• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

J.F.Penn

Thrillers, Dark Fantasy, Crime, Horror

  • Home
  • Shop
  • Books
    • Reading Order
    • Death Valley, A Thriller
    • Books by Location
    • Bundles and Book Stacks
    • ARKANE Thrillers
    • Crime Thrillers
    • Mapwalker Fantasy Adventure
    • Other Books and Short Stories
    • Pilgrimage
    • Audiobooks
    • Amazon Books
  • Free book!
  • Blog
  • Podcast
  • About
  • Now
  • Contact

Interviews with Thriller Authors

An Interview On Corpse Art, Genetic Science And Body Modification

November 26, 2013 By J.F. Penn

My latest crime novel, Desecration, is definitely darker than my previous books, and it tackles themes of corpse art, body modification and genetic science.

corpse art and body modificationI was interviewed about some of my thoughts around these areas by author Dan Holloway, who is himself a connoisseur of the dark side.

Here's an excerpt:

Dan Holloway: There’s a wonderful scene in Hannibal where Thomas Harris describes Dr Lecter standing amongst the exhibits of a collection called Atrocious Torture Instruments. The real horror, he says, is to be found not in the exhibits but in the gawping fascination on the faces of the crowds. I wonder if something similar could be said about the Hunterian Museum.

J.F.Penn: When I first visited the Hunterian Museum at the Royal College of Surgeons, I felt physically sick as I studied the medical specimens in their jars, and I try to capture that revulsion in Desecration. The display of historical medical instruments could certainly be categorized alongside torture, used as they were before anesthetic and before antibiotics. It’s true that visitors stare into the cases with fascination, but I think it is more about looking within ourselves, than some kind of schadenfreude at someone else’s pain, as the Lecter example.

I felt the same way at the Von Hagens’ Bodies exhibition, where corpses are plastinated, partially dissected and posed in various tableaus to illustrate aspects of life. The descriptions of the corpse art within Rowan Day-Conti’s studio in Desecration are straight out of that exhibition. As I looked at the figures, examining the muscles and veins, the displayed organs, it was both obscene and fascinating. The most disturbing thing was a room full of foetuses, of all ages right up to full-term still-born with its eyes open. Those desecrationimages haunt me and that definitely comes through in the book.

You can read the rest here at Dan's blog: Desecration: Twisting bodies out of shape.

You can read more or purchase Desecration here.

Image: Flickr Creative Commons Phossil

Filed Under: Interviews with Thriller Authors Tagged With: body modification, corpse art, death, desecration

Rebecca Cantrell On Writing In Berlin, The Hannah Vogel Mysteries And Blood Gospel

October 7, 2013 By J.F. Penn

Rebecca Cantrell on writing in BerlinI just spent the weekend in fantastic, artistic Berlin and while I was there, I met up with bestselling and award-winning author, Rebecca Cantrell.

Rebecca writes the Hannah Vogel mysteries, set in 1930s Berlin, and has recently started The Order of the Sanguines series with uber-thriller-author James Rollins. I loved Blood Gospel, so I was thrilled to talk to Becky about her books.

You can watch the video interview below, or here on YouTube.

In this on-location video in front of the Berliner Dome, we discuss:

  • Why Rebecca moved from Hawaii to Berlin, and how the city influences her writing.
  • What drew Rebecca to the history of Nazi Germany, and why she uses the perspective of crime reporter Hannah Vogel to explore the issues around the establishment of the regime. How the issue of gay rights in Germany became a focus based on a friendship she had back in the 1980s when she lived in Berlin when the Wall was still up. When Rebecca visited Dachau, she realized that her friend would have ended up in the camps because of his sexuality.
  • Rebecca's research process through original printed material and also films made in Berlin in the 1930s. She also managed to get a whole load of 1930s newspapers on eBay.
  • On writing Blood Gospel with James Rollins. How they met at a writer's conference years ago and stayed in touch, when the opportunity for the book came up, Rebecca was intrigued by the idea. The premise is that there is a group within the Catholic Church, the strigoi, who live on sanctified wine, when it is turned into blood through transubstantiation. So yes, it's a vampire series, but so much more than that! Here's my 5-star review on Goodreads. The next in the series is Innocent Blood, coming Dec 2013.
  • The World Beneath is coming soon, featuring a software millionaire who is stricken by agoraphobia and descends into the tunnels beneath Grand Central Station, NYC to solve crimes without ever going outside. Researching the tunnels was a lot of fun!
  • The themes that keep coming up for Rebecca include justice, as well as the stories of non-famous people behind the famous events.
  • How Rebecca spends her writing hours. She's a veteran cafe writer. She's currently reading Doctor Sleep by Stephen King at the moment, and also reads a lot of non-fiction historical books for research.

Cantrell BooksYou can find Rebecca at her site RebeccaCantrell.com and on twitter @rebeccacantrell.

Her books are available on Amazon and all online bookstores. If you like some mystery, thriller and a touch of history, you'll love the books!

 

 

Filed Under: Interviews with Thriller Authors Tagged With: berlin, history, travel

Kick-Ass Thrillers: Zoe Sharp Talks About Charlie Fox And The Blood Whisperer

September 4, 2013 By J.F. Penn

kick ass thrillers zoe sharp charlie foxI love to read books with strong female characters, and if you like my Morgan Sierra books, you will enjoy the Charlie Fox series by Zoe Sharp.

I met Zoe at Bristol Crimefest earlier this year and in this interview, we discuss how she started writing, how her ideas develop and the themes that resonate in her books.

Watch the video below or here on YouTube. You can also watch the rest of the KillerThriller TV episodes here. The show notes are below.

zoe sharp Zoe Sharp is author of the bestselling and award nominated thriller series featuring Charlie Fox, ex Special Forces turned bodyguard, compared by many to Lee Child's Jack Reacher.

