Meet the Author: Yvonne Hertzberger

Author Yvonne Hertzberger

Author Yvonne Hertzberger describes her writing as primarily character-driven. Though plot and description play an important part, she feels they are secondary to creating characters that grow and develop, that readers will identify with and want to spend time getting to know. She says, “I get into their thoughts and emotions, and even often describe the scene through the eyes of a character. I try to use language that is accessible but still literate. I believe that if you need a dictionary beside you to ‘get it’ you will not escape into the story.”

Yvonne says she is a people-watcher and derives many of her insights into the behavior of her characters from seeing how real people interact. “As well, I like to think about social issues and spiritual issues in new ways and play with how that might change how my characters see their world,” she adds.

Asked to describe her biggest challenge as a writer, Yvonne says it is maintaining the discipline to organize her time, preserving sufficient time to write while balancing the multiple demands of social networking, promotion, and marketing.

With respect to the issue of marketing her work, Yvonne avails herself of all the usual suspects in electronic social media (website, twitter , facebook, blog and LinkedIn), but suspects she has sold very few books to people she has never met. “That said, I have only begun to create an on-line presence over the last several months so I hope that will change as time goes on.”

Yvonne reads other indie authors including,  Rosanne Dingli, Ruth Barrett, Tom Kepler and KS Brooks, and has been very impressed with all of them. “The publishing industry is missing out on a huge amount of talent,” she says.

Her advice to aspiring writers? “Don’t expect to get rich any time soon. Read voraciously, in your genre, but also in other genres. Write, write, write. Get feedback but don’t let it rob you of your own voice or your own truth. Learn all the rules of writing and be able to use them, then break them consciously when it serves you, knowing why you do.”

Yvonne’s latest title, Though Kestrel’s Eyes is the second book in the Earth’s Pendulum epic fantasy trilogy:

Since the end of the Red Plague the people have enjoyed peace. That ends when the rulers of both Lieth and Gharn are toppled by traitors. Earth, goddess and source of Balance, suffers from this. Famine is inevitable when the rains fail to come.

Liannis, powerful seer, is thrust into her role with her training incomplete. She battles self-doubt and the forbidden lure of romance while Earth requires sacrifices that test her to her limits.

A kestrel allows Liannis to see through her eyes. She and a white horse accompany her as she faces one test after another. Yet both she and Earth cannot heal until the Balance is restored.

Through Kestrel’s Eyes is available from Amazon in both Kindle and print format.

Learn more about author Yvonne Hertzberger and her writing at her website and her  blog. You can also find her on Facebook and follow her on Twitter.

[subscribe2]

Author: Administrators

All Indies Unlimited staff members, including the admins, are volunteers who work for free. If you enjoy what you read here - all for free - please share with your friends, like us on Facebook and Twitter, and if you don't know how to thank us for all this great, free content - feel free to make a donation! Thanks for being here.

6 thoughts on “Meet the Author: Yvonne Hertzberger”

  1. Yvonne, I haven't written book length fiction yet, though plan to, but I too get some of the characters in my short stories from people I have observed.

  2. Yvonne is a good lady who writes novels about how important it is to be in harmony with yourself, other people, and the earth. It takes a balanced mind to write with such harmony!

  3. "Get feedback but don’t let it rob you of your own voice or your own truth." I like that statement. We get caught up in getting our work edited and critiqued, but if we followed all the suggestions given by our critique groups there would be some work that would have very little of 'us' left and it would become a many-voiced 'corporate' effort. I know feedback is very important, but it is not the be-all and end-all of the story.

    Yvonne, I wish you much success in 2012.

Comments are closed.