Phoenix Entertainment and Development

Phoenix Entertainment and Development
Showing posts with label Mark Tierno. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mark Tierno. Show all posts

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Mark Tierno Interview Part 2



Welcome everyone to another great week of the Writer's Revolution.  I am your host, the author of The Phoenix BladeAndrew Hess.  I'd like to introduce our guest this week, the author of Maldene, Mark Tierno



Okay, time for a little fun now.

If you could only bring three items with you to a deserted island (non-writing items or people) what would they be and why?

A friend, both for company and to help me out.  A shortwave radio transmitter with its own battery so I could signal for rescue.  And a toothbrush, for obvious reasons.

The world is going to end tomorrow.  How do you live out your remaining time?

Trying to figure out how to prevent this from happening, or survive it.

Someone wants to make a movie based on your life.  Who would you pick to play you?

I can’t think of anyone with curly enough hair, so it’d probably have to be an unknown.

Alive or dead, who is the one person you would want to interview and why?

Growing up, I guess the closest person I had to a hero, or at least really looked up to a lot, was the man that made me laugh the most, and that was Red Skelton.  Funniest comedian ever.
Though now that I think about it, I might also include my Dad.  Always wanted to grill him about our family history, but Parkinson’s Disease sorta got in the way of that.

Okay, crystal ball time.  Where do you see yourself in 5-10 years?

Ideally, on someone’s best seller lists and working on my next epic venture (you didn’t think I’d just stop at one or two sprawling epics, now did you?)

Any questions you would like to ask me?

What is the air-speed of an African Swallow?  And failing that, what is your favorite color?

Love the movie reference.  I tried to look up the answer anyway but couldn’t find an exact answer.  As for my favorite color, it depends on my mood.  I like royal blue and other times I like dark purple.

Any final words for our readers?

“tooti-fruity”  That’s a good word.  Or “muskrat”.

Seriously though, about the only piece of advice I might be qualified to give is to live for your dreams.  Whatever it is that you love to do, find a way to make a living out of it, because life is not about some stale 9-5 cubical job that weighs own your soul.  Find your dream and don’t give up on it.  If you keep at your dream, then say you have about a 50% chance of getting it, but if you give up on it then you have a Zero percent chance of achieving it.  I like the odds better from trying.

Where can we find you?

www.maldene.com has info on my book, a few free downloads, links to buying the paper and ebook editions, and more.  

I also have my Maldene Fan Page on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/pages/Maldene-Fan-Page/117102904979088

And for those so inclined, you can follow me on Twitter as @MarkATierno


And occasionally you can find me bicycling around the streets of my home town, but thats another story.

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Mark Tierno Interview Part 1


Welcome everyone to another great week of the Writer's Revolution.  I am your host, the author of The Phoenix BladeAndrew Hess.  I'd like to introduce our guest this week, the author of Maldene, Mark Tierno






Tell me a little about yourself.

Well, I have a MS in Physics and another degree in Math, so there’s a lot of that part of my brain going, but I’ve also nurtured the creative side of my mind as well and have quite the imagination.
For a number of years the bulk of my life seemed to be in caregiving.  My Dad got Parkinson’s Disease back when I was in High School and it was 25 years of that misery before he finally passed away; I was there the entire time helping out my Mom with him, a job that evolved from lifting him up from a tumble on occasion to 24/7 assistance.  Then after that I had to look after my Mom, and when in time she became really sick, I was the one that had to change her diapers and teach her how to walk again.  It was all pretty miserable, but even so I kept at formulating my book in my head until I finally had a chance to start it.  It was about 1994 when the Eaton Canyon fire took out my grandpa’s old house; he’d been dead a number of years but my Mom had never sold the place.  The insurance money eased things a bit.  About a year later I began working on my first novel.  S a side effect, it brought quite a bit of pleasure into my parents’ lives to watch me go at it, and that was good for all concerned.

I’m sorry you had to go through all of that, but I’m sure your parents were glad that you stuck by them and took care of them leaving it to someone else.

What inspired you to write?  What type of genre do you write?

