Interview: Lisa Kovanda Novelist, Screenwriter, Leader.
This month Lisa Kovanda reveals helpful advice not only for
writers, but for parents and teachers of children who display interests in the
arts. Lisa is the current President of the Nebraska Writer’s Guild. In the very
first question I asked Lisa, she reveals her unique history. Throughout this
interview, Lisa is teaching in some way about life, writing and leadership.
I’ve never been more thrilled to introduce an author on my page than Lisa
Kovanda.
Glenda: Lisa, every interview I do has a unique
quality and I learn to appreciate each writer’s life experience. As writers we
bind together by the common thread of a love for writing. Having support in our
ability and to help us pursue our love for the art of words is a lifelong need.
In your biography on your web site
at http://lisakovanda.com/ you mentioned writing your first book
at thirteen and you grandmother bound it. You grandmother must have been a
great ally. Please give us some family background as it pertains to writing and
support.
Lisa: I was actually much, much younger than 13. I am thinking
possibly as early as age 4. I don't think I was in school yet. Most of
the earliest books were my drawings, with her helping me write the words. They
evolved into actual story books as my writing and language skills developed.
I was born in Tehran, Iran, to an American mother, and Iranian father,
but adopted and raised in Nebraska. My adoptive family did a great job of
allowing me to maintain a cultural identity, even though there weren't many
Persians in Southeast Nebraska. My grandmother was a wonderful Czech woman, and
a superb storyteller. She really was the most influential person in my youth,
the person who instilled in me the sense that there was nothing I couldn't
accomplish if I put my mind to it. My family also allowed me to pursue
gymnastics, and fostered an interest in art, music, and theatre.
Glenda: As you’ve developed your talent since childhood, how would you
advise parents, teachers and other influences to help children grow their
interests/talents?
Lisa: The thing I recall most about those early influences was that
sense of not having boundaries where art was concerned. You want to paint? Do
it. Write? Here's a typewriter and some paper. Children are taught to
fail. I love the saying, "Dance like no one is watching." If we
instill that sense in kids in any of their endeavors, we would be overwhelmed
with what talent comes out.
Glenda: We are usually told by instructors and mentors to write from
what you know. Personally, I have some problem with that, but I love
research. You've set some of your dark mysteries and romances in
places like Seattle, and West Virginia. What is the draw for you to write using
varied locations as backdrops for your stories?
Lisa: When I was a gymnast, and even just riding the school bus, I
always had a book to keep me company and whisk me away to places I'd never been
before. It was a great way to experience the world vicariously through
characters on a page. I read anything and everything I could get my hands on.
The local library made an exception for me as to how many books they'd let a
patron check out at one time, I read so much. But, I spent about a year in
Washington State in 1980 (when Mt. St. Helen's erupted, no less) and loved the
area, so I've revisited the Pacific Northwest for a couple of my works. Both in
"Cedar in Seattle," and my feature script, "Til Death Do Us
Part." I've only passed through West Virginia, but when I was
working on "The Hunt," which is set in a fictional Appalachian
community, I was honestly thinking of a setting where things would be almost
foreign to a minister used to a more progressive urban environment.
Culturally and physically isolated, and almost like stepping back in time
a bit. The great thing about the age of the Internet, is that you can research
potential settings easily, so it becomes what you know. I used Google
Earth to take a virtual stroll around streets and byways to replicate in my
fictional communities. I've set stories in different eras, and in one (still
unedited) book, I went from Nebraska, to Chicago, to the Pine Ridge
Reservation, and the Hopi Nation. All places I have been, but I certainly did a
lot of research to flesh out my memories.
Glenda: You’re a graduate of Lew Hunter’s Screenwriting Colony and
have written a couple of screenplays. Can you give us some short samples
from a novel and a screenplay and describe how you change hats between the
genres?
Lisa: I've completed seven screenplays, and have actively
collaborated on scripts, including the Feature Movie script,
"Remission," that is currently in production in Lincoln. Two of my
script projects are also going to have novel adaptations. It really is a
different thought process between the two mediums. Scripts are
succinct. The Point of View is basically the camera. What you see or hear
is all you can put on the page. No motivation or lush sensory detail. I start
the process the same, meaning I start with a story paradigm, look at what I want
my major plot points to be, then expand that to a 30-45 step outline. I have
found writing the script first gives me a great 100-120 page outline to
complete a novel. I make a lot of side notes when I'm doing a script for
what I want to flesh out more in the book version. Then I use the script as a
detailed outline to fill in the gaps for the book. I'll give an example from my
upcoming book, "Modified Flight Plan," co-written with Brian Thomas,
who is the main character in this true story of overcoming all odds to pursue
your dreams.