In the interview, we discuss:

  • How Zoe got started in writing after she received death threats for her photo-journalism. It also gave her a keen interest in learning self-defense which has become a key aspect of the Charlie Fox books, and she continues to learn new physical skills.
  • How much of Zoe Sharp is in Charlie Fox? The motorbike, the travel, the self-defence … Zoe explains some of the similarities and differences
  • On violence in crime/thrillers with a female protagonist, and how the cumulative effort of violence affects Charlie’s life
  • Writing in first person and the dark humor that comes through in Charlie’s voice
  • The Blood Whisperer is a new stand-alone crime thriller, with a new character, Kelly Jacks, ex-CSI based in London now working as a crime-scene cleaner after a conviction for a murder she has no memory of.
  • Die Easy, the 10th Charlie Fox is set in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina and is Zoe’s homage to Die Hard. As long as Charlie keeps talking, Zoe will continue to tell her story.
  • Blood WhispererThe themes that keep coming back for Zoe are the search for respect and Charlie’s search for redemption
  • Zoe does a lot of writing in pencil on scraps of paper. She does plot the structure but then writes the characters and reactions as they happen in a discovery method.

You can find Zoe’s books on Amazon and other online bookstores, as well as on her website ZoeSharp.com and on twitter @authorzoesharp

 

Zoe Sharp Interview Transcription

charlie fox booksJoanna: Hi, everyone, I’m thriller author J.F. Penn, and today on Killer Thriller TV, I’m interviewing Zoe Sharp, author of the best-selling and award-nominated thrillers featuring Charlie Fox, ex-Special Forces turned bodyguard, compared by many to Lee Childs’ Jack Reacher, which is brilliant, and I love Zoe’s books, so very excited to have you on the show, Zoe!

Zoe: I’m excited to be here!

Joanna: Fantastic.

Well, first up, tell us a bit more about you and your writing background.

Zoe: One of the first questions I ever got asked when I went onto a panel in the States was what made you start writing crime books, and everybody had their usual, “I always wanted to write and I’ve been a very interested reader for years,” and I said, “Well, when I started getting the death threat letters, that was what set me off writing crime books,” and everybody on the panel kind of turned and looked and went “What?” But I worked as a photojournalist for many years, and when I was doing a regular column for one of the magazines I worked for, I actually got death threat letters, and that’s what originally sparked off with the idea for the first of the Charlie Fox books. And it also gave me a very keen interest in learning a lot of self-defense.

Joanna: Wow, I’ve got to ask, what did you get that for? Did you take some Enron pictures or something?

Zoe: No, that would have been much more understandable. It was a weird thing, it was a long story and I won’t go into it, but it was a really weird thing, and I think it was a guy who had just taken against me for some reason. I’d never met him before, the police never tracked down who exactly was sending them; they never caught him, but eventually they just stopped. So that was great. But they were, you know, cut out of newspaper like a ransom note, and telling me my days were numbered.

Joanna: Wow, so you went and learnt, because of course,

Charlie is really good with self-defense and things. So how much did you really get into all that, how much of that is your learning?

Zoe: Yeah, I had a guy who was a karate black belt instructor, and he was brilliant. He also did a lot of kyusho jitsu, which is pressure points, and a lot of knife work. So, between that, and I’ve since learnt from a friend of mine, she’s another author, she hasn’t published her first book yet, K.D. Kinchin, she studies ninjitsu, so whenever we get together, “Ooh,” she says, “I’ve got this great move you need to learn!” So I’ve learnt a lot of it as I’ve gone along. And I’ve cherry-picked from different disciplines that kind of suit me, and you have to know your limitation, and I try and pick stuff that I know will work for me. And I’ve actually done demonstrations of this at some of the crime-writing events, which is great fun. I do a thing called “You can’t run in high heels,” and that always goes down very well.

Joanna: I want to come on one! I want to come on one of your workshops: that would be so fun!

Zoe: You’re on.

Joanna: So, you also ride a bike, a motorbike, right?

Zoe: Yes! Yes.

Joanna: From some pictures that I’ve seen.

Zoe: Yes, I’ve had a bike license for too many years that I really don’t want to count, and I’m just looking longingly at my next bike at the moment, so yes, before the summer gets too far over.

Joanna: And, the travel, I mean, you’ve just come back from Jordan, you’ve traveled a lot.

So, there’s the bikes, there’s the travel, there’s the kind of kick-ass stuff: how much of Charlie is you?

Zoe: I used to deny it completely, you know: she’s just a fictional character, and now I just say, “Oh, it’s all entirely autobiographical.” It’s a lot easier!

Joanna: Yeah, but I mean, we all bring aspects of ourselves, to our characters, I mean like for me, my Morgan Sierra is like a kind of alter ego: I’d love to experience life in that way. But you are a bit more of a daredevil, I think.

Zoe: Well, when I was still doing my day job working as a photojournalist, I specialized a lot in the motoring field, so I used to say that I spent my days hanging out of moving cars, scraping my elbows on the road, taking photographs of other moving cars, which is not the usual kind of picture of a photographer. But, I just like to go and experience a lot of this stuff, because I think it gives you a better standpoint to write about it. Having said that, when I had Charlie shot in one of the books, I didn’t go that far. I went and talked to a guy who’d been shot instead: that was much easier.

Joanna: Yeah, and of course she’s been through some nasty experiences in the military and stuff that you wouldn’t wish on anyone.

Zoe: No. Well, when I first started the series, there was a military base in the UK called Deepcut that was having a lot of scandal to do with hazing of trainees, and that sort of all went into the back story for the character in that first book.

Joanna: I think, you know, thriller authors, crime writers in particular, and you’re kind of in the middle I think, there’s crime and thriller, we kind of get done for violence against women.

What’s your feelings about portraying violence as a female writer writing a female protagonist?

Zoe: Well, it’s odd, because it’s not as acceptable, I think, coming from a woman. A lot of the time, you find that women are either portrayed as they’re the victims, or if they are a bit more capable of taking care of themselves, they’re either psychopaths or ice-cold assassins. And I wanted somebody who had the capability to react with really great violence, when the situation dictated, but was nevertheless not comfortable with that aspect of her own personality. And, you know, the guys are all expected to shoot the baddies and go and have a beer afterwards, and for women, the female characters, I thought that that just wasn’t quite as credible. So I wanted to show that yes, she can, and does kill people when she has to, but it all leaves a mark, an those marks are having a cumulative effect on the character, I think.

