Author ~ Susan Crandall

Please welcome author, Susan Crandall, to Island Writer. She joins us this evening as part of the Cyber Tour sponsored by the RWA Women's Fiction online group.
BACK ROADS was Susan's first solo work, her first published work and her first award winning novel, having won a prestigious RITA award for Best First Book and two National Reader's Choice Awards.
Susan says she was born with an incredible love for books and eventually this evolved into the penning of her own stories.
Susan grew up in a small Indiana town, married a guy from that town, and then moved to Chicago for a while. She is pleased to say that she has been back in her hometown for many years and plans to stay. She and her husband have two grown children.
Susan's latest release is titled, Sleep No More, and we'll begin by having Susan tell us a bit about the story.
SLEEP NO MORE is the story of Abby Whitman, who was a sleepwalker as a child, setting a fire that destroyed the ancestral home and scarred her younger sister for life. Abby's sleepwalking passed with puberty, but the guilt did not. She lives alone, structuring her life to insure that if her sleepwalking reoccurs no one else will be in harm's way.
Now Abby's mother has recently died, her sister is being her usual manipulative self, and her father is showing signs of Alzheimer's. And her sleepwalking has returned.
One night Abby awakens behind the wheel of her van at a fatal accident. Sleepwalking, or more specifically, sleep-driving, is the only explanation she can come up with for her presence at the scene. But it soon becomes clear that there was a third party involved, and that person begins making threats for Abby not to tell what she saw. But Abby has no recollection of the accident. She seeks the help of a family acquaintance and psychiatrist, Jason Coble to try to figure out what happened at the accident and why someone is threatening her.
Abby's journey toward truth and self-forgiveness uncovers long buried secrets in both her family and her town. Secrets someone will go to any lengths to protect.
When did you first begin writing?
I didn't actually begin writing until I was in my thirties. My younger sister sort of dragged me into it. She came to me one day with a stack of paper and admitted she'd been writing in secret and wanted me to look over her work. Being the older sister and an avid reader, naturally I had an opinion. We worked on some stories together, then she stopped writing, but I was totally hooked. I could no more stop writing than I could stop reading.
What's your favorite and least favorite thing about writing?
I absolutely love the beginning stages of writing a book. I love the brainstorming, the research, the exploring of possibilities, the laying awake at night pondering "what ifs." It's the stage when everything is possible and you aren't yet hampered with the reality of making all of the parts work.
My least favorite? This may sound contradictory, but it's the blank page, the blinking cursor waiting like a teacher with a tapping foot. It's that stage between all of the daydreaming and actually having something concrete to work with. It's the place where you have to begin to make the real choices that will chart the course of your character's journey. Once I have something started, it's fun to work with it, expand, delve more deeply into my characters.
Can you offer any advice to other writers still hoping to become published?
1) Read widely, and read like a writer. When an author has elicited a particular emotion from you as a reader, take the work apart and figure out how he/she achieved it. Study the story construction, the pacing.
2) Continually hone your craft. Learn from workshops, classes, and just chatting with other writers.
3) Learn to trust your writing instincts. We writers are filled with self-doubt, constantly questioning the quality of our work. If you're a writer, there is something special inside you that lead you to it. Don't follow every suggestion made by everyone who has glanced at your work. Carefully evaluate criticism. It's a valuable tool, but it must be weighed.
4) And lastly, put on your armor and send your work out there into the world. No one is going to come knocking on your door and say, "I heard you're writing a book. I'd like to publish it." Yes, you'll probably receive rejections. That's all part of the process.
Can you tell us what you're working on now?
Now that SLEEP NO MORE is safely launched, I'm focusing on two novels. One is a mainstream women's fiction. The other is a slow-boil psychological suspense. I'm having a great time with both of them!
Thank you so much, Susan, for stopping by Island Writer for the Cyber Tour. I'm wishing you much success with Sleep No More and all of your future novels.
And readers............you can visit Susan for more information at her website at this link.
Please leave your comments and/or questions here at Island Writer and say hello to Susan.
I'll see you back here very soon with some better-late-than-never Christmas photos.............








Reader Comments (1)
Wrap up and drink some cocoa!
Susan