Great conversation with Jonathan Rose discussing Wedlock his new book and other three books.
hi, welcome to this episode of author echo I'm Travis Davis, your host.
Speaker:Tell us your story.
Speaker:Hey everybody.
Speaker:Welcome back to author Ecke today we have Jonathan Rose.
Speaker:He's going to tell you about himself, his book, and there we're just going to
Speaker:get into a free flowing conversation.
Speaker:And who knows where it's going to go, but tell your story.
Speaker:Go ahead, Jonathan.
Speaker:Oh, Travis.
Speaker:Uh, just want to thank you for having me as a guest.
Speaker:I'm happy to be here and looking forward to a good conversation.
Speaker:Actually.
Speaker:Me too.
Speaker:I'm ready, man.
Speaker:Let's do it.
Speaker:Sounds good.
Speaker:Sounds good.
Speaker:So what what'd you write your book?
Speaker:This book, this is my fourth book, actually.
Speaker:It's entitled wedlock and when see it there, right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Great cover.
Speaker:It was done by Jonathan
Speaker:Did a great job who really love his work look.
Speaker:I originally wrote it way back when I moved to Mexico about 13 years ago.
Speaker:And, the first draft was done living in a little apartment and over summertime,
Speaker:it was an idea I had, but I've been rewriting it over the past 12 or
Speaker:so years kinda would write, right.
Speaker:It was one of those books where I would write.
Speaker:And, I liked it, but it just didn't feel right.
Speaker:And then I would put it aside for a couple of years, work on
Speaker:another project, get back to it, rewrite it, get to another project.
Speaker:So it was a lot of back and forth.
Speaker:The very first draft of the book is way different than what it is now.
Speaker:Of course.
Speaker:So, yeah.
Speaker:So this is the version of most happy with.
Speaker:So in the meantime though, I published, uh, three, uh, three books before
Speaker:that, , This one was published by Montag breasts that was out in California.
Speaker:Before that published two more and also published a book down south in
Speaker:Mexico as well, a couple of years ago.
Speaker:So tell me about Mexico, man.
Speaker:I mean, you know, uh, I don't think Spain growing up as a kid, so
Speaker:Mexico had to, but we're at Mexico.
Speaker:I mean, how and what how'd you get there and why did you get there?
Speaker:Well, I got there by driving kind of Toronto.
Speaker:You drove from Toronto all the way to.
Speaker:I did.
Speaker:And I did an old 92 Camry.
Speaker:Love that car called it.
Speaker:Nobody stole it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:No, that car, I don't know how it made it, man.
Speaker:It had like two, 300,000 kilometers on it, but it's a Toyota.
Speaker:Oh yeah, man.
Speaker:Those, those are way back when they made them, they made them real good.
Speaker:Like.
Speaker:Used to die.
Speaker:It was a good four day drive.
Speaker:, I always wanted to do it and I had some very close relationships down in Mexico.
Speaker:Always wanted to live, in another country cause I've been visiting them so long.
Speaker:So I was just like, you know what?
Speaker:I quit my job.
Speaker:I was 23, 24 and I was like, ah, screw it.
Speaker:I want to take this writing thing serious and rent as a hell
Speaker:of a lot cheaper there than.
Speaker:Especially now.
Speaker:That's why I'm going back down south in the new year for you.
Speaker:Thank you.
Speaker:So, uh, yeah, drove down and, uh, I didn't have a timeline.
Speaker:I wasn't like I'm going to stay for a decade.
Speaker:It was more, I just want to live this and see where it goes.
Speaker:And I ended up there for over a decade for a couple of years too, and just spend
Speaker:a third of my life in Latin America.
Speaker:those are the important words, the important German.
Speaker:I can speak German.
Speaker:I lived there for nine years in Germany.
Speaker:That's all I know.
Speaker:I will speak English.
Speaker:I'll understand everything anyways, but I, yeah, and I didn't speak a
Speaker:word of Spanish when I got there.
Speaker:I just.
Speaker:I just got there with nothing.
Speaker:It was difficult.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Just picked it up.
Speaker:And, yeah, it was a great experience.
Speaker:And I was in, most of the time I spent in Mexico city, uh, I also lived in,
Speaker:uh, in a beautiful town called Cholula.
Speaker:It was in a state of right in front of volcanoes.
Speaker:It's like wake up to a postcard every morning place lived in a container row.
Speaker:Imply.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:And, bounce.
Speaker:I just moved around that country a lot, saw so much of it.
Speaker:I miss it a lot.
Speaker:And your book, uh, did it take place?
Speaker:It take place in Mexico?
Speaker:Oh, big time.
Speaker:Big.
Speaker:All of the books, all four of the books I've published have been
Speaker:heavily influenced by my time there.
Speaker:I mean, you're spending 12 years in a place you're surrounded by stories.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So, it heavily influenced.
Speaker:And, but I didn't name it specifically.
Speaker:I didn't want to you, I use details, but the story, because it's about, man and a
Speaker:woman, young woman meets this man thinks he's prince charming thinks he's perfect.
