AI Interview #2 — Derek Barton – 2023

As I promised, here is the second interview to give you a little more insight to me, my writing and who I am. Enjoy!

Where were you born?

In Warsaw… Warsaw, Indiana, that is. LOL. For those curious, it’s near Fort Wayne, Indiana.

What was your dream job when you were a child?

Originally I wanted to be an actor then that changed to an artist. Neither one panned out, but at least I did find a way to be creative.

What is your proudest achievement so far?

Of course there are two obvious answers here: one, my daughter and building a home for my family. Two, being a writer of not one but 15 novels! Seriously doubted I could be prolific enough and organized to write one coherent novel. 

What is your favorite book and why? 

Stephen King’s The Stand. The cast of complex characters coming from all parts of the country to fight in an epic struggle against evil was mind-blowing as well as inspiring.

What is your favorite movie and why?

This will surprise most of you, but it isn’t horror, but sci-fi. The Matrix is probably one of the most unique and exhilarating films I have ever seen. 

What is the best trip you’ve ever taken?

My father and I went for two weeks when I was in my early teens, camping in various spots all through Michigan until we got to an isolated island called Isle Royale. It was very remote with no technology allowed. I saw a moose in the wild, heard wolves howling and for the first time, there were no sounds other than nature. No cars, planes, trains or city noise. Complete silence. Amazing experience.

What is your favorite hobby or pastime?

I am very addicted to a Virtual Reality video game called In Death Unchained. If there were any way to make a living doing it professionally I would! LOL. It is an awesome archery game. I have been a gamer for most of my life. This game hands down is the most engaging and exciting.

What is your biggest fear?

Losing anyone in my family would be devastating, but having another stroke or something similar would be more than I could ever take on again.

What is one thing you’ve always wanted to learn but haven’t yet?

A couple of things: I would love to go on a cruise once. The other activity would be to go bungee jumping at least once in my life. 

What is your favorite cuisine?

Normal week to week favorite meals would be Chinese food or steak. For special times or on vacation, it would have to be Snow Crab Legs.

What is your favorite music genre or artist?

I am into heavier music like Godsmack, Avenged Sevenfold and Linkin Park.

What is your favorite season and why?

I love consistent weather so I love summer. Now it does get pretty hot here in Arizona, but I don’t miss the other seasons. I lived long enough in Indiana to have my fair share of rain and snow. I am so done with that!

What is your favorite childhood game or toy?

I am dating myself here but I have to say, it was the Atari. I love video games, especially the old standup arcades. Having a game console at home was amazing. Thus, I have always had one since the Atari. 

What is the most adventurous thing you’ve ever done?

I guess you could call it adventurous, but when I was 26, I decided I had to forge a new life for myself. After saving a bit of money, I moved to Phoenix–no job, no house/apartment and no family or friends. I moved here for the weather and to find myself. It took a lot of hard work to get established but I don’t regret it. Sometimes you just know when you have to make a hard change in order to grow.

What is your favorite fictional character and why?

One character which has always stolen my attention every time is the drow elf character called Drizzt Do’Urden created by R.A. Salvatore. Just a great fantasy character with a hero mindset and a misunderstood darkness about him. A “Batman”-esque dark hero. 

What is your favorite sport or physical activity?

Well, since my stroke I really haven’t been physical, but in the past, it was racquetball, tennis, pickleball or hiking. Perhaps I can rekindle my hiking at least. I do miss being in nature!

What is your dream travel destination?

I would love to see Australia at least once. Or maybe if given the opportunity, I would go see Scotland. 

What is your favorite holiday and why?

Halloween by far is my favorite. Just love the fun of it. As a kid, I was all about the costumes and the candy. My daughter shares that same love. Last year for the first time since my 20s I wasn’t able to dress so this year I guess I am going to have to make up for it! (pardon the pun.)

What is your favorite type of animal?

Although lions are really high on the list, I will never stop watching shark shows — I am a fanatic with Shark Week and I search out videos on YouTube about them. I love the videos and learning about them, but you’ll never catch me diving in the ocean. I have no interest in being up close to the actual animals.

What is your favorite type of music instrument?

I love the saxophone and actually played one in my Middleschool years. I am also a big fan of pianos – one day maybe I’ll push myself to learn to play.  

What is your favorite type of dessert?

I am a bigtime brownie aficionado. If that’s not available, then something with bananas will always work for me. And yes, yes I do take fan desert gifts! I am not so proud to turn them down. ha!

What are your top five favorite television shows?

Tough question but right now I would say 1# Game of Thrones (except last season!), 2# Dexter, 3# Lost, #4 Better Call Saul, and #5 Breaking Bad.

AI Interview #1 — Derek Barton – 2023

I used AI this week to “interview” myself. I submitted: what are the best 30 questions you can ask a writer? These are the best of the 30 it provided. I will do another one of these “interviews” soon but more ‘biographical’ in nature. Enjoy!

What is your writing process like?

After I have thought out the main plot points of my story, I like to focus on my characters. Backstory and or history for the main characters really helps bring them to life and make them multidimensional on the page. Then I work up a “beats outline” of the novel.

Do you prefer to outline your work or let it evolve organically?

