February 2021 — Mystery Writer Marty Wingate ventures into historical fiction

USA Today best-selling author Marty Wingate‘s latest book is the historical fiction novel Glamour Girls (Alcove Press), which follows Spitfire pilot Rosalie Wright through both the physical and emotional dangers of the Second World War. Marty also writes The First Edition Library series (Berkley) set in Bath, England, about the curator of a collection of books from the Golden Age of Mystery. In book two, Murder Is a Must, an exhibition manager is found dead at the bottom of a spiral staircase—a la Dorothy L. Sayers. Marty also writes the Potting Shed and Birds of a Feather mystery series.

About the book:

During World War II, farmer’s daughter Rosalie Wright becomes a pilot assisting the RAF. But will a romantic rivalry send her aerial dreams plummeting to earth?

Ever since she was 10 years old, Rosalie Wright’s eyes have been on the skies. But at the age of 18, on the verge of earning her pilot’s license, the English farmer’s daughter watches her dreams of becoming an aviatrix fly away without her. Britain’s entry into World War II brings civilian aviation to a standstill. Then, Rosalie’s father dies, leaving her, her mother, and her brothers to run the farm.

Everything changes when she learns that the Air Transport Authority is recruiting women pilots to ferry warplanes across Britain to RAF bases. Despite her mother’s objections, Rosalie cannot resist the call of her country–and the lure of the skies. During her training on Gipsy Moth aircraft, Rosalie forms a fast friendship with fellow flyer Caroline Andrews. Her trusty Ferry Pilots Notebook by her side, Rosalie delivers to five airfields in a day–while fighting an endless battle against skeptical male pilots and ground crews.

She would much rather spend her time on the wing than on the arm of any man…until she meets gruff pilot Snug Durrant and RAF squadron leader Alan Chersey. Snug is a cynical, wisecracking playboy, and Alan is every WAAF’s heartthrob…and Rosalie catches both their eyes. As the war drags on, and casualties mount, will love and tragedy send Rosalie’s exhilarating airborne life crashing to the ground?

Alan: You are a very successful mystery writer. How did you decide to branch out into historical fiction with Glamour Girls?

Marty: I’ve always enjoyed the historical research I’ve done for my mysteries – all of which are set in Britain – so it wasn’t a far reach to decide to write a WW2-erabook. I wanted the story to stand alone and not be part of the mystery series, with new characters that live within only this one book. 

Alan: How did you come up with the story? Is it based on an actual person?

Marty: Yes, my main character Rosalie Wright was inspired by Mary Wilkins Ellis, one of the women ferry pilots of the Air Transport Auxiliary who flew Spitfires and many other sorts of planes around Britain, delivering them to RAF bases. Mary died in 2018 at age 101! I read her autobiography and the stories of other pilots and picked and chose what I wanted to weave into Glamour Girls.

Alan: Did you find the process of writing a historical novel different from the process you use to write your mysteries? If so, in what ways?

Marty: Lots more research, which is both fun and worrying, because it’s so easy to spend an entire afternoon reading the Christmas 1942 issue of Radio Times (digitized online) rather than write! To avoid this, I type XXX every time I come across something I should look up later. The trick is to remember to search the manuscript so I don’t leave any of those behind.

Alan: What is your usual writing process?

Marty: I write best in the morning, usually about two hours. I can edit later in the day, but I don’t often write a lot of new stuff in the afternoon. To begin with, I may have a description of the story and even a synopsis, but I don’t use an outline, and I write one draft. I write new stuff, and the next day go over that and write further, and the next day go over that and write further. It means I need to read over the last half of the manuscript one more time more than the first half, but it’s a process that works well for me.

Alan: How did you first get published? Did you use an agent? 

Marty: Yes, I have an agent. I’m easily distracted, and if I had to do everything my agent and my publisher do, I would never get anything written. My first fiction, The Garden Plot, was published by Alibi, a digital-only imprint of Random House (now Penguin Random House). I had fabulous editors! I am now delighted to be in print as well as digital for the newest mystery series (the First Edition Library mysteries) and my historical fiction.

Alan: What project are you working on now?

Marty: I’m working on another historical novel set in 1957 England in a small town on the Suffolk coast. Book eight of The Potting Shed mysteries is (at last!) finished and will see the light of day one way or another. And, I’m also continuing the First Edition Library mysteries (Murder Is a Must, out in December 2020) and book three, out next January, features elements of Daphne du Maurier’s Frenchman’s Creek.