I guess I always had a story in my heart, just a matter of finding the right mould to poor it into.  Back when I was about 12 or 13 I remember taking mental notes about a book I liked, what elements of style or plot that I’d include for the future book I knew I would some day right.  Even before that, my imagination was always looking for an outlet.
The genre I write in is a mix of fantasy and SF.  The first Maldene book begins as High epic Fantasy, but later books will see certain Sci-Fi elements blended in as well.  I also have another as yet unpublished series that goes the other way around; it begins as mainly SF cyberpunk stuff but with elements of fantasy tossed in.  I’ll leave the straight stuff for everyone else, me I enjoy mixing up some rare combinations.

I think the literary and even movie world could use someone to mix things up a bit.

Tell me about your book Maldene.

Maldene is a world far far away, a world of magic, mystery, and many secrets and surprises.  A world of three moons with mysteriously precise orbits, a world many times bigger than Earth (and in no way connected to it at all), and a world under the shadow of a dark wizard named Miro (pronounced “My-Ro”).  The legend of his evil goes back as far as anyone knows, to the very beginning of recorded History, and it is said that even the gods fear him; exactly why that is, no one is saying.  It is quite evident that he has grand designs for power and conquest, and has the ability, cunning, and greed to have long-since conquered the world, yet he has not.  What holds him back is but one of the mysteries that our adventurers will begin to discover in this first book of Maldene, as they begin a journey that will take them across three continents in search of answers.


Sounds interesting and very intricate.  Tell us more about Maldene and  the main character, what makes them unique and what makes them tick.

There are several characters even in just this first book, but for the “main” ones (at least at first glance) there are three.  Sabu is a wizard whose intellect often gets distracted in too-deep an analysis of his surroundings, while his elven friend Eldar lives for adventure and whimsy.  Completing their triad is a psychic-wizard named Sindar, whose own intelligence is so nearly an echo of Sabu’s that their discussions can leave Eldar screaming, “There’s TWO of them?!”

At first glance, they are on a voyage for treasure to be found at an old abandoned lab of Miro’s. They encounter some friends and companions, and a troop of hired mercenaries.  But there is far more to their journey.  Each of them saw a blind old gypsy fortune teller with golden eyes that foretold of their meeting, and of the destiny that they would find on this journey.  Their reason for this trip is not the treasure people hear about, but something far more insubstantial.
Of course, as it turns out, they aren’t the only ones in their group with ulterior motives.

Sounds like this has the making of a fun book series.  What inspired you to write this book?

I’d been accumulating elements of this story in my head over a period of about 15 years before I sat down to write it.  Starting in college, gleaning inspiration from friends, books I’ve read, movies I’d seen, and just adding to the details as they came to me.  Before I knew it I had a world map, alphabet, dictionary and language, heck even weather patterns noted down.  I also had amassed one heck of a plot.

Wow, that’s a lot of creativity poured into your book.  What other books or blogs have you written?

“Maldene”, currently published in two volumes (It’s kinda large and I was told that unknown writers should not put out 800-page paperbacks), but this 2-book novel is just the first of thirteen.  Yes, you heard me right.  There are 13 novels in the Maldene series for a total of 5.2 million words, 250 characters, and a plot that stretches across the stars and back through time.
Of course, since I’m a bit of a fast writer, I also had time for a few other things.  As yet unpublished is a 5-book cyberpunk-conspiracy-fantasy series entitled Cyberdawn, a series of 6 stories and novels about a guy named Inspector Flaatphut (the first in this series, a short story entitled “Project Looking Glass” is available as an ebook on Amazon), and I managed to squeeze in a 2-book prequel for Maldene.

I also have my little blog over at www.maldene.com, but I mainly talk there about my book and a few writing tips.

Were your other books self-published or traditionally published?

The first two volumes of Maldene were originally traditionally published, but the publisher’s (Publish America) ideas of marketing involved getting the author to pay more fees and keep buying copies of their own books, rather than actually taking the effort to do something themselves.  So, I left them and started my own independent label and now publish under Vault of Knowledge.