Joanna: And there’s a scene in the first book, where, in the nightclub, there’s a really big guy, and there’s no way any woman is going to beat this massive trunk, and she deflects it with humor, and I think that’s one of the hallmarks of your books, there’s this kind of dry humor throughout.

So is that your humor?

Zoe: Oh, anybody who reads my, my stuff on Twitter or Facebook knows I have a very lowbrow sense of humor normally. But yes, and a lot of the time you do get that kind of quite dark humor from people who are dealing with that kind of situation all the time. And besides which, I think the point Charlie makes in the book is that she’s into self-defense, and anything that allows you to get out of a dangerous situation, be it humor, be it whatever, is effective self-defense.

Joanna: Absolutely. And I think possibly the equating you with the character is also because you write in first person.

Zoe: Yes.

Joanna: So that makes it – do you get this a lot? It’s like when you write your first person, it feels like it is the author?

Zoe: Yes, I, I think so, and it is very interesting, because I’ve just written a new, stand-alone mystery thriller called “The Blood Whisperer,” and I’ve done that in third person, and, but quite close third person, so I swap almost into the thoughts of various different characters throughout the book, and that was a very interesting exercise, having done ten books now in the Charlie Fox series, all in first person. To, to suddenly have that wider stage to play on was very interesting.

Joanna:

Tell us a bit more about “The Blood Whisperer,” while we’re here, waving it – I think you’ve got a copy there!

Zoe: I have, yes, my trade paperback copies arrived this week: lovely! I still wanted to keep with a very strong female protagonist, because I thought, well, if people do like the Charlie Fox books, then that’s one of the main threads of the books, is the fact that it’s a strong female character. So I ended up with another strong female character, who’s called Kelly Jacks. She’s an ex-CSI, based in London, who is now working as a crime scene cleaner, because six years ago, she woke up with a knife in her hands next to the body of a man, and she was convicted for killing him, but she has no memory of it. So, the book starts when she goes to clean up another crime scene, and gradually she starts to think that maybe this nightmare is starting all over again. And the title came from the fact that she was so good at pulling almost invisible evidence from crime scenes, when she was working as a CSI, that they called her the Blood Whisperer, because she seemed to be able to tease evidence out of those scenes. So, it was great fun to write, I really enjoyed it.

Joanna: And that’s out now?

Zoe: It is just hot off the press, yes.

Joanna: Exciting! So people can go and get that. And you’ve got another, your latest Charlie Fox, I believe, is out as well: “Die Easy,” is that right?

Zoe: “Die Easy” has been out since earlier on in the year.

Joanna: Oh, sorry.

Zoe: That’s alright. But I’ve just finished writing, in the last few days, a novella, a Charlie Fox novella, which kind of bridges the gap between “Die Easy,” which is Book Ten in the series, and what will be the next installment. Basically, I’m getting bullied by fans who keep saying, “When’s the next book out?” so I thought, right, I will fill in a little bit of what’s happening for Charlie between the last book and the next one. But “Die Easy” I set in New Orleans, after Hurricane Katrina. I went there a couple of years ago, and was fascinated by the way that great swathes of the place are still in ruins. And I wanted to really kind of show that contrast.

Joanna: That’s fantastic. And what are the themes? I mean, obviously there’s strong women in your books, but

what are the themes that keep coming back into the stories that you write?

Zoe: I try and work around sort of different themes, but a lot of them are search, people’s search for respect, and latterly, I suppose, Charlie’s search for redemption, for things: she feels she’s heading down a path which, if she’s not very careful, could take her to a place that will probably ruin her. So she’s looking for a way to justify her own abilities.

Joanna: And when you’re thinking of the next book, what is the thing that sparks the idea? Is it, “I want to write a book in New Orleans, so I’ll go and do the trip and then I’ll come up with a plot”? I mean, I’m one of those people; I’m like, “Let’s go to Budapest and then write a book”! I know you’ve just been to Jordan as well.

Or do you come up with the story and then fit it to a place?

Zoe: Well, a little bit of both. It very much depends on the location and the idea for the book. As I said, I knew I wanted to set something in New Orleans; it was such a fascinating place. I’ve also, for a lot of years, wanted to do a sort of my take on one of my all-time favorite movies, which was Die Hard. So, of course, what could I call the book but “Die Easy,” because it’s Die Hard set in The Big Easy. And I wanted to put Charlie in a situation, she ends up in a hostage situation, where she is on the outside, trying to work out how to rescue a lot of people, and also, she is unarmed, so that was her kind of bare feet handicap if you like, that she has to cope without her usual abilities with firearms.

Joanna: Oh, wow!

Zoe: So I like to keep testing her.

Joanna: You do: you really do.

Do you have an end in mind, for Charlie, you know, at ten, the series starts, do you go, “Right, this is going to go forever”?

Zoe: As long as she keeps talking to me – which sounds very strange, I know: the voices in my head and all that. But as long as she keeps talking to me, and has a story to tell, then I will keep telling it. She still has a lot of places to go, and I’ve got most of the plot worked out, I suppose, for the next book, and it’s still another place that interests me that takes her somewhere. I think because I try and make the actual plots of the books more or less stand alone and be self-contained, Charlie’s own personal journey is on-going throughout the series. So she has developed and changed, and evolved, I suppose, as she’s gone on, and that’s what keeps a lot of it interesting for me, is that sort of personal angle to the books, for the character.

Joanna: And you mentioned the voices there in a joking way, but

what is your writing process like? Your writing routine, I guess.

Zoe: Well, I tend to do an awful lot of my writing in pencil on scrap bits of paper, and I can do that more or less anywhere. I’ve written bits of books on planes, in doctors’ waiting rooms, in the car on the motorway – passenger seat, I have to say, I haven’t quite gone that far! But I do find, if I make notes to myself for the next scene that I’m thinking about, then by the time I come to actually type that up, it’s already got a skeleton; it’s already got a framework, and I find I can work much faster that way. But I do like to outline, I must admit: I’m not a very good seat-of-the-pants writer. I tend to go off in lots of hare-brained directions if I don’t have a fairly good idea of where I’m going. But I tend to plot kind of the structure, and then leave the reactions of the characters a lot more free-form, because I want them to react in a way that feels believable for that character at that time, and therefore I don’t plan that to the nth degree. And sometimes people surprise you: they turn out to react in a completely different way to the way you were expecting! Or they have a sense of humor you didn’t know they'd got until you start writing them–that discovery is always fun.

