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Friday, May 29, 2015

An Interview With Linda Riesenberg Fisler **Blind Influence Blog Tour**

An Interview With Linda Riesenberg Fisler 

**Blind Influence Blog Tour**

How did you become involved with the subject or theme of your book?

At the start of writing this book, I was reading a lot of espionage books.  James Bond was big in the theaters.  This was back in 1979.  I also had a huge interest in politics.  Cable was just starting out, meaning being offered to consumers.  C-Span was something I’d tune into and watch with great intrigue.  The debates were much more interesting then. The politicians were negotiating and it didn’t seem as spiteful as it does today.  Don’t get me wrong; there were volatile issues and very powerful congressmen who were directing their messages to the press.  In the end though, I believe there was a genuine consensus of working together for the greater good. It was early in the cable industry and the 24 hour news cycle was just beginning to gain traction.  

I was reading the Bourne Identity by Robert Ludlum and found it intriguing.  I read that book and couldn’t put it down, anxiously awaiting the showdown between the Jackal and Jason Bourne.  The showdown happened and the Jackal escaped.  I decided to give Ludlum one more chance.  I picked up the next book in the series, and while at the library, I noticed that there were more in the series.  “Certainly this whole series isn’t about capturing or killing the Jackal?”  I thought to myself.  Ludlum has terrific skill at building to the final showdown in each book that didn’t end up being the final showdown.  I threw the book against the wall, having lived through several showdowns only for the Jackal to escape.  It was at that moment that I decided that I was going to write this novel.  I started it the following weekend.  At that time, the ANWR debate was heating up and I decided, unlike the Bourne Series, that my novel and assassin would be centered within the political world unfolding before me.

Why did you choose to write in your particular field or genre?  If you write more than one, how do you balance them?

I’ve written in many genres but never published.  I did send a script to Star Trek: The Next Generation.  It was rejected, but had I any sense when I was younger, I would have determine that Eric Stillwell was actually trying to help me.  Along with the rejection came all the information I needed to try again, including a couple pages of agent names, some even circled suggesting I contact them.  I read his note and tucked it away in a bookcase at that time.  I got it out about a year ago and hit my head against the wall when I realized what I should have done back then.  <laughing; then shrugging shoulders>

I chose this genre to start because I wanted to publish the novel I’d been working on all these years.  It’s where I started and I wanted to see it in print.  It deserved to see the light of publishing.  I’m currently writing the sequel to Blind Influence called Love is Blind.  JRR Tolkien has inspired me to create my own fantasy series called Tales of Reginnis.  I like working on these two vastly different genres.  When I get blocked or tired of one series, I write the other series.  I also enjoy oil painting and I am a fine art artist.  For me, balance is variety.  I wake up and ask “What will I create today?”  I let what I feel like doing direct where I am spending my creative energy. I have to be doing something and don’t like being bored.  Each creative outlet has its challenges and that is what keeps me interested.  I’m all about doing this my way and not letting others dictate a set of things that I have to be doing.  It’s about the creating for me, being in the zone creating worlds that others can join in and enjoy with me. 

Where did your love of books/storytelling/reading/writing/etc. come from?

It has always been a part of me ever since I was a little kid.  My neighborhood friends were so creative and we were always doing something creative.  We wrote stories, made up plays, spoofed popular movies; we were just so creative. I had some very creative cousins that I looked up to and admired. I have over sixty first cousins and I’m at the young end of that line, so I had a number of cousins who were exploring during the sixties and seventies. They left a huge impression on me. During high school, my best friend and I would write and tell stories, passing notes as we passed in the hallway.  It is what got us through high school!  After high school I obtained a job working for a consumer products company.  From the time I was 18 until my 30’s I had to live in what others call the “real world”.  The creative spirit that thrived when I was a kid wasn’t exactly accepted at work and all the expectations laid on one who works in Corporate America—well, let’s just say it isn’t conducive to the arts.   That is when I started writing on weekends and any time I could steal away from the demands of that other world.  If something creative wasn’t pouring from me, I would get cranky and depressed.  It took a long time to get back here, but I’m glad I did.

How long have you been writing?

I’ve been writing since I was a kid, so let’s say forty some year <winks>.  I would watch a TV show, like Mod Squad, and then I would head upstairs to my room and write a script for the show.  I was like nine years old when that show was on TV I think.  In my teens I started writing spoofs on different movies.  At that time my friends and I were into Science Fiction and Fantasy.  We spoofed Star Wars, Flash Gordon and Star Trek.  Then came the VHS recorder and we started to record our spoofs—acting them out.  In one spoof we had all the villains from Star Wars and Flash Gordon pitted against the good guys.  Luke Skywalker, Prince Baron, Obi-Wan and Flash fighting the Emperor, Ming, and Darth Vader; it was pretty hilarious at least we kids thought so and it kept us out of trouble.  Our parents just thought we were crazy, but then whose parents don’t think their kids are crazy?

What kind(s) of writing do you do?

