The Tao of Doo


In his kind and generous review of my first mystery, DEATH NOTICE, author James Reasoner said the plot was vaguely reminiscent of something found in Scooby-Doo, only played seriously. He meant it as a compliment and I took it Read more

BAD MOON Rises


Another October, another release date. Since BAD MOON is my second book, you would think I'd be used to it. But nope, I'm not. BAD MOON's publication date feels as surreal as DEATH NOTICE's did last year. For readers, the Read more

Writing With ... Louise Penny


I am thrilled beyond words to welcome one of my favorite writers, Louise Penny, whose Armand Gamache mysteries have appeared on bestseller lists worldwide.  Her last book, BURY YOUR DEAD, won the Ellis for best mystery in Canada, and Read more

Is Browsing Dead?


I'll be the first to admit that I was a nerdy teenager. Not pocket protector nerdy, but no sports star, either. I was bookish, I guess you could say. I read A LOT back then, and nothing pleased me Read more

Why We Left Earth


Outer space has always been a mystery. Even before mankind fully grasped its vastness, they wanted to go there. Early astronomers, fascinated by the stars, invented ways to get a closer view. Think Copernicus, Galileo, Cassini. Writers not content Read more

Writing With

Writing With … Brad Parks

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Brad Parks and I worked at the same newspaper for more than a year, yet we never actually met until years later, when we both became published authors. His debut, FACES OF THE GONE, became the first book in history to win both the Nero and Shamus Awards. His second book, EYES OF THE INNOCENT, released in February from Minotaur Books, has been hailed as “as good if not better (than) his acclaimed debut” by Library Journal. A former reporter with The Washington Post and The (Newark, N.J.) Star-Ledger, he is now a full-time novelist living in Virginia. You can visit his website at www.BradParksBooks.com.

Q. Tell us about your book and what inspired you to write it.

Todd, we’re both journalists by training and nature. And, as journalists, we must tell the unvarnished truth. So, for real? What inspired this? Quite simple: I had written one novel featuring Carter Ross, a sometimes-dashing investigative reporter for a Newark-based newspaper (sound familiar?), and when Minotaur Books bought it, they offered me a two-book contract. Hence, Carter needed another adventure. EYES OF THE INNOCENT is the second of those books. Mind you, by this point, Carter has taken hold of me and is more or less calling the shots — I’ve written installments Nos. 3 and 4 as well, and I’m not sure I could stop writing him if I wanted to. But at least where No. 2 is concerned, it the inspiration was mostly contractual.

Q. Did you need to do any special research for the book? If so, what’s one of the most interesting facts you discovered?

My research regimen went something like this: Inhale. Exhale. Repeat. See, I was also a reporter for a large New Jersey newspaper. So my research pretty much involved living. The bulk of the part of my life that later became relevant to this book was a four- or five-month stretch in 2008 when I did a series of stories on the subprime mortgage scandal. That was where I learned about the house-flipping, greed, fraud and corruption that had been absolutely rampant during the real estate boom — and about the pain caused when the bubble popped. So while I’m not sure this is an “interesting fact,” one lesson I certainly learned: If you ever again see real estate increasing by 25 or 30 percent a year, run like hell.

Q. Many people are content to just be readers. How did you become a writer?

I got into writing for the money and the sex. This is true, actually. I was 14 years old and saw an ad in my hometown newspaper saying, “Sportswriters needed.” The job paid 50 cents a column inch, which meant I could make slightly more per week writing sports than I could babysitting. So that’s the money. The sex? My assignment was to cover the Ridgefield High School girls basketball team, and I figured this would be my in — after all, if I was the guy who could get their names’ in the paper, they’d have to talk to me, right? And from there I could work my charm and … uhh … yeah, didn’t quite work out that way. But it got me writing, helped me fall in love with storytelling and launched me into a line of work that I continue to enjoy immensely.

Q. What do you like to do when you’re not writing?

Read. Golf. Swim. Run. Garden. Sing. Act. Play tennis. Play softball. Play basketball. Play … Well, you get the idea. I’ve got a variety of interests and hobbies. Mind you, I don’t get much time to do any of them. I’ve got two small children. Much of my non-work time involves being yelled at by toddlers.

Q. What are you reading right now?

James Lovelock’s THE VANISHING FACE OF GAIA. No, I’m not trying to sound like an intellectual. It’s just research for my next novel. On the side, I’m also reading some of Robert J. Randisi’s work, because I’ve been given the honor of interviewing him at the next Bouchercon and I figure if I read five of his books it will at least mean I’ve read one percent of his (very impressive) canon.

