Sunday, September 8, 2013

Unbelievable Characters



Truth is stranger than fiction and there's a good reason for that. While life doesn't always make sense and people do some strange things, often for no apparent reason, whatever they did is a fact and we have no choice but to accept it. Because it's true.

It doesn't work that way in fiction. In fiction, things need to make sense and characters need to behave in ways that are in keeping with their personality, abilities and history. We readers expect the characters in the novels we read to be believable. We need to know them well enough to understand and accept their actions as being something they could or would do given who they are and the circumstances they’re in. Even if their actions are bizarre. Especially if their actions are bizarre.

What happens when I'm reading a novel and one of the characters does something totally “out of character,” something that doesn't ring true given what I know about him or her? What that tells me is that the author hasn’t fully developed the character and/or the author hasn't given me enough background information. When that happens, I stop caring about the character. And, I stop trusting the author. From that point on, if I bother to finish reading the book, I've lost interest because the character isn't believable.


Have you ever lost interest in a book because one of the characters was unbelievable? (Please don't mention specific titles.)

Sunday, September 1, 2013

Mystery Author of the Month, C.L. Swinney



            
Patricia: Chris, I'm pleased to have you with us this week. Tell us, where did you grow up? Did your childhood contribute to your desire to be a writer?
Chris: I grew up in Lakeside and Santee, California (even though I tell everyone I grew up in San Diego).  I was an only child and pretty spoiled.  I’d say my childhood contributed to my writing since I had a strong sense of adventure and always questioned everyone and everything.  This lead me to be an investigator and I landed in narcotics.
Patricia: Where do you live now? Do you use that locale for settings in your novels?
Chris: I live in the San Francisco Bay Area.  I haven’t used the area specifically in a book or story, but I use some of it in the poetry I write.  I’m leaning toward using the Bay Area in the third book of a series, but I’ll have to wait and see if the location works.
Patricia: What inspired you to write your most recent novel?
Chris: I love the outdoors, fly fishing, and investigating large-scale narcotics trafficking.  While flying into the Bahamas for a fly fishing trip, I was blown away by what I saw and learned from the locals.  A concept for my first novel, Gray Ghost, sat in my mind for fourteen years.  I wanted something special and unique; apparently it took me fourteen years to find it.
Patricia: When did you “know” that you wanted to be a writer?
Chris: I wrote a featured article for Fly Fisherman Magazine while in college.  Seeing that story in print really boosted my confidence.  I knew then I’d always write.
Patricia: Name three of your favorite authors in the mystery/suspense genre. What makes them your favorites?
Chris: Tony Hillerman- The man was a brilliant story teller.
Daniel Silva- Paints a picture with his words that is unmatched.
Tami Hoag-Suspenseful plot and beautifully crafted dialogue.

C. L. (Chris) Swinney is a narcotics investigator in the San Francisco Bay area. He has investigated hundreds of narcotics, homicide, gang, and Mexico cartel cases along the west coast of the United States, Mexico, and Canada. Swinney has been invited to speak at law enforcement conferences throughout the United States and is recognized as an expert in narcotics, homicides, and cell phone forensics. He developed the concept for the first book in his Bill Dix series, Gray Ghost, while fly fishing in the Bahamas. His passion for the outdoors and law enforcement is intertwined throughout his writing. The world of narcotics is dark and mysterious. C. L. Swinney pulls the reader into this fascinating world in his debut novel.


Blurb:
While on a fly fishing vacation to Andros Island in the Bahamas, narcotics detectives Dix and Peterson discover their fishing guides were killed when a sudden blast of gunfire fractured their speedboat, Gray Ghost. Local gossip has it that Gray Ghost went to the ocean floor with a hundred million dollars worth of cocaine in the hull. Dix and Peterson are drawn into helping their island friends, and chase down leads in Miami as well as the Bahamas until they identify the diabolical plot of the man known only as The Caller…and then the trouble really starts. 

"When two Miami narcotic officers take a fishing trip to the Bahamas, they can't leave the drug world behind...Deftly told by the author, detective and avid fly fisher Chris Swinney, this book will hook any reader of mystery fiction." —Sunny Frazier, author of the Christy Bristol Astrology Mysteries
Buy link:

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Mystery of the Month, "Hunter's Moon"



The wealthiest family in the Canaan Valley has several problems, which its members handle using discretion—or maybe secrecy is a better word.  But when one of their members is murdered, their secrets are revealed as sisters Andrea and Kathleen help Sheriff Ward Sterling investigate the murder.
The sisters feel it’s especially important to figure out who the murderer is, since their friend, Deputy Willard Hill, is the prime suspect. They know Willard couldn’t possibly be guilty, but finding out who is turns out to be difficult. Several people will profit from the death, and there are a few more who had reasons to dislike the deceased.
In spite of a serious threat from the murderer, Andrea and Kathleen persist, hunting for hidden diaries, reviewing security camera records, and interviewing members of the family.  Their friend Willard is scheduled to marry one of the daughters of this wealthy family, but the wedding has been postponed until the murder is solved. The sisters want Willard to be cleared so the wedding can proceed as planned. More important, they must solve the case before the killer silences them.

