Roger Sagert: http://highcountrystories.blogspot.com/
Roger, I’m so glad to have this opportunity to talk with you. I’m a big fan of your Inuit saga series which includs Inuit Child One Who Walks Alone and The Long Trail Home.
Roger, I’m so glad to have this opportunity to talk with you. I’m a big fan of your Inuit saga series which includs Inuit Child One Who Walks Alone and The Long Trail Home.
What inspired you to write these very unique novels?
Roger: I wanted to show how these unique people lived and how special their lives were and what they thought of their world and themselves. .
Roger: I wrote my first story when I was
in the 7th grade in school in Winter, Wisconsin. The story was short
and we were required to produce one for the class and we had to read our
stories out loud, it was an enjoyable experience, I wrote my next book in the
early seventies. It was by pen and paper while I was living camped out in the
Rocky Mountains. It wasn’t until years later when the computer made it possible
for me to write so that another person could actually read what it was I had
wrote.
DSW:
How do your ideas for
stories typically come to you?
Roger: The air and the world around me are
full of stories, I just sit down and start typing.
DSW:
Do you know the entire
story when you begin or do you begin with a grain of an idea and allow the
story to tell itself as you write?
Roger:
If a scene comes to my mind, I start to write, and the story and those
in it come in to a life of their own and pass through the story on their own.
DSW:
Do you use an outline?
Roger: No I am not a learned man; I
thought at one time these types of methods might help me so I bought a writing
program, working with that was worse than typing a story. It might even be
under my desk collecting dust right now.
A dear friend gave me a book on writing. Oh well, what can I say?
DSW:
What is your purpose in
writing?
Roger: I like to show that no matter what
circumstances a person or peoples are in, they are able to rise up to the
challenge. This is something I have noticed as I have lived my life.
I follow the flow as the story comes to me and I will introduce severe situations and the characters must then do what they must. But I never know how they will react to any give situation.
DSW:
That explains why your stories are so personal and touching,
even though they happen to a different people in a different time. Do you feel it to be a calling, or are you
satisfying some psychological, spiritual, or social imperative?
Roger: A calling, that would be far too
lofty for me, but self-satisfying, and some social imperative, those two
suggestions would be closer, I tend to write strong female characters. My
mother taught me to be respectful and thoughtful of those around me.
My Father taught me to stand up for the right to live and die for what I believe, and to step in and do what you must even if it was going to hurt.
My Father taught me to stand up for the right to live and die for what I believe, and to step in and do what you must even if it was going to hurt.
DSW:
Do you write to inform
or to entertain, or for some other reason?
Roger: I write because it is in me to do
so.
DSW:
Do you write to yourself
or do you keep a reading audience in your mind's eye?
Roger: One could write for one’s self and
be quite happy, and there is nothing wrong with that, but a story that is sent
out to the world must quickly take hold of the reader, and like the subtle
shade of evening, you must let the reader see enough to follow the path you
yourself are traveling on; you must not rush on ahead and leave them in the
dark, but occasionally you must brush their fingertips to help guide them to
your sight.
DSW:
Another example of why I
find your work filled with poetry. I like that. What is the most satisfying
aspect of writing for you?
Roger: A imaginary story or any factual
book no matter the content is built from within the mind of the writer, and to
bring the fruit of the story out of one’s mind and place it there for the
reader to see, and then to find out that the reader understands what you are
really trying to show, is for me the self-satisfying aspect of writing.
DSW: What is the most difficult aspect of it?
DSW: What is the most difficult aspect of it?
Roger:
Sitting down and doing.
DSW:
Do you write on a fairly
regular basis, or do you wait for your muse to whisper in your ear?
Roger: Hardly ever, but when I do, I am
like a lamb being eaten by the lion, I am consumed. I have written for over
twenty four hours at a sitting, and once bitten, I strive to drive the story on
to completion.
DSW:
What do you do when you
face the dreaded nemesis – Writer’s Block?
Roger:
When the thought has entered my mind I ask out loud to myself, “How will
I keep this story interesting?” Then I let my fingers move across the keyboard,
and a character sticks their head from between the keys on the keyboard and
says to me, “Here this is where I belong.” Or sometimes they say, “You have come too far
too fast and must go back and find out why I am here and why I am doing thusly.”
DSW:
Is there a better time
of day for you to write?
Roger: No, the story never stops flowing to me. When
I write I write until I need to stop.
DSW:
Where do you like to
practice your craft? Is there any
particular room?
Roger: I can write anywhere I can get to
a computer. I know nothing of structure of sentences and I cannot spell. Vowels
and verbs are strange countries made of gooey smelly mud; a hanging participial
might as well be a new planet off in deep space.
DSW:
Do you need quiet, or do
you like noise when you are writing?
Roger: I sometimes put on headphones and
listen to old timey blues. Or quiet works also.
DSW:
What does your typical
writing day look like?
Roger: When I was in the Antarctic I
wrote at night until midnight. When I
write at home I close the door of the room, I do not like stopping or being
bothered.
DSW:
Do you have to struggle
for ideas for stories, or do they come to you easily?
Roger:
My mind is not a void that is empty, but rather a new world waiting to
be investigated.
DSW:
What do you consider the
most important quality in writing: character development, plot, etc?
Roger:
I waste very little time describing the characters. I give the reader
the bare necessity , I leave them to be molded by the reader, I offer them a
sip of warm mulled wine and let their inner glow flesh out what they themselves
want to see. Perhaps this is a mistake. I’ll let the reader decide.
The plots main course is on its own. If I do something about it, I sure don’t know it when I do. If something is really wrong and I sense it, I look at my direction to see what has happened.
DSW:
Can we look forward to
other books by you in the future?
Roger: Will the sun rise in the realm of
our minds, and will not the rain fall and call the salmon from the sea?
DSW:
There you go again,
Roger! I love the way your mind
works. Would you care to share some of those
ideas with us now to whet our appetites?
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