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Ian O'Neill

 

"O'Neill knows how to keep readers turning the pages." —Kelley Armstrong, National Bestselling Author

 

 

Endo by Ian O'Neill
 

  
ENDO
Ian O'Neill
[
Suspense/Mystery] Keely McAdam discovers the dead body of a pro cyclist, and a second cyclist soon disappears. Murder mystery becomes nightmare when Keely’s wife, Elise, is kidnapped and a man contacts Keely telling him to find the missing rider or... MORE
 

 

Ian O'Neill

URL: www.authorianoneill.blogspot.com

 

ABOUT IAN

Who is Ian O’Neill?

He was born in Glasgow, Scotland but has no accent. He grew up in Mimico, the once-named town in southern Etobicoke, Ontario, Canada. Went to high school there and yadda-yadda-yadda, graduated from college then he got married, is father to a great daughter, got divorced, is still father to a great daughter, yadda-yadda-yadda, is married to an amazing woman and lives in Oakville, Ontario. Some say he is The Stig from Top Gear. Some say he isn’t. You can decide for yourself. We think he has the right shaped head to fit the crash helmet. We’re just saying.
 

INTERVIEW

Q: Why writing?

A: I suck at everything else. Wait, let me turn that into a positive phrase: It’s the only thing I’m good at.

Q: How long have you been writing?

A: My first paying gig was in high school. I wrote an essay for a buddy and got paid in beer. I ended up in advertising as a copywriter for a dozen years, then went freelance and I’ve been doing that ever since. I’ve written nature/wildlife, some science and sports, television and radio ads, P.R., speeches; pretty much anything that you need written, I’ll write it for you.

Q: When did the fiction bug bite you?

A: Not too long ago, maybe four or five years. That bug bit hard and it left a nasty scar. I’ve been hooked ever since.

Q: I’ll bet you get asked this question a lot; where did you get your idea for Endo?

A: All fiction writers face the ‘idea’ question and the answer is different for all of them. For Endo, there were two catalysts: a friend with a penchant for riding off cliffs on his mountain bike and a thought I had in the wee hours of a race.
     My friend Tony has gone off a cliff twice, and lived to tell the tale. Both times a branch saved him from hitting the ground. One night, at a twenty-four hour mountain bike race, I was traversing a cliff edge, I was alone, the only light was from my headlamp, it was pitch black beyond the halo and it was eerily quiet. I thought, wouldn’t this be a great place for a murder. That was all I needed to start researching, plotting, building characters.

Q: Speaking of characters, do they speak to you and lead you where they want to go or are you in charge?

A: If they were in charge then I’d need to be speaking to someone else right now; a professional of another kind. I know to a lot of writers, it feels like their characters are taking them on the journey, but it’s not the case. I will always send my characters to explore plot avenues I uncover but I’ll be the one deciding what to write. At least that’s what they tell me to say.

Q: Humor is a big part of your writing, your life?

A: Oh yeah. Like my parents said, if you can’t laugh at yourself others will, so, beat them to it. Well, they didn’t really say that but we did do a lot of laughing. Humor is a big part of what gets me through the day and inevitably it makes it into my work. One of the biggest compliments I ever received was when a reader told me my writing made her laugh and cry. That piece was a comedy, so, I didn’t want to know what made her cry.

Q: For anyone that hasn’t yet read Endo, what book would you compare it to?

A: That’s tough, but I’d say it has the pace and thriller elements of Greg Iles, 24 Hours. Endo is a whodunit that will take you on a thrill ride. It’s got a real knock out punch. Please stop me. It will get your heart pounding. Stop me please.

Q: Okay, stop. We get it. Endo is a great read. How about a change of pace. Boxers or briefs?

A: Commando.

Q. Let's change pace again, shall we?

A. Sorry, I can’t help myself. Okay, pace changing. As a guy who worked in advertising for many years, I can tell you first hand that word of mouth is the best advertising. All I can ask is that anyone reading this give Endo a read--I know you’ll have a great time. Then, tell two friends…hell, tell a dozen because I have a daughter going to college next year and that’ll help me buy her a box of fresh pens.

Q: Got any advice for writers out there trying to get published?

A: I have a single e-book title published so, I don’t think I’m in a position to give any advice. All I’ll say is if you write, keep writing. The only way good things happen for you as a writer, is if you keep writing. Oh, and read, too. Write and read, yeah, that’s it. Oh, and eat all your vegetables.

Q: What does that have to do with writing?

A: Can’t hurt.

 

 

Coming Soon

 

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