Tag Archive for 'writing'

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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.

Summer Almost Over, Most Writing Goals Accomplished

It has been a productive summer and I’m proud that I accomplished most of my writing and publishing goals.

I made my trade paperback novel Twenty-Five Years Ago Today available in ebook format, uploading it to Kindle and arranging for Smashwords to distribute it to multiple ebook retailers including Barnes&Noble, Sony, Apple’s iPad Store, Diesel and Kobo.

My children’s picture book The Flag Keeper went into production and now has a web site and Facebook page. I also collected wonderful back cover blurbs from Steve Van Buskirk, Director of Programs, VFW National Headquarters, and Mike Buss, Deputy Director, Americanism, American Legion National Headquarters.

I’m in the process of working on a large review mailing related to my reality TV show-themed mystery suspense novel Sink or Swim, which will be officially released New Year’s Day, 2011. Also this summer, I collected endorsements about the book from Stephenie LaGrossa, owner of GiGI Restaurant & Lounge, Philadelphia PA, Television personality and fan favorite Survivor: Palau, Guatemala, Heroes vs. Villains; Shawne Morgan, contestant CBS’s The Amazing Race 16 and entrepreneur; and Michelle Costa, contestant Big Brother 10.

I’ve also signed on as one of the moderators at a fabulous new message board forum called Bestseller Bound which connects readers and indie authors. Stop by and join the discussion.

In August, some terrific writers have visited the blog so far. We heard from: Matthew Dicks, Mary Deal, J.R. Lindermuth, Gerry Charbonneau, Suzanne Young and Patricia Gulley.

Coming up, we’ll hear from authors: Loni Emmert, Timothy Hallinan, Norma Huss, Avery Aames, Caitlyn Hunter, Barbara Ross, Kenneth Weene and Monica Brinkman. During the week of Sept. 12, I’ll host my first theme week “Fun With Food Week,” in which every post will tie into characters who enjoy cooking. Late September also marks the release of The Flag Keeper and a special giveaway. Stay tuned!

25 Years Ago Today: Downsized to Death Author Patricia Gulley

I’d like to welcome one of my fellow Sisters in Crime, Patricia Gulley. Patricia is a retired travel agent living on a floating home in Oregon. She depends on both for her writing. She has had several short stories published and her first novel, Downsized To Death, was published by Wings E Press in April 2010. She is a member of Sisters In Crime, the SinC Guppies, and EPIC.

Thanks for joining us, Pat, and congratulations on the new book. What were you doing 25 years ago?

PATRICIA: Twenty five years ago, I was giving up my writing career and returning to my travel company to take up earning a real living. I had taken three years off to write, write, write, on a portable, electric typewriter. Boy, did I own a supply of whiteout.

I wrote several SF short stories, sent them out to all kinds of publications, got back wonderful personal and detailed rejections, then decided to switch to romance and completed a novel. I’d only read a few, so the first thing I had to do was read a bunch. Thank the stars for all the used and trade bookstores at the time. And there was actually a class at the local community college, where I met several enthusiasts and we formed a critique group. I was the only one that completed a whole book, so I sent it off to Silhouette (actually had sex in it) and after six months, got a form rejection.

Undaunted, I sent it off to an agent. Within weeks, I got back another detailed rejection letter, (boy were those the good old days) and I can’t even remember the dear woman’s name. Soon after, it looked like hubby and I were going to split up. A decent and reliable wage became mandatory. I never gave up writing, but I didn’t write as steadily as I did during those three years off until I retired.

Thanks for joining us, Pat. You can visit Pat on the Working Stiffs blog and at www.patgulley.com. Check out Downsized to Death on Amazon. Downsizing, demotion and lay-offs are not the only things branch manager of a national travel company, Prudence Peters, faces when a murder stalks her office.

Bestseller Bound Connects Indie Authors and Readers

Readers and indie authors, do I have a treat for you. A new message board, Bestseller Bound, is having its grand opening this week. Darcia Helle, author of several books including The Cutting Edge, Miami Snow and Enemies and Playmates, created this unique board and I’m excited to be one of the resident authors and moderators along with Darcia and author Maria Savva.

The board is sort of like the literary equivalent of a reality show. Here, readers will get a behind the scenes glimpse into what it’s like to be a small press or independently published author. These authors will chat with readers about writing a book, how they do research and get their ideas, how they market their books, and the challenges they face. They’ll share articles, stories and poems, as well as special offers and discounts. For those of you who read ebooks, you’ll already notice some 99 cent coupons for a limited time.

