Tell us about yourself and how many books you have written.
I’ve spent most of my career in science education. Unlike a lot of writers, I never want writing to be my day job. I have too much fun working with my students! But I do want my writing to be _a_ job. I love it, too, and I have been doing it for a long time. I’ve written a lot of material for companies like Hasbro over the years. This year I released my first action/adventure thriller novel.
What is the name of your latest book and what inspired it?
The title is The Sword of the Magi, and the inspirations were numerous. Ever since I read about NASA’s original Orion Project, I’ve been wanting to write about it. Then when the news broke about the $22 billion in gold and gems (billion! not million! crazy!) found in an ancient Indian temple, I started to put two and two together.
Those two inspirations really helped form the plot.
For the characters, I was inspired to create and team up Silas and Feather because so many action/adventure thriller novels feature a father whose daughter is nothing but a burden. She’s the weak point that the bad guys attack through, or she’s holding the good guy hero back from being a total badass, or she makes her dad feel guilty about being away from her fighting the good fight. I wanted to write a book that flips that idea on its head. I wanted to write a book where the daughter is dragging the dad into the fight, a book where the daughter is just as much a badass as her father.
Do you have any unusual writing habits?
My natural tendency is to write slowly, so I have to fight that to meet my deadlines. One way that I fight that is Lucky Charms. If I meet my deadline for the night, then I get a bowl of Lucky Charms! What could be better?
What authors, or books have influenced you?
Thriller authors who have influenced me include James Rollins, Greg Rucka, Matthew Reilly, and of course Clive Cussler. I’d put Robert Heinlein and JK Rowling in that category, too (Deathly Hallows is a ripping good thriller). From other genres, I could list as influences George Orwell, Orson Scott Card, and George RR Martin.
What are you working on now?
I’m working on the second book in the Against the Magi series. The title is A Heaven for Demons.
What is your best method or website when it comes to promoting your books?
I’m not sure yet. The Sword of the Magi was just released three weeks ago, so I’m still figuring out the marketing process. I think reviews on Amazon are extremely important, but sites like Awesomegang can really help too.
Do you have any advice for new authors?
Finish your book. Get it out there. Too many authors are stuck in the write-rewrite-scrap-project-start-over cycle.
Read. Not only in your own genre, but read books on craft (James Scott Bell’s Plot and Structure is good) and read sites like kboards’ Writers’ Cafe.
What is the best advice you have ever heard?
Strive for the ideal while adapting to the real.
What are you reading now?
I just finished Iris Johannsen’s Live to See Tomorrow. Tonight, I’m going to have to pick something from my to-be-read shelf. Probably Rollins, F Paul Wilson, or Preston&Child.
What’s next for you as a writer?
I’m going to finish the Against the Magi series. After that, I have the first book in my next series plotted and populated. But that’s looking far ahead; Against the Magi still has a long way to go.
If you were going to be stranded on a desert island and allowed to take 3 or 4 books with you what books would you bring?
Ooh, that’s tough because I generally don’t re-read novels. I do, on the other hand, re-read poetry all the time. So if I were going to be stranded for a long, long time – beard-growing, teeth-pulling, talking-to-volleyballs long – I’d definitely take my complete works volumes of Millay, Frost, Wilbur, maybe Ryan. Two of the novels I do re-read are Ender’s Game and Stranger in a Strange Land, so I’d bring those, too.
If I were only going to be there a week or so, I’d pick up any three from my to-be-read shelf, where I have the newest ones from Baldacci, Rollins, F Paul Wilson, Jeremy Robinson, and Coulter.
Author Websites and Profiles
Vincent Caine Website
Vincent Caine Amazon Profile
Vincent Caine’s Social Media Links
Goodreads Profile