>>Watch Marty read at the February 9, 2021 WordFest on Zoom.

January 2021 — Vikki J. Carter talks with Alan Rose about his new novel, “As If Death Summoned.”

Alan’s novel about the AIDS epidemic, As If Death Summoned, was released by Amble Press, an imprint of Bywater Books, on World AIDS Day, December 1, 2020. It was inspired by his experiences in Australia and working at Cascade AIDS Project in Portland, Oregon, from 1993 to 1999.

Previously, Alan has written The Legacy of Emily Hargraves (2007) a paranormal mystery, Tales of Tokyo (2010) a quest novel set in modern Japan, and The Unforgiven (2012) a dark psychological mystery about the relationship between memory and guilt.

Alan coordinates the monthly WordFest events (now on Zoom,) hosts KLTV’s Book Chat program, and reviews books for the Columbia River Reader.

About the Book

In 1936, a man was caught in a blizzard on the Bogong High Plains of Australia. Found unconscious by a search party, he was taken to the nearest township where an old aborigine woman made the cryptic comment, “They brought back only his body.” He died soon after. In the decades since, there have been reports of a lone figure seen wandering over the heath lands. When approached, the man vanishes and no trace of him can be found.

Almost sixty years later, a young American returns from Australia, exhausted after ten years of being on the front lines of the AIDS epidemic and haunted by dreams of the Bogong High Plains. He, too, is lost in a kind of blizzard that has already claimed thirty-one friends and he struggles to recall a time when life was about more than death.

Plunging back into the heart of the epidemic by working at an AIDS organization in Portland, he eventually comes to understand his mystic connection to the Bogong High Plains and the significance of the old woman’s words: When he returned to the States, he brought back only his body.

With expected pathos and unexpected humor, As If Death Summoned testifies to the power of grief to erode a life, and—for those who can find a way through—the power to rebuild and renew it.

“Respecting the Ghosts”

Vikki J. Carter, producer of the podcast series Authors of the Pacific Northwest, interviewed Alan about As If Death Summoned.

VJC: Your novel comes out on the 40th anniversary of the AIDS pandemic and in the midst of a new epidemic. Was that a coincidence?

AER: Definitely a coincidence. I never planned the Covid-19 epidemic. But I was hoping the novel would be ready by 2021, the 40th anniversary since AIDS—Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome—appeared on our national radar.

VJC: The story is set primarily in Portland, Oregon.

AER: Yes, the book takes place over one long night in a hospital waiting room in 1995, where the narrator is keeping a lone vigil for a friend in the ICU. “Just me and a few dozen ghosts,” as he says, remembering the past 10 years. One of the questions in the book is who, which friend, is now in the ICU.

VJC: I had the sense that this vigil is for the narrator as well.

AER: It is. At this point, the narrator is exhausted, burnt out after working on the front lines of the epidemic. He’s lost more than 30 friends and colleagues, including his partner in Australia, and has returned to the United States, where he is working with a community AIDS organization in Portland.

VJC: I noticed you never name the narrator. Why was that?

AER: That was intentional. I see the narrator as representative. He’s like the Unknown Soldier in wars, representing all the unknown and lost soldiers. The narrator represents the stories of the epidemic that were never told. And there were many. At the time the book takes place, in 1995, more than 300,000 Americans had already died of AIDS, most of them gay men.

VJC: Foreword Reviews called your novel “as heartwarming and hope-giving as it is heartbreaking.”

AER: Yes, I was pleased to see that, because I feared people would think, “Oh, an AIDS novel. Must be a real downer,” whereas, I think it’s very life-affirming.

VJC: I was expecting the heartbreak. I was surprised at the humor.

AER: I included a lot of humor, because there was a lot of humor. Wonderful moments of humor amid all the grief and suffering. And I wanted to reflect that incredibly brave humor in the book.

VJC: Some of the flashbacks take place in Australia, especially on the Bogong High Plains of Victoria. What is their significance?

AER: At 6000 feet, the Bogong High Plains is a vast plateau in northern Victoria, about 150 miles north of Melbourne. They were sacred to the aboriginal people of Australia. And they become a kind of additional character in the novel, representing the mystical, the mysterious, the holy in human existence.

VJC: There’s a sub-theme winding through your book, about an actual event in Australia’s history called the Mt. Bogong Tragedy, and you connect the narrator to that event.

