Showing posts with label mystery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mystery. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

TBR welcomes J.R. Lindermuth



TBR: Welcome to TBR, J. R. Will you share a little bit about yourself? JRL: I’m a native of Pennsylvania. I had a talent for drawing early on and envisioned a career in art with writing on the side. When I was drafted, the Army decided I had the makings of a journalist and providing training. After military service I worked nearly 40 years in the newspaper business, on nearly all reporting beats and several editing desks. I published articles and short stories in a variety of magazines during the period, but the goal of a novel eluded me.
Since retiring, I’ve served as librarian of my county historical society, where I help patrons with genealogy and research. It keeps me in contact with people, hones my research skills and provides fodder for a weekly newspaper column on local history.
My children and four grandsons do their part in keeping me busy and out of trouble. When not writing, reading or occupied with family, I like to walk, draw, listen to music and learn something new everyday.
I’m a member of International Thriller Writers, EPIC and the Short Mystery Society. 

TBR: Tell us about Sooner Than Gold and where it's available. JRL: The print edition was published April 4 by Wild Oaks, division of Oak Tree Press, and is the second in my Sheriff Sylvester Tilghman series. A Kindle version should be coming soon. It’s available from http://www.oaktreebooks.com/


TBR: Please tantalize us with a story blurb or excerpt. JRL: It’s the summer of 1898. The nation, just coming out of an economic slump, has been at war with Spain since April. And Sylvester Tilghman, sheriff of Arahpot, Jordan County, Pennsylvania, has a murder victim with too many enemies.
There’s Claude Kessler, who is found standing with a knife in his hand over the body of Willis Petry. There’s Rachel Webber, Petry’s surly teen-aged stepdaughter, who admits an act intended to cause him harm. Then there’s the band of gypsies who claim Petry is the goryo who stole one of their young women.
If this isn’t enough to complicate Tilghman’s life, add in threats to his job by McClean Ruppenthal, former town burgess; a run-in with a female horse thief; scary predictions by a gypsy fortuneteller, and the theft of Doc Mariner’s new motorcar.
There’s plenty of good eating, church-going and socializing along the way. And, before all is over, Sylvester solves the crime and even comes a little closer to his goal of finally marrying longtime girlfriend Lydia Longlow.

TBR: What inspired you to write about the theme? JRL: Sooner is a sequel to Fallen From Grace. Initially I hadn’t even thought about another series. A number of readers of the first had asked for more of Sylvester’s adventures and/or wondered if Lydia would ever give in to his marriage proposals. Then, too, characters have a way of nudging us with more ideas.

TBR: Are you a plotter or pantser? JRL: Definitely on the side of the pantser fraternity. I do have a general idea of where the story is headed and how it will end and usually will jot down some notes. But a formal outline? No. And those notes would look like Mayan hieroglyphs to anyone else.

TBR: How do you develop your characters? JRL: They often seem to have a knack for doing what they want rather than taking direction from me.

TBR: Did any music inspire your book? Do you have a playlist? JRL: I wouldn’t say music inspired the book, but it always is a part of my novels. You won’t find these songs on the current hit parade, but they were popular in the time period of the book. Some of these ‘hits’ include Hearts and Flowers; Faith of Our Fathers; When All Thy Mercies, O God, and After The Ball.

TBR: Which of your characters would you most/least like to invite to dinner, and why? JRL: I admire a woman with spirit, so obviously an evening with Lydia Longlow would be fun. Of course we’d have to invite Sylvester or he’d be put out. He’s a good sport anyway. I don’t think McLean Ruppenthal would be much fun.

TBR: What's next for you? JRL: I’m working on a seventh Sticks Hetrick mystery (actually his protégé, Officer Flora Vastine seems to want first-place in this one).
TBR: Any other published works? JRL: There are five novels in my Sticks Hetrick mystery series and I recently signed a contract with Whiskey Creek Press for the sixth. I’ve also published several historical novels and contributed a story to Four of a Kind, an anthology with a gambling theme. I also have a contract with Sunbury Press for a non-fiction book with an anthracite coal mining theme.
TBR: What’s the most challenging aspect of writing? Most rewarding? JRL: Let me turn your question around. The most rewarding to me is the act of creation, building and controlling (at least somewhat) characters and a world of your own. The most challenging is the horrid drudgery of marketing in the hope readers will discover your writing amongst all the other books out there.

