Tag Archive for 'mystery series'

Twenty-Five Years Ago Today: The Queen of Patpong Author Timothy Hallinan

I’d like to welcome my guest Timothy Hallinan. Timothy has written ten published novels, all thrillers. A series of six mysteries he wrote in the 1990s featuring erudite Los Angeles private eye Simeon Grist is a cult favorite and is now becoming available in e-book form. Since 1981, Timothy has divided his time between Los Angeles and Southeast Asia, the setting for his Poke Rafferty novels: A NAIL THROUGH THE HEART, THE FOURTH WATCHER, BREATHING WATER, and the upcoming THE QUEEN OF PATPONG. As of this writing, THE QUEEN OF PATPONG has already received “starred” reviews in two of the four major publication trades.

We are lucky to get two 25 years ago stories for the price of one! Timothy shares what he was doing 25 years ago, and also gives us the scoop on the past of his character, Poke Rafferty. Read his post below.

TIMOTHY: This is kind of fun – I hardly ever look back on my life, much less those of my characters.

Twenty-five years ago, in 1985, I was living in LA, New York, London, and Bangkok – the first three for business and the fourth for fun. I had a life that must have looked incredibly privileged from the outside: money coming out of my ears, my own company of about 30 people advising giant corporations about their television activities, all those houses, limousines, first-class flights everywhere.

And I was miserable, so miserable that I was using, to put it delicately, substances to get me through the day and other substances to get me to sleep at night. I could afford lots of substances, economically speaking, although my body had a different perspective.

And then, in 1987, I started sitting down at 7 PM wherever I was and writing a novel. And about eight months later, I finished it, and it was terrible. It had a great title, The Wrong End of the Rainbow, but it was all downhill from there. So I wrote another one and then a third, and I sold the third – it got me a three-book contract – and my life changed. Over the next seven or eight years, I phased out the business (and, inadvertently, a lot of the money) and became a full-time writer. And the substances disappeared, too.

Best thing I ever did. In fact, I really have only two regrets about my life – that I never had children and that I didn’t write that first, awful novel about ten years earlier.

The hero of my current series, Poke Rafferty, was twelve years old, living twenty-five years ago in a dreary little house in the middle of some featureless desert near Lancaster, California, with his uncommunicative father, Frank, and his voluble half-Filipina mother, Angela. He hated it there. As he describes it in the second book in the series:

“. . . everything was brown. The desert was brown, our house was brown – half the time, the sky was brown, courtesy of the smog Los Angeles sent us every day. Buildings were brown and square: flat roofs, small windows to keep the heat out. Nothing was ornamented, nothing was designed a certain way just because it looked good. It was like people went out of their way to make it ugly.”

But his life is about to change. In his parents’ bedroom is a metal box, battered, rusting, and always locked. One day, Poke – his real name is Philip, but he got the nickname from his habit of poking his nose where it didn’t belong – popped the lock on the box with a bobby pin and found in it the remnants of his father’s mysterious sojourn in Asia years before Poke was born: money from various Asian countries.

“I just saw the bills as pictures,” he later tells Rose, the Thai woman he will marry. “Clouds. Trees. Buildings with roofs that tilted up at the corners like prayers. Lakes with bridges over them, and the bridges looked like . . . I don’t know, like lace or something. Everything seemed to float. In Lancaster the rocks were heavy and the buildings were like bigger, heavier rocks. And I unfolded that money, and I was looking at a world where everything was light enough to float.”

Eventually, the pictures on that money, and the need to track his father who has disappeared once again into China, will take Poke to Asia, where he will take up live as an expatriate in Bangkok.

His wife, Rose, was six years old twenty-five years ago, living in a poverty-stricken village in northeastern Thailand, just starting school, and eleven years away from the life-changing discovery that her father intends to sell her into prostitution. That discovery is at the heart of the fourth book in the Poke Rafferty series, THE QUEEN OF PATPONG, which came out on August 17.

I only hope I can continue to write the series long enough to look back again, twenty-five years from now, and thank so much, Stacy, for letting me do it this time.

Thanks for joining us, Timothy! It’s amazing the positive effects that getting on the right life path can bring. Check out THE QUEEN OF PATPONG on Amazon.

Life in Bangkok looks good for American expat travel writer Poke Rafferty and his little family – his wife, Rose, is happily running a domestics agency that offers bar girls an alternative to The Life, and their adopted daughter, Miaow, once an abandoned street child, is now enrolled in a good school and trying desperately to conform. And then, out of nowhere, comes the nightmare customer from Rose’s life in the bars, who he threatens not only their lives but their emotional relationships as well. To do battle with him, Rafferty needs to know more about Rose’s past, and there are things he may be unable to confront as we follow the path that took a shy village teen to Bangkok and turned her into the queen of Patpong.

25 Years Ago Today: Beth Solheim, Author of the Sadie Witt Mysteries

I’d like to welcome my fellow Sister in Crime Beth Solheim. Like the main character in her Sadie Witt mystery series, Beth was born with a healthy dose of imagination and a hankering to solve a puzzle. She learned her reverence for reading from her mother, who was never without a book in her hand.

By day, Beth works in Human Resources. By night, she morphs into a writer who frequents lake resorts and mortuaries and hosts a ghost or two in her humorous paranormal mysteries. Raised and still living in Northern Minnesota, Beth resides in lake country with her husband and a menagerie of wildlife critters. She and her husband are blessed with two grown children and two grandsons.

I’m pleased to announce that Beth is my first guest author to share what her character was doing 25 Years Ago Today. Tell us, Beth, what was Sadie Witt doing 25 years ago?


BETH: In 1984, my character, Sadie Witt, owner of the Witt’s End Resort, greeted yet another guest to Cabin 14. A dead guest, that is. And this guest has a big issue to solve before he can cross back over. This guest unsuspectingly witnessed the 1975 disappearance of Jimmy Hoffa, notorious Teamster leader with alleged mob connections, and Sadie must help him prove the disappearance. If information is revealed using the dead guest’s name, his family will be in peril.

To add to Sadie’s tribulations, a second dead guest arrives who has an equally taxing predicament to solve before she can make her final death decision. At odds with Sadie for years, this woman must now depend on an unorthodox death coach to help her uncover a clue in her husband’s warehouse of stolen merchandise. A clue that will free her grandson from the clutches of kidnappers who hold him ransom.

Sadie’s an eccentric, fun-loving resort proprietor who sees the dead. She’s not thrilled with her death coach responsibilities, especially when she has to help her guests solve crimes. Unfortunately, the steady stream of guests from the mortuary next door never ends. And, don’t let Sadie hear you say she’s fashion challenged. Mini skirts, halter tops, spiked hairdos and an asp tattoo are the norm for this spunky sleuth, who is a complete contrast to her prissy twin sister, Jane.

To find out more about Beth Solheim and her character Sadie Witt, visit Beth’s web site.

Check it out on Amazon.

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