Showing posts with label Interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Interview. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 8, 2020

Interview with Louise Hathaway


An excerpt from a book publishing Facebook group of an interview they did with us.

 
The first day of summer in New Orleans was unseasonably cool; but the locals had no complaints. They were in no hurry for hot temperatures and the sweltering humidity that was sure to come soon.  Artists set up their umbrellas in Jackson Square, waiting for the tourists to descend upon the Quarter. The wrought iron fence surrounding the square became their outdoor gallery full of colorful oils and watercolors for sale.  Inside the bride’s room of historic St. Louis Cathedral, Homicide Detective Yvonne Dauphin adjusted her wedding veil. Looking at herself in the floor length mirror she told her sister, “I should have just chosen a wreath of flowers instead of this stupid thing.  I feel like Miss America when she first gets crowned and has to do a balancing act.” -  Deadly Promises: A New Orleans Mystery

            So begins the sequel to Fighting Demons, Deadly Promises. This month I’m doing something I’ve never done before by showcasing not one but two authors, the husband and wife writing team of Louise Hathaway, the pen name for Karen and Sandy Wood.

15) First off, guys, thank you for sitting for this interview. It may be a little tricky since in the year or two I’ve been doing the monthly author interviews, they’ve always been binary. But this month, we have three participants.

      Secondly, apparently, Louise Hathaway was originally going to be a solo act but, as you’d said on your Amazon author page, the collaboration began when, as per the writer stereotype, the author showed their work to the other half. Did the transition from beta reader to collaborator begin with the first book or after?

Karen: My husband has always been supportive about reading my fiction, going back to high school when he was kind enough to read my short stories. The first book we wrote together, Death Among the Stacks: The Body in the Law Library, was loosely inspired by Agatha Christie’s stories and features a cast of suspects based upon my friends from the library where I used to work.

Sandy: My wife has always been a writer having penned many essays and articles before diving into book publishing. She is the expert in our collaboration with a master’s degree in English that keeps us on the up and up. Louise Hathaway began as a collaboration from the get-go with our first book.

14) As far as I can tell, you guys are juggling three series (Det. Santy, Det. Dauphin and Nancy Keene). Do you have a favorite series or do you enjoy writing them equally?

Karen: My favorite series is the New Orleans Mysteries starring Yvonne Dauphin because the detective and her sister are the ones who are the most like me. Yvonne and I have similar personal struggles and in Deadly Promisesher sister knows some colorful characters that she (and I) have met via our social media contacts and they show up in the plot as prime suspects.

Sandy: I enjoy them all equally. Each series brings with it a unique set of characters, locations and situations that feed the narrative in special ways.

13) The Yvonne Dauphin series is set in the Big Easy. Do you both live there in New Orleans and, if not, what fascination does the Crescent City have for you?

Karen: We live in California but have visited New Orleans about 13 times over the years. The city has a rich history with lots of atmosphere and is a setting around which I like to wrap stories.

Sandy: We’ve travelled to New Orleans more than any place in the world. The city exudes a certain mood for us in so many ways that it's hard to not be inspired by all its character.

12) I’d imagine for mystery novelists who juggle series set in contemporary times or within a specific historical epoch, the temptation for a crossover is great (I’ve written a couple, myself). Are there any plans to have Det. Santy meet Det. Dauphin for a crossover adventure?

Karen: I love the idea of having our two female detectives meet and work on a case together. It might be a little difficult, since one lives in Tustin, California and the other lives in New Orleans.

Sandy: I haven't thought about it until now. I think it's a brilliant idea and one that we should consider in the future.

11) In the Detective Santy and Dauphin series, you’re following a current trend: A seemingly insatiable reader appetite for strong female leads. Aside from inner strength, what traits do Santy and Dauphin have in common and how are they different? Does Karen write the female parts and Sandy the male ones? Enquiring minds want to know.

Karen: Traits that Detectives Santy and Dauphin have in common are that they’re both well-seasoned experienced detectives who have risen in the ranks, à la Jane Tennison in Prime Suspect. Both of our detectives are vulnerable: Detective Dauphin has bipolar disorder which makes her have her own unique challenges when it comes to doing her job and having personal relationships. Detective Santy is very affected by her both of her fathers—her adopted one and her blood relative. In The Murder at the Abbeyshe tries to help her father after he’s just gotten out of prison, and he’s a handful—to say the least.  The difference between them is that Clarissa Santy is younger in the first story (The Tustin Chronicles). She is only 18 when she’s investigating her adopted father’s murder; so, it’s a coming of age story and she learns some hard lessons along the way.