Readers are invited to hang out and meet tomorrow’s breakout writers. Have you always wanted to hear an author speak at your local bookstore or library and never had time to attend? Were you too uncomfortable asking a question? This is the perfect setting to interact with authors, ask your questions, and discover new favorites. If you enjoy reviewing books on sites such as Amazon or Goodreads, you can even offer your willingness to consider books for review.

Small press and independently published authors, you’re welcome to join in on the discussion. You may also post a thread about your books in the Connection Café, post a book trailer link and various web site links, and browse our free Help Wanted section, where authors and book lovers can exchange guest blogging and review opportunities. We do ask that you participate in the general discussion now and then rather than just promoting your books so that readers will have the opportunity to interact with a diverse group of indie authors. Please tell your readers about the forum. If every author recommended the site to their readers, think how much the indie book movement could spread.

Readers, please share our link with your book clubs and friends.

What are you waiting for? Hop on over to Bestseller Bound and check it out!

Blast From The Past: The Fairview Treasure

Here’s another one of my childhood writing excerpts. I can barely decipher my handwriting on this 25-year-old fifth grade writing assignment as I wrote it in pencil. I remember writing this story, which I titled The Fairview Treasure. Back then, I was reading a lot of Phyllis A. Whitney books, as well as the Nancy Drew, Trixie Belden, Cherry Ames, Bobbsey Twins, and Judy Bolton series.

Here’s an excerpt: One dark and gloomy night, as the coyotes that were hidden from the atmosphere of the Fairview Boarding School For Girls were howling loudly, two young girls of about twelve years old were walking nervously on the dirt trails that led down to Fairview Beach.

One child’s name was Linda. She was tall with long, thick curly black hair that hung down to her shoulders. She had wide hazel eyes and a creamy complexion. Her companion, Lucy, had beautiful long strawberry blonde hair and blue eyes.

“Linda,” Lucy asked suspiciously, “why have you suddenly decided that your great-great grandfather was murdered?”

“Well, when I asked you to come with me to his old mansion, I guess I forgot to fill you in on the details of the story. I’ll tell you the answer to the question you just asked me when I finish telling it.”

“Tell me when we get to the mansion, Linda,” Lucy pleaded. “The lights in our room at Fairview just turned on. I guess they just realized we were missing.”

“Already? Come on.”

“Linda, after you finally got me to promise I’d come with you, you mentioned something about not knowing where this mansion was.”

“Don’t worry. I have a map with me now. I forgot all about it until I found it in a secret compartment in my jewelry box. My mother put it there before she died and sent me to boarding school.”

“Why did she put it in a jewelry box?”

“It used to be hers. The map is very valuable and the secret compartment seemed to be a good place.”

***
Okay, I’ll admit this story was a bit heavy on the dialogue and didn’t have much description – well, other than the coyotes hanging around the boarding school. What kind of supervision did these students have, anyway???

I also didn’t know back then that authors should never have the names of two main characters start with the same letter – it’s rather hard for readers to distinguish between Linda and Lucy. It was a fun story to write, though. The girls found the Fairview treasure, but didn’t gather all of the answers they were seeking from decades past. I love the last two lines of the story: “It was best left an old mystery. But maybe someone can solve it. Can you?”

Hmm, do you think I could have gotten away with that ending in Twenty-Five Years Ago Today?

25 Years Ago Today: Journey of an Aspiring Mystery Writer

Twenty-five years ago, I was an 11–year-old bookworm who loved writing stories as much as reading them. My characters immersed themselves in tales like Mystery of the Stone Castle, Mystery at the Skating Rink, The Secret of the Sea Falcon, A Ghost at the Beach, Hidden Treasure, The Mysterious Relatives, and the Mysterious Bank Robbery. I wrote standalones, as well as a series featuring teenage amateur sleuth Cathy Summers and her sidekick Katie.

I wrote a lot about young psychics also, which is interesting as my two books-in-the-works both feature psychic characters.

Just for fun, now and then I’ll post excerpts from some of these old stories on my blog. I thought it would be fun to dig into these stories and see the similarities and differences to my adult writing style. I’m also doing it as a reminder to nurture your children’s talents and interests, as my parents did, and help steer them down the right path. There is a wonderful book called A Walk With Daimon, by Peter K. Delani, which describes the importance of following the right path.