I’ve written all kinds of things.  I’ve written scripts, blogs, business plans, reports, spoofs, short stories, and novels.  The list is endless really.  The thing is when you love to create or write, you just do it because it is a part of you. I can’t turn my brain off to the voices of my characters.  There is always a scene going on in my head.  As disturbing as that sounds, it is so necessary to what I do that I constantly keep tuned into it.  Most folks don’t even know it is going on because I’m so use to it. 


What cultural value do you see in writing/reading/storytelling/etc.?

That is an interesting question.  I grew up in a time when banning books was discussed in earnest.  My parents grew up during WWII and Hitler ordered books to be burned.  It is no wonder that my generation reacted so strongly to the proposition of banning books.  When we inhibit the creative voice, we are closing ourselves off to the wonderful learning experiences they present.  It is good that questions are asked and discussions based on knowledge and fact, are a result of that creativity.  There is a huge difference in knowledgeably questioning authority and just being an obstructionist because of being fearfully blind.   To me, writing/reading/storytelling is the cornerstone, the very foundation of creating a culture of co-existence. 


How does your book relate to your spiritual practice or other life path?
This book hasn’t progressed yet to relate to my spiritual practice.  Nicole will go through a bit of a change in the next book.  Right now, I would say Nicole and religion don’t get along. <laughs>.   Over the years, she lost her belief in the traditional churches.  That doesn’t mean that she is an atheist. She has yet to discover that she can manifest intentions.  She is still living in the expectation world.  Love is Blind, she’ll get a bit of a wake-up call.  Tales of Reginnis is probably closer to my spiritual practice.  I’m a Reiki Master and do a lot of mediation. 

Blind Influence was written at a time in my life when I lost faith in the traditional religion on which I was raised.  The church was changing and a number of circumstances happened that left a very bad taste in my mouth regarding organized religions.  I can remember sitting in a movie theater watching Empire Strike Back.  Yoda is explaining the Force and I was like—“yeah—yeah—what he said.”  That started me on a spiritual quest.  I wanted to know about energy and how to set intentions and manifest them.  I’ve met some pretty incredible people in this quest.  I could go on for hours about obtaining authentic power versus non-authentic power; how you lose your power/energy to non-authentic people and how to retain it when faced with non-authentic people.  So in a roundabout way, those things I’ve discovered, Nicole is on the way to discover.  But no worries, <laughing> I promise Nicole won’t wig out and join some cult or something weird like that.

What were your goals and intentions in this book, and how well do you feel you achieved them?  

Another great question and a bit hard to answer, but I’ll try.  Looking back at 1979 and the early 1980s, I really think that politics started on this slippery slope downward.  That’s not to say that it wasn’t as dysfunctional then as it is now, we just didn’t get 24/7 reporting on it. <laughs>  But I think back to the 1970s and 1980s there was a distinct turn that started.  Kennedy’s assassination brought Camelot, that mythical place where everything was flawless or innocent, to a shattering halt.  When I talked to my parents about that time, they genuinely believed that politics/government was honest, but the day that Kennedy was shot, the path grew darker with each administration.  Through research, you could probably determine that politics has always had a dirty side to it, we just didn’t see it; or perhaps we chose not to see it or believe it.  Kennedy’s assassination, Watergate, Iran-Contra, Whitewater—the list goes on and on—each one sending us further down the negativity spiral.  So, with Blind Influence, I wanted to create a parallel universe, if you will.  At the end of Blind Influence, Senator Robert Jenkins has a powerful secret. What he does with the secret will either send the government further down that negative spiral, or he has a chance to create a positive change and give the power back to the American people.   Will he do it? I’ll never tell until Love is Blind is published.

Each day, we, as individuals, have the opportunity to make decisions that change our path and can impact the path of many others.  So part of Blind Influence was to show how decisions, of others or their own, impact the environment in which we live.  I don’t necessarily mean our physical environment.  Each of the characters in the book needs to find themselves in order to make the necessary decisions to take their authentic power back.  Do I think I achieved that?  I think the series will achieve that and when I have, I’ll consider the series complete. 

Can you share some stories about people you met while researching this book?

When I first started researching the book, the internet was not available like it is today.  So I spent a lot of time in the library in the beginning.  One of the things I needed to do was define Sean, the MI6 agent.  Who was he? What shaped his life?  Just what qualities does MI6 look for in agents?  When doing the research, I found an application guidebook for the CIA.  That guidebook was fascinating and opened a whole new world of what being a field agent is like.  Believe me, it isn’t what James Bond is.  The guidebook had a copy of the test they were giving at the time.  The test asked questions about different drugs and you had to say whether you had ever taken them and if so, how incapacitated you were when you were on them. You rated yourself on a scale of one to ten. They were clearly looking for people who had a high tolerance to all drugs.  It made me think about how expendable the field agents really are.  Sad really. 

