My name is Gene Fournier. My actual first name is Eugene, after one of my grandfathers, but I don’t remember anyone ever calling me that unless they were an uncle or angry. When I write, I go by E. A. Fournier – I’ve always liked my initials better than my names. I was born in St. Paul, MN but grew up in Minneapolis. After I was married, I spent way too many years in LA going to grad school and later struggling as a writer in the TV and movie industries. Those were my roller-coaster years – brief moments at the top followed by long, scary drops. I finally escaped from California and returned to the Midwest where I now live in a southern suburb of Minneapolis called Chanhassen.
Did you always want to be a writer? If not,
what did you want to be?
I guess I never
really knew what I wanted to be, and to tell the truth, I still don’t know; but
I always knew what I wanted to do, I wanted to make people cry and laugh and be
moved by what I created. Poetry was my first love, but who can make a living at
that? So, I turned to filmmaking and screenplay writing and TV – but despite
the years of effort and the schemes and the silly meetings and agents and
producers, etc., etc., when all was said and done, it didn’t pay much better
than poetry did. So, inevitably, I got a “real” job (you know the kind, pay-checks,
health coverage, retirement - that kind of job) and wrote on the side. The
experience has not been fulfilling but the pay has improved.
I am embarrassed
to admit that it has taken me this long to grasp that with the rise of the
internet I can finally do what I had set out to do so many years ago. I can
actually write what I want to, a sci-fi novel, for instance, and instantly get
it in front of a real audience without all those pesky middle people: the self-important
ones in LA who mess up movies; the snooty ones in NY who mess up books. So, a
few years’ work writing in the evenings and weekends and here we are! - a
sci-fi novel called “Now & Again,” for sale on Amazon. But, just for the
record, so far I’m keeping my day job.
Did it take a long time to get your first book
published?
I suppose there
are a number of answers to this question. Since many people do not consider
that self-publishing or eBooks count as “being published,” I guess my answer is
that I’m still waiting. On the other hand, the startling arrival of the digital
age has forced a re-definition of what a book is and what it means to be
published. Like it or not, the traditional book industry is facing a
renaissance (or a Poseidon adventure, depending upon your vantage point) just
as fundamental and far-reaching as the one that overturned the music industry.
In that context, therefore, I would say that it either took me a lifetime up to
this point to get published, or two years (the time it took me to actually
write this book), or about a week (the time it took to format my final file,
proof read it and upload it). Take your pick.
What is the name of your latest book, and if
you had to summarize it in less than 20 words, what would you say?
My first novel is
called “Now & Again.” You can find a story synopsis at Amazon or Goodreads
but, instead of a 20 word summary, let me give you a behind-the-scenes answer.
The book is the result of a nightmare. I dreamed one of my sons and myself were
caught in a horrifying, chain-reaction traffic accident. You know how they say
you can’t be killed in your dreams; that you’ll wake up just before the end?
Not this dream. We were both killed but the dream continued and the accident
restarted over again – except, now that I knew how it ended, I tried to change
things. I kept lasting longer but still dying in the end. Finally, my son and I
managed to alter enough parts of the dream accident to survive. And only then
did I wake up. The novel is my attempt to explain what happened in that
nightmare.
Do you have plans for a new book?
Yes, I already
have a new book started and it will be quite different from this one. The main
character is an older woman from the Midwest, newly widowed, and overweight,
who is determined to go on a solo trip to Kampala, Uganda to help a native
school there because she feels she should. Undeterred by her horrified family,
her disapproving church and her baffled friends, she stubbornly sets out
anyway. What happens to her is beyond the worst of anything that she was warned
about and beyond the best that anyone could have predicted.
How did you come up with the title and cover
design for your book?
When I start work
on a book (or a screenplay for that matter) I don’t have a final title in mind,
I just have a working title – some short verbal way to reference what I’m
working on. It just makes things easier. In the process of writing the piece a
title will declare itself. At least, that’s been my experience. In a
metaphorical way, the piece takes on a life of its own and it will tell you
what its name is. The same is true of the cover art. At some point in the
creation process an image, or images, begin to dominate. In the case of “Now
& Again” the cover is my design. I just saw two trucks, one red and one
black, in a mirror image against a background of stars, and the rest just came
from working the images in Photoshop. It helps that my background is in art and
photography and that I work in Photoshop quite a bit in my “real” job. I like
the cover quite a bit and most of my readers have had a positive response as
well.
Do you layout a basic plot/plan for your book
before you actually write it out? Or do you let the writing flow and see where
it takes the story?
I tend to be an
overly planned out and detail oriented person. I’m the guy who actually looks
through the manuals of the things I buy before I use them. Really. For me, a
story isn’t much different. I want to know where I’m going before I start – not
everything, but most of the key things. My background in film directing and
film editing probably has had an impact on me. The more organized I can be
before the shooting starts the quicker and smoother things will go and the less
money it will cost to produce a good result. In the case of book writing, the
clearer the goals of the chapters are the more creative freedom I have within
those boundaries to write spontaneously and still not destroy the flow of the
book. Without a plan, a story can get away from you and the characters may
escape, die early, or just not make a bit of sense. I’ve found that an ounce of
story planning is worth about ten pounds (relatively speaking) of writing.
Do you think children at schools these days
are encouraged enough to read? And/or do imaginative writing?
Schools are a hot
topic these days, especially in the US, where we spend massively more money on
public education than any other country and yet secure utterly dismal results.
Reading is just one of many areas where our children are being short changed.
For me, though, the primary cause is not in the schools, and the solution is
not in the school. Children don’t read well today because their parents and
guardians don’t read to them. Read to your children! Start early and never
stop. There is no substitute for that and no better solution than that. Show
children a love of books while you raise them and no school on earth will be
able to take that urge to read away from them. It doesn’t mean we shouldn’t
demand better reading curricula in our schools, we should, but the school is
not the first place to look for either the problem or the solution: it’s the
home.
Do you have a favourite genre of book?
I read all types
of books from non-fiction to fiction, from philosophy to humor, from politics
to adventure but I always come back to science fiction when I read for
pleasure. It isn’t surprising that my novel is in that genre. For me, good
science fiction can have all the dramatic elements of fiction and all the big
ideas of philosophy and science but the story is played out in a new place or
time that I’d never known before. There’s no other genre that can carry me away
from my own life so completely as a well-crafted science fiction novel. And the
pleasure I most appreciate is that the best of them leave you thinking about
their story long after the pages are closed or the eBook reader is shut down.
If you could invite three favorite writers to
dinner, who would you invite and enjoy chatting with?
Only three? Okay,
let’s see, the first is easy. I have always admired and wished to spend time
with the poet, Emily Dickinson. She was truly someone who understood the power
of words. Next would have to be J.R.R. Tolkien, writer, of course, of the Trilogy of the Rings, but also an
old-English scholar and teacher and one of the translators of the first
Jerusalem Bible. He and Emily would have much to talk about and I would love to
listen. Finally, I would invite William R. Forstchen, my favorite science
fiction series writer, who wrote the 8 part civil war based Lost Regiment books. That would be a fabulous
evening. Without a doubt, though, we would all have to travel to Amherst,
Massachusetts and have the meal at Emily Dickinson’s house since she was a
recluse for most of her life. Believe me, I would be more than pleased to pick
up the tab for the catering.
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