Joanna: And what about your actual physical place, because we can see all the books behind you.

Do you have a special place, or do you go somewhere?

Zoe: My desk, normally. My morning commute is about ten feet, into the office! I tend to sit, just sit at my desk with one of these ergonomic keyboards, which is very nice for my wrists and everything, and sit and scribble. Listening to music, normally: all sorts of different music. I really do like to have, that going in the background when I’m writing. It creates an instant atmosphere in my head.

Joanna: And you, you live in the Lake District, is that right?

Zoe: I do, yes.

Joanna: So do you go out for walks and hills in between writing?

Zoe: Sometimes. I mean, doing something that’s physical, as opposed to, I suppose, sitting and sedentary and cerebral, gives you so much time for mulling over ideas, and problem-solving and things like that, so I’ll go out and mow the lawn, or weed the drive, or wash the car, do something like that, and that gives me problem-solving time, even, in my subconscious: I almost don’t know I’m doing it.

Joanna: And what do you like to read for pleasure?

Or what are you reading at the moment – I know it’s always a hard question!

Zoe: At the moment, I’m reading some great books, because I’m moderating a panel at Bouchercon later this month, so I’m reading my panelists’ books, which is great, because they’re a really nice, wide selection. I'm also moderating a panel at Iceland Noir in November, so I’ve got a couple of new to me Icelandic authors to read for that. So I’ve always got stuff either for panels I’m doing, or a lot of people will say, “Would you have a read of this book?” and I desperately try and fit them in, but my TBR pile – it should be an MBR pile, really, because it’s a Must Be Read rather than a To Be Read. But for pleasure, I’ll read all sorts of stuff. I read a lot of crime and thrillers, I also read sci fi, I’ll read more or less anything. I love books that are personal journeys. Not quite biographies, but memoirs and travel, travelogues and all sorts of stuff. If it’s well-written, I’ll read it.

Joanna: Fantastic books, you know, I’m a real fan.

Zoe: Thank you very much.

Joanna: Really love Charlie and the series, and I’m going to try your new stuff. So, let everybody know where they can find you and your books online.

Zoe: They can go to my website, which is www.zoesharp.com, there are the Bookshelf pages on there, which have all the links to everywhere the books are available in all the different formats, so large print, audio, e-book and the printed versions. I’m also on Twitter, @authorzoesharp and I’m on Facebook as well, as facebook.com/ZoeSharpAuthor, and, as I think we’ve already mentioned, I have a very lowbrow sense of humor, so don’t go and look at my Facebook pages if you’re easily offended!

Joanna: It’s a lot of fun, just like the books!

Zoe: Absolutely.

Joanna: Alright, so thanks so much, Zoe, that was brilliant.

Zoe: Thank you.

 

Filed Under: Interviews with Thriller Authors Tagged With: charlie fox, thriller author, zoe sharp

Thriller Author Michael Wallace On The Righteous Series

July 12, 2013 By J.F. Penn

Sometimes you find a series that you can't put down, and for me, The Righteous books by Michael Wallace fall into this category!

Thriller author Michael WallaceI love books that weave thriller stories into a fascinating religious background, and Wallace's polygamist cult of Blister Creek is a brilliant setting for the violent adventures of Jacob and Eliza Christianson.

In this interview I talk to Michael about the series.

You can watch below, or here on YouTube.

In the interview, we discuss:

  • How Michael got started writing, and how his Mum put an early dinosaur book on the shelf at the local library. An early inspiration to be a writer! He's had unusual ‘day jobs', worked as a programmer for simulators on nuclear submarines as well as owning an inn in Vermont.
  • The Righteous series is set in a polygamist cult in the deserts of southern Utah. Michael grew up in a small town in Utah, raised in a mainstream Mormon family, so he has a lot of background in that history. It's roughly based on some groups that do exist, but is a fictionalized world. There are doubters in the community, as well as many sympathetic characters, plus some brilliant bad guys!
  • Michael talks about his own feelings about spirituality and how they are mirrored a little in Jacob's doubts. Personally, I find the books respectful of people with faith, but also raises questions about belief, which makes the books even more interesting to read.
  • The family situations are very complicated in the books, weaving two major families with many inter-relations. The main protagonists are Jacob and Eliza, siblings, which is unusual in thrillers. Michael comes from a very large extended family so that is his own background, but the relationships of a small community also bring complications, which adds conflict to the books. The two characters also span the worlds of the male side and the female side of the patriarchal system, with a rising feminism in the books.
  • Thriller readers won't be disappointed in the conflicts between the families, which spills over into a lot of violence, murder and mayhem! This isn't just happy Mormon families in the desert 🙂 Michael talks about Miriam, who infiltrated the community as an FBI agent, but soon became enmeshed into Blister Creek and becomes a pivotal character, always ready to use a gun.
  • The apocalypse and a hint of what's in store for the next book, coming in 2014.
  • destorying angelMichael talks about his other books – he has techno-thrillers, historical novels and he also mentions The Devil's Deep series, which involves crimes related to Locked In Syndrome. [Fascinating!]

You can find all Michael's books on Amazon and other online bookstores – check out The Righteous here.

You can find more about Michael at his website: MichaelWallaceAuthor.com. You can also get a free novella if you sign up for Michael's list to try out.

Full Transcription of Michael Wallace Interview

Joanna: Hi, everyone, I’m thriller author J.F. Penn, and today I’m really excited, because I’m here with Michael Wallace, who is a best-selling thriller author. Welcome, Michael.

Michael: Thank you, Joanna, it’s nice to be on your program.

Joanna: Oh, no, it’s fantastic. And I am obviously obsessed with your Righteous series, as religion is one of those areas that I’m really into.

