Author Interview: Regina Harvey: She Challenges You To Figure Out Which Is Which
By Jaideep Khanduja
@PebbleInWaters
Regina Harvey lives and writes in Columbia, Maryland. She works
at Johns Hopkins University and teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in
writing and the concepts of utopia and dystopia, among other topics. You can
learn more at http://www.regharvey.com
Your
real name and pen name?
Regina
Harvey is a pen name. One of those names is my real middle name.
The other is a sort of elision of my maiden name initials. I challenge
you to figure out which is which!
About
your education?
I
have a graduate degree in Writing from Johns Hopkins University. I also
have an undergraduate degree in psychology, which I think helps my writing.
What
career did you plan during your education days?
I
changed my college major many times. Originally, I wanted to work as a
translator for the United Nations. I studied French and Arabic for a
short time, then switched my major to fine arts, then to creative writing, then
to psychology, with plans to be a psychotherapist. I never did begin my
graduate studies in psychology, and instead finished a novel I had been working
on!
What
languages you can speak and write?
Sadly,
beyond English, very little anymore. I can speak passable shopping French
and just a touch of Italian. I studied Arabic for two years in college,
and I can still write my own name and sound out some written Arabic, but my
vocabulary and spoken Arabic is laughable. It’s embarrassing how I let
all these skills lapse. Someday, I hope to revive them, and learn other
languages too.
What
is your biggest source of inspiration in life?
Books.
Plain and simple.
What
hurts you most in this world?
Unkindness.
I won’t even say “cruelty,” as that is a given. But moments in which
people are unkind, when they could easily be kind, are the biggest small hurts
in this world.
What
is your favorite genre and why?
I
write in a few different genres, so it is very hard to choose. I think
literature is very important, as it gives us access to the lives and emotions
of others in a way that some genres might skim over at times. But
well-written science-fiction often gets just as deep and acts as a harbinger of
future things that are beginning to simmer just under the radar in our present
world, and that is important stuff to pay attention to. I am also very
smitten with a good mystery, especially those with humor and a touch of
romance.
When
did you start writing?What
is the purpose of your writing?
I
have always written. That seems preposterous, but it is true. I taught
myself to read at age 3, when my older sister was learning. I wrote my
first story, a fable about a donkey and how it got its hee-haw (which is what
Americans usually call braying), when I was 6. When I was 8, I learned
the youngest published writer was younger than I was then, and I was boiling
mad at myself for quite a long time. Stories mean a lot to me. I
think they (and other art forms) are the most powerful non-violent change
agents that exist. And sometimes they just help us escape for a bit, so
we can survive a tough reality. I write for both those purposes, as
high-minded as that might sound. To change the world and to help people
through life in the meantime.
Which
of your work has been published so far? Would you like to share a synopsis
of your work?
Outliers,the
first book in theEOD series,has just been released by CUSP
books. A team of teens from all corners of the earth - statistical outliers in
talents and intelligence - come together to fight against UNITEED, the warped
world government that believes the norm is the ideal. UNITEED is suppressing
environmental recovery and systematically reducing and controlling outside
cultures. Only those young enough to be 'uncounseled' toward the norm can lead
the way to change. They must thwart the ultimate goal of the Reverend Doctor:
to bring all of humanity into genetically-manipulated communion.
Pan
Espere (who is a teenager originally from Stri-rajya, a land based on a culture
in Ancient India) selects the seven team members, each uniquely qualified due
to their influence over pop culture - in sports, film, music, art, adventuring,
technology, and opinion. But did she make the right choices? Her choices
include the team leader, Senon Cormac, the son of the Reverend Doctor himself.
But did she make the right choice? Abran Negasi isn't the one chosen to lead,
but will he play a greater role than she planned? Especially since he's the one
who leads her heart into places she'd rather not explore. Is Abran's own heart
still with the love he lost when his Holdout village was destroyed? Will Senon
be able to separate his hatred of his father from the goals of the team? And
can he focus on the team and its mission when Pan is such an intriguing and
attractive puzzle? No matter the answer to these questions, the Outliers
must stop the Reverend Doctor before his plan succeeds.
Fans
of the Hunger Games, Divergent, and Legend series will be as captivated byOutliers, the first book in theEOD
series.
What
are your forthcoming writings?
The
sequel toOutliers, which
will be the second book in the EOD series,
is scheduled to be out in early Winter 2014. Before then,I have two adult thrillers coming out,
in Spring and Summer 2014.
One
is calledTaking the Village.
It begins when, only six days before he’ll be a free man, small-time robber
Damonte Hall walks calmly away from his work-release crew into the path of an
oncoming van. Libby Margolis, the woman who hits him, comes from a
Baltimore family of cops. As she struggles to comprehend his suicide, and
the rippling impact it has on those close to her, she is drawn ever nearer to the
secrets of a Baltimore development company’s founder. Despite his public
persona and the praise he receives for rejuvenating the drug-ravaged North
Village neighborhood, he is a sick man who has never known a true family of his
own. I am particularly excited to have this novel published, as it was
shortlisted for the British Crime Writers Association’s Debut Dagger award some
years back.
The
second is calledFox and
Rainbow. Set on the
outskirts of Washington, D.C. in the 1990s, this is a fast-paced literary
thriller with touches of Aboriginal Dreamtime in the Australian outback. Dr. Jacob Baldwin, a psychotherapist
specializing in dreaming, is disillusioned with therapy and ready to close his
practice after a nasty divorce. He
is drawn into decoding the dreams of a young woman while each night he deals
with his own past trauma and accompanying nightmares. Summer Freeman, grown
daughter of the recently deceased U.S. Senator Mackenzie Freeman, believes her
mother’s death to be murder. She
seeks out Dr. Baldwin – Jake – to aid in searching her subconscious for clues
to past events that may have led to the Senator’s death. Jake must see past his need for
someone to fill the role of the wife he thought he had in order to help
Summer. He must focus on this
mystery when his own past is walking again. And walking too is a killer about to
strike again.
What
four topmost things do you take care of while writing a book?
1. Compelling characters – not necessarily likable ones, but
ones you can’t help but want to read more about
2. Tension on every page
3. An intriguing plot with a deeper underlying theme
4. Careful attention to each word – after all, they are the
bits that make up the whole of what we writers do
Your
dream destination on Earth?
The
main character inOutliers,
Pan Espere, is Stri-rajyan, from a land of only women – a perhaps mythological
setting in Ancient India. The culture I have created for her is very
loosely based on what little is written on this Ancient Indian culture, but I
have a fascination with those writings I have been able to explore.
Stri-rajya is said to have existed near sacred Mount Kailash, just over the
Indian border in the present day. It would be a dream come true to visit this
area, especially with the rest of India so near. In one of the upcoming
books in theEOD series,
Pan will return to her land of Stri-rajya, at least for a time. If I had
a chance to visit the area, I’m sure I would be much better able to depict it
with some truth and meaning.
Your
zodiac / sunsign?
I
am a Scorpio. I feel like that is akin, somehow, to being a Slytherin at
Hogwarts. It’s always seemed to be one of the darker zodiac signs.
I’m not sure what that says about me.
Your
favorite color and why?
Maroon.
I could get all dramatic and say it’s because it reminds me of BLOOD! But
really, I have no idea why.
Your
favorite book and why?
An
impossible question to answer. With so many amazing books to read, it is
often whatever book I am reading at the moment.
Your
favorite food?
Toast.
Buttered toast. It is the best thing ever.
The
last line of your autobiography would be…
“And
so it went.”