Sandy: We've always liked the tension that a female detective brings to a story. There's certainly the good-old-boys-club issue that is so often explored but I like the notion that a female will approach things different than a man. I'm sure many will disagree with that, but I love exploring the idea. Santy and Dauphin share some of the same traits in that they rose up through the ranks and survived being a woman in a normally man's position. They've both earned the respect of their fellow detectives and senior officers as well. In our Det. Dauphin series, we find the detective has a bit of romantic baggage that she is forced to deal with whereas Det. Santy is all business and very little love life, specifically in the first two books of the series. I worked in the local District Attorney's office and was able to see much of what our characters exhibit firsthand. As for who writes what, we don't separate things by sex. That said, it's wonderful to share the writing with someone of the opposite sex who can kindly give me a reality check if something doesn't sound right.

10) Your Nancy Keene series is an obvious homage to, as well as a parody of, Carolyn Keene (aka the Stratemeyer Syndicate) and the long-running Nancy Drew series. Aside from the homage, why did you begin this series and what do you think you’ve added to the original one?

Karen: A good friend of mine passed away and I inherited six of her Nancy Drew books that were written in the 30s. Around the same time, my husband and I went to California Adventures, a theme park by Disneyland. The park has a Route 66 theme based upon the movie Cars. The Buried Treasure on Route 66, my first Nancy Keene Mystery, was a result. I wasn’t planning on making a series out of it and in this book, Nancy is 18 and has premarital sex and gets married—something that would never happen to Nancy Drew. This book is mostly a parody and gently pokes fun at Nancy’s obscure knowledge, perfectionism, and need for control. The Nancy Keene Mysteries were fun to write. Unlike the Nancy Drew stories, mine are PG-rated, humorous, and meant for adult readers who grew up loving the Nancy Drew Mysteries.

Sandy: The Nancy Keene series creation is 100% Karen. I've been fortunate enough to add my bits here and there along the way.

9) Lest anyone assume you’re simply a mystery-writing couple, you’ve also written speculative fiction, romance and nonfiction. You’ve also written two time travel books (Travelers In Time Aboard The California Zephyr and the autobiographically-based short story Tripping Back to the 60s. What do you think fuels your fascination with time travel? Is it watching established history or the typical human urge to recreate established history?

Karen: What I like about creating time travel stories is putting modern characters into historic scenarios and seeing how they respond. Also, I like researching the background and the history of the time period. We began writing Travelers in Time in our sleeper car aboard the California Zephyr, so a lot of what we were seeing along the way ended up in the book. Sandy did a lot of historical research on the 100th Meridian Excursion and this shows up in the book where real-life characters interact with our fictional ones.

Sandy: I've always loved the idea of time travel both in the written word and on television. We both love history and the idea of placing oneself at a specific date and time in history is exhilarating. The notion that one could traverse time and exist in another era was something that was fun to write about in both of our stories. Bending the norms of time and history add a wonderful effect to characters and how they act and react. We wrote a large part of Travelers in Time aboard the Amtrak California Zephyr as we traveled between California and Colorado. The setting proved to be immensely inspiring and helped us focus on the story.

8) This especially goes out to the both of you. Describe your typical writing day. Do you set word goals and if so, what’s the goal? Do you use laptops or notebooks exclusively or both? And you both participate in the editing process?

Karen: We use laptops to write and Kindles to edit. Our writing days aren’t structured. We write when the spirit moves us.

Sandy: At this moment I'm going over the final draft of the sequel to Travelers in Time Aboard the California Zephyr. We both have laptops which give us some mobility around the house to settle where we feel. I don't have a word goal, but I do my best to put in an hour a day writing and editing. I'll dump the draft onto a Kindle and then read a chapter or two, mark it up and then edit the original copy on a notebook. Rinse and repeat. Some days I'll have more time than others, but I will strive to spend at least an hour.

7) How does the collaboration work? Do you trade off with each chapter, each paragraph? Is it an equal collaboration?

Karen: Usually I come up with the characters in the story and we work out the plot together. My husband’s forte is writing descriptions and making the stories richer in the long run.

Sandy: We work together, and things work out about 50-50. Karen normally starts with putting down a few chapters. We'll print that out and then sit down, usually over dinner and I'll read what she's done. Hearing it gives us a feel for how the story is going and what changes we need to make. At that point, I'll take what she's done and add things to it such as more dialog or whatever we've decided what needs to be done. At this point we'll have a few chapters that have both of our ideas in them. Then we start the process again until we're happy with the story. Often one of us will write a few chapters ahead of time that we know we'll need down the line, but we won't get to until later. Eventually the pieces will get put together to form a hopefully coherent story.