But before we get into that, tell us a bit about you and how you got into writing.

righteousMichael: Well, I’ve really thought of myself as a writer pretty much all of my life. I don’t think I started consciously thinking about what it would take to get published, and to tell stories professionally, to do it as a career, until I was about 17 or 18, but even younger, I would write up stories. My mother worked as a volunteer librarian in the small town where I lived as a boy, and I remember I’d made a book filled with pictures of dinosaurs, and I was kind of nervous, I was just learning how to read and write, so I was nervous about spelling all the names of the dinosaurs right, but she stapled the copies of the pictures together and put it up on the shelf every time that I would come over, so I could go look at my book. And then I remember playing Dungeons and Dragons a lot, about the time I was 10 or 12 years old, maybe, and I was always the Dungeon Master, so the telling the story part was the interesting part for me, the rolling of the dice, whatever: I would just kind of make up the rules to whatever fit my storyline. But none of my friends seemed to mind. So I think I was always a storyteller.

Joanna: And then,

did you have like a normal day job before you got into writing thrillers?

Michael: I don’t know if you’d call it normal, but I’ve definitely had a lot of different jobs. I started submitting, really before I finished high school, but of course, that was 20 plus years ago, so it took really forever. I worked a variety of different jobs; in additional to the usual college things, I worked as a software engineer, programming simulators for nuclear submarines, and then later, about 10 years ago, I bought an inn here in Vermont, I still own the inn, although I don’t live on site, I have an innkeeper, as the writing and everything just keeps me plenty busy. So I definitely had a way to support myself along the way, some kind of unorthodox ways, and, you know, I did the typical struggles of the rejections, and getting agents but then having the books fail to sell, etc., etc., before I finally had some success about two and a half years ago.

Joanna: Well the books are fantastic, and I know you have techno-thrillers as well, which fits with your submarine experience. But let’s talk about the Righteous series, because that’s the one –I’ve read some of your other books, but I really love these ones.

So maybe you could just give a broad overview for people who might not be familiar with the series.

Michael: The Righteous is a series of thrillers that’s set in a polygamous cult in the deserts of Southern Utah. I think when I came up with this idea, I was kind of pitching around for something that was a little bit different, and I had grown up in a small town in Utah from a Mormon family. I’m not Mormon myself anymore, but I was raised in that environment, and my family is still Mormon. They’re mainstream Mormon, but I do have polygamous ancestors, and I’ve known some polygamists, and had done really a lot of reading: it was an area that was settled by polygamists, so, I had a lot of background. So, whether people like the books or some people get angry at them for one reason or another, it’s definitely bringing some reality to the situation.

So I immediately started getting more interest for those than I had anything else, and had really found an agent, a few different agents, who were interested, and the first book was shopped out, had some near misses, but I got a lot of comments about it like, “I really couldn’t stop reading this, but who is the audience for a series of religious thrillers,” and, “Are they religious books, are they anti-religious books?” Of course I tend to think that if you write something that personally interests you, and you write it with a lot of love and passion and not cynically, you write it treating those people like real characters, there are people who really like to immerse themselves in a very, very different world. And really this series is set right in the heart of Western culture in the middle of the United States, and yet it’s really a foreign, alien society that’s been living out there on their own for better than 120 years now, kind of doing their own thing. And I think people find that really intriguing.

Joanna: And so, there really are groups like that existing these days?

Michael: There are, yes. It’s roughly based on the FLDS group, which is the group that was in the news quite a bit, especially a couple of years ago, for marrying under-age girls. I didn’t want to follow an exact group, so it’s kind of a fictionalized group of people, and I’m writing inside, so I need some people to be sympathetic, so I probably have more doubters in the community than a typical community would have, and there are some characters that are definitely sympathetic, others who are pretty much pure evil, and the conflict between believers and unbelievers, and the people who are trying to use their belief to gain power and control over other people, and those who are more sincere. But yeah, it’s estimated that there are, depending on who you talk to, maybe 50,000 polygamists living in the deserts south-west, probably half of them are associated with some church or religion, and a lot of the others are kind of independent, on their own. But quite a few, and it’s a growing population.

Joanna: It’s so fascinating to me. And I mean, I write ARKANE thrillers, and I have a similar kind of walking a line on religion: you mentioned that you’re no longer a Mormon, and I’m no longer a Christian, and yet we both write about religious things. Now, how do you walk that line, and yet, like you say, you have characters who express doubts, but Jacob, your protagonist, who becomes a leader, has doubts.

Do you put your own feelings into Jacob, or how does that come about?

Michael: Yes, actually, I think in the first book, Jacob is really kind of a proxy for my own feelings and doubts. I think I was working through a lot of the thoughts that I had had. So he’s been sent off as a medical student, to go to college and then come back and service the town’s doctor, but while he’s away-he’s always been a little bit of a doubter–while he’s been away, immersed in the real world, then he has a really hard time coming back. And when he comes back in, they bring him back in to help solve a murder in his community, to figure out exactly what’s happened; they think it was maybe outsiders, maybe someone inside the community, but they really don’t want to bring in law enforcement, because they’re a closed community.

And at the same time, his favorite younger sister, who’s only 17, is about to be married off to one of a couple of different older guys, and he feels really protective of her, but quickly finds himself back involved in the inter-politics of the community. But as he’s working through all of these doubts, especially in the first book, a lot of that was kind of representative of things that went through my mind. Over time, as the series goes on, and he really becomes more and more of an integral part of the community, in Book Two especially, he has tried to pull himself out, and his wife, and really, Eliza, as well, his sister, get out of the community-it’s really not so easy. He’s so closely connected to all of these people and all of the things going on in the community, brothers, sisters, his father, who becomes the main leader of the community.

Joanna: I do find the extended family situation in these communities is so complicated, and of course you’ve got these two feuding families going on: it’s almost like a saga from generations. But, one of the sort of interesting relationships, your main characters in the end are Jacob and Eliza, who actually are brother and sister. Which I think is unusual in thrillers, because there’s normally more of a sexual tension between protagonists.

So how did these characters emerge, and why did you make the main characters siblings?

Michael: Well, as I was going through some initial plotting, I think I wrote about three or four chapters of an abortive first start of the first book, where this wasn’t really the case, but I kept thinking about, for one thing, I come from a really large, extended family myself. We used to go to a family reunion under my great-grandfather, and there were second cousins that I would see once a year and people, literally cousins and second cousins I didn’t really know, because there were just so many of them. And thinking about how different people would be related, especially in a small community, where people are related sometimes in multiple different ways to each other, cousins here, and then second cousins over there. And, I thought, the more closely related that I can have any two characters, if I can have them cousins, or they have some past history together, it just led to some really interesting dynamics.