AER: Yes, in 1936, 3 skiers attempted to cross the high plains in winter. They were caught in a blizzard that lasted a week. Two survived the ordeal, but one of the men, Cleve Cole, died. In the book, his spirit continues to wander lost over the high plains, and the narrator comes to identify with Cleve Cole: he too is lost and dying, unable to find his way out of the blizzard that is the AIDS epidemic.

VJC: You employ magical realism in the book. The narrator has gone without sleep for more than 30 hours, and the lines between his dreams, memories, imagination and hallucinations begin to blur, playing with the reader by raising the question of what is real and what is not.  

AER: Go 30 hours without sleep and the world can become magically real. I did want capture the slipperiness of reality and the multi-dimensional nature of human consciousness.

VJC: I’m wondering how you came to write the book. The novel is autobiographical, inspired in part by your experiences and by those of others you knew. Was it a therapeutic exercise?

AER: All my books begin as therapeutic exercises. It’s how I work out ideas and feelings and memories. By turning them into stories. I had volunteered for an AIDS organization while in Australia, and when I returned to the States, I began working as the mental health specialist and later as the prevention program manager at Cascade AIDS Project in Portland, Oregon. It took me twenty years to process that experience before I could finally write the book.

VJC: What did you hope to accomplish in writing this book?

AER: I wanted to bear witness to a modern plague by telling these stories. How terrible it was, but also how there were moments of enormous grace and nobility and courage. I wanted to write it out and thereby make peace with that part of my life.

VJC: Silencing the ghosts?

AER: Perhaps more respecting the ghosts.

VJC: In a foreword, you reflect on writing about the AIDS epidemic during the current coronavirus pandemic

AER: Yes, we were wrapping up the manuscript in June (2020) and it was a good opportunity to consider the current epidemic in light of the earlier one, to weigh the similarities and the differences, and to find lessons and benefits that could help us through this difficult time of quarantining and mounting losses.

VJC: What were some of the lessons and benefits?

AER: There were benefits, gained at a terrible cost:  medical advances, advances in public health policy and strategies for tracking and combating epidemics. Also, societal advances in the decriminalizing and de-perverting of gay people in the public’s mind. And there were lessons: Trust the medical scientists. Be wary of politicians using a crisis for their political advantage. Let public health officials guide the administration, and not the other way around. It’s still too early to yet grasp the full impact of this current epidemic on our lives, but we already suspect it will be profound, deep and lasting. Many of us realize we will never be returning to Normal. And maybe that’s okay. We can do better.

VJC: The story suggests that a new birth and a new being can emerge from such tragedies as an epidemic.

AER: Truly. A crisis, whether personal or national or global, is a kind of cauldron. From it can come catharsis, renewal, even transformation. One way to understand this current pandemic is as another opportunity for us to re-discover who we are as a people, as one humanity.

VJC:  The story also tells of street kids and the homeless abused by local law enforcement that resonates with the news we’ve been watching this past year amid the protests and demonstrations. What would you like us to understand regarding the partnerships between communities and law enforcement?

AER: There are bad cops, but there are far more good cops, brave men and women who daily risk their lives to keep our communities safe.While depicting the abuse by some police officers, it was important for me to also embody the courage, integrity, and desire to understand and work with different communities by the police chief and particularly one young police officer.

VJC:  For the younger reader not as familiar with the AIDS epidemic of the ‘80s and ‘90s, what would you like to be the takeaways offered in this story? 

AER: The novelist E. L. Doctorow said the historian tells you what happened; the historical novelist tells you what it felt like. I would hope that readers unfamiliar with that time would get a sense of what it felt like: the fears, the confusion, the grief surrounding sad and terrible deaths, but also the courage and compassion and self-sacrifice that was common during those years.

VJC: What would you want people in general to take away from reading this book?

AER: On the historical plane, that amid something so terrible as a modern plague, we saw humanity rising up to its noblest and best, manifesting so much courage and compassion, so much grace and dignity, so much self-sacrifice and love. And humor—undying humor in the face of death. On a personal level, I wanted to recognize that profound grief and loss can erode a life, but when a person faces and finds a way through it, grief can also rebuild and renew life, and that a new and deeper soul can emerge from the crucible of loss.

VJC: There are many powerful and serious themes in this book. What is the dominant idea you would want readers to ponder long after they finish the last page?  

AER: That we are all temporary. That we have this brief time on earth and, to some extent, we can choose how we live it. Keats called existence this “vale of soul-making.”We can experience great loss and tragedy and emerge from it as better people, more whole through the experience of grief and grieving.

