Tyler Nitbone by Imran Siddiq
Publication date: November 29th, 2013
Genres: Science Fiction, Young Adult
Synopsis:
Tyler can Cross into parallel realities. Employed by a secret organization, he collects data about worlds encountered to improve the Alternate Worlds Map. Except the organization have apprehended him, tampered with his memory, and accused him of a crime he can’t recollect. They must have the wrong seventeen-year old? Nope – even Tyler’s friends have evidence against him.
There are rules to being a Alternate Worlds Viewer:
DO NOT interact with the environment.
DO NOT interfere with events.
DO NOT reveal the ability to Cross.
Tyler has broken with one. But which? All of them?
Worst of all he hates his surname: Nitbone.
Chased by the organization, he will Cross into explosive worlds to uncover the real traitor or risk the lives of zillions.
Tyler Nitbone must interfere to undo the interference
Purchase:
Imran Siddiq may have tried to
leave Leicester a few times, but its become his place to wake up to two
cats, freeze when the heating’s off and most of all, get down to
writing. At a young age, his primary school teacher commented on his
creativity and ability to tell stories. At the age of 29, during a
night in the jungle, the bug inside awakened, and for the last 5 years
he’s been sacrificing every second that he can to write. A veteran of
writing festivals, a presence on Twitter and gobbling up all forms of
Star Wars and Lord of the Rings, he hopes he can bring a smile to others
in the same way that he had, aged 5, reading with a torch under his
duvet. Imran’s preferred genre is YA Sci Fi, and he has a tendency to
throw a droid in every novel.
Author Links:
Website: http://www. imranwrites.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ flickimp
How
did you come up with the title?
Unlike
previous novels where the title is a representation of a theme, TN is
the protagonist – and the name – Tyler Nitbone – makes me take
notice and giggle. Nitbone rolls off the tongue. I wouldn’t have
used the name if it didn’t have that extra punch.
Is
there a message in your novel that you want readers to grasp?
Oh
most definitely. In fact it’s there on the cover as a tagline.
Interfering in anything has consequences. They won’t always be bad,
but they won’t always mean good either. Often people say or do
something without realising the long term effect. TN is about how he
must interfere to do the interference of a previous action.
How
much of the book is realistic?
The
bits that don’t involve the non-realistic parts… like parallel
universes… and robots… and a certain orang-utan. Then again,
maybe it is all possible.
Are
experiences based on someone you know, or events in your own life?
TN
is an extension of me whereby I always try to help and do good, but
sometimes it can be misconstrued and put me in trouble. Poor TN… he
doesn’t know when to stop and reflect.
Name
one entity that you feel supported you outside of family members.
Every
writer in the forums, Facebook and Twitter. All of them. They all
inspired me to keep working hard. They are the shadows that we want
to lurk with because they never leave your side.
Do
you see writing as a career?
[Starts
begging] – Yes, please.
It’s
a difficult career to make a mark and claw back enough income to
survive on, but hopefully one day, I will reach it.
If
you had to do it all over again, would you change anything in your
latest book?
Maybe
make it more of a Poirot mystery, though, that would take away the
fun factor and the youth that the protagonist brings to the plot.
Do
you recall how your interest in writing originated?
My
mother complained to my teacher, when I was 5 years old, that I was
always reading under the duvet (at night) with a torch. I loved
reading, and experimenting with my own stories. I loved to escape to
another place. Hang on – is that a white rabbit I see running with
a watch – see you later.
Is
there anything you find particularly challenging in your writing?
Descriptive
narrative. How much is too much? How much is not enough? What words
to use? Do they need to know about the lever on the door because it
might become important later. There are moments where I cringe at
long passages of descriptions. Reading other authors’ and how they
tackle this always helps.
Who
designed the covers?
I
seek out top-notch artists to create the character art. I pull
together the art, and then create my text, style, background, colour
changes, adaptations, tweaks and go all nuclear on creating what
would grasp my attention. Covers are massively important. The TN
cover is quirky and rather different from similar books in its genre,
but still says YA Fiction from a visual viewpoint.
What
was the hardest part of writing your book?
Not
making the real antagonist obvious or to give away the conclusion
without pushing the reader to read on. So throughout, I’ve placed
red herrings, and questions upon answers. It’s like a mini-version
of LOST but without making the reader frustrated.
Did
you learn anything from writing your book and what was it?
To
relax more and not try to make everything perfect in the first draft.
By becoming the carefree writer that matched the attitude of the
protagonist, I enjoyed my time more and reached the ending with
confidence. Redrafting felt like walking a journey again with the map
laid out.
Do
you have any advice for other
writers?
Think
Less and Write More.
Don’t
aim for perfection. Yes, have a plot and an idea of what will happen,
but just write. Don’t worry about the grammar, the edit, the change
of names, scenery or people appearing/disappearing. Just write and
reach the end. After that, you can be clinical with how you correct
any issues. You’ll be surprised at how many words you can belt out.
Do
you have anything specific that you want to say to your readers?
I’m
a hard working author that has to balance the day job, which a
strenuous role of responsibility, be ever present on the Social Media
scene, and always look after my dearest cats. The time it takes to
write and bring out something to the public eye takes courage, effort
and belief. Please, do leave a review on Amazon, Goodreads, and other
Vendors to let me know if I’ve done well, bad, or just enough. Your
feedback helps to reward or instruct us of how to continue. We need
you.
Huge thanks for this.
ReplyDeleteAnd I love the images on your side bar.