All
my life I've been addicted to words. My parents taught me to read
beginning around age four. I haven't stopped since. Even before then,
they read to me and to my brother, stories and poems. My father made
up rhyming songs for us, about dancing goldfish and clarinet-playing
cats. Very early I became attuned to the rhythms of poetry and prose,
the way words breathe, the way they sing.
I
was the kid who lay on my bed reading, even on the sunny days,
ignoring my mom's injunction to “go outside and play”. I was
playing, tripping through the worlds of wonder between the covers of
my books. I still remember the places I visited. Eleanor Cameron's
mushroom planet. Evelyn Sibley Lampman's and Honore Valintcourt's
city under the back steps. Nancy Drew's sleepy town full of secret
doors and underground passages. I toured ancient Egypt and
revolutionary America, met Betsy Ross and Helen Keller, Juliette
Gordon Low and Sacajawea. I recall spending days in the Chateau D'If
with poor, suffering Edmund Dantes. I wandered the red planet with
Ray Bradbury and Robert Heinlein and journeyed through Middle Earth
with Frodo and his band.
As
I read, I also wrote – my first poems around age seven, my first
stories no doubt even younger (although unlike my poems, none
survive). I wrote plays about the Beatles and the 1964 U.S.
presidential election. I wrote part of a novel about woman who falls
in love with a ghost in a haunted mansion by the sea. Delighted by
the music of the language I was studying, I wrote verse in French.
All
through school I was the bookworm, the egghead, the shy girl with the
coke-bottle eyeglasses who got all As but few dates. This really
didn't change much until I got to graduate school and “blossomed”.
In the interim, I wrote dozens of angst-ridden poems about my
unrequited loves.
It's
surprising to me now, but I never really planned on being an author.
I was going to be a famous scientist, like Marie Curie. Aside from
some work published in my high school newspaper, my writing was
mostly private. As my career goals morphed and I became a computer
scientist and software engineer, I continued to write – research
papers, proposals, specifications, manuals, marketing blurbs --
interspersed with more creative work. I tried my hand at a romance
but foundered, not really knowing the genre. Under the tutelage of
the primary man in my life, I began to read erotica, including quite
a lot of BDSM. I wrote fantasies for his pleasure. I penned a couple
of science fiction/erotica tales and toyed with the notion of a
collection.
Still,
I didn't actually write anything for publication until I was in my
forties. I happened to pick up a copy of Portia da Costa's Black Lace
classic Gemini Heat while I was traveling. I found it intelligent,
imaginative and above all arousing. Then I thought, “I'll bet I
could write something like that.” About eighteen months later, my
first novel, Raw
Silk,
was published by Black Lace. The rest, as they say, is history LOL.
(My full publishing history is available at
http://www.lisabetsarai.com/pubhistory.html.)
Since then I've published nine novels and hundreds of shorter works. I love to write. I began in the erotica genre but now I also write erotic romance. My earlier works tended to be realistic and contemporary, but as I’ve gained more experience I've experimented with science fiction, paranormals, historicals, thrillers and other sub-genres.
Nevertheless,
my first love is still reading. There's nothing like thrill of
finding a book that takes you over completely.
Words
have power. They can inspire. They can wound. They can crystallize
entire new worlds out of mere thought.
These
days I'm proud to be a bookworm. I consider myself fortunate to have
discovered the joy of reading at such an early age. I look forward to
the many books waiting for me in the years ahead.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Let me know your thoughts! (And if you're having trouble commenting, try enabling third-party cookies in your browser...)