6) What do or what did you do in your day jobs before your foray into indie publishing?

Karen: I previously worked in a law library and he worked in the District Attorney’s office. He just retired and will have more time to write.

Sandy: I worked as a network administrator for the local District Attorney's office. I was fortunate to have gotten close with some of the homicide prosecutors and investigators who shared all sorts of interesting things. When they had computer issues, I'd help out and in return they'd let me in on some interesting case features.

5) Plotter, pantser or plantser? Both of you weigh in.

Karen: We are mainly plotters who work from an outline and know the end of the story sometimes before we even start writing. Sometimes, though, we write key scenes first, and then go back later to fill in the chapters before or after. I tend to do this more than my husband does.
Sandy: None of the above for me. When we're putting together a book, we're always talking and keeping the story fresh in our minds. As mentioned, we sit down every day and recap where we're at, always editing and reworking. I haven't found the need to storyboard but it would probably benefit my writing. Karen is highly organized, and I have to admit that I'd be in big trouble without her organizational skills.

4) In Honeymoon in Savannah, you did what John Berendt did in Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil and featured The Lady Chablis. Did you ever see The Lady Chablis perform before her death in 2016?

Karen: Thank you for reading The Lady Chablis scene in Honeymoon in Savannah. Yes, we did see her perform at the club in Savannah that is mentioned in the book and movie, Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil. My husband and I sat in the first row at her show and she kissed my husband on the cheek. We were very sad when we heard of her death.

Sandy: Yes, we were fortunate enough to have seen her perform. It was a show that we’ll never forget.

3) Since two of your series are set in New Orleans, you’re obviously attracted to it. What is it about the Crescent City that fuels your mysteries? Is it the Hoodoo/Voodoo culture that readily lends itself to atmosphere and mystery or is it the entire city itself?

Karen: As you say, we do like the voodoo culture in New Orleans and I love writing about its unique cemeteries, restaurants, French Quarter and Garden District locales, the cuisine, the architecture, the music—everything.

Sandy: We both love New Orleans dearly. In all our trips there, we've fallen in love with the food, the history, the music, the streetcar, the many cultures. There is a magic there that I've never felt in any other city in the world. We've walked through some of the cemeteries late on hot humid nights and felt the pull of the ages.

2) Do you see New Orleans noir as something ready to bust out in a big way like Scandi Noir?

Karen: Yes, I do see New Orleans as a noir setting and maybe someday, I’ll write about a hardboiled male detective investigating a murder there. He would be a fun character to create.

Sandy: I would certainly hope so. New Orleans is so perfect for noir fiction.

1) So, what’s next for the dynamic duo of Louise Hathaway?

Karen: We are editing a sequel to Travelers in Time. Since I love trains so much, I have an idea about writing a mystery about a murder on a train where passengers Detective Dauphin and sister try to figure out whodunit. Unlike Agatha Christie’s Murder on the Orient Express, it will feature a female detective instead of her famous Belgian male lead and will take place in California aboard Amtrak’s Coast Starlight train. Instead of a snowstorm, as in Agatha’s story, my passengers are marooned on the train when a fire threatens to burn a bridge up ahead. We are traveling on the Coast Starlight next month, so I’m sure it will inspire a story.

Sandy: We've got some more Nancy Keene ideas as well as some Hitchcockian tales we'd like to pursue. Hopefully these will see the light of day by the Fall. Watch this space.

If you’re interested in learning more about the eclectic canon of Louise Hathaway, then go to the links listed below.

Fighting Demons: A New Orleans Mystery
Honeymoon in Savannah: A Detective Santy Mystery
The Tustin Chronicles: A Detective Santy Mystery
The Ghost in the Plantation: A Nancy Keene Mystery
The Buried Treasure on Route 66: A Nancy Keene Mystery

Saturday, April 21, 2018

Author Interview: Mystery Writer C.A. Asbrey

Today I spotlighting a mystery writer, C.A. Asbrey.  


She has experience as a young police officer in Scotland who learned that talking people down from spiraling emotions was a powerful tool in keeping people safe, and more potent than violence. She also learned that listening to detail is vital too. Noting the small things helped to push cases along in gathering evidence. 