TBR: Where can readers find you on the web? JRL:  My website: www.jrlindermuth.net
and many other sites.
TBR: Is there anything you’d like to ask our readers? JRL: For myself and fellow writers, if you read something by us that you like, please, please, spread the word. Be it in the form of a review (always appreciated), a mention online, or gossip over the backfence, the best publicity any of us can ask for is word of mouth.
 
TBR: Readers, J. R. Lindermuth will give away a copy of Sooner Than Gold to one lucky commenter. He'll pick a winner on Wednesday, May 22, and announce the winner here. Be sure to leave your email address so s/he can contact you.

Thanks for visiting TBR, J.R. All the best to you.

Monday, August 27, 2012

TBR welcomes Lesley Diehl

TBR: Welcome to TBR, Lesley. Will you share a little bit about yourself?
Lesley: I retired from my life as a professor of psychology and reclaimed my country roots by moving to a small cottage in the Butternut River Valley in upstate New York.  In the winter I migrate to old Florida—cowboys, scrub palmetto, and open fields of grazing cattle, a place where spurs still jingle in the post office, and gators make golf a contact sport.  Back north, the shy ghost inhabiting the cottage serves as my writing muse.  When not writing, I garden, cook, and renovate the 1874 cottage with the help of my husband, two cats, and, of course, Fred the ghost, who gives artistic direction to our work. 

I am author of two mystery series, both featuring country gals with attitude: the microbrewing mystery series set in the Butternut Valley of upstate New York—A Deadly Draught and Poisoned Pairings—and my old Florida, Big Lake Murder Mystery series—Dumpster Dying and Grilled, Chilled and Killed.  Untreedreads publishes my short stories as well as a novel length mystery, Angel Sleuth.   

TBR: Tell us about Poisoned Pairings and where it's available.
Lesley: My newest release is the second in the microbrewing series, Poisoned Pairings.  You can purchase it on Amazon at this link: http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_2?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=Poisoned+Pairings   

TBR: Please tantalize us with a story blurb or excerpt.
Lesley: A student helping set up for a beer and food pairings event in Hera Knightsbridge’s microbrewery dies there under suspicious circumstances.  At first the death looks like a suicide, but the medical examiner determines it is murder, and Hera and her lover, Deputy Sheriff Jake Ryan again find themselves partners in searching for the killer.  Not only does murder threaten the community, but something more explosive has come to the valley—hydraulic fracturing or fracking, a controversial gas drilling technique whose proponents say can take the poor families of the region out of debt.  Hera and her fellow brewers are convinced it will contaminate the water supply, as it had in other places, and change forever the pristine beauty of the valley.  Connections among the student, the family of a dead brewer, a religious leader and the gas companies lead Hera and Jake into a maze of confusing and conflicting clues.  Before the two can unravel the case’s tangled threads, Jake is called away to another job, leaving Hera alone to uncover the identity of the killer before she becomes the next victim.

TBR: What inspired you to write about the theme?
Lesley: When I began the first in the microbrewing series, I wanted an unusual occupation for my protagonist, something others had not done before, so I chose brewing.  More men than women brew craft beers, so I knew the position of being in a minority would be an interesting hook for my female sleuth.  In my second in this series I decided to give my reader a little more information about pairing beer and food so readers could see beer as an interesting accompaniment to food much as we see wine and food paired.  I added the controversial gas exploration of hydrofracking as an environmental backdrop because of the current controversy in the valley here and because it has implications for the quality and quantity of water so necessary in making fine craft beers.

TBR: Are you a plotter or pantser?
Lesley:I am a pantser.  Sometimes I may know the ending scene between my killer and my sleuth, but I often do not know who committed the murder.  I do adhere to some general elements of plotting: plot point one, plot point two, the dark moment, resolution.