Speaker:And he is just obsessed with keeping her safe to a frightening level.
Speaker:So it has a lot of black mirror aspects because we use technology to really keep.
Speaker:Safe as he likes to put it.
Speaker:And so I based a lot of that on real stories I've heard, not
Speaker:just from Mexico, but from women.
Speaker:I knew here in Canada, everywhere, but just that notion of this,
Speaker:that, that macho, you know, Tarzan you Jane kind of thing.
Speaker:You're my woman.
Speaker:I'm going to protect you.
Speaker:But for this character, and I found this happened a lot.
Speaker:It was rooted in real love.
Speaker:He really loved.
Speaker:But he's just a fanatic about it.
Speaker:He's worked on how he shows it.
Speaker:And I wanted that to reflect some of those attitudes.
Speaker:Like a man who believes that a woman's, his possession is wrong.
Speaker:It just stays.
Speaker:But it's important that just because something's wrong.
Speaker:That you don't just dismiss it and say evil, bad, and just go,
Speaker:that, that doesn't solve nothing.
Speaker:You got to try and understand it.
Speaker:Like, why is he like this?
Speaker:Where did these influences come from?
Speaker:Why is she go along with it?
Speaker:And where is she influenced?
Speaker:And by seeing so much of that macho culture, and I didn't
Speaker:just want to demonize it.
Speaker:And you know, it was the yelling on Twitter about it.
Speaker:I wanted to understand where did it come from?
Speaker:Generational.
Speaker:So this book was a reflection of a lot of that.
Speaker:What I learned really getting into the.
Speaker:To the heart of it.
Speaker:You know what I mean?
Speaker:While keeping it thrilling and trying to let the technology aspect.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:It's like black mirror, a black mirror romance set in the big Latin city.
Speaker:So really cool concept.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I had some flare of Latin America.
Speaker:It can, it can be anything.
Speaker:The type of relationship could be anywhere.
Speaker:We all know somebody who's been in that kind of, we all know a woman and a man
Speaker:has been in that kind of relationship where you, they go to you and they're
Speaker:like, I don't know, something's wrong.
Speaker:Like this doesn't feel right.
Speaker:And then the first question is, you know, do they hit, you know, Do they
Speaker:yell at you and embarrass you, humiliate you and do all those bad things
Speaker:that make it obvious in this book?
Speaker:Uh, the character she's just like, no, no.
Speaker:Well then what's the problem, but you, there is one was
Speaker:what I wanted to get into.
Speaker:Oh, cool.
Speaker:Or the other, other three books similar.
Speaker:They have a totally different, uh, storyline.
Speaker:How long did it take you to write those versus the 10, 12 year.
Speaker:Right there.
Speaker:They're all different, very different storyline, but the influences there,
Speaker:I'm actually having them here with me.
Speaker:My little show that the third book is called the spirit of laughter.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:Another great artist.
Speaker:His name was Al out of, he was out of Cholula.
Speaker:He did that for me.
Speaker:This book was inspired by again, a Mexican story and important.
Speaker:It was inspired by a few years back, there was the murder of 43 students.
Speaker:They were from IOC, Napa, the, the Mormons, right?
Speaker:Not the Mormons.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So I'm fortunate how there's so many of these types of
Speaker:the tragedy of it.
Speaker:This one was 43 students from a teacher's college, from the normal east of school.
Speaker:And they were from Iguala and they were in a bus.
Speaker:The bus disappeared, they were shot at, and these kids just.
Speaker:They still have it.
Speaker:They found little parts of them and stuff like that.
Speaker:And it's just, and when that happened, I was there in Mexico city and
Speaker:everybody was justifiably furious.
Speaker:And they were like, where are these kids?
Speaker:What happened?
Speaker:The government wasn't doing anything.
Speaker:And I remember when I was taking a walk around Mexico city, near the
Speaker:national university, there was a wall.
Speaker:And on the wall, you would see these murals.
Speaker:And I've also seen murals for 49 kids who died in a fire
Speaker:in Sonora and the ABC school.
Speaker:And they were young kids, but corruption and corner cutting.
Speaker:So it wasn't safe.
Speaker:The fire started, they couldn't get out.
Speaker:And so these murals you'd see of these real kids and
Speaker:sometimes they were so lifelike.
Speaker:And so the spirit of laughter, I wrote this story about what would
Speaker:happen if those murals did come to.
Speaker:And so I said, yeah, I said it in a school with a main character named Francis
Speaker:disco, and he has this evil principle that they nickname evil Espinosa.
Speaker:And she's like a representation of that corruption, that tyranny.
Speaker:And so it's kind of like, you know, that, that, uh, that part seems to finish kind
Speaker:of kid, you know, that kid leans back when everyone's studying, you know, and, uh,
Speaker:Oh, yeah.
Speaker:I was the one in detention.
Speaker:They had corporal punishment when I was a kid.
Speaker:And thank God they did, or I did really bad.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I was in detention.
Speaker:It was, it was always that too.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Throughout the school where they would send me.
Speaker:So this, Francisco character, just like a, him versus evil Espinosa.