The first few books of the, of the series kind of worked out accidentally: I didn’t necessarily know what it was all about. It took me a little while to figure everything out. So, some of that was lucky, and some of it was accidental, but, I found it was really interesting and useful to me as a writer to have one character who was involved in the male power structure and one who was involved with the females. I didn’t want to write a series where all the women were just brainwashed fools or completely oppressed; that just seemed like it would be too depressing and uninteresting. It’s really useful to have Eliza, who can work and move among the women, many of whom have very complex motives and backgrounds themselves, and I think it’s really interesting to me to explore almost, within this very patriarchal system, there’s this kind of emerging and long-running feminist – if you will – sort of movement within the community. With women who both feel like they need to obey and honor men in their priesthood, but at the same time, have some resentment, because they’re the ones who run this community; there are a lot more women than there are men. Every man has several different wives, and they have their own power structures and struggles within them. So it’s really useful to have Eliza in there, and in some ways she’s kind of a mirror of Jacob, but not entirely.

Joanna: I love that you’ve done that, too, because it could so easily have turned into a sort of women as the downtrodden story. But most of the women characters, including Jacob’s wife who, who has been married previously to the bad guys and stuff, you manage to keep all these people, relationships going.

And I wondered, because many of them have been intermarried, do you have a series bible that you have to keep updating with all these relationships?

Michael: I probably should. By the time that I realized I needed one, it was really, really complex. So one thing that I do need to keep mentioning over and over in every book, because otherwise people are going to forget, is that in a very strange way, Jacob and his wife are kind of siblings. Fernie and Eliza are siblings, so Fernie and Eliza share the same mother, who was divorced and then remarried, and Jacob and Eliza share the same father, but Jacob and Fernie are not blood related in any sort of a way, even though they have this relationship, so it’s really kind of weird. And every time, it kind of needs to be explained, because otherwise Eliza talks about her sister and Jacob talks about her sister, and readers say, “Wait a minute, aren’t they brother and sister?” Yeah, so, so many people have half-siblings and things.

Joanna: Which makes it like a crucible, because just my family, at Christmas, there’s only five siblings and it’s crazy, and violent, so I can sort of see how your, your stories go off. And we should mention, because of course there’s all this family stuff going on, and there’s the religion side, but you blow a lot of stuff up, as well: these are not just happy family books, set out in the nice desert, are they?

Tell us about some of the more violent stuff that thriller readers love to read.

Michael: In the first book, and this comes across later, the conflict is really between two families within this community: the Christiansons, to which Jacob and Eliza belong, and their really fairly patriarchal, but sometimes sympathetic father, and then the Kimballs, who are also closely related, and they’ve been struggling really since the founding of the community, back in the 19th century. And the Kimballs, they deal with some things. One is, is they’re really power-hungry and ruthless, but there’s also some mental illness in the family, they really do believe that they are seeing angels and they’re being told by God to kill people and struggle to take over the community.

So, in the first book, without giving away too much, is where you introduce this conflict. The second book, and to a certain extent the third book, are a little bit more outside, as they get involved with some kind of outside communities. Books Four and Five are really playing out this final struggle between these two families that ends in some really horrific, violent events. So I would definitely say, if people are looking for a gossipy soap opera story that just has who’s sleeping with who and who’s marrying who, there are people who die, and sometimes in horrific ways, and in a couple of cases, people who people care about.

And there are also some characters, a couple of the characters are quite willing to use violence, too, on the side of the protagonist: Abraham Christianson, Jacob and Eliza’s father is definitely of the can’t make an omelet without cracking a few eggs sort of a person, and then there’s Miriam, who’s actually converted into their community, and she comes from an FBI background. She came in at Book Two, and I didn't think she was going to stick around, but I found her so useful, someone who’s a true believer, and she came in, the FBI sent her to infiltrate the community, and she went in so deeply that she became almost brainwashed, you could say. And some of that comes about, I don’t know if you heard about the Elizabeth Smart story, if you heard about that. So, there was a young Mormon girl who was kidnaped from the Salt Lake area, it’s been seven or eight years ago, now. About 13, I think she was, and she was kidnaped by a, a polygamist guy and essentially, taken into his strange little homeless cult that he was trying to form. And she had multiple chances to escape, and didn’t, as she for whatever reason, believed the fact, that at the point where the police finally took her, were interviewing her and saying, “I think you’re Elizabeth Smart, aren't you?” she was initially denying who she was, she was so far into it. And I think living in a really strict religious community, it’s quite possible for people, even who are horrifically oppressed, to come to believe that this is, what God wants, I don’t know if it’s Stockholm Syndrome, or people’s just desire to believe that they’re in possession of secret knowledge or whatever it is. So that was how I initially started off with Miriam, but she became such a useful character, she’s always pushing the main characters into taking more violent action. She’s perfectly happy to put a bullet in someone’s head rather than talk it out with them.

Joanna: Which is another strong woman character, which is great. Now, I didn’t read the books in series, so if people watching, are like, “Wow, there’s all these books,” I didn’t find you had to read them in order, I think I jumped in at Number Three and then went back and read One and Two. And now, of course, “Destroying Angel,” which was the last one, you wound up a pretty big storyline: we don’t want to give anything away, but you opened the possibilities for another, dare I mention the word “apocalypse”? You know, it really did sort of sound that way.

Can you give us a bit of a hint of what’s in store for Jacob and Eliza?

Michael: Sure, as I was working on Book Five and I was kind of planning to wrap things up, the books were doing pretty well at the time, and my publisher, Thomas & Mercer, talked about, “Well, have you thought about writing some more books in this series? We’d be interested in signing you on for two, three, whatever you want to write.”