Rarely do I write without an outline. I find that my mind and my story will wander if not on a targeted directory. Especially with my fantasy tales, I have several plots and subplots happening at once and it’s way too hard to keep track of if it’s not written in an organized fashion.

How do you develop your characters?

I tend to be inspired by music or ideas that I can develop characters around. For instance, one of my main characters, Taihven Artadeus, was crafted around a premise of how do you effectively live and lead if you can’t tell whether you are in the real world or a figment of your imagination.

What role does research play in your writing?

I praise every day how wonderful the internet is and how this is the greatest age to live in as a writer. For my novel, In Four Days, I used Philadelphia as the foundation city of the story. I have never been to or lived around that city. However, through my research on the net, I could plop in various key locations or national parks, etc to make it very believable. I have had readers actually ask me how long did I live in PA! Another example was the whole US Marshals and their prison transport set up that I used in my Evade series. I had to really dig to learn procedures and some of the jargon they used. Without research I couldn’t have portrayed the exciting prison escape/hostage scene realistically. I highly recommend that every writer do  thorough and proper research — you don’t have any legitimate excuses now to not do it. It totally adds to your story and brings it home for your readers.

How do you handle criticism and feedback on your work?

So far, I have been extremely fortunate in my reviews, but there will be the day I am sure someone will tell me how much they did not like my work. It is unfortunate, but it is bound to come. One thing to remember is that there are millions of people with millions of various interests and tastes. No one can satisfy every person. You chalk it up to, you did your work the best you could and you know that for every hater there are tons of people who love it too. If it’s constructive criticism, maybe you learn from it. If it’s just hateful, then you pass it off as trolling and let it go.

What do you find most challenging about the writing process?

To me, finding the mental energy and fire to write is one of the biggest obstacles to being productive. I have a full house: a wife, 3 children (2 young adults now), a son-in law, a baby grandson and several animals. All need time, attention and financial support. So, a full time day job and 2 running vehicles is a must. Having time to myself is a luxury and having that coincide with having the mental stamina to produce anything…sometimes it seems rare like a lunar eclipse! Most times though I find if I set up a small goal of writing 300 words (which is pretty easy to accomplish), it will spill over into writing near a 1000 or more. It is what they call “resistance”. You have to will yourself to push through and you’ll find that unexpected reserve of energy and motivation to write.

How do you balance creativity and the need to meet deadlines?

As I said, it isn’t easy for me to find time. I usually set goals for general deadlines. In other words, I won’t set an actual date but more like a timeframe of when I want to be done. If I apply too much pressure to complete something, I will squish all the enjoyment out of the process and I will find plenty of reasons to procrastinate and never get to the work. I have to allow some freedom in order to be sure I will find the drive there enjoyable.

What advice would you give to aspiring writers?

When you first start out, don’t focus so much on the idea ‘will the readers like this or will they hate me?’. Write for you. Write something you want to read, something you’d like to explore or fantasize about. Free yourself from your inner critic (that bastard will never leave you and is like the school yard bully, always ready to steal your lunch money and bloody your nose). You can be free with your ideas and your story structure or prose since no one is ever going to read your first draft. Nor should you let anyone read it. Then when you are “done”, go back and allow the editing process to do its magic. Clean up everything to be readable content. But don’t let that white empty page scare you. It’s a playground waiting for you to run around in. Go enjoy yourself!

How do you create believable dialogue in your stories?

I am very detail-oriented in my story creation. As I said, I am outline obsessed. But when it comes to dialogue, I lose myself in the moment and try to become my characters in the scene. Answer and reply how they would, not how Derek would. If you are going to have credible, realistic dialogue you cannot censor or guide it based on you.

What is your favorite genre to write in, and why?

I of course have two favorite genres: horror and fantasy. I really love to write in both. Horror is much easier to write but I love the convoluted stories that bloom in fantasy tales. I have thought about or entertained writing in other genres like Steampunk, Sci-fi or History but so far nothing has been a powerful enough draw to take me away from the big two. As it stands, I have way too many stories waiting in line for me to write. Maybe one day down the road, who knows?

How do you handle self-doubt as a writer?

I am okay with doubt until it comes down to the last of a series. For instance, for my Elude series the last novel scared me witless! I analyzed and fretted over every word and detail. I really wanted to end the whole story with an impact. I put so much pressure that I nearly stalled out and didn’t finish it. I am sure that is also why it has taken me several attempts at writing the last of my Wyvernshield series. The Bleeding Crown was written in 2017 and hear six years later I am just getting out the next part of that story. I hate disappointing readers and I work hard at finding what I feel will be worth their effort in reading it. Analysis-paralysis I think it’s called. To get myself to finally push myself to write it was to just say I will do my best and write what I would want to read. Hope for the best and hope the readers enjoy the ride along with me.

What impact do you hope your writing will have on readers?

More than anything, I want the reader to lose themselves in the story. Immerse themselves in the world I have detailed. In these days of political strife and conflict, it’s nice to forget the world and its troubles. If the reader connects with the characters, feels for them and their troubles then I’ve done my job. It’s important to me that the characters are memorable, believable and relatable.