...for readers who love animals, and animal lovers who read!

Sunday, April 13, 2014

Author Interview: Doranna Durgin & Friends


Tell us a little about your background

Oh, it’s complicated.  Start with one animal lover, determined to become a vet.  Life happens.  End up in Environmental Education, and then in a stunningly remote area of the Appalachian mountains.  Hand-built log cabin, a hundred acres...dogs, wood stove, and endless tromps in the woods together.  Enough people to generate lost and dumped dogs, not enough to have a shelter, so UPS would drop dogs off at our place for rescue.  And with the vet hours away, I found myself dealing with mange, broken bones, snakebite, varmint damage...even gunshot.

Connery
It’s also where I developed my love for hounds.  

I eventually shifted to Southwest mountains and turned my trail riding into Lipizzan dressage and the dog activities to competition sports, but really those early days are the core of what informs my writing.  Mountains, wilderness, dogs, horses, and a  side of smarty-pants.

The writing...that started when I was twelve and never stopped.  By the time I sold Dun Lady’s Jess, I’d been writing a book or two a year for quite a while.  By hand.  (I love my laptop!)





Tell us a bit about your latest book


The Dale & Sully mysteries are like most of my books--they color a bit outside the genre lines, and they’re as much about Dale and Sully and Laura as they are about the mystery.  The series started out as one of those Dreaded Publishing Stories--Big Name Publisher gave Editor the Stamp of Approval to develop the series, and then forgot about it.   Which in a way is fine, because it meant I could go ahead and color outside those lines.

Anyway, Scent of Danger is a recent release, and I’m really excited about it!  “A hunky veterinarian, his irrepressible beagle pal, and a quiet Navajo colleague who keeps him guessing about her heart...what could be more fun?”

Are any of the characters based on real animals or people?

I don’t tend to do that, except... when I do.   Which is to say that like for most writers, certain people or animals might serve as the inspiration for a character, but once the character is conceived, all bets are off.  In fantasy  A Feral Darkness, Druid was an amalgam of two of my Cardigan Corgis--one sweet boy who was functionally autistic due to brain injury at birth, and one who had a panic syndrome.  What, I thought, if there was a mystical reason behind those behaviors?  But I would still never say that Druid was based on these dogs...only inspired by them.

The irony about the Dale Kinsall & Sully Beagle mysteries is that I conceived the books before I ever had a Beagle.  Now I have three...

What are you working on now and what are your future writing plans?

I generally have a lot of irons in the fire.  I’m working on a Nocturne paranormal proposal  with my own brand of werewolf, as well as the third book in the Reckoners trilogy (paranormal).  I’m plotting out book three for Dale & Sully.  And I’m getting ready to start first draft on the next Nocturne under contract (shapeshifters!).

Actually, since I had to do a big red tape paperwork job this week, I’m also desperately trying to get my web site and blog details up to date.  I’m pretty good with it--all the big pieces are where they should be--but there are always little housekeeping tasks that creep up.  And I’m trying to get a running rafflecopter giveaway in play at the  blog, since those seem pretty fun. There should be one there now, I hope.

Tell us about your pets, or other animals that inspire you

Dart

My guys do more than inspire me; they keep me grounded.  Along with training the dogs I also bike with them, and at his age Duncan is more about easy trail rides mixed with foundation dressage than hard training. 

Connery is my oldest Beagle and is the second most titled breed champion Beagle in the States, as well as the first to reach both MACH3 with a VCD1 (titles in obedience, tracking, and agility).  Dart is in the most exciting part of his various trialing journeys--on his way toward advanced titles in agility, rally, obedience and tracking.  Rena Beagle is fostering and has earned some titles along the way while I unravel her health tangles. I blog about them all constantly!


What advice do you have to offer to an aspiring author?

Short and sweet:  It used to be “persistence.”  Now it’s “Know what you REALLY want and make the choices that will reach that goal.  Don’t make assumptions, and don’t sneer at those who make different choices (unless they’ve made assumptions as a big part of doing so.  Then be my guest).”




Doranna Durgin's quirky spirit has led to an eclectic and extensive publishing journey across genres.  Beyond that, she hangs around outside her Southwest mountain home with horse and dogs. She doesn't believe in mastering the beast within, but in channeling its power. For good or bad has yet to be decided...

14 comments:

  1. Wow, Doranna, I didn't know about that you'd been in the Appalachians. Where were you when you had that adventure? I live near the Blue Ridge Parkway in Southwest Virginia.

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    1. Oh, it's so pretty there!

      I was in the deep southwest area--spit west and it's over the Pine Mountain KY line into Elkhorn, head south and there's Tennessee. Between Clintwood and Haysi, out on the end of the ridge and surrounded by the lake. Before that, just over the line in KY, Greasy Creek Holler. Pretty deep. 8)

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  2. What a completely delightful and interesting interview. Doranna is one incredibly talented and kind hearted lady!

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  3. Thanks for sharing, Doranna. I love learning about your dogs!

    I'd like to see more authors adopt your line that we "...don’t sneer at those who make different choices..."

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    1. I'd like to see more *everyone* adopt that line! But hey, everyone's got their own reasons for what they do. I figure the key is to make an informed choice--and that means understanding--and accepting--the advantages and disadvantages of each path.

      Training taught me this as much as anything else, btw. For every person who knee-jerk sneers at a particular (correctly employed) training tool or technique, there's a horse/dog out there who thrives on it. Talk to me sometime about Dart Beagle, who despises all collars except (drum roll) his beloved pinch collar...

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    2. Doranna, interesting about Dart and I second what Susan Holmes said. One reason that I love Gail Tomases Fisher's The Thinking Dog is that while she clearly believes clicker training is superior, she takes a do-what-works attitude.

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    3. I'll have to take a look at that one. The When Pigs Fly book has been on my list for a long time, too...

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  4. Always love hearng about auntie doranna and her dogs and horses and books and other wild creatures. Love layla greyhound

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  5. Doranne, thank you for being my guest!

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  6. I enjoyed your post, Doranna. It's always fun to hear from another writer of both romance and mystery--and a dog lover, too!

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