–
C O M M O N Q U E S T I O N S –
We’ve provided answers
to some of the most frequently asked questions. If we don't answer
a burning question you have, please feel free to e-mail your question
to us at david@daviddun.com.
I attempt to answer all mail,
but may enlist the help of colleagues whenever I'm seriously behind
on a deadline.
Where
can I purchase your books?
Visit your favorite bookstore,
wherever books are sold, or one of your favorite online retailers.
Some of the popular stores carrying David's book are:
The publisher's price for
The Black Silent, Unacceptable Risk, Overfall, At the Edge
and Necessary Evil is $6.99.
Are you currently working
on another book?
I am always working on a
new book, it seems. My sixth book, is without a title but the working
title is: “They Will Kill You if You Tell”.
Currently no publication date has been set.
Where did you get your idea
for Necessary Evil?
I like love stories where
opposites are attracted. I enjoy people being out of their element,
like Jessie, but I also enjoy characters that have great or unusual
insight and expertise like Kier’s survival ability. I like a
sense of the mystical although I always like a backdoor natural explanation.
(Readers can decide for themselves how they wish to interpret these
events.)
So I fashioned a story about
a rugged, back country Native American veterinarian getting together
with the ultimate city dweller, threw in a tale of harrowing survival,
and wove in mysticism with the Spirit Walker and the Tiloks. Then
I added what I consider a standout villain. Once you know the elements
you want, then you discover characters to live those elements.
How long between books?
Usually approximately one
year but this varies from year to year.
Where do you get your ideas
for characters?
For me they are composites
of various people I have met, but resembling no single individual
in particular.
Do you outline your books
before you write them?
Some think I should but I
usually do not do a formal outline. Normally I write the first 50
to 100 pages and then write down the plot and its twists. This is
something like an outline but not detailed. I describe the characters
and the story line. Then I write the book. I tend to re-write many
times.
Are the Tilok Indians a
real tribe?
They are as real to me as
the next door neighbors. Particularly Kier from Necessary Evil
and Sam as he developed in The Black Silent. But you won't
find the Tilok tribe listed in the phone book and I couldn't tell
you where exactly to find the reservation. But it must be out there
someplace between the Trinity Alps and the Marble Mountains of Northern
California. But you say 'There is nothing between the Marbles and
the Alps.' Well... why worry about it? They are real. Someplace.
In all seriousness, I did
a lot of reading concerning Indian legends and mythology to develop
the Tiloks and to come up with the proverbs that appear in Necessary
Evil.
Are you like any of your
characters? Which ones?
Other than the usual sense
in which we're all a little bit like the people we would fictionalize,
I think I am not much like any of my characters. Perhaps I am most
like Dan of At The Edge.
Do you read a lot? Who are
your favorite authors?
Like many other authors, I don't read as many books
as I'd like. Depending on my moods I have had exceptional reading
experiences with most of the popular thriller writers and somewhat
to my surprise a number of literary writers. Although it's very hard
to name a favorite because it honestly depends on my mood, I have
very much enjoyed Clive Cussler, Tom Clancy, Lee Child, David Morrell,
Gayle Lynds, Tess Gerritsen, Steve Alton, Nelson DeMille, Dean Koontz,
Michael Chricton, Robert Ludlum, MJ Rose, Anne Tyler, David Guterson,
Ian McEwan, Charles Frazier, Dan Brown, David Balducci, and Chris
Reich to name just a few. For a more complete list of authors I highly
recommend please see the links that can be accessed at the bottom
of any page from my website.
How did you get started
in writing?
On the spur of the moment.
Ignorant. Completely unapprised of what I was about. Initially I discussed
it with no one, felt foolish, but loved putting the words on the paper.
I did it for a few years before it actually looked like I might get
an agent and have a novel. I wrote copiously and remember passages
and scenes that seem to have disappeared into the attic.
In the beginning my approach
was very unstructured but as time passed I began to develop habits
and methods and to travel down fewer dead ends. Now I write with a
more focused purpose in mind and as described above make character
sketches, and plot descriptions that keep me focused and enable complex
plot development.
Was it hard to get started?
How did you get published?
First and foremost I have
written for the joy of writing and that generally has been a deep
underlying motivation. On the other hand when you write over long
spans of time, it's just natural to ask yourself when it's going to
get published. I found myself with a growing desire to publish.
Rejection can be daunting.
I'd like to say that I sat alone in a closet, had a vision, pounded
it out and published a book. It wasn't like that. It was try and try
again. When I began there were many conventions about writing that
I didn't understand. One could say I learned the hard way, but it
was fun. Ultimately agents directed me to professional editors and
they certainly helped me learn basic principles. Although I would
emphasize that the author must write the story and develop the characters.
The editor may be writing his own book but he most probably is not
going to write yours.
Being published is about
producing your own unique work that catches the eye of an editor in
a publishing house. Ed Stackler, my personal editor, is a marvel and
a fun imaginative guy with whom to collaborate. Because he worked
in a publishing house he knows the ropes. In the end if you want to
write you can only listen so much and then you have to write it and
finish it. Mostly it's a solitary pastime.
To sell a book I would strongly
recommend that you find a good agent. Trying to sell a book without
an agent is a little like trying to water ski without a towboat. I
would add that once sold, an enthusiastic and committed publisher
is a grand thing. And of course every author, in the final analysis,
loves his readers because he or she is writing so that somebody can
read.
Back
to Top