TBR: How do you develop your characters?
Lesley: I do that as freely as I plot.  I have a general idea of how I wish a character to be.  I know what the person looks like, what the core set of values is, family background, education, then I fill in by creating difficult situations, contact with people who care about the person or others who fear or hate the individual.  Once I have a situation I can place a person in, I determine what behavior I want.  Enough of these events, and I have a character who emerges with strengths and weaknesses, qualities the reader may identify with or hate, and desires, passions, intellectual stances I decide would work for this particular character.  Most of this I do almost unconsciously, but I am bound by needing t make the character grow and develop throughout the book.  This is true of the protagonist and the villain as well as other characters also.  As much as the plot drives what my characters do, my characters must do the things that shape how the plot evolves also.  And, of course, this is quite fluid as I may need to make a bad guy a bit nicer and a goodie two-shoes a bit more believable as I the story line unfolds.

TBR: Do you have a favorite quote you’d like to share?
Lesley: To paraphrase Mark Twain - Humans are the only animals that blush or need to.

TBR: Which of your characters would you most/least like to invite to dinner, and why?
Lesley: I have a real bad boy character in my Florida series.  I think he would be an interesting dinner guest, perhaps not a very polished one.  He chews tobacco, so one would either have to tolerate that and set a coffee can at his feet or order him to go outside.  I continue to explore how he thinks when I write about him.  For example, he believes the county would be a whole lot better off if he could simply sit in his police cruiser under a palm tree and snooze away the afternoon.  He also considers most of his bad luck as due to the uppity Yankee women he encounters.  His deductions about life are not bound by either truth or reality, but by how he believes his world to function.

TBR: While creating your books, what was one of the most surprising things you learned?
Lesley: I was always a scotch and wine drinker, but needing to research microbreweries, I spent time touring some of the breweries in Florida and New York State.  I was certain I didn’t care for beer.  I never drank it even in college when everyone went to keg parties. To my amazement, I found craft beers so unlike beers from large breweries, and I now have some brews.  It’s this knowledge I hope to convey in my microbrewing series, to let people know they’re in for an unusual taste experience.  While many men seem to find microbrews interesting, it’s a hard sell to get women to try them.

TBR: Tease us with one little thing about your fictional world that makes it different from others.
Lesley: Murder in a brewery?  The smell of malt and yeast and foamy ales?  High ceilings with towering shiny vats containing IPAs, stouts, porters?  A very different world for a murder.  Who knew a brewery could be such an enticing, yet threatening place?

TBR: What's next for you?
Lesley: My publisher will release the second in my Florida Big Lake series this fall/winter.  This one is entitled Grilled, Chilled and Killed.  Poor Emily Rhodes.  She’s always tripping across dead bodies. This time she discovers a contestant in the local barbeque cook-off covered with sauce, an apple stuck in his mouth, in a beer truck. 

TBR: Any other published works?
Lesley:   If the reader likes something more “heavenly”, Untreedreads publishing released Angel Sleuth in April.  You can find out why my protagonist needs two guardian angels, a pool shark, a detective and a pot-bellied pig to help her find a murderer.

TBR: What’s the most challenging aspect of writing? Most rewarding?
Lesley: The most challenging part is rewriting, editing.  It’s so difficult to keep at it, but I know it needs doing.  The most rewarding?  When I write something that even I find funny enough to laugh out loud.

TBR: What’s the most interesting comment you have received about your books?
Lesley: Someone said my plots were as complicated as P. D. James’.  I write nothing like her, and, as I said above, I’m a pantser in plotting, so I take that as something of a compliment.

TBR: Who are some of your favorite authors and books? What are you reading now?
Lesley: I love Robert Parker, Agatha Christie, P. D. James, Martha Grimes, Elizabeth George, Janet Evanovich, Lisa Scottoline, Harlan Cobin.
Right now I’m on the fourth book in the Harry Potter series.

TBR: Where can readers find you on the web?
Lesley:  www.lesleydiehl.com and http://anotherhdraught.blogspot.com

TBR: Is there anything you’d like to ask our readers?
Lesley: How do you find books to read?  Do you use social media, internet book sites, Amazon, word of mouth?  And what makes you pick up a book by a writer who is new to you?

TBR: Readers, Lesley will give away a copy of the first in my microbrewing series, A Deadly Draught, to one lucky commenter. She'll pick a winner next week and announce the winner here. Be sure to leave your email address so she can contact you.  I’d like to give away.

Thanks for visiting TBR, Lesley! All the best to you.