http://amzn.com/B00CQMF6B8 





Helen Haught Fanick’s short stories have appeared in Women’s Household, Midnight Zoo, Vermont Ink, and in various anthologies and online publications. Her articles and photos have been published in Texas Observer, Stepping Stones, and other periodicals. Her poem, Leaf Fall, was published in Nature’s Gifts, an anthology to benefit The Nature Conservancy.  She has won several local and state awards, and two national awards in the Writer’s Digest Competition.
Helen’s novel, Moon Signs, Book I of the Moon Mystery Series, was a quarter-finalist in the 2011 Amazon Breakthrough Novel Awards and is available on Amazon. The second and third novels in the Moon Mystery Series, Moonlight Mayhem and Hunter’s Moon, and a collection of three short stories, Bad Moon Rising, have now been published. Saving Susie, a suspense novel, reached the second level of the 2012 Amazon Breakthrough Novel Awards and was published in March 2012. Helen’s other works, Spring Decision, Assignment Prague, and City Life, are can also be found on Amazon. All are available for Kindle and in paperback, and Moon Signs is now an audiobook.
Helen is a graduate of The University of Texas at San Antonio with a degree in English and lives in San Antonio with her husband.

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Getting to know Staci McLaughlin



 
I’d like to welcome mystery author Staci McLaughlin.
Now, let’s get to know her.

Patricia: What are your favorite things to do when you’re not reading or writing?

Staci: I love to take walks. There’s a park in town with acres of open space and lots of trails. The kids and I sometimes see deer, rabbits, and even the occasional coyote or Great Blue Heron. Now that school is out, we’ve also been doing a lot of science experiments. We’ve managed to lift an ice cube using only salt and a piece of string, plus suck an egg into a bottle with a lit match. When I have time, I also enjoy cooking and trying new recipes. I only wish I could remember to mark the recipes that the whole family enjoys so I can make those dishes again. Instead, six months down the road, we’ll remember a great meal we ate, and I’ll have no idea what magazine or book it came from.

Patricia: What’s your favorite color? Why?

Staci: It’s hard to choose. Sometimes my favorite changes. I love different shades of blue, especially a deep sky blue or royal blue, but sometimes I’ll see a gorgeous shade of green in a leaf or a really vivid red dress, and decide that’s my favorite color for the day. But if I could only pick one, I guess I would stay with blue. I love to lay on the grass on a cloudless summer day and stare up at the vast blue sky.

Patricia: How would you describe yourself, personality wise?

Staci: I’m definitely a half-glass-full kind of person. I like to believe that most situations will turn out all right in the end. Sometimes, that doesn’t happen, but being optimistic is a much better way to spend my time than fearing the worst. I also try not to get annoyed with the little things, like being stuck in traffic. I remind myself that there are bigger problems in the world, which helps put pesky annoyances in perspective.

Patricia: Do you like to travel? If so, what are some of your favorite places to go and/or what was your favorite vacation?

Staci: I do like to travel, although I don’t always travel far. I prefer driving to flying, so a lot of our trips are to Southern California or Nevada. One of my favorite vacations was a trip to Ohio several years ago. My husband and I both love roller coasters, so we went to Cedar Point, which has some fantastic coasters. While we were there, we boated out to an island in Lake Erie and toured it in a golf cart. We also visited a wild safari park and hiked into an underground cave, fun things like that. When the kids are older, I’d like to visit Washington D.C., Mount Rushmore, the Alamo, and other historical places.

Patricia: How would you complete this sentence? If I won a million dollars, I would  ------

Staci: I’m a bit of a saver, so I’d put a large portion in a college account for the kids. I’d also take the whole family—grandma, grandpa, aunts, and uncles—on a big group vacation, maybe a cruise. I went on a Caribbean cruise for my honeymoon, and I’d love to take another one. It’s a great way to see faraway places and try different foods and new activities. I’d also like to donate money to a few of the local charities, especially the food bank and organizations that help underprivileged children.


Author Bio: Staci McLaughlin is the author of the Blossom Valley Mysteries. Going Organic Can Kill You is the first in the series, followed by All Natural Murder. When she’s not writing, she is a maid, short-order cook, and band-aid supplier for her two young sons.  They live in the San Francisco Bay Area with her husband, two cats, one fish, and a sea monkey.




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