She has a new mystery that has just been released:


Here is an interview with this writer:

Did you ever consider writing under a pseudonym?
I kinda do. I write under my married name and feature on social media under my maiden name for social interactions. I also write under initials. I don’t hide my gender, but it’s not immediately obvious when you look at the book cover.
Do you want each book to stand alone, or are you trying to build a body of work with connections between each book?
‘The Innocents’ is most definitely part of a larger body of work. It’s the first of a trilogy, but if people like them there’ plenty of scope to keep them going. I would still continue with each book being a self-contained mystery with the larger universe of the characters providing an over-arching connection between the books. The third book is written and at editing stage, but there are plenty of trials I can still put the characters through yet.   
What is your writing Kryptonite
Emotional upset for sure. My last book took me a year to write as I was distracted by my husband being injured in an accident and my mother-in-law passing away from a long illness. I was very lucky to have a lovely mother-in-law. She is sorely missed.
What other authors are you friends with, and how do they help you become a better writer?
I’ve met many wonderful people on this journey and I’ve found them to be an incredibly generous and open community. I’d really encourage new writers to reach out and make contact. Not only will you find that they share resources, but you’ll probably make all kinds of new friends too. There are too many to mention but Kit Prate and Joanie Chevalier deserve a special mention. Both have been so supportive and inspiring to a brand new writer and have gone the extra mile in helping me cross over so many barriers. Kit introduced me to her publisher after reading my work, and helped me out of the slush pile. Joanie helped to point me towards the various groups which help a new writer with marketing and publicity. Not only that but she actually made up some advertising material and told me to ‘get my swag on.’ I was being far too Scottish—reticent and unwilling to look like I was bragging by saying my book was good. Both ladies have been incredible and I can’t thank them enough. Read their books and you’ll soon see how lucky I was to be assisted by them.
What was an early experience where you learned that language had power?
That would be in my work as a young police officer. I learned that talking people down from spiraling emotions is a powerful tool in keeping people safe, and more potent than violence. I also learned that listening to detail is vital too. Noting the small things helped to push cases along in gathering evidence. I also learned the complex and intricate ways people use language to put you down and grab power in a situation. Understanding that really helps you stay in control of a situation.
What’s your favorite under-appreciated novel?  
That would have to be ‘The Moonstone’ by Wilkie Collins. Not only is it considered the first proper detective novel in the English language, it also shows working class females as rounded characters instead of foils for male attention. It also is the first to introduce many of the elements we take for granted in mysteries such as red herrings, false suspects, the skilled investigator, and a final twist. Collins was actually vastly more popular than Dickens in his day, but is now largely forgotten in comparison.
As a writer, what would you choose as your mascot/avatar/spirit animal? 
Lol, maybe a giant sloth? Or one of those dogs or cats which go viral for bumping into glass doors or falling off things.
What kind of research do you do, and how long do you spend researching before beginning a book? 
Copious amounts. ‘The Innocents’ has taken years of research into the work of the early Pinkertons, especially the female agents and the kind of work they did, including their methodologies. I research everything, even the stationary which was in use and the correct codes for the telegraph stations mentioned in the books. The theatrical make up used as disguises in the book began to flourish right around the period the books are set in as lighting improved and people could see the flaws in the rudimentary stuff previously only lit by candles. The forensics are fascinating to dig into too. You name it I researched it.
How do you select the names of your characters?
As I write 19TH century characters I try to keep them in period and maintain a sense of place. I’ll research popular or unusual names as well as using names of people I know if they’re appropriate. I’ve also been known to add really unusual names to my note as I come across them. Some are too good not to use.
Who is the most famous person you have ever met?
That would be either the Pope of the Queen – on a protection duty. When the Pope visited Scotland I was the police officer at the bottom of the aircraft steps. We then moved with him into the city. As a fun aside, the glass-covered vehicle he used was nicknamed the Pope Mobile by the press. The crowds were all still there when we returned to the airport in the Pope mobile without him. We stood in full uniform waving flowers out the top to cheering crowds as we drove the full length of Prince’s Street in Edinburgh (the big main street in Scotland’s capital city). The crowd cheered us and waved flags as we passed. Only a Scottish crowd could hail a car full of police officers like that. Great fun.
What kind of research do you do, and how long do you spend researching before beginning a book? 
Copious amounts. ‘The Innocents’ has taken years of research into the work of the early Pinkertons, especially the female agents and the kind of work they did, including their methodologies. I research everything, even the stationary which was in use and the correct codes for the telegraph stations mentioned in the books. The theatrical make up, used as disguises in the book, began to flourish right around the period the books are set in. Lighting had improved and people could see the flaws in the rudimentary stuff previously only lit by candles. The forensics are fascinating to dig into too. You name it I researched it.
