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Spoiler Free Q & A / She Has a Broken Thing Where Her Heart Should Be by J.D. Barker
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Brenda ~The Sisters~Book Witch
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May 07, 2020 09:03AM

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Can't wait for this! J.D. has quickly become a favorite of mine.

All it took was one book and he's a favorite of mine, too 😁


I love the originality of your books and She Has a Broken Thing Where Her Heart Should Be was no exception. For me, this book was a little bit of everything: mystery, coming of age, love story, obsession, suspense, etc. Can you tell us how this book came out? How did you come up with it? Was it intentional that this book would have so many things (coming of age, suspense, etc), or did they just come about as you wrote?
There are several quotes from Great Expectations in the book. I love how that book influenced this one. Is Great Expectations a favorite book of yours? I haven't read that book since high school, , this book has me wanting to read Great Expectations again!

Are there any authors that you would like to write with in the future?

I tend to read your books fast, is it ever frustrating to you as an author to write a book, have it take months (or longer) of your life, to have a reader, sit down and read it in one day?
Are you working on anything currently?
Who are your literary influences?


I loved the literary references to Great Expectations! As a fan of classical literature, I found this to be so original and brilliant! Is Dickens your favorite classical author? What classical authors do you like to read? What authors would you say have influenced your writing the most?
Your characters in this novel were superbly done. They felt real to me and I had a real emotional connection to them. How do you think you accomplish this? Are their personalities inspired by people you know?
This book reminded me a lot of Stephen King in that regard. He is a favorite of mine and I always enjoy and bond with his characters. Do you read Stephen King?
This story was so unique, where did you find the inspiration?
When writing do you outline your story from start to finish, or are you led by the characters?
Finally, have you considered writing a sequel to She Has a Broken Thing Where Her Heart Should Be? I just can't let the characters go!
Thank you so very much for taking the time to answer our questions! Looking forward to any books you put out in the future! I plan to read every single one!


Thank you so much for joining us J.D! I enjoyed your 4MK series and found your killers fascinating, dark and twisted.
As an author what do you feel makes a serial killer fascinating and what do you think readers like to keep them turning the pages? Is this something you think about as you are creating your characters or do you feel your characters are guiding you?
As an author what do you feel makes a serial killer fascinating and what do you think readers like to keep them turning the pages? Is this something you think about as you are creating your characters or do you feel your characters are guiding you?

I also love the way there was something for everyone in this. You wrote a thriller but there is romance, magical systems, literary fiction, family saga vibes throughout. How did you approach this book? Did you have an initial idea and then let it take off or was it more planned than that?
Thanks for being willing to do this and thank you for the early copy of your next book! I'm ready to read them all!

I was fortunate to get a copy of "The Coast-to-Coast Murders", which was absolutely fabulous. I'm already feeling needy for another J.D. novel! Do you have anything in the works that you could tell us about or share? Best Regards!
You have a few characters in She Has a Broken Thing Where Her Heart Should Be and each developed so well. How we felt about them changed as their own true character was slowing revealed by the choices they made. You put the characters under a bit of pressure here that added some great tension and suspense to the story. We enjoyed discussing their actions that reveal who they really were and how different they were from what they seemed at first. This made these unusual characters feel very real to us. Pretty much you created characters we wanted to talk about.
How do you feel you were able to create that depth to your characters, their relationships and capturing their voices? Do you feel that your characters speak to you or do capture their voices in a different way?
How do you feel you were able to create that depth to your characters, their relationships and capturing their voices? Do you feel that your characters speak to you or do capture their voices in a different way?
Did you have a character you enjoyed writing more than the others and why? Maybe one that you felt was a bit more fun to create?
What would you like your readers to get from your books? Is there anything you would like us to know?

Hi all!


All it took was one book and he's a favorite of mine, too 😁" Thank you!

I love the originality of your books and She Has a Broken Thing Where Her Heart Should Be was no exception. For me, this bo..."
Great Expectations has always been a favorite of mine and when I had the initial idea for this book, I knew I wanted to mix them together. As far as how this one came along, once I had the opening paragraph (below) I just let it rip. I don't plan or outline in advance, I let the characters tell me the story.
OPENING:
Her name was Stella and I loved her from the first moment I saw her. Even after watching her kill a man who looked a lot like me, I couldn’t help but love her.
I didn’t know she had killed him, not at that time, I couldn’t possibly know, I only watched them kiss, but that moment spelled his end as surely as water runs downhill.
We would hide the body together, amid her apologies for what she had done.
Then she would be gone, disappearing into the night.
And I could do nothing else but follow, my heart filled with ache, her scent pulling me so.
—Jack Thatch | 22 Years Old

The Stoker family read my first book (Forsaken) and reached out. Apparently they'd been trying to find someone to write a prequel to DRACULA for some time (using Bram's original notes) and thought I'd be a good fit. I had a lot of fun with that one. With Patterson, he read The Fourth Monkey and liked it enough to provide a blurb. Once we started talking, we both knew we needed to work together on something.

I tend to read your books fast, is it ever frustrating to you as an author to write a book, have it take months (or longer) of your life, to h..."
It takes me about three months to write a draft, then a little longer to clean it up. I absolutely love it when a reader burns through it quickly. It means I did something right.

Nope. I learn this as I go along. It's always difficult. In this novel in particular, the events at the diner were tough. That's where the story went, though. Who am I to argue?

I don't have a preference. It is hard to close out a standalone, though, knowing I won't be working with those characters again.

I have a very understanding wife. I couldn't do this without her. She and our daughter always come first. When I walk out my office every day, I belong to them.

I'm sure Jack and the family are doing well but I have no plans to revisit them in a sequel at this time. Too many other books to write!

It depends largely on the collaborator. With DRACUL, Dacre Stoker didn't do any of the writing, he only provided the research. Patterson has been very hand's on. Like all relationships, writing with others is about compromise. You focus on each other's strengths and let it all balance out.

I was fortunate to get a copy of "The Coast-to-Coast Murders", which was abs..."
I've got a new book going out to publishers next week. Can't provide any details yet. You can probably expect something new out of me about every six months or so :)

Before I start any book, I always work out detailed character sketches. I knew as well as I know my best friends. I think that's key. If an author doesn't do it, the characters don't feel real and nobody is invested in what happens to them.

Characters are like children, you love them all equally. That said, I miss Sam Porter and hope to revisit him at some point.

I write literary popcorn. I just want to offer readers a little bit of an escape.

Naw, this has been great. I'll keep an eye on the board and try to answer others if they post. Now I need to get back to writing or my agent will call and yell at me!

Do you have a set writing routine?"
I usually know how I'd like a book to end but it doesn't typically go that way.
I've got my butt in my chair every day at 7am and I write until around noon, then I spend the afternoon working on the business side of things. On any given day, I'm working from 7am until around 3pm. I head out for a five mile run after that, then the rest of the day goes to my family.
Thank you for joining us J.D. I hope your agent doesn't yell!!
I look forward to reading your future work!!
I look forward to reading your future work!!


Hi :-)

Thank you for sharing your process. I look forward to any and all future books.
Books mentioned in this topic
She Has a Broken Thing Where Her Heart Should Be (other topics)Forsaken (other topics)
Dracul (other topics)
Coast to Coast Murders (other topics)
The Fourth Monkey (other topics)
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