, I read a lot of books with one sentence or even phrase
per board page. I can't wait for my daughter to reach an age when she
will want to participate in reading - other than by eating the pages.
I'm
also very curious about how a fictional mother with an infant would
handle any number of fictional challenges from a zombie apocalypse to
finding a second chance at love.
5) What inspired your new novel?
Wolf
Creek was inspired by a number of short stories and books I was
reading at the time and a change in the overall acceptance of gay
characters in fiction. The late Jay Lake's Torquing Vacuum
made me realize that a gay main character could have adventures that
didn't revolve around his or her sexuality. JR Ward's Lover at
Last finally consummated a homosexual relationship between two
characters that had been building for several novels earlier in the
series. Patricia Brigg's Cry Wolf take on the importance of an
omega wolf caught my imagination.
Before
writing Wolf Creek, I had been writing with an erotic novella
about two martial artists coming to terms with their sexuality and
falling in love. While writing about the evolution of their sexual
relationship and dealing with the consequences of their secret
romance was enjoyable, I worried that the story was too much about
one character coming out and that there wasn't enough external
conflict.
So I kidnapped Josh from that story, made him a werewolf and introduced him to a sidekick character I loved from another trunked novel who made trouble where ever she went.
6) Is there anything else you would like to say?
So I kidnapped Josh from that story, made him a werewolf and introduced him to a sidekick character I loved from another trunked novel who made trouble where ever she went.
6) Is there anything else you would like to say?
I'd
just like to invite people to check out Wolf Creek. I hope
they will fall in love with these characters as much as I did.
Although Wolf Creek has some romantic elements, it is more
about Josh finding himself and his place in the world. If there is
enough interest, I will get to write the sequel in which Josh finds
love in a most unexpected foe turned friend who made an appearance in
Wolf Creek.
2 comments:
Welcome to Beyond Romance, Nikko and Jean.
I really enjoyed the interview, and wish you great success with Wolf Creek.
Thanks. I love talking about writing and Wolf Creek.
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