It’s the first Wednesday of the month, so you know that means it’s time for another special #WCW – Author Edition.
If you’re new here, every month I have a chat with fellow authors. We talk about books, creating worlds of words, and other things.
And for the first chat of 2021, I get to share my chat with the lovely Dylan Allen.
Let’s get into the chat, shall we?
Thanks for taking the time to chat today, Dylan!
Let’s talk all about your writing style first…
How do you handle writer’s block?
DA: I read, write in my journal, listen to a lot of music. It’s hard when it hits, and some days I just have to force myself even when every word feels like a drop of blood. It’s the worst and so scary because I never know how long it will last. But what I do know is that it WILL pass and if I journal enough, I can usually get to the root of the problem and once I know what’s truly wrong, I work on addressing it. One of the most important things I’ve learned is that trying to “get over” things without allowing yourself to sit in the pain and feel self-pity isn’t healthy for me. Once I started giving myself permission to be sad about a disappointing release or whatever – it was much easier to move on and get going again.
What comes first, the plot or characters? –
DA: The characters. Always. I’m a very curious (some may say nosey) person and so when someone intrigues me, I usually stop and ask questions. For my book The Sun and Her Star, my hero was inspired by the “naked bartender” at my sister’s wedding shower. He was nude but for a tiny apron that was open in the back and while I could see that it was supposed to be a sexy, fun thing, and he was very nice to look at, I couldn’t imagine that it was an enjoyable job – having your bare ass out in a room from of strangers. So, I asked him – and he told me that he didn’t particularly like it, but that it paid the bills and let him work exclusively on weekends so he could go to school full time. All my characters have an origin story like that.
How much ‘world building’ takes place before you start writing?
DA: A Lot. Setting is very important – I like my readers to have an immersive experience, and for me that means engaging all of their senses. And even if not all of the details make it into the story, it helps me give my characters context.
How do you deal with the emotional impact of a book (on yourself) as you are writing the story?
DA: Not very well honestly, when I have to write emotionally difficult scenes, I tend to avoid writing altogether. But when I can’t avoid it anymore, I just let my emotions have their way. I cry, and agonize and celebrate along with my characters and it’s usually very cathartic. And it takes me a while to move on from stories when I’m done.
How do you come up with the titles to your books?
DA: I don’t know – they usually come to me when I’m building my Pinterest boards and playlists.
How many books have you written? Which is your favorite?
DA: I’ve published 9 books and they are all special for so many reasons. But if I had a gun to my head, I’d say it’s my fourth book, Release. It’s set it in my home country of Ghana and I loved introducing readers to that world. Also it’s deeply emotional and so very romantic.
If you were to genre-hop, which genre would you most like to try?
DA: I think fantasy. I’d love to test the bounds of my imagination and world build without worrying about accuracy.
Which of your books was most enjoyable to write?
DA: The Sun and Her Star.
If you had to recommend one of your books to a new reader, which would you recommend?
DA: I’ll let my readers answer this. Whenever I ask this question, the response is always Thicker Than Water.
THREE FUN FACTS ABOUT DYLAN
What do you like to do when you are not writing?
DA: binge tv shows with my husband.
What’s your favorite food?
DA: things you can only buy on the street corners in Ghana.
Can you share something your readers wouldn’t know about you?
DA: I’m terrified of heights because I fell off a two story building when I was four years old.
TO FIND OUT MORE ABOUT DYLAN & HER BOOKS, CHECK OUT HER SOCIAL MEDIA
Website: https://www.dylanallenbooks.com/
Facebook Profile Page: https://www.facebook.com/authordylanallen


Available for PreOrder!
The Scoop on
THE SOUND OF TEMPTATION
Can you share something about your current book that isn’t in the blurb?
DA: My hero in The Sound of Temptation is the product of an affair his father had and when his birth mother died, his biological father brought him to live with his family – which has always made my hero feel like a fly in the ointment of his family’s otherwise picturesque tableau.
What was the inspiration for the story?
DA: A woman I met randomly while in NYC who discovered, after doing a 23 & Me DNA kit just for kicks, that the people who raised her were not her biological parents.
Do you write listening to music? If so, what music inspired or accompanied this current book?
DA: Yes. Each book has a playlist. For this book the song that inspired me a lot was Killing Me Softly with His Song by The Fugees.
What is the future of the characters? Will there be a sequel?
DA: I don’t plan to write a sequel. But I hope maybe they’ll make cameos in future books. My heroine’s best friend is going to be the love interest in my Rivers Wilde novella – The Daredevil
If you had to describe the main character in THREE words, what would those three words be?
DA: Brave, restless, creative.
AUTHOR CRUSHING
Who is your favorite author and why?
DA: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie – Her TedTalk, The Danger of a Single Story solidified her spot as my number one favorite forever.
What are you reading now?
DA: I’m reading The Children of Blood and Bone by Tomi Adeyemi. I just finished Caste by Isabel Wilkerson. I highly recommend them both and consider Caste essential reading.
Favorite book when you were a kid?
DA: The Color Purple by Alice Walker
BEFORE I LET YOU GO, HOW ABOUT A RAPID FIRE ROUND?
Would you rather be in a room full of snakes or a room full of spiders?
DA: Death, please.
Would you rather have an endless summer or an endless winter?
DA: Endless Summer
Would you rather always be an hour early or be constantly twenty minutes late?
DA: An hour early
Tea or Coffee
DA: Tea
Movie or Book
DA: Movie
Toilet Paper: Over or Under?
DA: Over
Share a playlist!
DA: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/5V3f1wNaGJWAp8wX34cRsD?si=i80EdYmCRL2J57mikKYpwQ