VJC: Finally, this is a profoundly personal narrative, what is your greatest joy as you hold the book in your hands and anticipate sharing it with readers? 

AER: That it is finished. That I bore witness. That the people whose stories I told might be satisfied that others will benefit from their stories, and in this way their lives will have mattered in ways they never would have expected.

December 2020-Talking with mystery author Hannah Dennison

Hannah Dennison began her writing career as a trainee reporter for a small West Country newspaper in Devon, England. A member of Sisters in Crime, Mystery Writers of America, the Willamette Writers, and British Crime Writers’ Association, Hannah is the author of five books in the Vicky Hill Mystery series and six books in her Honeychurch Hall Mystery series. She has recently published Death at High Tide, the first book in her new Island Sisters series. Coincidentally, her mother is a docent at Greenway, Agatha Christie’s summer home, which has been turned into a museum.

About the book…

“For My Darling Wife: In the Event of My Death – If you are reading this letter, it means you are the proud owner of Tregarrick Rock Hotel…”

When Evie Mead’s husband, Robert, suddenly drops dead of a heart attack, a mysterious note is found among his possessions informing her that she owns the rights to an old hotel on Tregarrick Rock, one of the Isles of Scilly off Cornwall.

Still grieving, Evie is inclined to leave the matter to the accountant to sort out, but her sister Margot, who has taken time away from her glamorous career in LA, has other plans. Envisioning a luxurious weekend getaway, she buys two tickets―one way―to Tregarrick.

Evie and Margot find the hotel to be more fixer-upper than spa resort, and they attempt to get to the bottom of things. But the foul-tempered hotel owner claims he’s never met the late Robert, even after Evie finds framed photos of them in his office. The rest of the island inhabitants, ranging from an ex-con receptionist to a vicar who communicates with cats, aren’t any easier to read.

But when a murder occurs at the hotel, soon followed by another, their frustration turns to desperation as they become the primary suspects. There’s no getting off the island at high tide and it falls to them to unravel secrets spanning generations if they want to make it back alive.

AER: With two successful mystery series going, what prompted you to start a new series?

HD: I actually didn’t intend to write a new series at all until I met a friend of my sister who told me about her life as an HR Director on a resort in the beautiful Isles of Scilly. She said that seasonal workers often fled to the islands because they were running away from something or hiding from someone. This idea intrigued me and I knew it would be a great foundation for a series.

AER: How do you know that an idea will carry a whole series?

HD: That is a good question. The first book I ever wrote – A Vicky Hill Exclusive! – was written as a one-off. I started writing it in a UCLA Extension Writers’ Program Beginner’s Fiction class because my daughter had gone off to college and I was suffering from the empty nest syndrome. I already had a background in screenwriting but not long-form fiction.

I soon realized that since Vicky Hill was an aspiring investigative reporter— though stuck writing obituaries in a small market town in England—there were no end of possible storylines for murder and mayhem. Anthony Horowitz (Foyles War, Midsomer Murders) says, “English villages are special places where hatred and mistrust and suspicion and anger and bitterness have a natural place to grow.” 

AER: Kind of spoils my idyllic image of English country villages. How did you use these elements that we usually don’t hear about from the UK Tourism industry?

HD: I found them very useful for the Honeychurch Hall series that feature a mother-daughter duo who live on a sprawling country estate (a contemporary Downton Abbey,) although now that I’ve just finished my seventh book in the series, I’ve had to give the estate a village since there are only so many times the butler can do it!

AER: So what are the key ingredients for a good mystery series?

HD: In a nutshell, you need a protagonist with an interesting occupation or, if retired, someone like Miss Marple; also, a setting that lends itself to mischief, and a small cast of recurring characters. I’ve found that readers who invest in a series do so because they feel each instalment is like visiting old friends. The books are just as much about the characters and their relationships as it is about the actual murder.

AER: You’ve completed your first book. How far ahead do you plan the other books in a series?

HD: To be honest, I don’t plan ahead. What interests me is a strange incident that I may have read or heard about where I think “Oh! Yes, that would be great for Vicky or Kat or Evie.” I’m constantly on the lookout for stories. Ask my family – they say a vague look comes over me and I mutter, “I must write that down.”

AER: How do you juggle the writing of different series at the same time?

HD: It’s very stressful because I write for two different publishers so I don’t have the luxury of picking my deadlines. However, I’m usually at a different place in the story process for the different books. I can be writing a rubbish first and second draft while working on revisions and copyedits of a “finished” manuscript, but I couldn’t create two stories from scratch at the same time.

