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On The Table Read Magazine, “the best book magazine in the UK“, author Samara Breger shares the inspiration behind her new book, A Long Time Dead, and her creative writing process.
I interviewed Samara Breger about her life and career, what inspired her to start writing, and the story of her new book, A Long Time Dead.
I’m Samara. I’m a writer and performer. I like to write about queer women falling in love. I drink my coffee black, mostly out of laziness and lactose intolerance. I really like anchovies and I think more people should be eating them. I waste a lot of time on TikTok. I have a wife and a dog and I love them both very much.
I had been a journalist for a few years and I was miserable. A story I had traveled to report got killed by an editor who fundamentally misunderstood it. I was also pretty sick of sanding down real people’s stories in the name of narrative journalism. I wondered what it would be like to have complete control over a story and let my imagination run wild. There was maybe an hour between having that thought and actually starting my first book. Writing was a total impulse decision.
See above. I didn’t prep anything. I just started. I highly recommend just doing it. Sometimes, people will say “Well, I have to take a class first,” or “I have no idea what to write about.” I think the best move is to write some stuff down and take it from there.
A couple of years, give or take some months. I try not to think too hard about that or else I’ll question whether I’m productive enough and I’ll completely spiral.
Two other authors at my publisher approached me to write a vampire novella, the idea being we release all three together. Independently, our novellas got out of control, and here we are. When I committed to the vampire idea, I knew I was going to go gothic. Those are my favorite vampires. I like them bloody and dramatic and a little spooky. My big deviation from the genre was to promote the queer coding to overt, explicit queerness.
The research was extensive. I have limited patience and I get too excited to write, which means I often make mistakes and need to backtrack. I spent a lot of time googling whether certain words were used in certain contexts in certain years. I know there are some anachronisms left in the book, but at this point, I have to live with them.
Because this was a novella, and because I planned to write it quickly, I didn’t do much preparation and a lot of my own personality snuck in. When I think of the yearning and dyke drama I wanted to put into this book, I go immediately to a relationship I had when I was twenty. It spanned three years and three countries and was a total mess, but, a decade later, it’s great fodder for fiction.
I wanted her to be a true obsessive. That’s the scariest thing to me: someone who just can’t let an ex go. She’s a real “if I can’t have her, nobody can” type of person, except with creepy paranormal abilities.
I hate thinking about structure. I really do. I know it’s useful, and would definitely benefit me as a writer to consider it more, but it does make me itchy. I’m trying to plan out my next book in advance, which is something I’ve never done before, and the process is kind of miserable. I know it will make the writing easier, but it’s way less fun.
It’s a romance, so the conflict has to do with two women who have been torn apart finding their way back together. Also, it’s that there is a very powerful vampire trying to kill them.
I fly, baby. I’m a bird. But I’m trying to be a more organized bird. A bird with glasses and a spiral notebook. Maybe an owl.
I had one massive development edit with my editor, Kit Haggard, who is a genius. I love getting edits. I’ll take as many as I can get. A few friends offered to give me notes, and I absolutely took them up on that offer. The book is dedicated to my friend Alessandra, because without her notes this book would probably suck.
Do it. Don’t think too hard. Just start writing stuff down and see if it feels good. If it doesn’t feel good, go on a little walk and try again. If it still doesn’t feel good, write about something else. You don’t have to be married to your first idea, and sometimes a great idea doesn’t lead to a great story. Take edits. The first thing you write is probably going to be bad. That’s fine, and doesn’t mean you’re a bad writer. If it feels good, keep doing it.
Yes! I’m writing a Victorian spiritualist ghost romance based loosely on the play Blithe Spirit. I’m also working on a romance inspired by Gallus Mag and Sadie the Goat, two notorious characters from 19th century New York City. I don’t want to spoil too much, but someone does get their ear bitten off.
I am very proud! I hope people like the book. I really liked writing it.
Learn more at www.samarabreger.com
Kindle: https://amzn.to/3qTypGJ
Paperback: https://amzn.to/3NAJFAU
Connect with Samara
Instagram @yesjbreg
Twitter @SamaraJBreger
TikTok @samarajbreger.
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