Excerpt
from “Modified Flight Plan” screenplay:
EXT. YANKTON AIRPORT – DAY
Brian lands the Cessna at Chan Gurney
Municipal Airport, a
small paved airfield, and taxis to near
the fuel pumps.
He gets out and looks around. Two FAA
Inspectors in dark
suits and ties stand by another plane.
One of the men, RILEY WALLINGFORD (55)
a Native American with
a long gray ponytail, sees Brian. He
nudges DAN GILBERT
(45), a more standard-issue Caucasian,
and the pair walk
toward Brian.
BRIAN
(under
his breath)
Shit.
Wallingford pulls his ID badge from
inside his jacket.
WALLINGFORD
Inspector
Wallingford, FAA. This
your
plane?
BRIAN
My Dad’s.
WALLINGFORD
Got a
license to fly it?
BRIAN
Student
certificate, sir.
WALLINGFORD
Can I see
it? And your log book?
Brian pulls his log book from his
flight bag inside the plane
and hands it to him.
Wallingford looks through it as Gilbert
walks around the
plane.
GILBERT
You
wouldn’t be giving rides, now
would
you, son?
BRIAN
No sir.
Students can’t take
passengers.
Gilbert stands up from near the wheel.
GILBERT
Looks
like someone lost their lunch
over here
on the passenger side.
Brian flinches.
BRIAN
Damn
school tacos. Happened during
pre-flight.
Gilbert grunts and glares at him.
Wallingford writes on a notebook.
WALLINGFORD
Wouldn’t
know anything about a
plane
taking off from a field near
here,
would you?
BRIAN
Wasn’t
me.
WALLINGFORD
Uh huh.
TATE BALOUN (35) a wiry flight
instructor, joins them, his
flight bag slung over his shoulder.
TATE
Touch and
go’s today?
WALLINGFORD
One of
your students?
TATE
One of my
best students.
Tate gives Brian a hard stare.
Brian grins.
TATE
(CONT’D)
(to
Brian)
Do your
pre-flight.
Tate and the two inspectors walk a few
yards away and talk.
Brian eyes them as he readies the plane
to fly.
INT. CESSNA - DAY
Tate climbs into the copilot seat. He
smacks Brian upside
the head.
TATE
You can’t
lie to the FAA.
2.
BRIAN
I didn’t
lie. He asked if I took
off from
a field.
TATE
We both
know that was you.
BRIAN
I took
off from the highway, not
the
field.
Tate shakes his head and laughs.
3.
Excerpt from “Modified Flight Plan” Novel
In a
matter of minutes, he traversed the distance between Tabor and Yankton passing
over the Missouri River where boats made an intricate design of white wakes on
the rippled surface. He landed the plane at Chan Gurney Municipal Airport, a
fairly large, paved airfield for a town of 14,000 people. He taxied to the fuel
pumps, shut down the airplane, and hopped out to wait for his instructor.
He
noticed two men in black suits and ties near another plane. One of the men was
tall, with a gray ponytail half-way down his back. The other seemed like a more
standard issue 'man in black.' "Shit." Brian muttered the word
half-under his breath. It had to be Federal Aviation Inspectors of some sort.
And that couldn't be good.
As
if to bring that point home, the man with the ponytail nudged the other suited
guy, and pointed in Brian's direction. The pair walked toward him. Just play it cool. He tried to make his
face appear calm.
The
guy with the ponytail, now apparent as a Native American, pulled a badge out
from his breast pocket and showed it to him. "Inspector Riley Wallingford,
FAA. My partner, Inspector Dan Gilbert. This your plane son?"
"It's
my dad's."
Wallingford's
gaze bore into him. "Got a license to fly it?"
Brian
swallowed, even though his mouth was suddenly so dry he didn't know if he could
answer. "Student certificate, sir."
"Can
I see it? And your log book?"
Brian's
hands shook as he pulled his flight bag out of the baggage compartment, fished
out the log book, and handed it to the inspector. He tried to look nonchalant
as he watched the man thumb through it.
Out
of the corner of his eye, he noticed the other man--Gilbert, he thought that's
what Wallingford called him--walk around the plane.
Gilbert
crouched near the co-pilot's door. "You wouldn't be giving rides, would
you, son?"
Brian
swallowed hard. "No sir, students can't give rides."
Gilbert
stood up from near the wheel. He pulled his sunglasses off his face and pointed
at the airplane. "Looks like someone lost their lunch over here on the
passenger side."
Brian
tried to cover his flinch with a quick thump to his chest. "Damn school
tacos. That happened while I was doing my pre-flight."