Q. If you were stranded on that proverbial deserted island, what five books would you want to have with you?

I would want four extra-large, waterproof coffee table books and the JUMBO DUCT TAPE BOOK (that comes with the free samples). That way I could lash the coffee table books together, make myself a boat and get the hell off the island. Or at least get myself to an island with the library on it. I mean, really, who wants to be stuck with five books forever?

Q. What’s your favorite movie?

Hoo boy. Now you’re going to know one of my deep, dark secrets: When it comes to music and movies, I’m really a 16-year-old girl. So. Ahem. Love, Actually. Just a great flick. If I watch it when I’m sick, it makes me cry.

Q. What’s your favorite food?

When it comes to chow, I’m a meat and potatoes kind of guy. Wait, that’s two foods. Okay, just the meat. Filet mignon, if you’ve got it. Cooked rare. Super rare. Purple-in-the-middle-stick-a-fork-in-it-and-it-moos rare. Yum.

Q. Cats or dogs?

I’ve got to go with cats, if only because Carter Ross has a cat — named, appropriately enough, Deadline. And if I judge based on reader mail alone, Deadline is everyone’s favorite character over Carter by a about a 5:1 ratio.

Q. Name one thing that people would be surprised to learn about you.

I’m fairly obnoxious, ceaselessly outgoing and an egregious self-promoter, so by this point I’m not sure I could really surprise anyone. (I just don’t think anyone would be that shocked to learn I do community theater). Okay, let’s make it a boastful, seemingly outrageous claim that you, Todd Ritter, could actually verify if you choose: I once hit three home runs on my first three swings in a Star-Ledger softball game. Now, if you excuse me, I’m going to start playing Bruce’s Glory Days.

Writing With … Lynn Sheene

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Today, I welcome Lynn Sheene, whose debut novel, THE LAST TIME I SAW PARIS, will be released on Tuesday. A graduate of UC Santa Barbara, Lynn lives in Southern California with her husband and dog. She is currently working on her next novel set in wartime France. You can visit her online at www.lynnsheene.com.

Q. Tell us about your book and what inspired you to write it.

THE LAST TIME I SAW PARIS is about a young Jazz-Age Manhattan socialite who heads to Paris to escape her secret past, only to find herself swept up in the danger and drama of the French Resistance.

I’ve loved Paris as well as the 1930’s and 1940’s for many years. Then about five years ago, I found a French Art Deco brooch and wondered about its past. As I began to dig into what was going on in France during the German Occupation, I was captivated by the intrigue, darkness and danger as well as the heroism and the beauty. I HAD to write a novel based in that era!

Q. Did you need to do any special research for the book? If so, what’s one of the most interesting facts you discovered?

I’ve spent hours online, I’ve read stacks of memoirs and news accounts. But, of course, the best part of the research is France itself. I’ve gone to Paris a number of times for research. In fact, I recently returned from a month in Paris researching the second book. The trips are wonderful. Paris is, in a way, timeless, so I can walk the sidewalks, visit the parks, eat in the same cafes as people did 70 years ago. I visit archives and dig out old photos and maps. It is great fun and so easy to lose days searching for the smallest detail. But the best part are the surprises. What you see or hear that you weren’t thinking of that you love so much that it becomes part of the story.

I have found so many interesting facts, to be honest, it would take a book to list them. What amazes me, though, are how so many of the Resistants in Paris were normal people like us. Not trained soldiers, they were men and women, students and writers, businessmen and homemakers. And yet they risked their lives day after day.

Q. Many people are content to just be readers. How did you become a writer?

I always loved stories and wanted to be a writer. When I was young, I wrote many short stories that never saw the light of day. In college, I studied screenwriting and wrote several screenplays, but realized that wasn’t my best format and ran out of steam for a while. When THE LAST TIME I SAW PARIS sparked in my imagination, I was ready to write a novel, no matter what it took.

Q. What do you like to do when you’re not writing?

I love to read (of course), travel, garden, watch old movies and contemplate what color to paint my office walls.

Q. What are you reading right now?

I am researching my current book, also based in German-occupied France, so I am working my way through a large pile of nonfiction specific to that story.

