Thriller author Michael R. French is chatting with me today about his new intercultural love story, Ghost with Two Hearts.
Welcome, Michael. Please tell us a little bit about yourself.
Born and grew up in Southern California, graduated from Stanford and Northwestern, married to Patricia Goodkind French and together raised a son and daughter. Moved from Brooklyn to Santa Fe to Santa Barbara over 50 fun, episodic years. I collect rare books, like adventure travel, and lately my wife and spend time with our two grandchildren.
Please tell us about your current release.
It’s a page turner that, ironically, shouldn’t be read too quickly. There’s more in GWTH than interesting characters put to unexpected tests. Their conflicts can’t be understood without a reader entering the labyrinths of Japanese history and culture, through the eyes of both an American software engineer and a Japanese ghost. A lot to puzzle over, including the emotions raised throughout the novel. This is a ghost story that has nothing to do with horror, and a lot to do about different kinds of love.
What inspired you to write this book?
In addition to reading about Japan, my wife and I have traveled there several times and probably will again. The social and political values are often antithetical to American society. I wanted the novel to capture some of the magic of the Japanese sensibility. There’s a lot to contemplate and learn from.
What exciting project are you working on next?
For self-preservation I prefer not to talk about what’s still in my imagination. I get focused on giving birth to a healthy, vital entity, a day-to-day process that thrives best without distractions.
When did you first consider yourself a writer?
My need for self expression, coupled with an already-active imagination, occurred in my mid-teens. Jumping from the need to write to calling myself a writer was a longer process. In grad school I was published in a literary journal and began writing book reviews for the Kansas City Star. In the Army I was editor in chief of the Fort Ord newspaper. But I was slow to say in public I was a writer until I published my first novel a few years later.
Do you write full-time? If so, what’s your workday like? If not, what do you do other than write and how do you find time to write?
I’ve never written full-time because it was impossible for me to sustain a living. My careers included public relations, real estate, and entrepreneurial pursuits. At the same time, I never stopped writing, even if for only an hour a day. I’m pretty disciplined. On a good day, I write 3,000 words, which almost inevitably are rewritten at some point. Over time, I published 24 books, including several best sellers and two novels warmly reviewed in the The New York Times. I write both fiction and nonfiction. Because I like to explore in all aspects of my life, I don’t focus on a single genre in my fiction.
What would you say is your interesting writing quirk?
Getting into a character’s head and heart by talking to them even when they’re off the page.
As a child, what did you want to be when you grew up?
I didn’t think much about that. I always wanted to stay a child. That being said, what boy growing up in America in the Fifties didn’t fantasize about being an authority figure in a uniform? Firemen and policemen predated the digital age of Super Heroes.
Anything additional you want to share with the readers?
Think hard about why you want to be a writer. If your subject matter isn’t popular enough to insure making a living, will you change what you write about, or stay the course of your imagination and emotions?
Links:
Website | Goodreads | Amazon
Thanks for being here today, Michael.
Hi Lsa. Thank you so much for your great interview! I hope my answers illuminate my writing habits and motivation, especially about Ghost With Two Hearts, which I’m particularly proud of.