Tag Archives: jimsteele

Jim Steele, Library, Writing, Author, at Home Office.JPG

Jim Steele Interview

I write raw. My dialogue is real and conversational. No topic is off-limits. My stories are authentic and alive.

Posted Nov 18 2019 by TheButler in Interviews with 0 Comments

The Indie Book Butler Interview – Jim Steele

Tell us a little about yourself and your work.

I’ve written for probably 30 plus years, but only in the last 4-5 kind of graduated into starting to learn how to craft a novel. On that topic, I’d say that I started trying to figure out how to write more than 4-5,000 words about 20 years ago. Little by little, I finally completed Ride My Highway in 2017. Ride is a rough and tumble story of a guy who is just out of control. Meanwhile, he’s driving an 18-wheeler cross country. But it also tells a lot of stories along the way: how he got to be the way he was, where he’s going, relationships ruined, lessons learned. For me, just to complete that first book was a pretty big accomplishment.

Then I got Just Across The Way in 2018. I’m finishing up Out Past Round Barns now, which is a prequel/sequel to Just Across The Way, both are just very messed up psychological Thrillers/Horror. The thing about those books is that they’re told in the first person, so they read like the journal of mad-man or something, which I think is pretty compelling. I use real places, hotels, towns, you name it. You could go to these places, and the story is right there in front of you. The first person is pretty much my favourite voice to write.

More than anything, I’m just wanting to complete the works I’ve already started, and then continue on with this business of writing books. I also enjoy short stories on occasion, and maybe even a bit of poetry if the mood hits me right. But, day to day, I’m pretty much focused on putting out books.

You’ve got 20 words to sell us on your work. Tempt us.

I write raw. My dialogue is real and conversational. No topic is off-limits. My stories are authentic and alive.

ride my highway

Were there any particular parts of the writing/publishing process that you struggled with?

Not selling very many books! Haha. But then again, I remind myself that I was never in it for the sales, even though that might be nice at some point. I have a day job that I enjoy, my family, kids, granddaughter, and our dogs. But at times, and this probably has a lot to do with being an Indie Author, there is nobody pushing me to do anything! If I start a work and then don’t finish it? Nobody cares. So for me, sometimes the grind of it all, putting the words down, and completing a book… when nobody is ASKING for it, that’s a tough thing to make yourself do sometimes. But, what can I say, I love it? So, I write.

Continue reading
Snapshots-poem-jim-steele-scattered-photos-poetry-jimsteeleauthor.com-jim-steele-writer.jpg

Snapshots ~ Poetry

Snapshots 

Gathered up to form,
A portrait in a frame
All of them together 
Tiny pictures with no name 


Through them we can see
Years and times gone by
With them we may feel
At times the urge to cry


Each one had a life then
Now they’re simply frozen
An image staring back through time 
Forgotten, once was chosen


Snapshots
Stills and hazy memories,
Never in a frame 
Fragments of a lifetime
Tiny pictures with no name


~ Jim Steele

Jim Steele ~ Blog

They say that a picture is worth a thousand words- unless it’s a picture of the Ocean. The Sea appears as an endless expanse, constantly changing, calm at times and violent at others. It ebbs and flows, coming and going, and however chaotic- follows the order of life.

Jim Steele, Author, Novelist, www.jimsteele.org, www.jimsteele.online, www.jimsteeleauthor.com, Jim Steele, Writer, Author, Books, jim steele, pacific, sonoma, state, park, california, sunset, Photo Credit at Jim Steele

The Pacific ~ Jim Steele

Viewed in that way, that picture- much like our lives- is now worth more than a million words, and an absolute meaning will never be achieved. Still, as a writer I try to put into words what others may hear, see, or feel. I attempt to convey emotions: Love, Hate, Bravery, Fear- Birth, Life, Death, and Dying.


It all goes together. We are all made up of millions of bits and pieces, put into words.

Listen as I tell our Story.

I do not sugar coat anything. I write as raw and as unpolished as my life and those around me
have been. As the reader, you need to be prepared for what you’re getting ready to wade into.
You won’t come back out the same.
I want to make you apprehensive, waiting for what comes around the corner. My goal is for you
to see what I see- it’s a wanderlust at every sunrise, and a sense of defeat at every sunset; a
feeling that no matter what you do, it will never be enough. To be content is akin is akin to
being comfortable, and comfort is not an option I’ve had. Instead, I would rather you have a
feeling of trepidation than some predisposed notion of safety.
Stephen King said that he recognizes “Terror as the finest emotion”. I agree and I’ll play that
card all day long. Laughter subsides, Love can fade, but Terror- Terror and Fear remains until
the bitter end and it’s all around us. It’s a constant in our lives, and is there whether the story is
one of romance, horror, or adventure. A terror of the unknown is why we cry at birth. Likewise,
that same unknown, the terror of not knowing where we might be traveling to, or possibly the
fear of where we think we may be headed- is what makes us hide from it all at the hour of our
death.

In the middle of it all- we LIVE!



Digiprove sealCopyright secured by Digiprove © 2018