
Almost done!!!!


1) What inspired you to write?
I never really dreamed of being an author. As a kid, I hated reading. The idea of being stuck inside with my nose in a book, when I could be outside playing, was nuts to me. Then someone handed me Tolkien’s series and fell in love with ink on pages.
About six months into the COVID pandemic, I was stuck at home over a weekend and completely bored. A story I’d dreamed up as a kid popped into my head, and I decided to type it up—just so I wouldn’t forget it. Three months later, I’d written a novel. Crazy, right?
A neighbor’s daughter picked it up off a coffee table and started reading. The next day, her mom called and asked if the next book was done. Her daughter wanted to know what happened next.
That was my “ah, ha moment,” that instant when I realized I might be able to do something with writing.
2) Are you a reader? What are some of your favorites?
Absolutely. I don’t know how anyone could write successfully and not read. It’s how we learn the craft, both from masters and those less skilled.
I love fantasy, but I also enjoy political or crime thrillers. If you get an adult beverage in me, I might even admit to enjoying the occasional romance. The descriptive style is different in each genre, so I expand my own skill by reading the widest possible variety.
Joe Abercrombie has become my most recent favorite. He has a mystical ability to describe a scene without ever actually describing it. It’s just remarkable.
3) What is your newest work, and what is going to happen in the future?
Over the months of May, June, and July, I’m releasing The Kingdom War, a four-book epic fantasy series. It begins as a medieval crime mystery, but quickly evolves into a fight for survival between nations—and magic itself.
In January this year, I published the first book in a new series, The Rising Son. Think Game of Thrones set in ancient Japan. I’m currently working on book 2 in that series, with an expected publication date in November 2023.
4) Do you have advice or tips for Indie Authors?
I think the best advice I can give is:
1. Don’t edit while you write. Get the story on paper and know it’s going to need a lot of work. Finishing the manuscript is where most people get stuck because they get distracted with things like “making the chapter perfect.”
2. Writing is only a tiny part of being successful. Become a student of the game and learn marketing, social media, publishing, and the other hundred things involved in being an author.
3. A lot of people will offer advice. Learn who to trust and who to ignore, but know there’s something useful in almost every bit of guidance.
5) What influenced you as a writer?
Authentic, complex characters who I want to know in real life . . . and stories that take me away from real life and drop me into a fantastic world I wish really existed.
More than anything, though, I’d say readers inspire me. When I started writing, I wasn’t sure how I would enjoy interacting with the folks on the other side of my books. I’m not shy, not by a mile, but when it’s your own work on the line, it’s personal-and nerve wracking. What surprised me was how much I love the emails and messages from readers. I answer every one personally, and have been caught laughing at my desk, many times, as I read something a reader sent. They crack me up. And sometimes, they come up with crazy ideas that make it into books!
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My Email: jd@jdruffin.com
After some time. I have decided on the cover for my new book! Take a peek and click on my TikTok page to see! Link: https://www.tiktok.com/t/ZTRo1o1KF/?t=1
1) What inspired you to write?
There’s a particular question that inspires me to write. It’s “what would it be like…” For
example, what would it be like to experience virtual reality so lifelike, it makes you feel like
you’ve been transported to another world. Or what would it be like to hop in your personal
space ship and skip off to another planet for dinner? Writing is my way to scratch that itch of
curiosity about experience we can’t have currently.
2) Are you a reader? What are some of your favorites?
I still love the Silmarillion by J.R. Tolkein. I’ve read it four times and keep coming back for
more. It’s such a beautiful dose of pure lore, and it is fun getting lost in that. Rendezvous with
Rama by Arthur C Clarke was amazing. It captured that science fiction sense of wonder so
well. Some newer novels I’ve loved were Dark Matter by Blake Crouch, Project Hail Mary by
Andy Weir, and Cradle by Will Wright.
3) What is your newest work, and what is going to happen in the future?
My latest work is a novel titled Path of Relics: Aether Shard. It’s about the down-on-his-luck
guy in a job-starved future who loves video games. And he gets the chance to compete in the
virtual reality RPG fantasy game of his dreams. When he’s playing, it’s so realistic, it’s like
he’s in another world. But during this tournament, he starts to suspect that events in the game
are causing malfunctions in real-world Manhattan, and that it’s starting to kill people. It’s like a
mash-up of Ready Player One, Lord of the Rings, and Indiana Jones.
I’m currently working on the sequel, and the entire “Loreseeker Odyssey” series will be about
four to five books.
4) Do you have advice or tips for Indie Authors?
