Tracy Higley started her first novel at the age of eight and has been hooked on writing ever since. A lifelong interest in history and mythology has led Tracy to extensive research into ancient Greece, Egypt, Rome and Persia, and shaped her desire to shine the light of the gospel into the cultures of the past. She has traveled through Greece, Turkey, Egypt, Israel, Jordan and Italy researching her novels and falling into adventures.
What is the your question for
the blog readers?
What
exciting or exotic location would you most like to visit, and perhaps write
about?
Please
tell us a bit about yourself and how you got into writing.
I have loved to write since childhood, and spent those years
either with my nose in a book or writing. I created short stories, school
newspapers, neighborhood plays, angst-ridden poetry in the teen years, then
drama sketches for church ministry as an adult. Around the age of thirty I got
serious about writing full-length fiction and getting published.
Tell
us about your latest release.
Garden of Madness is the tale of Nebuchadnezzar’s daughter at
the end of his seven years of madness. The palace has become a hotbed of murder,
sorcery and plots against the throne and Tia fights for her family’s safety
while unraveling horrifying family secrets that could destroy their nation.
Did
you have any experiences that prompted your love of historical fiction?
As a story-lover, I have always been drawn to history, which is
really a collection of stories from our past. I love the window into the past
that is opened through historical fiction, both as a reader and as a writer!
How
much time does it take to research your stories – what balance would you
say there is between research and actual writing?
I do spend quite a bit of time in the research phase, which is
ongoing. Before the writing begins I amass pages and pages of notes from
textbooks, etc., divided into categories that help as I write (like clothing,
food, politics, etc.). I continue the
research as I write, then usually do more at the end to fill in gaps that have
been created by the rough draft. I would say about one-fourth of the time spent
on a book is research. Sometimes I have to force myself out of the research and
into the writing!
Describe
for us, if you will, your writing style, as in plotter vs. seat of the
pants, and do you put more time into developing characters or plot or are
they equal?
I am definitely a plotter, probably to a fault. I create outlines, spreadsheets, graphs and
detailed notes before I even begin the rough draft. Sometimes it becomes a
procrastination technique! I put more time into creating plots, because I want
my stories to be fast-paced, surprising and riveting – the kind that keep you
up at night. Character development comes more slowly, through the course of the
writing, and then I go back and make changes to the early sections where I
didn’t really know the characters very well.
Was
there a person who inspired you to write? Come back tomorrow for part two of Tracy's interview to hear her answer.
To enter to win a copy of her book Garden of Madness, leave a comment with the answer to her question by Friday, May 18 at 8 a.m. EST. Please include your email so we can contact you.


4 comments:
I've written for as long as I can remember, but in more recent years, there have been two people who really inspired and encouraged me to take writing seriously:
One was my favorite English professor, who challenged my writing and wouldn't let me "slide" - he really made my writing stronger, and always believed in me.
The other is Tim Tebow, haha...I read his book "Through my Eyes" last summer, and it challenged me to actually DO something about my dream, instead of just thinking about it.
:o)
This book sounds neat, and great interview!
quarterback.girl[at]gmail[dot]com
Oops! The author's question is at the beginning of the interview, not at the end. But interesting answer anyway! ;-)
I'd pick Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. Love it there!
Thanks for the interview and giveaway.
mtakala1 AT yahoo DOT com
luving the exotic eu locations of ancient cities, fabulous architecture, peoples of multi generations...
faithhopecherrytea at *gmail.*com
thx for the great question Tracy!
loving your writing... :)
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