I met Jason McKinney on the indiehorror website. Big surprise, huh? I hang out there a lot. You should probably be checking the site out. I liked Jason right away because he was funny and I like people who can make me laugh. He also seemed to know his way around the horror genre. And so I offered to review one of his books and do an interview here on my blog. 
Jason currently has two full length novels out- Dog World and Memoirs of the Walking Dead. I decided to read Memoirs first because you know I like my apocalyptic fiction and zombies! The review is up at See Spot Read so you should definitely head over there and check that out! I'll wait. Back? On with the interview:
1.)    How long have you been  writing?
I’ve  been writing since I was twelve, but I’ve only been writing seriously for the  past five years.
2.)     I know that you quit your day job to focus on your writing. How is that working  out?
 
It’s  been rough but we’ve kept our head above water so I could follow my inspiration.  “I left a job making $500 a week so I could make that a year. So far it’s  working out beautifully.” I paraphrased the comedian Greg Hahn there. That line  has stuck with me ever since I heard it because it seems to sum up the situation  perfectly. 
3.)     Is this your fist published novel?
Yes  it is. Oddly enough I finished my other horror novel Dog  World  before Memoirs,  but I was compelled to kick Memoirs  out of the nest first. 
4.)     What made you decide to go the Indie route and what problems have you  faced?
I  didn’t want to spend “X” amount of years looking for a publisher especially with  the economy being what it is and affecting the publishing industry the way it  has.
 I  wrote middle grade fiction before horror and was rejected for two years.  The  rejections weren’t horrible, though.  They mostly said, “You’re story’s good  but…” or “We would publish it, but…” and that got old. So instead of going  through all that again I went Indie. 
 Surprisingly,  a lot of reactions I get from people when I tell them I have gone Indie are  positive. I have meet a lot of comic artists and writers and authors that are  extremely talented, but are having the same difficultly breaking in to the  industry that have gone Indie also.  
 Going  Indie is not easy.  It is a lot of hard work to do your own promoting and  marketing, but the main place I’ve faced problems is my extended family. They  think going Indie is the equivalent of failure or not bothering to try at  all.
 I  tell them that it’s a put-your-money-where-your-mouth-is scenario. It’s kind of  like college in a sense. You spend the money to get something that later on may  get you where you want to be. Either one is not a guarantee but it boils down to  having faith in yourself and your work. A bit of “Screw what everyone else  thinks” doesn’t hurt either.
5.)     What made you decide to write about Zombies? And how did you come up with the  idea of doing the story from the Zombie point of view?
Actually,  that’s kind of a funny story. 
 I  go to the local Books-A-Million to write a lot. With three kids in the house  there’s no such thing as peace and quiet so I go out. 
 One  day a barista asked me if I was writing a book and I said yes. I was finishing  Dog  World  at the time, but when she asked what I was writing I told her something  completely different. 
 I  was feeling kind of zombie-ish that day so I said, “Memoirs of the Walking Dead.  It’s a story from the zombie’s point of view so it’s a biography”. I went on to  finish Dog World but the title and subtitle stuck with me. My wife thought the  idea was crazy, but interesting. She thinks the book is funny so I know I have  at least one biased fan.
6.)     What scares you personally?  Do you have any silly phobias?
I  have three phobias and you’ll laugh yourself sick about them. 
 One  is people with their faces wrapped in bandages scare me. That’s partly Claude  Rains’ fault but mostly my parents. I don’t know what they were thinking when  they let me watch The Invisible Man at six years old but I am glad they did.  
 The  second is that I can’t shower near a drain. I know that’s personal but hey, it’s  my silly phobia. I saw Psycho when I was eight and the shower scene, along with  the drain, scared me to death. Now every time I see a shower drain I cringe.
The  third is I will not fly at night while sitting next to a window overlooking the  wing. It’s amazing the things that stay with you from your childhood.   
7.)     What is your writing routine?
Every  morning I go to Books A Million, pop in my earphones and let the evil that lurks  within me run riot. I have a play list of music that I listen to while I write  and I begin and end my music repertoire with “All These Things That I’ve Done’  by The  Killers.
8.)     Have you always been a fan of horror?
Yes,  yes, yes. And… did I say yes? I love horror and the supernatural. The classic  stuff mostly. The Twilight Zone has given me so many wonderful scares and fears  that I would have to be stuck on stupid not to love Rod Serling. Eye  of the Beholder  and Nightmare  at 20,000 Feet  are my two of my top five favorite episodes. The  Grave,  The  Purple Testament,  and The  7th  is Made Up of Phantoms  fit in there somewhere, too.
9.)     What other authors inspire you?
Richard  Matheson, Dean Koontz, and Stephen King are the big three to me.
10.)  What advice would you give to newbie writers out there?
Follow  your inspiration and your gut. If you are compelled to write and/or self publish  then do it. It bears repeating: screw what others think of you and your work. Do  it primarily for you; everyone else comes second.
Jason McKinney is a writer, storyteller and collector of comics. A busy husband and father of three, he started writing fiction in his spare time for his wife.  He is a former accountant who got tired of keeping track of other people’s money and decided to follow his inspiration to make a little money of his own.
Jason is the author of the zombie comedy, Memoirs of the Walking Dead: A Story from the Zombies Point of View.
His most recent book, Dog World, has just been published and is available in his e-Store or on Amazon.  Dog World is the written answer to his seven-year-old daughter’s questions: Are there any good werewolves and what do they do when they aren’t hairy? 
Follow his blog
Follow him on Twitter @jason_mckinney
Buy his books on Amazon.
Happy Monday,
♥Spot

 
2 comments:
This is my kind of writer! What a great attitude! And funny, too. I can understand his head bandage phobia thing. I still think "The Invisible Man" is the greatest horror film of all time. That maniacal laugh was sooo cool!
His outlook on Indie publishing is great. Why waste your life waiting for the call when you can do it yourself? Sure, we all need a good Editor and cover designer and such, but a writer certainly stands to make much higher royalties. Everyone has to market, so there's nothing different between traditional and Indie there.
Great interview. I'll go over and read the review now. So shoot me! I stayed here and read this first.
Blaze
Great interview! I love getting glimpses into the minds of other indie writers!
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