Speaker:And she tells us like for punishment, you have to paint your other students
Speaker:and you have to paint them on the wall.
Speaker:So I don't have to paint, paint and artists save the school money.
Speaker:But to do it, he has to interview these students, get to know them, to paint them
Speaker:and they start telling him their stories.
Speaker:They start telling him, he's like, well, I want to get emotion.
Speaker:Like, how do you feel that?
Speaker:Or what do you hate about this school?
Speaker:And they start talking about how they were wrong by this principal.
Speaker:So he starts passionately doing these portraits throughout
Speaker:the school, on this big wall.
Speaker:And then as things progressed, you know, things come out of it.
Speaker:And then these portraits come to that.
Speaker:And then they get their revenge.
Speaker:And I just was, it was so inspiring from the murals I saw
Speaker:of those, these kids from ILT.
Speaker:And I feel like they deserve their revenge.
Speaker:They deserve justice, right.
Speaker:Their revenge against that, that wrong them.
Speaker:So that inspired that book.
Speaker:That was part of that.
Speaker:But one was published by Montag press in 2020.
Speaker:Yup.
Speaker:The next one, next one here is called Guthrie Lobo.
Speaker:And, uh, this one was published in, uh, last year and a couple of years back.
Speaker:Sorry.
Speaker:It's being promoted by Wampo in Mexico city right now.
Speaker:It's not even available in English.
Speaker:It's only a Spanish word.
Speaker:You wrote it in Spanish.
Speaker:I wrote it in English, but it was translated.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I can't write in Spanish.
Speaker:I would butcher the lane.
Speaker:I don't have that.
Speaker:I can't do that.
Speaker:But, uh, this story was men means a lot.
Speaker:It was, a real story I was asked to do.
Speaker:By somebody who's very dear to me.
Speaker:He asked me to do it.
Speaker:He was just like you, I think you'd be perfect for this.
Speaker:So he put me in contact with this teacher and she's like, I have this
Speaker:real story, but I'm not a writer.
Speaker:She's like, I want to tell it to you.
Speaker:Do you mind?
Speaker:And I said, of course not.
Speaker:And we sat in this cafe, overlooking the Zocalo in Mexico city in the center.
Speaker:She told me this tale and it blew my mind.
Speaker:And we're just talking.
Speaker:It's all in Spanish.
Speaker:We're talking about.
Speaker:And she's telling me this story about this girl who would go to class, dressed up
Speaker:like a cat she'd have cat contact lenses.
Speaker:She'd have, she would just look at, but nobody, nobody would make fun of her.
Speaker:That always stuck me.
Speaker:Nobody would bully her.
Speaker:Like I think back when I was a kid, if you had anything different,
Speaker:you were going to get, you were going to get, you know what I mean?
Speaker:They were more, they normalized it.
Speaker:She did it with such an individual confidence that you
Speaker:couldn't and that fascinated me.
Speaker:And then on the other side, there was this boy named everyone called
Speaker:him Lobo because he had like a beard and he was just moved like a Wolf.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And so, and yeah, nobody speaks Spanish.
Speaker:Lobel means Wolf GAPA means okay.
Speaker:And, and then the story she told me, like with the details she had, I had to
Speaker:dramatize some of course things were, she told me it was all based on real stuff,
Speaker:how it was like Romeo and Juliet kind of thing, you know, like these opposite types
Speaker:and they get together with tragic results.
Speaker:And I don't want to give away too much of it, but just don't know,
Speaker:people don't read the British results were the reason it takes.
Speaker:I learned Spanish and the results were really tragic, but it was so beautiful.
Speaker:And there was so much to it that I was just like, you just told me this unique
Speaker:Shakespearian tale that actually happened.
Speaker:I'd be honored to write it.
Speaker:And so I wrote that for a teenage audience.
Speaker:Which I've never done.
Speaker:And I wasn't sure if I could, but then I just have the simple thing
Speaker:I'm like, I don't like the idea is I hated reading the books.
Speaker:They gave us in school.
Speaker:I hated the most of them are crap.
Speaker:Like they were boring and dull and like I'm 16.
Speaker:Come on.
Speaker:So what I wanted to do is I want it to read, I want it to write the type
Speaker:of book I would have wanted to read.
Speaker:And so my idea, and I love reading.
Speaker:I love classes.
Speaker:The most, I love real good stories.
Speaker:So I thought, well, I'm going to do that.
Speaker:And just because it's for teenagers, doesn't mean I have to dumb it down.
Speaker:It doesn't mean I have to tell it in a way that other kids are smart, really smart.
Speaker:So for me, it was just, okay, just no graphic violence,
Speaker:no graphic sex and neglect.
Speaker:You took that out of the equation, you can write no diff no different.
Speaker:So that's how I approached it.
Speaker:And it really worked.
Speaker:And some of the best things that came from it so far, I mean, the
Speaker:pandemic ruined the promotion.
Speaker:We were supposed to do a book tour was ruined.
Speaker:I, there I was there in March of 20, 20 trying to debate.
Speaker:Should I stay?
Speaker:Should I go back to Toronto?