Be sure to nurture your own inner child as well. If you liked painting, writing, music, or drawing as a child and have given it up due to time constraints, that part of you is still buried somewhere inside you. Let it come out to play.

Summer News: E-Books, Flags & 25 Years Ago Columns

It has been a busy summer so far, both on and off my blog. Twenty-Five Years Ago Today is now in e-book format. It will be available at the price of $2.99 for a limited time, and through July 7, you can use this coupon code to purchase it for $1.99 at Smashwords: PF84F. It’s already on sale for $2.24 at Smashwords for the month of July, but using the above coupon you can get it for $1.99 for a very limited time. The book is also in the Amazon Kindle Store and in trade paperback.

Over the next few weeks, the e-book version will begin popping up on many other online retailer sites through various distribution channels, including Barnes & Noble, Sony, Kobo and Apple. You can read more about the book here.

My children’s picture book The Flag Keeper, which I gave away here as a PDF from Flag Day through July 4, will soon be coming out in paperback. You can receive updates by following the brand new Flag Keeper Facebook page. Look for a book trailer and red, white and blue web page in the near future.

A scene from The Flag Keeper, written bt Stacy Juba and illustrated by Larry Drumtra

Thanks to Tisha Berg for featuring my recent interview at bizmommy.com. She has an incredibly inspirational site for mothers who want to start their own business.

In June on my own blog, we met mystery/suspense author Darcía Helle’s Miami Snow character Nick Donovan; literary and contemporary fiction author Maria Savva told us about the mysterious Red Man from her childhood; and novelist and short story author Stephen D. Rogers shared what working for a direct mail company taught him about writing.

Also, Beth Kanell, author of the young adult book The Darkness Under the Water, shared a powerful memory about a life-changing year in Vermont, and Lynne Murray, author of the romantic comedy Bride of the Living Dead and the Josephine Fuller mystery series, recalled writing her very first mystery novel.

In July, we’ll share a special anniversary with mystery author Steve Liskow; mystery, children’s and fantasy author Camille LaGuire will look back at writing her swashbuckler novel; zoo mystery author Ann Littlewood will tell us about a time of career transitions; and Jenny Milchman will tell us about her start as a teenage writer. In the meantime, check out all their books in my Amazon bookstore and hope you’re having a great start to your summer.

25 Years Ago Today: Popular Mystery and Romantic Comedy Author Lynne Murray

I’d like to welcome my guest Lynne Murray, who is visiting today as a stop on her blog tour to promote her fantastic new romantic comedy, Bride of the Living Dead. Lynne has had six mysteries published. Larger Than Death, the first book featuring Josephine Fuller, sleuth of size who doesn’t apologize, won the Distinguished Achievement Award from NAAFA (the National Association to Advance Fat Acceptance).

Lynne has written three e-books of encouragement for writers, as well as essays, interviews and reviews on subjects that rouse her passions. Many of those can be found under “Rants and Raves” on her web site. Lynne lives in San Francisco, and when not writing, she enjoys reading, watching DVD film directors’ commentaries, and spoiling her cats, all of whom are rescued or formerly feral felines.

Lynne, thanks for joining us. I love the concept of your latest title, Bride of the Living Dead, and I really enjoyed the Josephine Fuller mystery that I just finished, At Large. Tell us, what were you doing 25 years ago?

LYNNE: Twenty-five years ago this month, I was writing my first mystery novel. I had finished an earlier novel, a Sensitive Novel of Disillusioned Youth. One word describes it—unreadable.

Daily notes on my personal calendar bring back memories from 25 years ago, a year when way too many bad things happened—a life-threatening illness, a devastating burglary and vandalism in the apartment across the hall. My 1985 calendar records neutral and good days, but often the little squares note things like: “Bad, bad, bad day.”

Silver threads of hope weaving through the days were notes like “wrote 2 pages” or “put 6 pages on D-writer at work.” The “D-writer” was a Displaywriter, a word processing machine the size of a big, microwave oven. Starting the Displaywriter took two eight-inch disk drives, like a toaster set on end. The left drive loaded the software, the right the data.

Three days a week, 10 hours a day I typed documents for the law firm. When work was slow, I pulled out a “borrowed” eight-inch diskette from my backpack and wrote my novel.