AER: You’re incredibly prolific. What is your writing process that allows you to produce several books a year?

HD: I have to write early in the day. I get up at six and spend a solid three or four hours on the book that is at the hardest point to write or needs intense thought or revisions. I walk dogs, run errands (with a mask!) and after lunch, settle down for a couple more hours to play in the sandbox with the new idea that doesn’t need carefully crafted sentences. Yet.

AER: Which authors have influenced your own writing?

I think my favourite authors have influenced me by osmosis. I would include Agatha Christie, Mary Stewart, M.M. Kaye, Dodie Smith, Barbara Pym, M.C. Beaton and Jilly Cooper.

AER: Are there books on the craft of writing that you would recommend?

HD: There are so many that it’s easy to get overwhelmed. But my top five are Becoming A Writer by Dorothea Brande,  Making A Literary Life: Advice For Writers And Other Dreamers by Carolyn See, The War Of Art by Steven Pressfield, On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft by Stephen King, and Bird by Bird by Anne Lamott. I also recommend Caroline Donahue’s Secret Library podcast series (it’s free) of interviews with writers discussing their processes and work.

AER: Any suggestions for aspiring mystery writers?

I have two pieces of advice: Make sure to develop your characters before starting to write. When writers get stuck, it’s often because they don’t know their characters. And second, finish that first draft. Only then will you be able to really start writing because writing is just rewriting. Think of it as a marathon, not a sprint.

October 2020 — A chat between Robert Michael Pyle and Hal Calbom

Robert Michael Pyle is the author of more than 20 books, including Wintergreen, Sky Time in Gray’s River, Chasing Monarchs, and Where Bigfoot Walks. A Yale-trained ecologist, Guggenheim Fellow, and Honorary Fellow of the Royal Entomological Society, he lives in rural southwest Washington state.

About the book:

From The Tidewater Reach:

Robert Michael Pyles work transcends genre and region. His voyages seem migratory, like the butterflies he so loves. Yet, at the same time, he reveres a sense of place, and the intimate details of places. His collaboration with photographer Judy VanderMaten for their book, The Tidewater Reach, combines forty-four of Bob’s poems with color and black & white photos by Judy, all focused on the Lower Columbia River region, “the reach” where tidal salt water and fresh river water intermingle.

Film producer, educator and Emmy-award winning journalist Hal Calbom talked with Bob about his newest book. The following excerpts are from that discussion which appears in full in The Tidewater Reach, published by The Columbia River Reader Press, and used here with permission.

Bob: When I first envisioned The Tidewater Reach, I assumed my contribution would be in prose, like most of my books.

Hal: What changed your mind? What attracted you to poetry?

Bob: Over the last couple of years I’ve written and performed and published more and more poetry, and I came to realize its special attractions and capabilities. First of all is brevity. While many readers will pass by an essay because of the time it takes to read, they can enjoy any of these poems in a minute or two or a few.

Hal:  Ironic that poetry, which is thought to be so esoteric, would actually suit our notoriously short attention spans.

Bob: Oh, very much so. Instead of going on and on, you cut to the heart of the matter, and realize that concision is its own reward.

Hal: You also tell stories in your poems. They’re not just lyrics.

Bob: Certainly. Many of my poems are stories that relate to the readers’ own experience, and as such, are very accessible — definitely not esoteric. Still, why not tell them in conventional prose? Because the line breaks mean as much as the words themselves, indicating natural pauses and flow in the song; and the ability to take liberties with grammar or syntax in favor of narrative means that the poet can concentrate on bewitchment instead of mere structure….A good essay is a fine thing, but a good poem will stick to your ribs — and to the heart within.

Hal: Do the pictures lead the poems, or vice versa?

Bob: It’s an intricate relationship. Neither the pictures nor the poems can be said to “lead.” Certainly Judy and I were inspired by many of the same things, and I was directly inspired by some of the photographs…In our book the pictures and the poems are presented on an equal footing, to expand the reader / looker’s view of one another. We believe the whole really is greater than the sum of the parts.

Hal: What do you want people to take away from this latest piece of work, this pairing of words and pictures?

Bob: Both Judy and I love this river. We love its working parts, and we love how the people depend upon it, from the gillnetters to the writers and photographers, even the damned cruise ships. … Everybody who comes here knows the river is essential. They care for the river ­— or they certainly should! The river makes us feel like caring. And to feel like caring is a better way to live than to be oblivious.

