It's with great pleasure that I hand over the reins of my blog today to book reviewer and author Graham Smith, who comes wearing both hats, both unique individuals...
The two different Graham
Smith’s are here today to talk about Gutshots:
Ten Blows to the Abdomen. The reviewer part of Graham will be interviewing
the author part of his psyche. Expect frank answers and the odd firework.
Reviewer:
Thank you for allowing me
this opportunity to interview you Graham.
Author:
I’ll be honest from the
start. When my agent (Graham Smith) and publicist (Graham Smith) told me I was
gonna be interviewed by a book reviewer I was hoping it was gonna be Mariella
Frostrup. Instead I got you. So ask what you gotta ask and then let me go get
some writing done.
Reviewer:
Can I get you a coffee or
something?
Author:
I’ll have a beer and twenty
fags.
Reviewer:
I’m sorry I only brought a
fiver with me.
Author:
You’re a bloody cheapskate.
Forget the beer, just get on with the interview as there’s a torture scene
which is calling to me.
Reviewer:
Having read Gutshots: Ten
Blows to the Abdomen, it struck me that you haven’t yet found the niche you are
most comfortable writing in. Why do you write in so many different styles,
tenses and points of view?
Author:
I don’t like boundaries and
find pigeon holes constricting. What I do is write the stories which come to me
asking to be told. I tell them the way which sounds best in my head, whether it
is a first, third or even second person point of view. Tenses and styles are
merely tools in an author’s toolbox. I vary my writing styles when writing
short stories to suit the story and to maintain artistic freedom. Some of my
writing is very hard hitting whereas other stories are all about me leading the
reader one way just so that I can catch them out with a twist at the end.
Reviewer:
You have stories which range
from neighbourly disputes to full on action thrillers and one of the tales even
starts as a love story before descending into a tale of bullying and torture.
Why does your writing vary so greatly?
Author:
Are you serious? What did I just
tell you? I tell the stories that come to me asking to be told. I’m nothing
more than the mouthpiece for the voices whispering in my ear.
If your next question isn’t
on a different topic I’m off.
Reviewer:
In the introduction to My Job
is Murder you make reference to an anthology you had a story in. What was the
anthology about?
Author:
It was Action:
Pulse Pounding Tales which was compiled and edited by our host Matt Hilton.
Action: PPT is a great anthology of action
thriller stories which hark back to the seventies when action men were
tough uncompromising rogues who killed without a second thought. Action was
always more important than believability in those days and I tried to carry
that on with my story Issa’s Island Prison, which had three swordsman storming
an island citadel to rescue their queen.
Reviewer:
Your collection is excellent
value at £0.77 or $0.99 for fifteen stories. Why did you price it so low?
Author:
Firstly I’m only really
charging for the first ten stories. I’ve included five bonus stories as a way
of sharing my writing with as many people as possible. I’ve named the online
haunts where they first appeared to show my appreciation.
It’s priced low in the hope
that readers will take a punt. I mean what can you buy for less than a quid or
a buck?
Reviewer:
One of the bonus stories is
co-written. How did that come about?
Author:
Rosalind Nazilli actually
altered the settings on her computer when in Greece so she could download a
previous release of mine called Eleven the Hardest Way. We were in
communication via Facebook and when I found out what she’d done I knew there
was a story to be told. I threw down a rough draft which Rosie polished to
become Downloading Disaster.
Reviewer:
Kindle or book?
Author:
Don’t be a muppet. You know
fine well I mostly read paper books but my releases have all been on kindle. I
see the benefit of both.
Reviewer:
What’s next for you?
Author:
I have a couple of short
stories to write. One is for a charity anthology and the other is for a site
I’ve been requested to submit to. Then my publisher (Graham Smith) says I have
to re-write my novel before testing the waters.
Reviewer:
Thank you for your time.
Author:
Yeah, whatever.