Author: Brian Power

author-brian-power

Brian Power graduated with a bachelor’s degree in English literature and secondary education and later earned a master’s degree in international relations. He is a retired corporate consultant and trainer. He also retired from the US Marine Corps Reserve as a lieutenant colonel where he completed 24 years of active and reserve service. He currently lives in Rhode Island.

 FAQs About the Author

Tell me a little bit about who you are and where you live.

My name is Brian Power, and I have lived in Rhode Island for 32 years. I am a retired Lt. Col. In the US Marine Corps Reserve with 5 plus years of active service and 20+ years of reserve service. I also had a successful training and consulting firm that provided leadership, team building, and problem solving services to small to medium sized companies in the Rhode Island and Southeastern Massachusetts area. I taught humanities courses such as Human Relations in the Workplace, Introduction to Film, The Automobile and American Culture, Leadership, and Ethics to students at New England Institute of Technology.

Favorite local spots you like to visit that inspire your creativity?

I was born and raised in Norwalk, CT, but my grandparents lived in Norwich, CT. Norwich was my anchor as a child. There I got the lore of the family as well as the lore of the region. I had two great-aunts who lived almost right across the street from Chief Uncas’s burial ground.

Wow us with shock value. Is there anything about you that would surprise readers?

I didn’t become a writer until seven years ago, when I was 63. A lifetime self-taught guitar player, I began taking lessons in 1992. In 2003 my teacher suggested that I start recording my favorite songs (in his basement recording studio). Starting in 2003, at age 57, I recorded five CDs of my favorite music and began and finished my novel. Not bad for a guy in the twilight of his years.

What interested you to become a writer rather than something else such as a neurosurgeon?

First of all, I am not smart enough to be a neurosurgeon, a lawyer, or anything else that required a lot of academic smarts. I had spent my adult life being a Marine Officer, a corporate lackey, a corporate outplacement consultant, an amateur baseball player, a corporate consultant and trainer, a high school teacher, and a bad guitarist. It suddenly hit me that I had a great story to tell that drew from most of my childhood and adult experiences.

If you could spend a day with any author, living or dead – who would it be and why?

One answer is that I would probably want to talk with Douglas Adams to ask him where he got those really wild and hysterical ideas from. On the other hand, I would really want to talk to Dickens about David Copperfield and also talk to Jack Schaefer about Shane.

Does the area in which you live provide influence in your writing? How so?

When I was a kid growing up in East Norwalk, CT, we lived adjacent to Taylor’s Farm. Originally it had been Marvin farm encompassing our now suburban neighborhood. The farm was granted to the Marvin family by the king of England in 1630, I believe. As a kid I loved to pretend, as I stalked through the farm’s fields with a pretend flintlock in my arms, that I was stalking Indians, deer, and what have you. I loved the fact that we lived where the Indians lived. As a kid in the 50s, we had nothing but a steady diet of westerns on TV. So when I played cowboys and Indians with my friends, I really wanted to be the Indians. I think that’s where my main character, Gordon Tallbear, came from.

What is the most critical piece of advice you would give to new authors?

With all due respect, I think that may be an over-rated question. I always wanted to be a writer, and had started many a short story and novel only to give up early. One day I woke up with forty-seven ideas in my head that were an accumulation of childhood, adult, lifetime, and just plain reading experiences that all of a sudden wanted to get out of my head and onto a piece of paper. When I started writing, everything else took control, and I let it. I found that as I was typing something that one of my characters was going in a different direction than I thought he would. And I marveled at the thought. So if you think you are going to be a writer, you have to let something else inside of you take over the writing process. I did and loved the experience. Whether I have another book that can take me over, I don’t know.

Coming up with a title can be difficult. Tell me how you came up with yours.

Somewhere in my background it came to me that song was the natural way of communications and that someday we would all arrive at that conclusion. Then I began writing this novel and it hit me that maybe song was the way our original forebears communicated. Hence the title. On the other hand, when in doubt, go to Shakespeare. There’s always a line you can use.

Are there more books coming from you in the future? Do tell.

I have a lengthy Ruminations, a memoir as it were, that may have some merit for publication. Many who have read Song of Atlantis have begged me for information about a sequel. All I can say is, Tallbear lives.

Where can people find more information on you and your projects?

I am not as well-versed as I would like to be regarding social media. However, I am on Facebook (www.facebook.com/SongofAtlantis), and the book’s website, songofatlantis.com, will be up as of January 2017.

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