Understand from the beginning that this will likely take time. Not only to write a novel, revise it,
publish it, etc. But also to gain a following and get some momentum going behind your career.
That’s okay, though. If you enjoy writing and creating worlds, the work is a reward by itself.
Plus, you’re creating “assets” in the form of intellectual property that can bring you income for
decades to come.
5) What influenced you as a writer?
My writing influences come from all over the place. Since I’m just starting out, I’m still in that
phase where all the science fiction and fantasy stories I read as a kid sort of mash together
and come out of me as something with the same vibe, but different. But I’m also influenced by
technology and futurism. Thinking about where we might go as a species in the future, what
we might accomplish and what consequences all that will have, both good and bad, intrigues
me. All of that finds it way into my writing.
Links:
Amazon Book Link: https://www.amazon.com/Path-Relics-Aether-Seeker-Odyssey-
ebook/dp/B0B9RRJ2MQ
Website: https://djlejeune.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/djlauthor
Twitter: https://twitter.com/DJLAuthor

When I am not writing then I am doing a podcast with my husband. Please check us out! Its avaliable on Spotify as well!
#podcastshow #newpodcast #podcasters #newepisode #podcasthosts
https://spotifyanchor-web.app.link/e/WBzS2NIPpxb

My first book now has hit a huge achievement! Six reviews away from the big 200! Being an indie author it has shown me that you can write stories, and then have people want to read them! My best friend in Nebraska is reading the first book in paperback, and loving it!
Blurb:
Prince Liam of Derzeli believes differently in what honor means. King Breen, Liam’s father, and Cullen, Liam’s brother, believe that real greatness is achieved once they slay a dragon. Liam thinks that dragons are majestic and do not deserve to die. King Breen, Liam’s father, brings Liam along on an expedition to slay a dragon. On one of the nights of the journey, Liam rescued a dragon’s egg. Liam decides to care for it, and it hatches on Liam’s birthday. Tragedy strikes, which leads to Liam having to leave Derzeli, and Liam goes on the run with the help of Ella, the dragon. Ella helps him escape and runs to a barren wasteland, where he saw himself to becoming a hermit for the rest of his life. But due to an event happening with the help of a new friend and a childhood friend, Liam has no choice but to return home. He has to decide to run away from his destiny, or embrace it, the chance of a king.
If you want to know more about this show then please click on this link:
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Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B092CJPX2Q?notRedirectToSDP=1&ref_=dbs_mng_calw_0&storeType=ebooks
1) What inspired you to write? I’ve spent my career making fantasy and science fiction
video games and roleplaying games. I have a love of making stories and finally got to a point
in life where I could sit down and actually write for myself. I’ve had the idea for this trilogy
floating around in my head for quite a while, banging at the inside of my skull demanding to
be let out.
2) Are you a reader? What are some of your favorites? I’m an avid reader with far too
many books in my library. I’m reading Adrian Tchaikovsky right now. He’s very imaginative
and writes in both fantasy and science fiction. His ideas challenge me, which isn’t always the
case in imaginative fiction. I also love Seanan McGuire, Roger Zelazny, Iain Banks, Holly
Black, Terry Pratchett (who doesn’t) and Alastair Reynolds.
3) What is your newest work, and what is going to happen in the future? My current series
is contemporary fantasy featuring Loki as a stage magician in the modern-day Chicago suburbs. The
first two books, Mischief Maker and Odin’s Escape, are available on Amazone. Loki is hiding out there
from the other Norse gods, but gets drawn back into the Nine Realms when someone tried to murder
him. Although I researched Norse mythology and culture heavily, I’ve given it a fresh take with some
fun twists. The Nine Realms themselves are a magic place, but the gods are just people that have
special abilities, and the dwarves are steampunk. Part of Loki’s journey is trying to decide what is
means to be a god in a modern world, or if there even is such a thing.
With Ymir’s Return, the third book of the trilogy due out in late March, I have some ideas for science
fictions stories that I’d like to try.
4) Do you have advice or tips for Indie Authors? Build good habits. Write on a regular
schedule, whatever it is that works for you. Get in the habit of soliciting feedback and listening
to it. Get in the habit of reading in your genre. Build these habits and you can accomplish your
goals.
5) What influenced you as a writer? What didn’t? There are so many amazing books,
movies, graphic novels, video games, and roleplaying games out there. From my years
working at TSR writing Dungeons & Dragons adventures, I learned to embrace flexible story
telling. From my work at lead designer of The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim, I learned to weave
multiple story threads together. A life time of reading science fiction, fantasy, and comics
taught me how to let loose your creativity.