The internet has opened all sorts of research opportunities. I think the funny stories will be sometime in the future.  With all the searches I’ve done lately, I keep wondering if I’m on the radar now.  <laughs>  One of my friends who read the book asked my husband if he worries at night when he is sleeping.  Tom, my husband, asked her why she was asking. She couldn’t believe that I came up with the Serpent’s calling card. She wondered what other sinister things I could come up with and wondered if Tom was thinking the same thing.  That part of the book has surprised a lot of folks.   <insert devious smile here.>

What are some of the references that you used while researching this book?

I can’t really recall the names of the research, hard copy that I used back in 1979/1980.  I know there was a CIA handbook and guidebook that I found.  A lot of research occurred during the last year.  I used a number of internet references, mainly just to make sure my handwritten notes from the research I did back in 1979 was true.  There was a lot of research done on IRA, terrorist activities in the 1960s, 1970s, ANWR, politics, Vietnam War, the list goes on and on. 

One of the most interesting pieces I discovered recently while writing the prequel novella, Blind Intention.  This novella was written to provide a little more back story on the three main characters.  Nicole is a lawyer and went to school at Harvard Law.  Working back through the timeline, it would have been 1964.  Well, I wasn’t sure that Harvard was accepting female law students in 1964.  I know some of you out there may be saying—of course they did. Well, the class of 1964 was the first year that Harvard Law accepted females.  So, Nicole’s class was the first class.  That lead me to a book called “Pinstripes and Pearls” written by Judith Richards Hope, who was one of the 22 females accepted into the class of 1964.  The book chronicles her fight to graduation.  The short story about Nicole in Blind Intention was strongly influenced by the courage and fight of these women in the class of 1964.  Just another quick fact about the class of 1964: 22 women were accepted, 15 actually graduated and one committed suicide.  The total class size of the class of 1964 was approximately 534.  That gives you an idea of what these women endured. 

What do you think most characterizes your writing?

I always think in scenes, so there is a lot said in dialog.  One reader said that reading my book is like watching a movie, which she loved.  It probably does read like a movie because I’m directing what is being captured in the book and there is a lot more revealed in dialog.  I think it reads more personally because there is a focus on relationships.

What was the hardest part of writing this book?  

Taking my seven or more inches of handwritten scenes/notes and actually typing it up on the computer.  Then making decisions on what stays and what goes. I can remember that for weeks I kept trying to figure out how Nicole would react in regards to the Serpent.  I don’t want to give too much away, but I was stumped on this one particular scene.  Let’s just say I actually did to myself what happens in the book.  I can attest firsthand that what she does really does hurt and the effects last quite long.  I accidently did it, by the way. 

What did you enjoy most about writing this book?

Anytime I write, the most enjoyable stage is the free write stage.  This is where I just write and not worry about grammar, sentence structure, plot and so on.  This is just to get the scene down.  Then after many of these sessions, I sit down and write an outline. That is the most fun I have writing.  The rest becomes the hard work—trimming, editing, and proofing are all hard.  They call it free writing for a reason!



When Linda Riesenberg Fisler isn’t working on her next book she is painting in her studio or riding her Trek bicycle along the many bike trails of Ohio. The former Fortune 500 consumer products manager explores art through her worldwide Internet radio show, “Art Chats with Linda Fisler”. Linda has been creative since childhood, writing stories and scripts of movies and TV shows to entertain friends. She discovered oil painting in the 1990s and began trying to express words visually.

Writing Blind Influence helped Linda realize she had been blind to letting others run her life, so she began to transition to the more artistic life she has today. In addition to The Blind series of books, Linda has created a fantasy book based on her exploration of spirituality. She hopes readers will learn how to open their own eyes instead of blindly following the expectations of those around them.


Blind Influence

Successful, sexy attorney Nicole Charbonneau feels content with her life and career as a star at a powerful law firm in Washington, DC. She is blind, however, to the circumstances that will put her at the center of a web of deceit, murder, power plays and conspiracies. Across the ocean, British MI-6 Agent Sean Adkins is tracking a cold-blooded assassin known as the Serpent, who’s been hired to kill President Andrews. The Serpent cares only for the millions he’ll get, not why the powerful group of men wants Andrews killed.
The Serpent, a master of disguise, completes his job, but will it be his last? Sean will stop at nothing to get revenge, which includes setting a trap. Nicole, through her work and her connection with Robert Jenkins, a powerful young senator who happens to head the Intelligence Committee, pieces together who hired the assassin. Will the senator reveal to the public all he knows, or will revealing the identities of the powerful businessmen, politicians and government officials be too much for a country already in a fragile state?
Blind Influence, set in 1979 when the United States was on the brink of its second oil crisis, takes readers on a wild ride of political intrigue and personal discovery.

Are you ready for an exclusive teaser from Blind Influence? Check it out, and tell us what you think in the comments!
Then it started. The siren was the first thing to warn him something was wrong. The golden light turned dark. The bittersweet taste of adrenaline began in his mouth, and he swallowed, trying to quell it. A red flashing light accosted his eyes, and he could see himself running to his home—their home. He ran into the house, unable to catch his breath. He tried to wake himself from the nightmare. He didn’t want to live this again.


Links
Twitter page   (@lfisler)


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