Speaker:Like I was faced with that.
Speaker:You take care of my mom who lives here.
Speaker:And so the book tour got scrapped and so much bad things happened.
Speaker:And, um, are you going to take it back?
Speaker:Are you going to try it?
Speaker:When you go back down, are you going to, it's being promoted there now by
Speaker:Wampo they're doing an easy job with it.
Speaker:Um, but I hope to get back to it, to see what I can do to help it to get out and
Speaker:momentum, but also really great was the teacher who told me the story, getting
Speaker:her approval men more than anything.
Speaker:I didn't care about anybody else.
Speaker:Like she told me.
Speaker:This is her story.
Speaker:She told me if she says this is crappy, butchered, it I'd scrap it.
Speaker:She, she cried a little.
Speaker:She was just like, that was beautiful.
Speaker:I mean that to me, And then it got read by students in schools.
Speaker:And, um, there was this one school in particular and it meant a lot
Speaker:where there were indigenous kids, Spanish isn't even their first
Speaker:language and they don't read a lot.
Speaker:They're, you know, they're not into it too much.
Speaker:Books, they can't relate to.
Speaker:And, um, so they had copies of this book and they read it and they loved
Speaker:it and we would do zoom conferences and they would hold up the book and
Speaker:they'd be like, wow, pretty slick.
Speaker:It was great.
Speaker:And it's like, and the ending is ambiguous.
Speaker:So what the kids did is it was proposed to them.
Speaker:Well, what do you think happened to the characters?
Speaker:Because in real life, I don't know what happened, so I don't at the end,
Speaker:so I don't think it was fair to make.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So, and that was helped.
Speaker:That was given to me, I would always give credit to a friend named Mariana.
Speaker:She, she gave me the ending.
Speaker:She was like, no, if you don't know what happened, don't say it, leave
Speaker:it to the, and that was all her.
Speaker:And she left their creative juices instructor percolate.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And it did all of these kids wrote their own endings and I mean 10
Speaker:page essays and they didn't have to.
Speaker:And the teacher was even like, they don't write a lot.
Speaker:They're not really into it, but your book spark that.
Speaker:And so that kind of reaction in like I am, as far from an indigenous
Speaker:Mexican teenagers, he gets that I was able to write this book
Speaker:based on things that really happen and that they were inspired by.
Speaker:It meant a lot.
Speaker:So we're really pretty cool.
Speaker:To keep it going.
Speaker:And the next one, do you have another bone or is that a, yeah,
Speaker:my first book, this, this is my first book published professionally.
Speaker:It's called carrier.
Speaker:And this one got published in 2015 by Montag press.
Speaker:And there's always something special when your first book gets published.
Speaker:Mine is actually released today.
Speaker:My first book was actually released today.
Speaker:Really?
Speaker:What's it called?
Speaker:It was called flames of deception.
Speaker:Oh, congratulations.
Speaker:Thank you.
Speaker:Yeah, today's a big day.
Speaker:So get to show.
Speaker:That's really cool.
Speaker:It's a feeling that.
Speaker:Nothing matches it.
Speaker:I don't care how many more books you publish getting that first one.
Speaker:When you get your copies in the mail, you open it up and you see what you worked on.
Speaker:And it's a cool feeling.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I think we'll see how it goes.
Speaker:Uh, happily optimistic as you should be.
Speaker:You should be a lot of writers.
Speaker:Don't get to that point.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:How many, like a lot, don't get to see that.
Speaker:That's why I started this podcast because.
Speaker:So I started writing my story in March that first week of March.
Speaker:And I finished it last April.
Speaker:I was like, man, there's gotta be other people that have these ideas or these
Speaker:thoughts that they want to write a book.
Speaker:They don't know where to start.
Speaker:They, you know, it's, you know, it's just a.
Speaker:Trying to get all the stuff together, you know, like they say, you're
Speaker:trying to make sausage, right?
Speaker:I mean, you've got all these ingredients and get a published
Speaker:and where do you start?
Speaker:How do you start?
Speaker:So that's why I wanted to interview authors and they don't
Speaker:have to be no famous authors.
Speaker:It's just like people see walking down the street that wrote a book.
Speaker:You'd never know it.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And then, you know, so what, what motivated them?
Speaker:Why'd you, it takes time it's effort.
Speaker:It's, it's a commitment that you have to make to be able to finish.
Speaker:And then when you start writing, like when I write, say, I can see
Speaker:everything that I, that I want.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:So it's got some details in it.
Speaker:That's why I wanted to interview folks.
Speaker:And so, you know, you don't, you don't, I mean, I didn't get up that
Speaker:day, so I'm gonna write a book.
Speaker:I was just sitting there and I go, you know, what's going on in the world?
Speaker:And I said, what if this happened?
Speaker:What if.
Speaker:I actually start with the same kind of concept that with that idea.
Speaker:Like what if this happened?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Like you just said, I had that, that inspired a few books,
Speaker:especially the first one.
Speaker:I would just carry on book.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Tell us about that.
Speaker:I wanna hear about that book.
