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Saturday, March 29, 2025

Dig Into Your Soul for Inspiration: Author Interview with Steven Rogers

Your main career has been in accounting. What inspired you to go from numbers to words and write a novel? 

I’m a lifelong lover of reading fiction and can’t remember a time I didn’t want to write my own stories. During my professional career I occasionally dabbled with short stories and (unfinished) novels, but it wasn’t until my retirement from the corporate world in 2016 that I seriously pursued the craft.

I always assumed I would write a novel. I really wanted to discover if I could put together a story with a complex plot and well-developed characters. My first one-and-half novels are stored on the shelf in my office. I describe them as “learning opportunities that will never see the light of day.”

How long did it take to write the first one you published? Did you have in mind that it would be a two-book set or did it just expand too much for one?

My first published novel, Into the Room, took about fourteen months to write. At the time, I wasn’t thinking about a series, but, once the book was completed, I knew there was more I wanted to say about my main character, Ben Cahill. A Year in the Room was the result. This summer, I plan to begin the third book in the “Reluctant Pilgrim” series. 

Your story is a transformative one with the main character trying to recreate his life after alcoholic addiction. What drew you to focusing on this issue?

When I began writing, I never considered alcoholism or addiction as potential topics. Initially, I wrote horror and time travel stories. However, on a flight to Israel in 2017 I had a thought— “I wonder what would happen if I was an alcoholic, just released from rehab, and I had to take this trip?” Ben Cahill and Into the Room were how I answered the question. Why did I have this thought and why did I suddenly begin writing Christian Fiction when I was trying to be Stephen King? I can’t really answer either question other than to say, it was a “God Thing.”

However, both books reflect my own experiences observing alcohol and drug abuse in others. This perspective was forged by living with those around me suffering from the disease, witnessing their recovery, and addressing the impacts those addictions had on me and my life. My journey has led me to do extensive research into the mind of the alcoholic/addict and the reality of alcoholism/addiction as a family disease. No one escapes untouched. I’ve tried to reflect this perspective through my writing.

What is the hardest part of writing for you? Starting? Creating a scene? Dialog? Tension, etc.?

Patience. I always want to write faster and complete my books more quickly. However, I can’t and still be satisfied with the product. For instance, with A Year in the Room, I wrote sixty pages before deciding the narrative was too “flat” and that I wasn’t letting my characters drive the plot. I ended up throwing away all but about ten of those sixty pages and starting over. For me, sixty pages are a couple of months’ worth of work. I forced myself to take a deep breath and trust my process.

On a more specific level, I find creating tension without overusing adjectives and adverbs to be the most challenging part of writing

What’s the best encouragement you’ve had in your writing?

There are two things that come to mind. First, three successful authors—Brad Parks, Heath Lee, and Adriana Trigiani—mentored and encouraged me. They offered in-person guidance and answered questions by email. Their advice ranged from “how to find a publisher” to “how to make an unlikable character likeable (for the record, the answer is either get him a dog or have him save a cat) to “if you could achieve what you did in the corporate world, you can certainly write a piece of fiction worth publication.” Secondly, a short story I wrote, “Deep Waters,” won an honorable mention award in a Writer’s Digest competition. The award helped me believe I was moving in the right direction.

How did you go about finding your publisher?

Before I began submitting the book for publication, I hired a professional editor, Michele Chynoweth, to help me polish the manuscript of Into the Room. My plan was to find an agent and work with him/her to identify a publisher.

Once we were finished revising/improving, Michele told me the book was worthy of publication. She asked if I’d for like her to submit the manuscript to Elk Lake Publishing for consideration. Of course, I said yes. A week later they sent me a contract with an offer to publish the book. Elk Lake is also the publisher of A Year in the Room.

 What do you know now about writing you wished you had known sooner?

Initially, I avoided my own instincts on style and topics, focusing on the reader rather than on what my writing meant to me personally. The result was mechanical storytelling. However, beginning with the short story that won the award, I began to tell stories reflecting my own experiences and personal history. Writing them impacted me as much as any reader.

For example, we discussed above about how my two published novels focus on alcoholism and addiction. While both books are 100% fiction, writing them taught me to forgive others and helped clear my heart of the resentment, anger, and guilt directed towards the alcoholics/addicts in my life. In addition, walking with my main character, Ben Cahill, helped me to better understand God’s grace and His love for all of us. I truly believe that, if these books had never been published, telling Ben’s story would still have changed my life.

Said another way, I wish I’d known sooner that fiction is better when the author digs deep into his/her own soul when telling a story.

What is the best writing advice you’ve received or could give?

Write the story you want to write and be yourself as an author. Not everyone is going to like your work. You better be darn sure you do.

Are there any other points about writing you would like to add?

I recommend focusing on characters first. For me, the most enjoyable fiction draws me into the characters and then impels me to follow them through whatever conflict/events the author’s mind has invented.

 As a result, I spend a lot of time getting to know my main characters before I begin writing. Also, I’m a “pantser.” For my stories, I know the beginning and the ending before I start. However, the details in between are determined by my characters and how they react to the events occurring in the story.

What is the next book coming out? Can you give me a short synopsis?

I’m not sure when the book will be published, but I’m planning a third book in the series. The working title is Beyond the Room. I’m still developing characters and the overall storyline, but I know three things so far: (1) the first and last scenes (I can’t say anymore without offering a major spoiler), (2) that Ben Cahill will help someone else with an addiction, and (3) there will be a travel component to Italy, Greece, and Turkey as the characters follow the footsteps of the Apostle Paul. My wife and I are taking a tour in May to help me research that part of the book.

That's all for today's interview. Hope you'll look into Steven's books. I'm currently reading one of them and am finding it an insightful read. I don't usually like books written in the first person, but this book is done well.

Instagram: @stevenrogerswriter 

And here's a bonus for my readers... Leave a comment on this post and we'll pick one reader who'll receive a copy of one of Steven's eBooks or a paperback. So do that now. It can be as simple as I want to be in the giveaway. We'll chose a winner next weekend  

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