On December 29, 1985, I went to work an hour early and stayed late. My note: “Finished TI (my novel) for contest. Done at 9:00 pm exactly. Sent by Express Mail at Airport Mail Facility.” Termination Interview didn’t win the Scribner’s contest, but a few months later an agent accepted it and sold it to St. Martin’s Press.

My first novel was published in 1988—a much better year!

Thank goodness things got better for Lynne! Read more about her work on her web sites and blog.
http://www.lmurray.com
http://www.pearlsong.com/brideofthelivingdead.htm
http://www.brideofthedead.blogspot.com

Check out Bride of the Living Dead on Amazon. Here is a description:

Indie film critic, Daria MacClellan, wants to marry the man she loves, but she’s slipping on rose petals as if they were banana peels on her way to the altar. Big, beautiful and rebellious, Daria, who is most comfortable in a monster movie poster T-shirt and blue jeans, finds that her wedding is hijacked by family drama. How did she sign on for a formal wedding planned by Sky, her perfectionist, anorexic, older sister? Daria adores her fiancé and she loves horror films, but her wedding seems to be spiraling downward in that direction. Will a picture perfect pink wedding turn her into the Bride of the Living Dead?

Also check out Lynne’s mysteries on Amazon.

25 Years Ago Today: Novelist and Short Story Author Stephen D. Rogers

I’d like to welcome Stephen D. Rogers, one of the most prolific writers that I’ve ever met. His name has been familiar to me for quite awhile, due to our mutual affiliation with Mystery Writers of America, however, I recently had the pleasure of getting to know Stephen much better as we both have books published by Mainly Murder Press.


Stephen’s new release Shot To Death contains 31 stories of murder and mayhem, set in New England. He is also the author of more than 600 shorter pieces.

Stephen, what were you doing 25 years ago?

STEPHEN: Twenty-five years ago I was writing, but then when wasn’t I?

Twenty-five years ago, I was working at a direct mail company, standing at a burster-decollator eight to sixteen hours a day, scribbling story ideas on scrap paper while waiting for enough sheets to come out of the machine and collect for me to jog.

(“To jog” means to hold a stack of loose papers on a vibrating board until the sheets line up. This is done so that the sheets don’t jam the inserters, the machines that are the next stop on the junk-mail assembly line.)

Not only did this job allow me to stockpile hundreds of creative ideas, it taught me two key concepts that were applicable to writing. First, the job taught me that submissions were a numbers game. Second, the job taught me that rejections weren’t personal. According to management, the companies that produced and paid for these mailings were thrilled with a three-percent return.

The other ninety-seven percent that never replied? That was just the cost of doing business.

Find out more about Shot To Death and Stephen’s other projects on his web site.

Check out Shot To Death on Amazon and at Mainly Murder Press.

25 Years Ago Today: Childhood Lessons on the Craft of Writing

While organizing my bookshelf, I stumbled across a special book that I haven’t picked up in years. It bears a quill pen designed onto a simple brown hard cover and the title “Writing: Unit-Lessons in Composition.” I bought this college textbook from a used bookstore when I was about 11 years old.

According to the handwritten names scrawled on the inside cover, it previously belonged to students named Tom and Donna. I remember marveling at the vivid excerpts that opened each chapter, compelling passages from works such as The Pearl by John Steinbeck, The Points of My Compass by E.B. White, and To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee.

I’d read the accompanying lessons on the craft of writing, digesting tips about how to describe motion with visual details, use connotations effectively, arrange objects in a spatial order, and use figurative language wisely.

Pretty heavy reading for an 11-year-old girl, but I felt as if I’d been given a behind-the-scenes pass into the world of books and authors. As a child, I fondly remember completing many exercises in the book. Here are a couple exercises:

1. You remember the small details of a scene – crackling leaves under your feet, the crooked arms of a barren tree. Find the words to make your reader see and feel them, too. Using this technique, describe one of these topics: a football field during and after a game; a children’s birthday party; the streets after a fall rain or winter snowfall.

2. Write a paragraph in which you describe the actions of two people, such as two girls silently combing their hair before the same mirror; or a boy and a girl approaching one another in an empty hallway.

If you have a descriptive paragraph from your own writing (either published or unpublished), or if you want to try one of the above exercises, please feel free to share your passage in the comments!

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