Books
Socials
1) What inspired you to write?
It’s the deepest passion in my heart, so it’s more a matter of needing to write than being
inspired to write. I enjoy it of course, but it’s a quiet itch that never stops. Sometimes, it’s not so
quiet. The urge is always there, then, and it’s only waiting for time to do it. In that context, ideas
are constantly sparking in my brain. It could be something somebody said, an existential question
I ask myself, some movie that did a crappy job of delivering its plot such that I wanted to do
better. On and on the possibilities go.
Since there’s no lack of digital storage (at least for text), I have piled up hundreds of
different story and book ideas that are just waiting.
2) Are you a reader? What are some of your favorites?
Fantasy and science fiction are my go-to categories. I’m working through a delicious
series by Brandon Sanderson called The Stormlight Archive. It’s the fourth book, and each novel
is wonderfully long. Thus, I’ve been in this storyline for a long time now. C. S. Lewis is always a
favorite. I really enjoyed Stephen King’s Dark Tower series. I read an amazing biography called
Amazing Grace by Eric Metaxas. There are too many! We’ll just start there for now.
3) What is your newest work, and what is going to happen in the future?
The newest thing in progress is my Patreon story. Today (February 2), I posted the first
chapter for patrons. It’ll be available to the public in about a week. It’s reminiscent of a choose-
your-own-adventure story but only just. I set it up so that patrons could vote on events
throughout the tale and have their choices implemented in upcoming chapters. There are a couple
other layers that higher tiers can influence. Overall, I think it’s going to be an innovative way to
experience a story.
4) Do you have advice or tips for Indie Authors?
Keep at it. The sun will rise and set. Peace will ebb and flow. You may or may not get
support. Inspiration is fickle. Despite all this, you will be more plagued in your spirit if you
continue finding excuses not to write than if you had just written and been rejected.
Also, let go of the need to be validated in your writing. If people like it, splendid. If you
can get published, awesome. If you make some money off it, glorious. However, write for
yourself first. Write just to relieve the mental pressure your brain keeps creating in the effort to
destroy itself.
Also, work harder. Poetic license is never an excuse to be sloppy or lazy. It’s horrible
trying to find the balance between rigor and flow, but you can assume that either extreme is bad
news. Just because you’re trying to find freedom, it doesn’t mean you should abandon grammar
altogether.
Also, be more vulnerable. Writing is not a safe thing. We shouldn’t write to protect our
feelings. Among many reasons, we should write simply to practice being vulnerable with
ourselves—and possibly with others. We humans like to hide from each other and ourselves.
Writing, even fiction writing, is the practice of being seen, being exposed. Let your hurts spill
into your stories. It’ll make them that much truer.
5) What influenced you as a writer?
It started with my father. He’s been a scholar my whole life, so I gleaned a love of
reading and writing from him at a very young age. It was so long ago! I was grounded one
afternoon for something I don’t remember. I had to sit in his office as he was working. I think I
was allowed to read or something like that. I know I was technically grounded, but I only
remember the calming experience that it was. He gave off this quiet, intense, studious vibe that I
love so much, and I try to channel that same aura.
The next two key influences were English teachers in high school. One of my favorite
memories from Mr. Homeyer’s class was the daily quotation. He would post some adage on a
little sideboard that we’d discuss at the beginning of every class. Usually, it would just help us
spark our brains. Sometimes, he would allow the whole class period to pass discussing it. It
fostered in me a love of depth, of searching for truth and richness.
Mr. Yonan would usually start class by giving us commonly confused words. There were
so many, but the only pair I distinctly remember was “affect” and “effect.” The man was
imaginative and passionate, but he was also rigorous. He fostered in me a love of precision and
accuracy in my writing.
There was a professor in my early college life. I’m ashamed that I don’t remember her
name! She gave the class so many creative prompts. She taught me that absolutely anything can
spark one’s writing.
Another professor, Dr. Boyer (whose name I remember only through searching old, old
documents), compounded my appreciation for crisp work. As part of his syllabus, he included a
page about the importance of quality grammar. He lists many of the common errors that writers
tend to make. He says, “If the reader’s attention is distracted by any of these things, then the
content is more difficult to see, which means that your paper fails to communicate its content,
fails to do the very thing it is designed to do.” Despite all the talk out there about the differences
between syntax and story, I believe that my syntax is part of my stories. I want to write quality
stories, so I pursue quality syntax.
There are so many other wonderful people who have helped me develop as a writer. I
wish I could list them all. With my scatterbrained memory, I wish I could remember them all!
C’est la vie. I am thankful.