Gilbert
grunted. His face remained as blank as ever. Brian wondered if they had special
classes where they taught them how to make their expressions so unreadable.
Maybe a bit like those guards at the Palace in London who never flinch?
He
focused his attention on Wallingford, as he jotted in a small notebook. The
Native American man didn't even lift his eyes from his work as he spoke.
"You wouldn't know anything about a blue and silver airplane taking off
from a field near here, now would you?"
That
one he could answer. "It wasn't me."
Wallingford
dipped his chin so his eyes looked over the top of his sunglasses his steely
stare appraised him. "Uhh huhh."
It
was all he could do to not break under the intensity of the man's gaze.
Luckily, his flight instructor, Tate Baloun, stepped out of the terminal and
headed toward them. In fact, he thought the wiry man's gait quickened when he
noticed the two men in black suits talking to him.
When
Tate reached them, he shifted his flight bag from one shoulder to the other so
he could shake hands with the two men. He gave Brian a pointed look. "How
about we do some touch and go's today."
Wallingford
turned his attention to Tate. "One of your students?"
Tate
gave Brian a hard stare. "One of my best students."
Brian
couldn't help it. He grinned. To cover, he turned his head. Tate walked near
him. "Do your pre-flight."
Tate
guided the two inspectors a few yards away on the taxiway. Brian couldn't hear
what they were talking about, but there was no doubt in his mind it was him.
Wallingford's eyes met his.
They
were definitely talking about him.
Once
he finished the inspection, he climbed into the pilot's seat and strapped
himself in. He debated turning on his CD player, but thought better of it. No
need to piss the FAA off even more by looking disrespectful. Instead he pulled
his practical flight exam book out and pretended to study the questions.
Before
long, Tate climbed into the co-pilot's seat. As he did, he reached out and
slapped Brian upside the head. "What are you thinking? You can't lie to
the FAA!"
Brian
shook his head. "I didn't lie to them. He asked if I took off from a
field."
Tate
snorted. "We both know that was you. You fly the only blue striped on
polished aluminum Cessna 150 in the Midwest."
Brian
smiled. “Well, the blue is faded with plenty of yellow primer showing, and it
has chipped white stripes.” He tried to put his most innocent look on his face.
"Besides I didn't take off from a field. I took off from the
highway."
Tate
shook his head and even though it was obvious he was fighting it, a smile
cracked the corners of his mouth. "We need to get your training done, and
soon. Before we get both of our asses kicked."
Brian
grinned. He leaned out the door. "Clear." The plane roared to life.
Glenda: This past year, you took on the role of President of the
Nebraska Writer’s Guild. It’s not a lot of people who can take on such a
leadership role. I am so grateful to those of you who do take the leadership
roles and offices. What would you say to others to encourage more leadership in
the writing community?
Lisa: When I was first approached about assuming the helm of the
Guild, my first reaction was that I did not have enough writing credentials to
lead. I look at the membership roster--both past and present--and I am still an
awe-struck fan. But, that's not what it takes to be a leader. I've run a small
hospital as a nurse. I'm a retail manager. I'm also the Municipal Liaison for
the Nebraska: Other, and Nebraska: Lincoln regions for National Novel Writing Month.
(and have also successfully completed the 50,000 word challenge every year I've
participated) I understand how to make things happen, and hopefully, get other
people to want to come along for the ride. What I try to do is put on events I
want to go to. What to say to encourage others to take a leadership role...
well, I've had to appoint a few people to the Board since I took office in
2011. Only occasionally have I needed to resort to brute-force. I will say for
all of the headaches, stress, and general mayhem, I have gained far more than I
have put in. If your writing career isn't going anywhere--or not headed in the
direction you want it to be headed--I would encourage you to get involved in
writing groups like the Nebraska Writers Guild. Not just belong, get
involved. When you're invested in yourself as an author and writer, amazing
things happen!
I find myself wanting to grill Lisa to glean
more from her vast experience and knowledge. If I could I would pester these
authors until they were so sick of me, they’d call the cops to pull me away.
Since I cannot be so brazen, I will continue doing interviews, reading their
blogs and what books I can.
As Lisa quotes “Dance as if nobody is
watching.” Parents, husbands, children, friends, teachers, encourage any
interest you find in a child. Grab a pencil and paper and write whatever comes
to your own mind. Wouldn’t it be a wonderful thing for a child to look at your
endeavors and think I can do that?
3 comments:
Great post.
Thanks for a wonderful interview, Glenda! It was a thrill to be asked.
Lisa, it was my pleasure.
Thanks Gina
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