Speaker:Well, I'm gonna, I'm going to take it from what you said.
Speaker:It was a, what if it was a big, what if.
Speaker:This was 2014.
Speaker:I wrote in 2013, you know, the walking dead thing and all of that
Speaker:dragging on like a soap opera.
Speaker:I dunno.
Speaker:Uh, I wasn't really into it, but you know, we've had those stories forever.
Speaker:You know, humans, good monsters, bad humans must kill
Speaker:monsters to survive, blah.
Speaker:And I was like, well, what if I got, it was more, what, what if
Speaker:we got a story from the monsters?
Speaker:And so that was what carry on.
Speaker:Like you said, the what?
Speaker:And so the whole book is basically just think a walking
Speaker:dead episode, just flip it.
Speaker:And it's from the Monster's point of view where they're.
Speaker:They're not hateful.
Speaker:They have nothing against you.
Speaker:It's not just their food.
Speaker:It's no different than if it's, it'd be like demonizing a shark or
Speaker:a lion or a Cougar or something.
Speaker:It doesn't hate you.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So this story is just about that.
Speaker:And so by doing that and I based it again, and I'm a big Latin city, Mexico.
Speaker:And it would just be like these different scenarios where through the Monster's
Speaker:eyes, there's not a lot of inner monologue or not, and it's still monster, but you
Speaker:see through his eyes that I wanted to put the question who's really evil here.
Speaker:Like he's just looking at he or she, whatever.
Speaker:It's just looking for food, but then you see the.
Speaker:Like torture, you know, the Rick character, the hero character,
Speaker:you're like torturing these monsters.
Speaker:You're, you're doing all these things.
Speaker:You're for fun.
Speaker:Shooting them in all of this.
Speaker:And they're just going, shopping for food, the grocery stores
Speaker:just where you live, that's it.
Speaker:It's not personal.
Speaker:So it stems from what you were talking about that.
Speaker:What did that, do you write?
Speaker:Do you have like a set time you write or do you have, I'm going to write so many
Speaker:words a day or I just feel like writing.
Speaker:Cause sometimes I'll just say, okay, I feel like writing and
Speaker:then I'll just hammer away or sometimes I'll say, you know what?
Speaker:I have an idea.
Speaker:So let me put that idea somewhere in the book, because I think I
Speaker:could use it and it didn't, it just helps me kind of flow that.
Speaker:So you take like, you know, is it a job right?
Speaker:Eight to 500, right?
Speaker:Or is it, you know what, it's a passion I'm gonna write,
Speaker:but I don't want to write.
Speaker:I'll do something else.
Speaker:I I've been doing it.
Speaker:I remember before when I first started, oh, long time ago when I maybe before
Speaker:Mexico, even maybe 13, 14 years ago.
Speaker:I wanted to see if I could write a book.
Speaker:I was really inspired to, I, I had, I was going through a long convalescence from
Speaker:a back injury, so I did a ton of reading.
Speaker:Like what else it was that or soap operas.
Speaker:So, yeah, so I did a ton of reading and really got inspired by
Speaker:like, I read the classics, right?
Speaker:Like when you got all that time, I read one piece on hold.
Speaker:Not trying to stay on full story.
Speaker:I survived.
Speaker:The depth of the stories was inspiring.
Speaker:So I said, I want to write stories like this human stories, deep stories.
Speaker:Always been a fan of them.
Speaker:And so what I did was first before I think I'm great.
Speaker:Cause in my mind I wanted to be Dostoevsky before I was 30.
Speaker:It didn't happen, but it's okay.
Speaker:I still got time.
Speaker:I started writing more for the, can I do it?
Speaker:And I decided to discipline.
Speaker:So I told myself I'm gonna write.
Speaker:By words.
Speaker:So, and it stuck.
Speaker:So I do a thousand words a day and I still do that when I'm working on a project.
Speaker:And that's good.
Speaker:I mean, uh, I tell folks that, uh, Hemingway wrote 500 words a day because
Speaker:he was so meticulous in his writing that that's all he could get out of.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And I usually work, in the mornings.
Speaker:I mean, I'm not an early morning riser, but basically morning in like I get up
Speaker:when I feel the most fresh to do it.
Speaker:So it's wake up.
Speaker:Sometimes it takes only a half an hour.
Speaker:Sometimes it takes four hours, but the whole thing to get those
Speaker:thousand words and I didn't care if it was my birthday, Chris.
Speaker:And so with that first book, I did that and was really proud.
Speaker:I thought it was great.
Speaker:Book was garbage, but it will never come out, but that's not the point.
Speaker:It was to see if I could fit just to see if you could do it, finish it.
Speaker:I mean, you hear everybody say, I'm going to write a book.
Speaker:And when I told my friends, Hey, I'm gonna write a book in there.
Speaker:Like, uh, Travis, we know you.
Speaker:So you know, like squirrel.
Speaker:So, and then if it didn't actually went dark, I told
Speaker:everybody I was writing a book.
Speaker:I'm going to have to finish this thing.
Speaker:So it just kind of motivated me to do that.
