Oh, you guys. This is such a special author interview for me because ... okay, I'm almost hyperventilating with excitement here ... I went to school with
Andrew Fukuda in Hong Kong. (Yes, really.)
I ran into his brother down in L.A. and Andy's HUGE book deal came up in conversation and I was like, "Do you think he'd let me interview him? Do you think he'll remember me?" *nervous star-struck quaking ensues*
I don't know if Andrew remembered me or not, but he did graciously agree to come on my blog. And I'm SO THRILLED.
THE HUNT is out now and it looks amazing!
Tell us about your book in one sentence.
Gene,
a 17 year old in a bleak world where humans have been eaten to near
extinction and who has survived by painstakingly concealing his true
species, is chosen to hunt down the last few remaining humans.
Who or what inspired THE HUNT?
The Hunt likely began while watching Adam Lambert’s performance of
Mad World on American Idol. The following lyrics made an
impression, and stayed with me for days afterwards.
Went to school and I was very nervous
No one knew me, no one knew me
Hello teacher tell me what’s my lesson
Look right through me, look right through me.
From those lyrics, a single image popped into my head: of a boy sitting in a
classroom, desperately lonely despite the many students around him, wanting to
be ignored. This boy had a secret, I came to see, one so awful that if it were
ever made known his otherwise civil classmates would–in a split second–kill
him. I pondered what that secret might be. When it came to me, I literally
jumped out of my seat: the boy was the only surviving human in a world filled
with vampire-like creatures. No existence could be lonelier or scarier than
that.
How long have you been writing?
Probably from the
time I was thirteen or fourteen. To pass time during interminable
classes, I'd write short stories. My classmates were entertained by
them, and I began to think maybe I had a talent. I once collaborated on a
short story with my twin brother during French class, and it was this
sprawling, epic apocalyptic story about how the classroom, then the
school, then Hong Kong, then the whole world was taken over by trillions
of rabid ants. I wish I could dig up that story because it really was
quite enthralling!
How long did it take you to write THE HUNT?
It
took about a year. I wrote it at a time when I was extremely busy with
work, with family life, and with my church. I didn't have a lot of free
time. But I committed myself to writing 1400 words per week (or 200 per
day), which is not a lot, but which will give you a YA-length novel
after a year. When the book really
started coming into its own, I'd wake up extra early to write before the
workday began. But it took a go-for-broke tenacity to get it done!
What's your favorite novel of all time?
NOOOOO!!!!! The
one-favorite-novel question! Okay, okay, if I had to choose only one, it would have to be this obscure novel titled
Never Let Me Go on The Road to Watership Down on Cold Mountain.
The author's name eludes me at the moment, but I think it's something
long like Mr. Kazuo Adams Charles McIshiguro Cormac Frazier. Or
something like that.
If you had to eat only one food for a whole week, what would it be?
Doritos! For one whole week! Woohoo!
Tell us about your ideal vacation.
I am such a boring person: a beach resort with my family and a great book. And Doritos.
Name the best city in the entire world.
Hong Kong. It's an incredible, awesome city.*
Do you have a day job?
I'm a
full-time author! Before that, I worked a number of years as a
prosecutor. Like all lawyers, I hated my job and jumped ship at the
first
opportunity. Just kidding! I actually loved being a prosecutor. But
fulfilling as it was, my love for writing ran deeper and truer. After
The Hunt
trilogy was bought by St. Martin's Press at auction, I was able to quit
my lawyer job and write full-time. A dream come true for which I'm
daily grateful.
Any advice for aspiring authors?
Write 200 words
a day. After a year, you'll have a novel-length manuscript. Still, I
feel blessed because I know getting published requires so much more
than simply writing 200 words a day. Luck, gumption, talent, a great
editor, a savvy agent – all, and much more, are needed, and many of
these are beyond your control. But there are also things you do control,
and 200 words a day is one of them. Now, when people ask me what it
takes to get published, I say: start with 200 words a day. And anyone
can do that.
Thank you for letting me pry you with weird questions, Andy, and I love your advice at the end. Congratulations and I wish you every success in your career!
*Andy knew he had to answer this question correctly or face my wrath.