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SCIENCE FICTION NOVELS

Man-Made Trilogy of Books

NON-FICTION REFERENCE

Potty Training for REAL Cats

FAQs

Cassie Answers Frequently Asked Questions

What made you want to write?

I always loved to write, even as a child. It probably started as my mum read to me every night in bed before I went to sleep, and I continued to be a bookworm on my own. At age five, I proclaimed to my parents, “I want to be an author and illustrator of children’s books!” I would take sheets of my drawing paper, fold it in half, put it together and create my own little books for my parents, thus achieving the dream.

Where do you get the most inspiration to write?

Of course, in the most private of places to think, but also in the shower. Another very productive thinking spot is at the kitchen sink as I am washing the dishes, or any place my mind can wander as I’m doing a mundane chore. Ideas tend to pop into my mind, not even when I am thinking about books. Suddenly, an aspect of a character will reveal itself, a new twist as to some situation, or an event that would have easily shaped the personality of a character.

Why Science Fiction?

Science was always my favorite subject in school, and some of my first memories were watching "Lost in Space" at three years old. I even had an animated Robot toy at that time in the late 1960s. My love of the genre gradually developed as a fan of "Planet of the Apes" and later "Dr. Who". This was intermingled with a fascination of mystery and crime dramas starting at age seven on. I was an avid "Nancy Drew" reader growing up. Given Betty's unique abilities and Woodie's FBI background, I thought it would be great to combine the two genres eventually, once her whole story was revealed in the trilogy in "Man-Made - Three out of Four."

Why aren’t your books more graphic?

I believe graphic violence, language, nudity and the like has become so overused that it was just time for a change. Some mainstream TV shows and movies have so many "F-bombs" and graphic scenes that i just got tired of it. Back in the golden years of TV shows and movies the writing was so good, graphic "gimmicks" just weren't needed.
My goal is to create good, wholesome stories with rich and lovable characters. I believe that the way things are worded can be cloaked, and such scenes can be left to the imagination.
One’s imagination can often be a more powerful tool than all the graphic scenes that modern day shows and movies subject us to now.

Why did you not categorize the Man-Made trilogy as being YA novels?

Since some parts dealt with a fertility center, I felt the content might be considered more mature.
I have heard some authors going after the YA market simply because it is more lucrative. Even though there is nothing really graphic mentioned, I did not want to misrepresent the material. It may very well be suitable for some tweens through young adults, but I wanted to leave that call to the discretion of parents, teachers and librarians.

Do you have any advice for young writers?

Yes!
1. Don’t ever give up!
2. Write whenever you can.
3. Let your imagination go wild.
4. Don’t ever try to force a story. It will come when it is ready, and once the ideas start to flow, there's no stopping them.
5. Have fun with it! If at some point it becomes "work" that you have to do, don’t continue and put it aside for later.

What is your process of writing?

If I’m doing a long, involved story spanning over years or decades, I create a timeline of events for every character. I often referred to it for ages of certain characters in relation to other characters and situations. This was an immense help. Even though there is never a year mentioned in Man-Made, the timeline holds true throughout the story. In doing the trilogy, I wrote it all at once, then went back and forth between the three as I added and edited. It was rather like weaving the story together like a tapestry. The ideas kept coming, and I kept adding them in where they needed to go. Once all my ideas were implemented, I felt it was done.

Why is there no year ever mentioned in "Man-Made"?

Simple and for a very important reason‒Timelessness. I did not want to “date” the story. No matter what year I predict it could be, my predictions would surely be wrong. I wrote it under the premise that things do not change that drastically over time. People will always be people, and will continue to do the same brilliant or stupid things throughout history. All the technology I write about in Man-Made is being utilized currently. Perhaps not available yet commercially, but it is in existence, and I figured it was just a matter of time before the various technologies are available commercially.

How much research goes into your books?

As much as needed! If there’s something I’m not expert in, I continue to research until I find the answer. If I can’t find an answer, I drop that line I’m going on and do not even use it. I believe authenticity is a key part of a good story. Just because I may not know something, a reader could be in that field, and if they read something untrue, it could ruin the story for them. It has happened to me. My husband and I have watched a show, and something happens that could never have happened in real life. It just ruins the whole moment! The only made-up item in Man-Made was Dr. Kerring’s beloved “Peppergrape” plants. They were still based on a genus of real plants that had similar medicinal qualities, but the particular species and its common name were made up. I still did research on it!

Do you use AI for writing any of your books?

NO! All my stories I came up with in my own head and wrote them entirely on my own. I kind of look at AI-generated stories as “cheating”.
My sympathies do go out to Betty, who in "Man-Made - Three out of Four" complains that because she has AI, she is unable to own anything or get a copyright.
In all seriousness, I have heard of such things being done, but I do not condone it. It can take human authors years to refine and write the perfect story. It does not seem ethically correct to have an AI do the same thing within a matter of minutes, and then have a human put it out there as their own work.

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