What was your hardest scene to write?
The interrogation scene. I had to inject a sense of menace into it to make it work. I know it’s not usual to make your hero do bad things, but he’s a professional criminal and he has to find out who this mysterious woman is and how much danger the heroine poses to him.
How long have you been writing?
I’ve been playing with the characters for about ten years, but work and life got in the way. I started writing seriously about two years ago and spent about a year being turned down by everyone. I acted on every bit of feedback and continually got my work reviewed and improved until it was polished enough to be accepted.
What inspires you?
Often fact is stranger than fiction, so I’ll start with real crime or criminals. I‘ll then change it to ensure that even people familiar with that particular crime can’t guess whodunit. The stories are inspired by real crimes and people but they are not a memoir. They are stories where everything is historically possible. It either happened or could have happened.   
How did you come to write The Innocents?
My grasp on the methodologies used by law enforcement, when applied the law in day to day enquiries in the days before technology was available, as well as historic weaknesses and blind spots in the both the legal and court systems, make for an authentic backdrop to the characters.    
I was always a voracious reader, my mother teaching me with flashcards at the age of two, and graduating to the adult section of the library about the age of ten. I easily finished three books a week for years and was lost without one. Mysteries were a real love and I consumed the works of writers old and new constantly. The one thing I always wanted to do was to write but never had the confidence or time to do more than dream about it.
As a child I loved to run lines with my actor father when he rehearsed, and peeked in on the parties full of creative people singing, dancing, telling jokes, performing and discussing the issues of the day. Childhood taught me that creativity was something you do, not something you passively watch. That carried over to a love of singing, professionally and with choirs, as well as playing some dodgy fiddle music, alongside far better musicians who either made me sound okay or drowned me out entirely. Either way I managed to carry it off for a bit and even bagged a musician husband.  
I first became interested in the female pioneers in law enforcement when I joined the police in Scotland. History has always held a draw and the colorful stories of the older officers piqued my interest, making her look even further back.
The very first women in law enforcement had been in France, working for the Sûreté in the early 19th century. They were, however, no more than a network of spies and prostitutes, the most infamous being the notorious ‘Violette’. Now there’s another story which needs to be told!
The first truly professional women in law enforcement worked for the Pinkerton Agency, and they were trained by the first female agent Kate Warne, an ex-actress and an expert in working undercover. Kate Warne was an expert at disguise, adopting roles, and accents. She was said to be daring and able to pass her characters off, even in close quarters. In the only known photograph of her she is dressed as a man. This was a skill set my childhood had prepared her to understand.  
These women were fully-fledged agents, with their skills being held in high regard by Alan Pinkerton who once said, “In my service you will serve your country better than on the field. I have several female operatives. If you agree to come aboard you will go in training with the head of my female detectives, Kate Warne. She has never let me down.”
I started to wonder why one of the female agents couldn’t be a Scottish Immigrant. After all, Alan Pinkerton was one. He came from Glasgow. Being a Scot in another land is something I know well. They do say you should write what you know.    
My work has taken me all over the world, but working in the USA and visiting the places where these women worked deepened my  passion for finding out more about how they lived. I also researched the tools and equipment available to them at the time. Connections to police and Home Office experts allowed me to research the birth of forensics with people who knew their subject intimately.   
The topic for ‘The Innocents Mystery Series’ simmered in the background for years, and all the time I was researching more and more deeply into the period. I love the rapid pace of innovation and invention in the 19th century. Nothing pleases me more than finding spy gadgets available at the time which were invented far earlier than most people would think possible.

Work and life got in the way of the books being anything more than an idea until I was suddenly grounded by a serious accident. The enforced leisure time of recuperation focused my mind and the old dream of writing resurfaced. It started as a short story which took on a life of its own when it grew and grew—then grew some more.

Eventually, ‘The Innocents Mysteries’ evolved and I found the perfect home for it at Prairie Rose. This is my first foray into fiction. I have produced magazine and newspaper articles based on consumer law and written guides for the Consumer Direct Website. I was Media Trained by The Rank Organization, and acted as a consultant to the BBC's One Show and Watchdog. I have also been interviewed on BBC radio answering questions on consumer law to the public.

I run a blog which explores all things strange, mysterious, and unexpected about the 19th century. It was a huge compliment to be told that another writer finds it a great resource. The link can be found below.
I live with my husband and two daft cats in Northamptonshire, England—for now. Another move is on the cards in 2108 to the beautiful city of York.

Blog which includes things obscure and strange in the Victorian period     http://caasbrey.com/
Facebook group for The Innocents Mystery Series 
 https://www.facebook.com/groups/937572179738970/?ref=br_rs