And it was kind of interesting to me, but at the same time, I didn’t want to write the same story over and over again, and it seemed like there were two possibilities. I could go into a cult of the day sort of a thing, or have Jacob start working with the FBI to infiltrate various cults and religious groups, and use his medical background to solve crimes. Some of the agents I had talked to early on in the process had thought that would be the case: he would move on outside the community. But I definitely wanted to wrap up this conflict with the Kimballs and the Christiansons. Readers had been going on, it didn’t seem fair to keep dragging it out. So I didn't want to write the same thing. At the same time, it’s nice to have books and things that are wanted, and I thought if I could make it interesting for myself, that would be, a good idea, that would be something I’d be interested in tackling.

So I started to think, well, essentially we’ve got a Milliennialist type cult that ever since the founding of Mormonism back in the mid-19th century, it has been founded upon the principle that the world is coming to an end. Things are getting really wicked, there are going to be more wars, natural disasters, eventually the earth is going to be swept with bloodshed and fire and Jesus is going to come down and cleanse everything, and only the elect will be saved at the end of the day. So, I thought, wouldn’t it be really interesting if it started to look like the world in fact was coming to an end. So, Book Six is written, it’s been through edits, I’m working on the first draft of Book Seven right now/ Book Six won’t be released until early next year, the schedule’s full, they’re releasing them on a six-month schedule and now they’ve pushed this one back, so it will be a full year between Five and Six, but after that, I think Book Seven is going to be October, and then it’ll be wrapped up the next year, so, you’ll get three books within the course of the year.

Anyway, so in Book Six, it looks like things, civilization – I’m starting with the premise that it really just kind of takes one serious shock to the system, of which you could speculate five or six things: people have been worried about nuclear war, or peak oil, whatever, I don’t want to give away what method I’m using, but it’s a pretty hard shock to the system, and combined with a few other things.

So this small community in the desert, which has been preparing for the end of the world, which Jacob has pooh-poohed: everyone’s always saying the world’s going to end, they’ve been saying so, about five minutes after Jesus was killed the first time: Paul in the New Testament was expecting him to come back, so a couple thousand years, at least, people have been expecting the world to end. People always say that. Well, what does he do if it looks like the world actually is coming to an end in this small community which is self-sufficient, they have farming stuff and they have weapons, and an isolated valley: could they hold off? So, that’s kind of where I’m looking at: in Book Seven, things are worse, and I’m not quite sure where I’m going to go in Book Eight, if, if, if the world’s going to be just rubble, or if I’m going to pull back from the brink: I, I don’t know.

Joanna: You could move into post-apocalyptic, maybe!

Michael: Yeah, and in some ways it is kind of like that, so, people who, who like that sort of story, the thought of – and there are a lot of different ideas of small communities or a group of travelers, like “The Stand,” Stephen King, or something like that, Ed Robertson who we know, and “The Breakers,” he has a disease wipe out most of civilization too, as kind of interesting. People want to know, would I survive, I don’t know if it’s a longing for a simpler time when you had to survive by your wits and whatnot, or if it’s fear, a lot of people are interested in that. So that’s kind of the story arc of the last three books. And I’m hoping, of course, that people will be interested enough that they will keep reading, but I didn’t want to keep stringing people alone, either. Eight books is a good time commitment for any reader.

Joanna: Definitely. Well, I’m in. I’m in for the rest!

Michael: Good.

Joanna: But I also wanted to ask you, because of course, I was reading on your bio, you trekked across the Sahara on a camel, and had all these adventures:

Are you as exciting as the characters in your books?

Michael: Well, I have not solved any murder mysteries, no. I’ve not been kidnaped by any strange cults. I have received a few death threats from people in strange cults, but I think anyone’s life sounds really interesting if you distill out the interesting bits. I could easily make it sound like I could live the most boring life ever, I’m sure. But, you know, I have done some exciting things, and I like to occasionally try some different things. I think it’s really useful, as a writer, to go ahead and put yourself in lots of different situations. And you never know when they’re going to come up.

The most recent book I have, which is releasing here in about three days, called, “The Devil’s Cauldron,” involves a caving accident out in the desert of Nevada, kind of a horrific crime, and I have done some rappelling down into a desert cave that really only one other group had ever been down, and it had only been partially explored, so, at the time I did it, I just was trying something new and unusual. For similar reasons, I took up skiing and did some Scuba diving. Most recently, I participated in a Dengue Fever vaccine study, because I’ve wanted a little bit more experience with the medical field, and, I think I learned everything I needed to know about that about four vials of blood into it: once they’d taken out half the blood in my body, I think I was well beyond what I could usefully learn! So I think as a writer, and maybe even as a human being, it’s just really interesting to try new things out, if there’s something you wanted to try, especially if it’s not overly expensive or time-consuming. Usually it’s the risks that we don’t take that we regret at the end of the day.

Joanna: Oh, definitely.

Michael: Up until the point where the bungee cord breaks and you splat on the concrete: then maybe  you do have a few regrets, but beyond that, I think putting yourself out there and trying a few new things makes more a more interesting life and more interesting background.

Joanna: Definitely, and I’m a real keen Scuba diver, and I keep meeting thriller writers who love Scuba diving, so I want to put on a thriller writers’ Scuba trip sometime.

Michael: That’s right.

Joanna: That would be awesome! But that’s fantastic. So maybe just give us a quick overview of the other books.

You mentioned that one there, “The Devil’s Cauldron,” what else can people expect from your writing?

Michael: Well, I like to write a variety of different things. I think it’s kind of boring to simply write the same thing over and over, which is what I was saying, even within the Righteous series. So, I’ve just finished the third book in the Devil’s Deep series, which deals with crimes involving Locked-in Syndrome, which is people who have a really high brainstem injury to where they’re fully conscious within their own head, but have no way of communicating with the outside world. And there are thousands of these people out there with undiagnosed Locked-in Syndrome: people think they’re in a coma or brain-dead and really they’re fully conscious, which I find one of the most horrific things imaginable. So there’s this group of people who are trying to track down these people who have Locked-in Syndrome, and every once in a while they come across someone who has been the victim of a crime and someone’s trying to hide it or cover up the crime.

I’ve also written some historical thrillers, “The Red Rooster,” which is set in Occupied France; it’s one of my favorite books that I’ve written. And I have another book called “Wolf Hook,” which is also set in Occupied Europe, and it’s about an English-language theater troupe, traveling through Occupied Europe, and it’s kind of a front for recruiting Anglophile German officers to be spies and things. And that was really fun to write. Of course, as a writer, you’ve got to, to look at what people are interested in buying, if you’re hoping to make a living at it, so I do sometimes write according to what I think is going to be more marketable, but that’s not my only consideration.