Q. If you were stranded on that proverbial deserted island, what five books would you want to have with you?

I can’t even commit to an overnight stay with only five books! I would throw myself into a volcano (because my island would need a volcano) if I had only five things to read. However, in the hours before desperation overtook me, I would enjoy:

SUITE FRANCAISE — Irene Nemirovsky (because she was so talented and saw the world through writer’s eyes, and because she died so tragically)

THE POLISH OFFICER — Alan Furst (because he is brilliant)

KINGDOM OF SHADOWS — Alan Furst  (ditto)

THE SECRET GARDEN — Frances Hodgson Burnett (because ever since I was nine years old, this book always makes me happy)

MY LIFE IN FRANCE — Julia Child (so I could dream of butter and chicken and potatoes and bread and…)

Q. What’s your favorite movie?

Tough — It’s a tossup between His Girl Friday and The Philadelphia Story — both Cary Grant, both 1940. I suppose that says something about why I write historical fiction set in the 1940’s, doesn’t it.

Q. What’s your favorite food?

I could live on fresh French bread indefinitely. I could also happily drown in Thai coconut soup.

Q. Cats or dogs?

Dogs — specifically, Boris Von Woofiepants. We got him from a rescue three years ago. He is a terrier/basset hound mix, we think. And he is the most popular person, let alone dog, I’ve ever met. People honk and yell out his name when we walk down the street. Not my name. Boris. I now know what it must feel like to be part of someone’s entourage.

Q. Name one thing that people would be surprised to learn about you.

When I lived in Northern California, I once swam from Alcatraz Island to San Francisco. My friend Gayle can talk me into just about anything!

Writing With … Douglas Corleone

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For the first official Wednesdays With entry, I welcome my friend DOUGLAS CORLEONE. Doug is the author of the Kevin Corvelli crime series, published by St. Martin’s Minotaur. His debut novel, ONE MAN’S PARADISE, won the Minotaur Books/Mystery Writers of America First Crime Novel Award. A practicing attorney, Douglas divides his time between New York and Hawaii. His second Corvelli novel, NIGHT ON FIRE, will be released on Tuesday. You can visit him online at www.DouglasCorleone.com

Q. Tell us about your latest book and what inspired you to write it.

In NIGHT ON FIRE, hotshot Honolulu defense attorney Kevin Corvelli narrowly escapes a deadly arson fire at a popular Hawaiian beach resort only to land the prime suspect — a stunning but troubled young bride — as a client. NIGHT ON FIRE is the follow-up to my debut novel, ONE MAN’S PARADISE, which was released last year. The idea for the second Kevin Corvelli novel was inspired by an event from my past. When I was a child on vacation in Canada, I woke late one night to the sound of a fire alarm. The hotel was being evacuated and I was terrified. There was a blaze a few floors below us and smoke was seeping into the stairwell as we bounded down the steps. Ultimately, no one was injured, but it was an incident I’ll never forget.

Q. Did you need to do any special research for the book? If so, what’s one of the most interesting facts you discovered?

For NIGHT ON FIRE, I had to research arson investigation. The most interesting fact I discovered was how fire investigators determine a blaze’s point of origin. They search for a V-shaped burn pattern — that’s the point of origin, where the fire burned hottest and did the most damage.

Q. Many people are content to just be readers. How did you become a writer?

I wanted to be a writer since reading the Hardy Boys mysteries as a kid. But I didn’t get serious about it until a few years ago when I was able to take a time-out from practicing law. Living in Hawaii was a great inspiration.

Q. What do you like to do when you’re not writing?

I love the ocean — it’s one of the many reasons I live in Hawaii. I enjoy swimming, snorkeling, kayaking, and just about anything else that gets me in the water.

Q. What are you reading right now?

I’m currently reading THE FIFTH WITNESS by Michael Connelly, and I’m looking forward to Steve Martini’s TRADER OF SECRETS next month.

Q. If you were stranded on that proverbial deserted island, what five books would you want to have with you?

AMERICAN PSYCHO by Bret Easton Ellis

WOMEN by Charles Bukowski

THE LONG GOODBYE by Raymond Chandler

PORNO by Irvine Welsh

IMAJICA by Clive Barker

Q. What’s your favorite movie?

Sexy Beast with Ben Kingsley.

Q. What’s your favorite food?

New York-style pizza.

Q. Cats or dogs?

Both. We have three cats, one of whom (Grey Skies) makes an appearance in the Kevin Corvelli novels. But I have a 20-month-old son named Jack, and I can’t wait to get him his first puppy, because I’ve always wanted a dog.

Q. Name one thing that people would be surprised to learn about you.

Steve-O from Jackass once poured half a bottle of Jose Cuervo down my throat at a show in New Brunswick, New Jersey.