I can’t believe they would make you pay extra fees and force you to buy multiple copies of your own book.  I think writers have been finding more success opening their own independent label and go through the self-publishing routes.

Who is your greatest writing inspiration?


I couldn’t narrow it down to just one.  Growing up I pretty much read everybody and everything I could get my hands on.  If it was SF or Fantasy, I read it.  Heinlein, Asimov, Andre Norton, Tolkein, the works.

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Welcome everyone to another great week of the Writer's Revolution.  I am your host, the author of The Phoenix BladeAndrew Hess.  I'd like to introduce our guest this week, the author of Maldene, Mark Tierno




Maldene is a world of fantasy and science, a world of fantastic creatures, characters that range from the crazy to the wise, and home to many astounding secrets.  It is also home to the most villainous evil known:  Miro (Pronounced MY-RO).  It is said that even the gods fear Miro, though they aren't saying why, and stories of this evil wizard go back many thousands of years.

Into this, Sabu and Eldar lead a band of mercenaries for the alleged reason of raiding one of Miro's old abandoned labs, yet several in this group have ulterior motives.  For Sabu and Eldar, this would be what a blind old gold-skinned gypsy had told them about a destiny and the third of their number they would meet.  Making it through the hazards of this old facility only starts them on a road that will take them across the farthest reaches of Maldene, through it all ever the dark hand of Miro in evidence.  Everywhere save with a mysterious King who seems the only one willing to stand up against the forces of Miro, as Sabu and Eldar find that they and their companions have been recruited for a battle against the most evil being ever known.

The Maldene series spans several continents of this giant Earth-swallowing world, crosses to other dimensions, and later on in the series other worlds and even far distant periods in its history.  But it all begins in the first book (currently published as Volume I and Volume II), in which we follow Sabu, Eldar, Sindar and their companions on a search for secrets, destiny, and discovery of what Really goes on in the world.  Three different continents, journey to a second world, the Sea of A Thousand Islands, Tedelnosho (The Great Whirlpool), the mysterious King who is the only one willing to stand up to Miro's forces, over a dozen main characters, several alien races (from the sea-going Thirdocians to the avian-evolved Kÿecians), and this is just the first book, as but the first chapter in a story that spans several books.

www.maldene.com

Monday, September 9, 2013

Week 7 Preview Mark Tierno

Welcome everyone to another great week of the Writer's Revolution.  I am your host, the author of The Phoenix BladeAndrew Hess.  I'd like to introduce our guest this week, the author of Maldene, Mark Tierno




Mark lives in his home town of Monrovia California, the recipient of degrees in Physics and Math, and a lifelong reader of fantasy and SciFi.  The son of loving middle class parents, while Mark had a good enough childhood that allowed him to develop both intellectually and creatively, in the middle of High School his father developed Parkinsons Disease. What followed was 25 years of watching his Dad and the family finances get worse and worse, helping out his mother with his Dad while finishing up his MS in Physics. A lifelong reader of Fantasy and Sci-Fi, when added tragedy, in the form of his grandpas old house burning to the ground, struck, the resulting insurance money eased off the collective burden enough to allow Mark to start writing a series of books that he had been developing in his head for the previous 15 years.

The result was some joy brought into the Tierno household to offset the bleak circumstances that an ailing father can bring. Caring for his father up through his death became a full-time job, but even so he was able to pen an amazing series of books that have few- if any- equals. This creative effort became the light in the darkness, bringing back some hope and joy and turning the house back into a home.

His father never lived to see it published, but his mother lived long enough to see it first published and a chapter or two read in a library before a small audience. Now his goal is to see his lifes work bring pleasure to the world outside his own.

In total, Maldene spans 13 novels, 5.2 million words, 250 characters, many worlds and dimensions, thousands of years, and is a unique blend of both Fantasy and Science fiction, coupled with skillful prose and realistic characterizations that put it head and shoulders above everything else out today. You will get lost in a story that will have you wondering if- somewhere out there- the world of Maldene just might exist.  Maldene is the first book in a series that will redefine the word Epic.


"A world beyond time... an adventure beyond imagining."