Speaker:And as I continued to do it and motive motivated me more until you're done,
Speaker:then you're like, okay, now what do I do?
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Got out to the publishers.
Speaker:And, you know, just the whole process now is the process of marketing a book.
Speaker:So writing to me is the easy part marketing.
Speaker:It is more of is a harder part.
Speaker:Even though, I mean, I've done marketing before and some things, but getting,
Speaker:you know, get that interest because there's a lot of books out there.
Speaker:I mean, millions, millions on Amazon millions.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:You know, you've got to find it.
Speaker:I don't even think it's a niche.
Speaker:I think you have to find something interesting.
Speaker:People want to read.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Cause they're committing themselves to three, four hours in a period of time.
Speaker:So to listen, to read your thoughts that you've actually put down on paper.
Speaker:I look at it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Like they're basically saying I'm going to have a one-sided conversation with you
Speaker:where I'm just going to listen to you, talk for hours and hours about something.
Speaker:And I mean, I think about any time you've talked to somebody, how many people have
Speaker:you talked to where you'd be like, yep.
Speaker:I'd be willing to sit here and not say a word and listen to them for hours.
Speaker:Pretty short.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:So anytime a person chooses to read anything I've written and I take it like,
Speaker:damn, they just want to listen to me.
Speaker:That's that's really cool.
Speaker:But yeah, like you said, for the marketing, I mean, I'm terrible at it.
Speaker:I suck.
Speaker:I'm not good at it.
Speaker:I'm a private person.
Speaker:I'm not an introvert.
Speaker:I'm just private and.
Speaker:I'm not, I just never had the skill of it.
Speaker:I've always, I love the writing of the stories.
Speaker:I love editing.
Speaker:I love editing a lot.
Speaker:I love that.
Speaker:It's like bonsai tree cutting.
Speaker:I love trimming it just to get it just right.
Speaker:That's where I love that.
Speaker:But so many people do.
Speaker:That's why I like opportunities like this to do podcasts, to talk about it.
Speaker:I find like, okay, this is fun.
Speaker:If this could be called marketing, I enjoy this.
Speaker:It's interesting because.
Speaker:, I was communicating back and forth with a writer that I interviewed,
Speaker:Jennifer Hilley two weeks ago and talking about marketing and I
Speaker:think outside the box at marketing.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So, you know, they're trying to get in bookstores.
Speaker:I'm like, I don't want to get where books are.
Speaker:I want to go where people that read books are that's fair.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:So like the places I put on my books.
Speaker:They're real places.
Speaker:I mean, you could drive the highway, you could see it.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:And so, I, put my daughter's flower shop in it.
Speaker:I'm gonna have a book signing in a flower shop.
Speaker:I did a, a brewery in Manassas, Virginia called Eve.
Speaker:I'm having a book signing with them on the 22nd.
Speaker:We're all excited about that because that's where people go and they can
Speaker:relate because they're, they're the same reason why I put it in the book, right?
Speaker:This is a place with, after a mission, they go and relax and they just
Speaker:get the clear, the air they relax.
Speaker:And that's why people go to these things like that to relax so
Speaker:they can kind of relate to it.
Speaker:Um, so that's my take on marketing, which could be totally wrong.
Speaker:If it works, it works.
Speaker:If it works, it doesn't, you know what, I'll do something else because
Speaker:there's a lot of Africans I'm writing.
Speaker:I'm currently writing my second book about halfway through.
Speaker:It was a follow on.
Speaker:So, uh, so it's, it's, uh, it's a military thriller, uh, espionage,
Speaker:and it's what if Russia, for example, knew that something they have.
Speaker:Was running out, but something that they had to have and they
Speaker:had to get it from somewhere else.
Speaker:So they elicit the help of India and China, right.
Speaker:To get it.
Speaker:And the same time everybody's going to green technology.
Speaker:And what about a cyber attack?
Speaker:That could actually say when to turn the lights off, when the light
Speaker:turn the lights on how far you can drive, you can't drive today.
Speaker:You can't grow outside this radius.
Speaker:So, so what if this actually.
Speaker:And it's perceivable that it could.
Speaker:And if it's three individuals that were independent, that became a team
Speaker:and you can see all the course of the book, how they became a coach who
Speaker:cohesive team, and everybody has their strengths and weaknesses, but they
Speaker:rely on each other for the mission.
Speaker:And, uh, and then, you know, I talking to somebody on an airplane,
Speaker:flying back from Atlanta the other day, and I've told her, and she
Speaker:looked at me and she goes, is there.
Speaker:I go like, okay, awesome.
Speaker:I'm fresh.
Speaker:You'd go jump out of the plane.
Speaker:I said, no, I just made it up.
Speaker:That's really cool.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So it's, it's kinda, you know, cause like I was in the army for 20 years and
Speaker:you know, spirits in the military and everything, but uh, it's just, you know,
Speaker:it's interesting that what you can do.
Speaker:When you, when you sit down and you think of something, you go, oh, well, that'd
Speaker:be cool if I, I want them to do this now, because I'm trying to put it in a way the
Speaker:reader would, reader's expecting this.
