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FARRAH
ROCHON:
DELIVERING
PASSION

by
Wayne Jordan
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Name:
Birthday:
Occupation:
City of Residence:
Favorite Color:
Favorite Food:
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Farrah Rochon
May 25th
Office Manager by day, Author all the time
Currently…Austin, Texas
Brown
Mashed Potatoes and Ice Cream, but not
together |
1. Farrah, tell us a bit about RESCUE ME and the Holmes
Brothers series. Is it really the end of the series?
To answer the second question first, yes,
RESCUE ME
is the last of the Holmes Brothers series. The trilogy
centers around three brothers, a Elijah (DELIVER
ME),
Tobias, (RELEASE
ME),
Alexander (RESCUE
ME),
and is set in my hometown, the romantic city of New Orleans.
In RESCUE ME, the eldest brother Alex finally finds his
happily ever after. Throughout the series readers have
witnessed the single father shower love upon his daughter,
but in RESCUE ME, Alex discovers that his daughter has
turned into an absolute terror in the classroom, so he
volunteers at her elementary school in hopes of discovering
what’s going on with little Jasmine. It’s at the elementary
school that he meets the school’s Special Projects
Coordinator, Renee Moore, and the sparks fly.
2. What made you want to become a writer?
Sometimes I ask myself that question. Ha! Actually, writing
is something that has always come easy to me. I loved essay
tests in high school, wrote papers for myself and several of
my cousins throughout college (shhh…don’t tell anyone), and
have been a reader my entire life. I knew as a freshmen in
college that I would one day write my own Great American
Novel, but it wasn’t until I finished graduate school that I
drummed up enough courage to share my writing with others,
and sought publication.
3. Tell us a bit about your journey to publication.
As I listened to other writers’ journeys, I discovered that
mine was pretty similar. When I finally decided to pursue
publication I did everything I could to educate myself about
the business. The best decision was joining Romance Writers
of America. Through RWA I learned to hone my craft, how to
land an agent, and received support from like-minded
writers. I received my share of rejection letters, but
continued sending out material. Then, about three or so
years after joining RWA, I heard that Dorchester Publishing
was acquiring African American romance. I sold
DELIVER ME
about seven months later.
4. When you’re not writing, what do you like to do in your
spare time?
I love, love, love to read, and have a mountain of books in
my to-be-read pile to prove it. I’m also a HUGE sports fan
who eats, breathes and lives football. And, when I have a
spare buck or two, I like to hop on a plane and head up to
New York City to catch a Broadway show.
5. What would you consider to be your greatest
accomplishment (as a writer) to date?
I’d have to say completing my revisions for
RESCUE ME
without losing my sanity. It was one of the most hellish
weeks of my life (yes, you read that right; I had exactly
one week in which to revise a 400+ page manuscript). In
addition to having to shave about thirty pages from my
manuscript, that week also included running away from
Hurricane Gustav, dealing with a flat tire, and finding
random Starbucks in and around Dallas and Austin, TX so I
could work.
6. If you were introducing a new reader to your work, which
one would you choose and why?
Well, I’m a stickler for reading books in order, so if I
were to recommend one of the Holmes Brothers books I’d have
to go with the first in the trilogy,
DELIVER ME.
However, for those wanting a little taste of my writing, I’d
recommend readers try my story,
A
CHANGE OF HEART,
in The Holiday Inn anthology. It’s a short, sweet story that
I’m really proud of.
7. How has your life changed since you became a published
author?
I get much less sleep, lol.
8. How have you changed as a writer since that first book?
I sure hope my characterization has gotten better. I feel as
if I take the time to know the characters more before diving
into the story. I’ve also developed somewhat of a process to
my writing. It’s subject to change at a moment’s notice, but
for now, it’s working.
9. What do you like most about being a published author?
The fan mail. Hands down. In fact, during those really icky
writing days (usually happens while working on pages 25 -
330 or so), I go back and read over some of the great fan
emails I’ve received. It keeps me going.
10. What has been the most difficult thing about being a
published author who writes African-America Romance?
Probably trying to convinced non-black readers that my books
are the same as others. Also, it still rubs me a bit raw
when I go into a book store and cannot find my book in the
romance section.
11. What advice would you give an aspiring author?
Don’t do this for the money, lol. Seriously, just make sure
you’re doing this for the right reasons, because you truly
want to be a writer. If when you’re writing, there is
nothing else you feel as if you should be doing, then you’re
meant to be a writer. Oh, and don’t take bad reviews
personally, no matter how hard it is not to.
12. Tell us a bit about the process you use when you write a
novel.
It took me several (umm…about five or six) manuscripts to
actually develop a “process”, and as I stated before, this
process is ever-changing. When I start a new book, I take a
couple of hours (or even a few days) to just free- write
some ideas. It usually starts with one little spark. For
example, I got the idea for my current work-in-progress when
my heroine’s name popped into my head. Her name is Paige
Turner. Can you guess what she does for a living?
I write as much backstory as I can, then start to brainstorm
possible scene ideas. I write about thirty or so pages of
the actual manuscript, after which I’m usually ready to
start framing up the rest of the story. I use a great
writing system,
THE PLOT DOCTOR,
by Carolyn Greene. I’ve tweaked it a bit for my own
purposes, but I use several of her worksheets. They really
help me to lay out my story. My walls are covered with
poster boards and colorful sticky notes, but it’s my
process. You have to do what works for you.
13. What’s next for Farrah Rochon?
Well, I hope to sell that work-in-progress I mentioned. It’s
a football story, surprise, surprise. In the meantime, I’m
working on another Christmas novella for a new holiday
anthology to be released later this year.
14. If there was one thing you could tell your readers what
would it be?
Thanks! Your support has helped to make my life-long dream
come true.
15. How can readers contact you?
A number of ways,
but the easiest is through my website:
www.farrahrochon.com,
and of course, through email:
farrah@farrahrochon.com
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