By Gail Tagarro / 28 February 2020 / 7 minutes of reading
The Profiled Author is part of ‘Let’s Talk with the Authors’, a series of interviews with authors who have worked with editors4you or WriteDesign Publications. The promotional opportunity is also open to other authors (contact us for details).
The Profiled Author: Greg Kater
Promoting Your Books
Around Christmas 2019, I offered my authors
a simple way to promote their books through an author interview.
As we writers know, it’s one thing to write
a book. It’s quite another to promote it. Writers tend to shy away from
promotion, but it’s vital to kick the shyness habit and get our books out there
in the big wide world.
In this third interview in the series, the profiled author is Greg Kater, a prolific author who has so far published four novels: The Warramunga’s War, The Warramunga’s Aftermath of War, Skills of the Warramunga and Conflict on the Yangtze. And he hasn’t finished writing yet!
I am an 80-year-old
Australian living on the Gold Coast of Queensland. I retired as a geological
and geophysical consultant to the resources industries five years ago. During my
professional life, I was always busy and never had time for writing anything but
thousands of technical reports.
On my retirement, I
had time on my hands and decided that I would like to write fiction using my
knowledge of different lands and peoples. I had worked with many weird and
wonderful people and thought it would be fun to include them (under different
names) in my novels.
That’s an
interesting point, because your characters are vividly painted, likeable (the
goodies!) and realistic. Did you tell these people they were going to appear in
your books? How did they react?
No, I didn’t tell anyone
in advance that I might base my characters on them. At first, I didn’t know
which characters I was likely to develop as the story progressed, but each
situation brought forth a new memory. Most of the characters I remembered are
diverse and spread out all over the place. Some may not now be alive.
Contemporaries of mine who have recognised themselves in my novels have been
most amused (and, I hope, pleased).
I was fascinated
and completely drawn in by the descriptions of countries, locations, buildings
and customs in your novels. How were you able to make them so vibrant?
I travelled
extensively and worked in all parts of the world and in all sorts of
environments, from Australian desert and remote bush country to parts of the
USA, Central America, South East Asia, Russian Siberia, the Middle East and
most provinces of China. The countries and locations in my books are all
personally familiar to me.
Tell us about your
books.
The profiled author’s first book
My first book, The
Warramunga’s War, was initially based on my father’s war diaries and his
involvement in the Syrian campaign and the desert war in the Middle East and
North Africa during World War II. My principal characters were based on people
I had worked with at Tennant Creek in the Northern Territory, including some of
the local aboriginal people, the Warramungas, during the 1960s. All the
localities in the book are places where I have been and know well.
Greg’s second book
My second book, The
Warramunga’s Aftermath of War, which takes place in early 1946, deals with the
trafficking of children from the war-torn Philippines. I lived in the
Philippines for 11 years from 1969 as VP with one of the major mining companies
there. I learned a great deal about the havoc and suffering during the Japanese
occupation, as well as some of the terrible things that happened later as
criminals took advantage of the chaos in the aftermath of war. I felt a need to
write about this.
The third book in the Warramunga trilogy
My third book, Skills
of the Warramunga, takes place in Malaya, where I have also worked
throughout the country. In the aftermath of World War II, many different
groups, including communists, bandits, Nazis and others, were trying to gain
control of all or part of the Malayan Peninsular from the British. The novel
deals with the period when the British created the Malayan Union in April 1946.
It showcases the extraordinary tracking skills of the Warramunga aborigines,
which I witnessed first-hand during my time at Tennant Creek.
The fourth book – Greg couldn’t let his characters go!
I had originally set out
to write a trilogy using the same principal characters, but after the third
novel I just couldn’t let them fade away! So, I wrote Conflict on the
Yangtze. I have been to China more than a hundred times and am very
familiar with the landscape and the people. In 1946, although Japanese
occupation had ended, there was still a good deal of fighting throughout China
between the government (the Kuomintang), the communists, warlords and various
criminal groups, all trying to establish centres of power. Most of the leading
families mentioned in the novel are real and there certainly was some opium
smuggling going on at that time.
Your books clearly
required a huge amount of painstaking research. How did you go about this?
In spite of my
intimate knowledge of the localities and their histories, I had to undertake a
great deal of research to confirm the accuracy of the historical events my
fictional characters were involved in. I researched material from libraries,
diaries and known histories as well as talking to people who had been around
during the war in the different countries. As mentioned before, I was also able
to use my father’s war experiences in my first novel.
Did you enjoy doing
the research? Why?
Historical research is
very fulfilling. I have always been interested in history and the research
enabled me to learn much more about past events than I previously knew. That
gathering of knowledge, in no small way, increased my enthusiasm for ensuring the
accuracy of historical events.
What are the main
themes in these four books?
Apart from a good
amount of action, adventure and history, I have tried to include the themes of
friendship, trust, humour and skills, mixed in with a certain amount of love
and romance.
Who do you consider
is your main audience?
I think my main
audience comprises all ages, from 15 years up. With my style of historical
fiction, I don’t believe it necessary to spice up the narrative with lurid
descriptions of steamy sexual affairs or extreme violence. In wartime and its
aftermath, violence does occur. When it does, I have generally moderated the
descriptions as far as possible to appeal to a wider audience.
Many authors struggle with promotion. How have you gone about promoting your book, and what success have you met with?
Yes. As with all other
authors, I struggle with promotion. I have been fortunate to have the support
of the Online Book Club and other such organisations which have produced
hundreds of maximum star reviews for my books and supported me in other ways. I
have also been fortunate to have received several book awards from various international
groups that run competitions. If any of that translates into book sales, we’ll
have to see…
Greg, I believe
you’re currently writing your next book. Can you give us a sneak peak, without
giving too much away?
I am about 70% through
another historical fiction novel which is set in a completely different period
to that of my first four books. The working title is Scent of a Foreign Land.
It follows the adventures of a family in the 1830s-40s who sail to Australia
from England and carve out a life for themselves producing cattle and sheep in
the vast wild country over the mountains west of Sydney.
The story is based on the detailed diaries and letters of my great-great-grandmother, as well as letters and histories of other ancestors. Writing this novel has been slow, as I am in possession of almost too much research material. However, it is a wondrous thing to be able to get into the minds of my forebears. They were a hardy lot. It is quite a series of adventures.
You can read reviews of and purchase Greg’s books by:
In our next ‘Let’s Talk with the Authors’ series, we chat with another Gold Coast author who wrote a moving account of losing her son in the 2004 Boxing Day tsunami.
If you would like to be interviewed for this series as a featured author, please contact us.
Hi Donn, thank you for your message. I’m trying to get in touch with the author but have not been successful to date. I will let you know if I receive a reply. Meanwhile, you may like to check out his FB page: https://www.facebook.com/greg.kater.7 Kind regards, Gail
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I am unable to access Greg Kater’s website. I live in Lexington, Kentucky, USA. Can you assist me?
Hi Donn, thank you for your message. I’m trying to get in touch with the author but have not been successful to date. I will let you know if I receive a reply. Meanwhile, you may like to check out his FB page: https://www.facebook.com/greg.kater.7
Kind regards, Gail