I happy to have Kate Lutter here today on her book tour of "Wild Point Island". She is nice enough to do a interview with us so lets get started.
I know you get asked this question over and over but can you tell us a
little about yourself? Maybe something juicy. ;) What amazes me about myself is
that the core of my life is one big contradiction. I’m incredibly shy. I love to sit in a room all by myself and
write and yet when I examine my career after I graduated college, I constantly
put myself out in front of people—on stage and forced myself to perform. First I was high school teacher, which means
I had to stand in front of kids. Then I
ran a training program for teachers and supervisors for a school district so again
I was in front of adults—teachers—teaching them how to become better teachers. Then I taught undergraduates and graduate
students on the college level. And
finally, I was an elementary principal, which meant I had to constantly meet
with parents and teachers and other principals. Oh, I almost forgot, I also did
workshops in other school districts--another “be on stage” type of job. Crazy.
But you wanted something juicy??? Well, with Wild
Point Island, I wrote about 100 pages, then went to a conference, met
with a high profile New York editor and pretended that I’d completed the entire
manuscript. Which is a very dumb thing
to do, but I figured that at most she’d
request a partial. I convinced myself that the reason I was pitching the novel
was to see if it was marketable. Well,
as it turned out, the editor had vacationed as a child in North Carolina and
knew all about the Lost Colony of Roanoke, the backstory for Wild
Point Island. She loved the
premise of my story and asked for the entire manuscript. Which, of course, wasn’t written. When I went home and told my husband what I’d
done, he said—why don’t you just write it then. Yeah, right. I figured I had a month at most to do just
that. Could I? The next day I enrolled myself online in the
nation wide Book In A Month program and for the next twenty days wrote ten
pages a day. Exactly one month later I’d
finished editing and sent the manuscript off.
Of course, it was rejected. But
three months later—after I’d had a chance to do some extensive revising and
editing—I pitched it again at a conference and sold it.
When did you first start writing? Are you a full time author or do you do it on the side?
I wrote my first novel in eighth grade so I guess
you can say I’ve been writing all my life.
I left a high paying, high profile job to write full time. At the time I called it “jumping off the
cliff.” It felt that way. I had no idea if I would ever be
published. But it was my life, and it
was something I felt I had to do.
Do you have an author that has really inspired you? I’ve never quite gotten over the experience of reading Wuthering Heights. I’m a world traveler, and I even went to England to see the moors that Emily Bronte describes in her book. I loved the relationship between Heathcliff and Catherine. The intensity. And I guess I loved reading about all the Bronte sisters. In terms of role models, though, I belong to the New Jersey Romance Writers, and I particularly admire so many of the women writers who are successful, yet give back to the organization—do workshops, etc. and share what they know about writing. Two that come to mind are Virginia Kantra and Madeline Hunter.
How long does it normally take you to write an average book or your last
book? On average, a book takes me a year to write-from the initial idea to the
final editing so that it’s good enough to start sending out to editors and
agents.
What do you think makes a story great?
That’s a really great question. For me the story needs to have three things:
It needs to evoke emotion. It needs to
be a page-turner. And it needs to
contain something unexpected, which is what gives the story that high profile
appeal, I guess. I just finished the
Hunger Games, and honestly, that book had all three, which is why it’s so
successful!
Can you describe your book "Wild Point Island" in one
sentence?
I was inspired by the first season of HBO’s hot
drama True Blood when Bill and Sookie fall for each other and their seemingly
doomed relationship . . . hopefully, Wild Point Island has the same
amount of angst and drama with less blood.
Have you done lots of research for your books or do the stories just
come to you?
I usually hate doing research. Would much rather make things up. Use my imagination. But generally find that as I get into a story,
I do need to look things up and verify information. For Wild Point Island, I did research
the Roanoke Colony off the coast of North Carolina because that was the
backstory of my novel. I took my
characters’ names from the original manifest of the English ship that landed on
Roanoke Island.