Portions of these interviews originated in the Columbia River Reader, April 2018; April 2020. Interviews are edited for length and condensed for clarity, Copyright MMXX. Columbia  River Reader Press. Used with permission.

September 2020 — A chat with northwest mystery writer Rick E. George

Rick E. George has been a sportswriter, a wildland firefighter, and an educator. He is the author of Vengeance Burns Hot, published by Unsolicited Press (2019) and Cooper’s Loot, published by The Wild Rose Press (2019.) His short fiction and poetry have been published in various literary magazines. He lives with his wife April in the Cascade Mountains of Washington State.

About the book:

It’s 1972, but the Neanderthal editors of reporter Bev Wikowski’s newspaper don’t have a clue. They’ve assigned her to the Women’s Pages and put her desk near the door so she can greet newsroom visitors. It’s a wonder they haven’t asked her to make the coffee. Then Bev meets a buddy of the infamous hijacker DB Cooper. Cooper has sent him to gather a posse to find and dig up the loot he buried in the Cascade Mountains. Would Bev like to join the group? Suddenly, Bev’s looking at the possibility of a front-page story in every newspaper in the nation—and maybe a Pulitzer Prize. The young widow leaves her four-year-old daughter with her parents, hides her work identity, and joins the group. But it doesn’t take long before an even bigger challenge demands every ounce of Bev’s strength: Survival.

From my interview with Rick:

1. How did you come to write a novel based on the DB Cooper mystery

People love real-life unsolved mysteries, especially when nothing is harmed except the bank accounts of the fabulously rich. DB Cooper, whoever he is, pulled off a daring feat and got away with it. In doing so, he spawned a small regiment of armchair detectives who still take great pleasure in advancing their theories about who the real DB Cooper was and what happened to him. It’s fun stuff.

2.  What aspects of Cooper’s Loot are true to what is known about the Cooper Hijacking?

I did a lot of research about the hijacking. The setting is quite feasible, as is the hullabaloo surrounding the event, the outlaw folk-hero mystique, the manner of cash Cooper made off with, and the societal conflicts of the Vietnam era. But mostly it’s a story about a young female reporter whose striving for professional respect prompts her to take a big risk that ends up placing her in a life-or-death predicament. I worked in the newspaper business around the time of the hijacking, and I saw first-hand how women were frequently denied meatier assignments and ushered instead toward feature writing and the Women’s Page.

3.  How does the story deviate from the facts?

Everything about the hijacking and getaway is true to the facts, but beyond that it’s a completely fictional story.

3. You’ve said your book was influenced by both Agatha Christie and by the John Huston film, “The Treasure of Sierra Madre.” How so?

“The Treasure of Sierra Madre” begins in a bar, where they’re enticed by a tale of hidden gold. The characters make a pact—they’ll stay loyal through all privations in their quest to find it, but once they do find it, their commitment to each other turns out shakier than they thought. In Agatha Christie’s And Then There Were None, a group of strangers ends up stuck on an island, and one by one they meet a terrible demise. All these elements occur in Cooper’s Loot.

4. What’s the theme or message behind the story?

A current of feminism runs through the story—how women are demeaned and regarded as less capable than men. In her acclaimed essay, Chimamanda Adiche asserts, “We should all be feminists.” My story makes a case for why.

5. How would you describe your writing process?

I plan and write and cut and revise and change and write it all over again, compiling miniature novels of character journals, plot journals, and revision notes. I am fortunate to be part of a great critique group, and they’re not shy about telling me what isn’t working.

6. How long did it take to research and write the book?

One year.

7. How did Cooper’s Loot come to be published

It’s a traditionally published book. I pitched the novel to an editor from The Wild Rose Press at a Pacific Northwest Writers Association conference; she asked for the manuscript and liked it enough to take a chance on publishing it. 

8. What are you working on now?

I’m currently pitching a novel entitled Syrian Winter to literary agents. The elevator pitch: While trying to cope with their unexpected feelings for each other, a rookie FBI agent and his Arabic interpreter try to rescue Syrian refugees before they’re forced into a sex trafficking operation. I’m working on a sequel while I await the agents’ verdicts.

Copies of Cooper’s Loot ($19.44 paperback; $4.99 e-Book) and Vengeance Burns Hot ($17 paperback; $4.99 e-Book) are available wherever books are sold, including Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and ordering through your local bookstore.