Speaker:I'll go 90 degrees, the opposite direction.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:I'm doing something different, but that's cool.
Speaker:So, yeah, so we're excited, but so where can everybody get your.
Speaker:Um, well, my website is the easiest place.
Speaker:All the links are there.
Speaker:It's www.jonathanrrose.com real simple, H a N R rose.com.
Speaker:I'm also at Twitter.
Speaker:Uh, Jonathan R underscore rose.
Speaker:They're all on Amazon and, yeah, I really encourage people to give them a read.
Speaker:If you really want to get a.
Speaker:Like for me, I was interesting when you mentioned like, yeah, your story,
Speaker:it came from 20 years in the military, you have that insight, you know, the
Speaker:workings, you know, those details, little mannerism, things that to you are
Speaker:normal, but to anybody who has nothing to, I've never been in the military, I
Speaker:want to know like, oh yeah, just this.
Speaker:Like what?
Speaker:And it's those nails that I find, make a story enriching
Speaker:that really gets you in there.
Speaker:And so from.
Speaker:'cause they were so inspired by the time I spent in Latin
Speaker:America, because I want to go back.
Speaker:It's just this world that embraced me.
Speaker:It showed me, it opened itself to me.
Speaker:I really shut my mouth and listened.
Speaker:I immersed in it.
Speaker:I didn't just look at it from a distance.
Speaker:Like I was in a zoo.
Speaker:I went elbow to elbow.
Speaker:I got in as much as I could.
Speaker:And I was lucky where I was just able to, and people allowed me and everything.
Speaker:It was like even in the military where I was able to acquire.
Speaker:Those details that I would have to be reminded aren't
Speaker:common knowledge to people.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:So for my books, I tried to put those details as much as I could.
Speaker:To give people who might not know that world, an insight into that world.
Speaker:Isn't that, Hey, there's so much richness here and it's interesting.
Speaker:It's not all great, but it's not all bad either.
Speaker:It's, it's, it's humanity.
Speaker:It's no different than anywhere else yet.
Speaker:It's completely different from everywhere else.
Speaker:And I wanted to show those worlds and I want to keep doing that
Speaker:and keep writing those types of stories that people give me.
Speaker:So while I'm never going to ch I'm, I'm not a chronicler of like Mexican history.
Speaker:That's right.
Speaker:But I wanted to capture those stories and bring them to as many people as I can.
Speaker:So all the books I've written so far, I think can give a little insight to that.
Speaker:And for people from Latin America, I hope they enjoy it
Speaker:so they can see, Hey, he saw it.
Speaker:I know that I've been there.
Speaker:I've been at that place.
Speaker:I saw them, I walked the streets.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:I see the street names.
Speaker:I don't sit because the Latin-America is humongous.
Speaker:Like, and it's so diverse, like Wendell series, can't be more
Speaker:different from Mexico city that can be different than Keith or Lima.
Speaker:They're all different, but there's also a similarity to them as well.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So I wanted to capture that.
Speaker:So, yeah, definitely my website, all the books are there, this new book
Speaker:wedlock, I'm really excited about it.
Speaker:It's been 12 years in the making.
Speaker:That's awesome though.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Or you got another one you worked in another one or it
Speaker:was just something I recommend.
Speaker:I'm a big traveler.
Speaker:I love to travel and I'd recommend it.
Speaker:Recommend it.
Speaker:If you have the opportunity to go live somewhere else for absolutely
Speaker:six months, three months, six months.
Speaker:As long as you can.
Speaker:I'm for me, it's addictive.
Speaker:I, every time I come back to Canada, I'm always itching to leave.
Speaker:And for me, it's one of those things where once you start, you can't stop.
Speaker:Like, you always hear a lot of people.
Speaker:They're just like, oh, would you want to live forever?
Speaker:And I'll be like, oh, I don't know.
Speaker:I would go, I would spend a century in each country because it's so interesting,
Speaker:but I know I can't live forever.
Speaker:So I want to.
Speaker:Spend any time I have to learn about these different cultures
Speaker:and everything they have to offer the good end, the battle I love.
Speaker:And as a writer, as somebody who likes to tell stories, I mean, it's like mining
Speaker:and without hurting anybody, right.
Speaker:It's to get as much of this great stuff as you can.
Speaker:And that's that's, I just love doing, but, as far as right now,
Speaker:I'm working on a, play an English version, play of the Gato Lobel book.
Speaker:And, uh, that's almost finished.
Speaker:I don't know what I'm going to do to come see that, but I want a good seat.
Speaker:Yeah, absolutely.
Speaker:Here's hoping that as somebody takes an interest in.
Speaker:I've also finished a frog, any screenwriters out there looking for a good
Speaker:play that's original check out Jonathan.
Speaker:It's a great story.
Speaker:It's really good.
Speaker:And, uh, I just finished a non-fiction book, Canadian based actually the
Speaker:first real Canadian-based story.
Speaker:It's a real story.
Speaker:It was, it was based on an accident that happened back in 1988 to my stepbrother,
Speaker:actually that may the second, most famous Canadian in the world of that.