I had also gone on safari in Kenya, Africa and
learned that the black rhinoceros there eats the Euphorbia Candelabra, a
poisonous plant, because they need the liquid from the plant. Over the years they’ve developed an immunity
to this plant. I became fascinated by
that story and that became the basis—after I did the dreaded research—for what
happens in my novel and how the colonists are changed into revenants—another
life form.
What are you currently working on?
Ella, my heroine, has a sister (Lily) who creates
an enormous amount of conflict in Wild Point Island. People who’ve read the story feel very
strongly about Lily. Right now I’m
writing Lily’s story, which will be the sequel.
Can you tell us about some of your prior achievements?
Believe it or not, I’ve been writing on and off for
ten years. I wrote four novels before I
sold Wild
Point Island. I’m proud of the
fact that I persevered and didn’t give up.
And, yeah, I broke a rule or two along the way, but always for a good
cause.
Is there anything that I didn't cover that you would like to talk about
or say to your potential readers?
I was totally thrilled to hold a book that I had
written in my hands. Even now I catch
myself staring at it and reading random pages.
I hope you like the story and have fun reading it.
Just for fun:
Hardback or
Paperback? paperback
Dog ears or Bookmarks? Bookmarks—I respect books too much.
YA novels or Adult novels? Adult novels
Library or Bookstore? Bookstore/Kindle
Reading glasses or No glasses? Reading glasses
Snack while reading or No snacks? Snack
Beach or Mountain? Beach (Jersey girl)
Vampire or Werewolf? Vampire
Hot or Flirty? Flirty
Movie 1st or Book 1st? Movie
Contemporary or Historical? Contemporary
Page-Turner or Tear Jerker? Page-turner
Dog ears or Bookmarks? Bookmarks—I respect books too much.
YA novels or Adult novels? Adult novels
Library or Bookstore? Bookstore/Kindle
Reading glasses or No glasses? Reading glasses
Snack while reading or No snacks? Snack
Beach or Mountain? Beach (Jersey girl)
Vampire or Werewolf? Vampire
Hot or Flirty? Flirty
Movie 1st or Book 1st? Movie
Contemporary or Historical? Contemporary
Page-Turner or Tear Jerker? Page-turner
Wild Point Island
By Kate Lutter
Banished from Wild
Point Island
as a child, Ella Pattenson, a half human-half revenant, has managed to hide her
true identity as a descendent of the Lost Colony of Roanoke. Thought
to have perished, the settlers survived but were transformed into
revenants--immortal beings who live forever as long as they remain on the
island.
Now, Ella must return to the place of her birth to rescue
her father from imprisonment and a soon to be unspeakable death. Her
only hope is to trust a seductive revenant who seems to have ties to the
corrupt High Council. Simon Viccars is sexy and like no man she’s
ever met. But he’s been trapped on the island for 400 years and is willing to
do almost anything for his freedom.
With the forces of the island conspiring against her,
Ella must risk her father, her heart, and her life on love.
Kate Lutter believes she was born to write. She wrote her
first novel when she was in eighth grade, but then almost burned her house down
when she tried to incinerate her story in the garbage can because she couldn’t
get the plot to turn out right. Now, many years later, she lives in NJ with her
husband and five cats (no matches in sight) and spends her days writing
contemporary paranormal romances, traveling the world, and hanging out with her
four wild sisters. She is happy to report that her debut novel, Wild Point Island,
the first in a series, has just been published by Crescent Moon Press. She is
busy writing the sequel and her weekly travel blog entitled Hot
Blogging with Chuck, which features her very snarky and rascally almost
famous cat.
Website: www.katelutter.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/katelutternovelist
Twitter: www.twitter.com/katelutter
1 comments:
Danielle, Thanks so much for hosting me on your site. It was so much fun to write Wild Point Island, and I hope your readers will enjoy reading it.
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