Welcome to Dave Adair. A professional writer for more
than 30 years, Dave lives a remarkable life in Pennsylvania. His family, his
job and his hobbies take him to amazing places everyday.
Random Lucidity is his
first novel.
Connect with Dave:
@daveadairbooks
(twitter)
daveadair.wordpress.com
goodreads.com/daveadairbooks
facebook.com/daveadairbooks
www.daveadair.net
The Writers’ Lens is about "Bringing
fiction into focus." What brings your writing into focus-- the
characters, the stories, the love of words For me, it definitely is the
characters: the way they interact and the story they tell through their words.
There is a banter that exists among the main characters that brings out the
types of people they are. Like all of us, they are not one dimensional. They
can be fun and sarcastic, or they can be deadly serious and depressed.
Some writers like to spend most of
their time setting the scene and getting into detailed descriptions of smells
and sounds. I present the setting in subtle ways and get back as quickly as
possible to the characters. That’s what life is really like. Who has time to
take in every bit of your surroundings?
I want my characters and my stories
to be real. For them to be real, they have to interact in a real way.
How do you find time to write and do a demanding job? In real life, I am a health care
executive, primarily on the marketing side. So I get to be creative from time
to time, but nothing like writing fiction.
I make time to write in the
evenings. My wife, Rachel, is a school teacher. So she is in bed fairly early,
as are my kids that are still at home. If I’m not writing or marketing Random
Lucidity at night, then I would probably just be sitting around watching
television. That’s no way to spend your time.
I used to think I didn’t have time
to write until I realized how much time I was wasting on the couch in front of
the television, or playing with my phone every night.
What do you think readers will like about your book? So far, every bit of feedback I
have received has been positive. To be honest, I was terrified the first time I
gave my book to my wife to read as a proof. I was equally terrified when I
released it. I had no idea what to expect. I
thought it was good, but who really knows until someone you don’t know tells
you they like it.
There has been no greater thrill
than the first review I received from a complete stranger saying that she
wanted me to write more books. I’m not sure anything else will top that feeling
for me regardless of what happens from here on out.
How much fact is in your fiction? This is a really popular question
among my friends and family. My mother was very scared before she read it
because she thought it was going to be about our family! I can tell you she is
very relieved.
There are very few correlations between these characters and
anyone I know in real life.
Certainly, the main character,
Reggie, has some similarities to me, but not many. Instead of trying to
recreate real events and circumstances, I chose to recreate the emotions from
situations I have experienced, or those close to me have experienced.
This book was based on a line
from a Bruce Springsteen song called The River, which goes, “Is a dream a lie
if it don’t come true, or is it something worse?” It started with that and
ended where it ended. How I was going to get there was unknown to me when I started
out. It was quite a rewarding journey.
What's the highest compliment someone could make about your
writing? Besides genuinely telling me they
enjoyed Random Lucidity, the best thing I have heard so far were comparisons to
successful writers. I had one reviewer say that my writing was a cross between
Carl Hiaasen and Dennis Lehane. I had never read either of those authors, but I
plan to soon.
If someone spends hours of their
time reading what I wrote, all I can really hope for is that they didn’t find
it to be a waste of time; that they were entertained and along the way, maybe
it made them think a bit about their life and their choices. Maybe it made them
think about where they want their life to go from this point forward.
If I can entertain people and get
them thinking, even just a little bit, about their place in the world, then
I’ll be pretty happy.
An excerpt from Random
Lucidity:
At
first glance, Rita Miserly was precisely the type of person Reggie expected to
encounter when he first entered into this complex. She was a frightful sight.
White roots almost three inches in length chasing her auburn hair steadfastly.
A burning cigarette dangled from her lower lip beneath a squinted expression
caught somewhere between curiosity and disgust. It was only later that Reggie
would realize that his first impression of Rita would be among his most
pleasant experiences.
The
door opened and Reggie steeled himself to jump feet first into a world he knew
nothing about. He had walked unarmed into an apartment complex on the bad side
of town to discuss the literary career of a special needs patient with someone
who looked as though she was transplanted directly from Appalachia by way of an
insane asylum.
All
for the sake of his dream, he thought, and forged ahead.
“Hi,”
he said to this frightening sight at the opposite side of the door frame.
Rita
stood, staring at him, the squint including her nose as an unwilling partner as
smoke billowed past her thick black eyebrows. She said not a word. Just stared.
This
must be the place, Reggie chuckled to himself. Like mother, like son.
“My
name is Reggie Hatcher and I am looking for Jerry’s apartment. Last name starts
with an M. Does he live here?” Reggie asked.
“Why
do you want to know?” Rita snarled back.
“Well,
I found this notebook of his and I wanted to return it to him.”
Rita
reached out, grabbed the notebook with a deliberate motion, almost daring
Reggie to pull it back, and closed the door.
His
instincts told him to turn and walk back to his car. The old Reggie would have
run away. This Reggie would not.
His
first few knocks went unanswered. Then, finally getting the point that he
wasn’t going to go away, Rita opened the door again. The cigarette was missing,
but the same disturbed, squinted expression remained. Apparently it wasn’t the
smoke that made her look that way. She just looked that way.