Speaker:Behind only Ben Johnson.
Speaker:He was the Olympic sprinter that got caught with steroids and he
Speaker:survived a fire, a house fire that burned 98% of his body.
Speaker:Third degree, nobody survives that nobody buys more 40% at 90% and he survived.
Speaker:He was the Guinea pig.
Speaker:So.
Speaker:That they used all the skin graph, surgeries, everything like that.
Speaker:He was one of the ones from the, he went to the Shriners Institute in Boston.
Speaker:They developed a lot of their experimental procedures that saved thousands of people.
Speaker:It started with.
Speaker:Every time he would be in a surgery.
Speaker:They'd be like, he wants to arrive.
Speaker:I was seven, eight years old at this time and seeing it, whatever, from my
Speaker:point of view and he kept surviving and I've talked to him about it at length.
Speaker:And he would tell me about out of body experiences.
Speaker:I mean, some of the stories he told me were so unbelievable, they had to be true.
Speaker:Like he had to get disinfected, but imagine your whole day 8% is raw.
Speaker:We would have to dip him into a bad.
Speaker:Of water with salt.
Speaker:I mean, this is torture stuff.
Speaker:This is like Darth Vader.
Speaker:You can imagine it, the burden to keep him cleaned and he survived and he was 15.
Speaker:Oh my goodness.
Speaker:And the book is about, that's just the beginning, but it's about
Speaker:the 30 years after, because the media made him into this massive.
Speaker:Because the title is the heroes we want and the heroes we get, he
Speaker:was extraordinary for surviving.
Speaker:He was extraordinary for that, but they wanted him to be more extraordinary.
Speaker:They wanted him to be the hero, the symbol of goodness.
Speaker:And that just wasn't him.
Speaker:He was a normal kid
Speaker:in a normal life, but the story of what he represented, they,
Speaker:and there was a lot of line.
Speaker:There was a lot of embedded.
Speaker:On their part.
Speaker:And by the time he was able to say his own piece, he was already sucked in.
Speaker:And so this book is about the 30 years after.
Speaker:Cause he just passed away last year, 49 people wasn't supposed to make it that day
Speaker:and he lived another 33 years and amazing.
Speaker:But in that light, He was exposed to so much.
Speaker:And to me it was such a human story and it made, there was a lot of questions.
Speaker:Should he have survived?
Speaker:Did he like, there's a lot of human questions to it.
Speaker:And so I was asked to write it by my father.
Speaker:I had is I had diaries newspaper clip.
Speaker:It was a really, really deep dive.
Speaker:So.
Speaker:I'm trying to find a publishing.
Speaker:I'm trying to find an agent for it.
Speaker:I'm looking so anybody interested in a real story like that, please contact me.
Speaker:It's a great person.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So I'm really proud of that one.
Speaker:So keeping busy.
Speaker:I wouldn't expect that one.
Speaker:So yeah, so I like writing about anything I find in games.
Speaker:I love reality.
Speaker:I love real stories.
Speaker:I love and funny enough, the notion of subversion now it's interesting.
Speaker:People are expecting the embellishment.
Speaker:Now they're expecting the, um, the pro say corny, but they're expecting
Speaker:the simplified, the whole Goodwill.
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:I don't really like that direction where I find reality is
Speaker:actually the thing that's unexp.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And so I want to lean more toward that.
Speaker:Like, Hey, the real stuff, I guess what your heroes are
Speaker:flawed, your heroes are human.
Speaker:Your heroes have messed up.
Speaker:There is no such thing as this person that is infallible and perfect and
Speaker:has been pure of heart doesn't exist.
Speaker:I don't care who it is.
Speaker:They've done some bad things that doesn't take away from the
Speaker:good they've done and vice versa.
Speaker:I've done some good things too.
Speaker:And you have to do.
Speaker:You just have to understand the fact that as human beings, there's the whole
Speaker:spectrum and that's, there's the same.
Speaker:Uh, it all comes out in the wash.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:So, uh, I agree, but they have a fascinating talking
Speaker:to you and meeting you.
Speaker:I mean, I've never met you before.
Speaker:This is fascinating.
Speaker:Thank you.
Speaker:Show us your books again.
Speaker:Let's let's put the coverage out there.
Speaker:So the latest book right now is God is wedlock that's out right now.
Speaker:That's the new one.
Speaker:There's the spirit of laughter.
Speaker:That came out 2020 the Spanish book at the we low-balled probably
Speaker:Spanish speakers out there.
Speaker:It's the movie in like what I'm in
Speaker:My very first book carry on.
Speaker:It's a horror novel from the Monster's perspective to see who's more
Speaker:monstrous us or the us or the monsters.
Speaker:And they're all available on my website.
Speaker:Www dot Jonathan R.
Speaker:Rose dot.
Speaker:Well, thanks for being a guest author.
Speaker:Thank you very much.
Speaker:It was, uh, it was interesting.
Speaker:I liked it.
Speaker:Thanks.
Speaker:Take care.
Speaker:Thank you for listening there'll be another episode next week.
Speaker:Please stop by and structure your own story.