An Interview: Advice from a Poet, Novelist and Webmaster
by Fred Martinez
WASHINGTON/ Conservative Monitor -- The Highbridge Press published Kathryn Lively’s pro-life novel, Little Flowers, in May with good reviews. She is a now working on a mystery novel. Lively is in the HTML Writers Guild, the Catholic Writers Association(CWA) and the CWA webmaster.
Q. What advice would you give to persons wanting to
become a writer?
A. The best writing advice I ever received came from one
of my college professors: if you
want to write, just write! I usually supplement this
advice with some of my own, namely
by advising people to find what works best for them in
terms of writing. If a person is
comfortable composing directly onto the computer
keyboard, that person should write that way.
If person is more comfortable either keeping a journal
or writing drafts by hand, by all
means he should do that. A person can not become a
writer unless he makes the time to do it and
then actually does it.
Q. You have written freelance articles for business
magazines, what is the best way to get started as a
freelance writer?
A. Find a topic that interests you and study the market.
What sort of magazines or newspapers publish articles
on this market?
Are they willing to consider freelance work? Study the
articles in these magazines; do your homework.
The best tool for a freelance writer to have is a
current edition of The Writer's Market. There a writer
will find
all the information he needs on the various magazines
and newspaper markets, what sort of writing is sought
and how
to contact the individual editors and publishers.
Q. Is it best to just submit you articles to magazines
or should one contact the editor first?
A. I learned a long time ago that just submitting an
article to an editor who did not first ask for it
is not the way to go. Most likely you will receive
your submission back unopened. It is always prudent
to contact an editor first. Editors have enough work
to do without having to wade through unwanted mail.
Q. Your the webmaster of the Catholic Writers
Association(CWA) as well as a member.
Can your tell us about the CWA?
A. The CWA was formed around 1998 by a writer named Mark
Kwasny. Mark wanted to establish
an organization for Catholic writers faithful to the
Magisterium to network and offer
each other professional and spiritual support. I
suppose he had noticed dissention in
similar organizations with regards to Catholic
teaching, and he wanted an organization
that was true to the Church and Jesus Christ. I don't
recall exactly how I became
involved with the CWA; I remember seeing a notice
early on in a Catholic mailing list, and
I joined when membership was still quite small. I took
over as webmaster about a year ago when Mark's
schedule could no longer accommodate it.
Q. How can one benefit from the CWA?
A. As a member of the CWA one is connected to like-minded
writers of all levels of experience.
Our membership consists of people who published
numerous books, as well as people just
beginning to query publishers and editors. Through the
CWA one may inquire more knowledgeable
people about the Catholic periodicals markets or find
somebody to peer edit work. More
importantly, one finds spiritual support with the CWA,
for we strive to keep all members in our
prayers, that they may find success in their writing
endeavors and that their writing will
reflect the Good News of Christ.
Q. You recently wrote the pro-life novel Little Flowers
for Highbridge Press. According to one reviewer you were sympathetic to those who go through the abortion struggle? What experiences have
helped you in writing Little Flowers?
A. Writing Little Flowers, in a way, was therapy for me.
Not only have I know people who have had
abortions, I too was faced with a similar dilemma when
I was young. Though I never have had an
abortion, the situation I experienced helped me to
understand what some people go through when
faced with these kinds of decisions. Some of my
acquaintances regretted their decision to abort,
and I knew I had no right to judge them for their
actions. Jesus tells us in Matthew to "judge
not, that ye be not judged." This command was foremost
in my mind when writing Little Flowers.
Q. Your book was published by a secular press. How did
you get them to publish a pro-life Catholic book?
A. As it happened, the two women who run Highbridge Press
were raised Catholic and identified easily
with the story. I had already queried a number of
Catholic presses, but many had ceased to publish
fiction, and the few that did publish fiction turned
down the book. Highbridge Press actually
contacted me first to review one of their titles for a
website I maintain, so I contacted them
about my book. They asked to see it, and the rest is
history.
Q. Your have a listing in various Who's Who
publications. How did you get into Who's Who?
A. That happened in high school; I believe those kinds of
organizations send application to
everyone in the world hoping people will buy their
books if they are listed. I have only
one book, Who's Who in American High School Students,
with my listing.
A. As book reviewer, what is your all time favorite
book?
Q. This is a difficult question, because I just can't
pick one book. I enjoy reading all sorts of
books, but if I had to choose a favorite I would
choose Fannie Flagg's Fried Green Tomatoes at
the Whistle Stop Cafe because I love the book's style
and characterization. It's one book I
wouldn't mind reading more than once.
Q. What is your all time favorite Catholic book?
A. I love reading about the saints in particular, so I
would have to say St Teresa's Interior Castle.
Q. As a poet who has been published, what guidance can
you give aspiring poets?
A. Poetry is entirely a labor of love. Don't expect to
get rich off of poetry unless you are
somehow able to get a job as a creative writing
professor. My advice to read the works of the
great poets and get a feel for how they wrote, then to
find your own voice.
Q. You have been published nationally in secular
business magazines, what is your opinion on the
current economic problems?
A. I believe right now we have to give the current
administration time to help the country back to its
feet.
I believe what we are experiencing now is a backlash
from the previous administration, just as
Clinton's alleged success was drawn from the elder
Bush's presidency. Above all else, pray for the
country. It certainly wouldn't hurt.
Q. As a webmaster, do you think the internet is about
to meet economic doom?
A. I work in the Internet industry, and not only have
I've had to watch many "dot com" businesses
fail, but I have also seen good friends lose their
jobs. I don't think the Internet is doomed,
however, but I believe the people who ran many of
these failed business just did not plan very
well. I believe the Internet, like any other industry,
will experience cyclical growing pains.
Once people are more comfortable and knowledgeable
about the Internet, business will pick up
again.
Q. Do you think the webs financial crisis will end in
mutli-national corporations taking over the net?
If ,yes, how will this effect the internet? If ,no,
what will happen to the net?
A. I really don't know how to answer these questions,
because it's so difficult to say. In recent
years we saw major corporations align themselves with
search technology (Disney buys Infoseek,
NBC buys Snap), and we have seen these sites fail. I
can't predict how other corporations will
buy into the Internet. I suppose we'll have to wait
and see who is willing to invest the capital.
Q. Your currently working on two mystery novels, to be
titled Murder Most Trivial and Saints Preserve Us.
Tell us about how you write mystery novels?
A. With Little Flowers, I just wrote off the top of my
head, five pages a day longhand, until the
first draft was completed. With mystery novels, the
process is a bit more complex because the story
must present the mystery (the crime) and lead the
reader up to a plausible solution without giving
too much away. For the two mysteries I have written, I
outlined the story in full - chapter by
chapter - and wrote the first sentence of each
chapter. This way I was able to help myself in the
writing process by giving myself a starting point for
each chapter.
It also helps, if one wishes to write mystery, to read
mystery.
Q. As a married woman, do you find that it helps or
hurts you writing?
A. In my case, it is a help, since my husband is a
college professor with an English background.
Since his work schedule is erratic, I schedule my
writing around him, and sometimes when we go
out for coffee I will take my notebook with me.
Q. You fell away from the Catholic faith for a while;
what brought you back?
A. For a few years in college I was mired in some very
unsavory practices. I think being away from
home and falling under the influence of certain people
helped this downward spiral. Eventually
I realized how empty I felt, and I sought something to
fill the void. Though I had left Jesus
at one point, I realized He had never left me. It took
the near death of my father to get me to
return to the Church; I prayed for my father's safety
with the promise that I would make a
concerted effort to return to His good graces, and I
continue to strive to keep that promise.
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