So I will choose from among various ideas that interest me, and, and, like all writers, I have more ideas than I can use, so, I go through, and I sometimes think, “Well, I need to do something a little different,” writing a historical novel is really a big departure, so sometimes after working in Blister Creek, in  the Righteous Series, I will do something completely different. And that’s interesting. So I hope to do more historical writing, some more stand-alone contemporary thrillers, I’ve even got a couple of fantasy novels, one that my agent is currently shopping: eventually people will see it in one way or another. It’s called “The Wolves of Paris,” and that involves a real historical incident. In the winter of 1450, a pack of wolves infiltrated the city walls of Paris and killed a couple of dozen people before they were finally tracked down by an angry mob and killed on the steps of Notre Dame, so, I’ve got a novel that I’ve written set around that. That I really loved: I think it’s going to do really well once it’s eventually released, but kind of in marketing limbo at the moment.

Joanna: Oh, wow, there’s so much people can start reading.

So, where can people find you and your books online?

Michael: The Righteous series is pretty much available anywhere that you can order paper books; it’s not available as an e-book on Barnes & Noble, because of this kind of dispute between Amazon and Barnes & Noble, Thomas & Mercer being an imprint owned by Amazon, of course. But, other than that, the other books can also be found as Nook books or about half of them are paper as well, on Barnes & Noble, they’re on Kobo, some of them are starting to come on, on iTunes, the Devil’s Deep series will be out on iTunes. If my voice doesn’t drive you too crazy, there are a couple of Podio books up as well – a techno-thriller called “Implant” that I wrote with neurologist Jeff Anderson, and the first book in the Devil’s Deep series are both available for free on podiobooks.com. You can listen to those. That’s me reading, so I don't know, the Righteous series is all available by a professional voice person, that might be more to people’s liking!

Joanna: And your website?

Michael: My website is michaelwallaceauthor.com.

Joanna: Fantastic.

Michael: So you can go take a look at that and see about when new books are coming up. People who sign up on my website for my mailing list, I will send them a free copy of “Trial by Fury,” which is a stand-alone novella set in the Righteous series, and I’ll send a version that, for Nook, Kobo or the Kindle, and that’s a free book if people are interested in dipping their toe in the violent waters of Blister Creek.

Joanna: Well, thanks ever so much for your time, Michael, that was brilliant.

Michael: Well, thank you, it was nice talking to you, and I’m sure we’ll chat again sometime.

Filed Under: Interviews with Thriller Authors Tagged With: michael wallace, religion, thriller

New Video Series For Thriller Lovers. Killer Thriller TV.

June 25, 2013 By J.F. Penn

I love meeting other authors through the power of skype!

killer thriller tvI've just started a new series of video interviews with authors on the Killer Thriller site, where you should also sign up to be notified of books on special sales or free.

I've also got a curated playlist on YouTube with the Killer Thriller interviews as well as videos you might be interested in about my own research.

Here's the latest video to get you started, with bestselling and award winning thriller & mystery author Timothy Hallinan on his latest Poke Rafferty and Junior Bender stories as well as why he loves Thailand.

 

 

Filed Under: Interviews with Thriller Authors Tagged With: killer thriller tv, video

Crime Thriller Author Mel Sherratt Talks About Taunting The Dead

April 18, 2013 By J.F. Penn

I met up with Amazon bestselling author Mel Sherratt at the London Book Fair and we had a great chat about her books. 

Mel SherratHer crime novel Taunting the Dead reached #1 in the UK charts and was also one of the Top 10 bestselling books of 2012 in the UK Amazon store.
 
 
 

taunting the deadIn the video, we briefly discuss:

  • How she portrays a sense of place in her books and incorporates aspects of her own town, Stoke on Trent, into a fictional estate. Not everyone wants to read crime books about London, New York or other big cities.
  • Why are we so fascinated with reading and writing violence? Mel uses violence in her crime novels but she wants you feel compassion for the victim and care that justice is served.
  • Readers of Martina Cole and Lynda La Plante, as well as Casey Kelleher would enjoy Mel's books.
  • Why is crime writing so popular in the UK? It's about a sense of forboding and solving a puzzle as well as giving readers a thrill.

Here's my own review for Taunting the Dead on Goodreads:

I really enjoyed this fast-paced crime novel that centres around a northern crime ring and the Police who must try to rein them in. There are only a couple of sympathetic characters which makes it all the more fun to bump off the nasty ones! High body count towards the end as the tension ratchets up, a great, fun read.

You can buy Mel's books on Amazon now.

 

Filed Under: Interviews with Thriller Authors Tagged With: crime writers, mel sherratt

On Carl Jung, Dreams And Moments Of Visual Inspiration. J.F. Penn In The Dream Network Journal.

April 2, 2013 By J.F. Penn

When I write, I primarily want to provide entertainment and a few hours of escape from the world. But I also bring my obsessions of religion and psychology to the books, along with extensive research to create another level of reading.

On Carl Jung, Dreams and Moments of Visual InspirationSo I am delighted when readers “get” this side of my books, and I was really excited to do an interview with Russ Lockhart for the Dream Network Journal Volume 32 No 1, Summer 2013.

There's an extract below and you can download the whole article as a PDF here. You can also check out the journal, subscribe or buy back issues at Dream Network Journal.

RL. Tell me, Joanna, what have been the most important influences on you becoming a writer?

JP. Probably the first writer that led me to feel this is what I want do was Umberto Eco, with The Name of the Rose and also Foucault’s Pendulum. Have you read those?

RL. Oh, yes.

JP. I’ve always been interested in religion, and Eco showed me it was possible to write about religion in a fiction book. Trying to write like Umberto Eco obviously was not something I was going to do and that froze me up a bit. But then Dan Brown came along with The Da Vinci Code and Angels & Demons and this made me realize you could write fiction with religion, history, architecture, and archeology, deep and meaningful things, but in a fast-paced way that people would enjoy. Dan Brown helped me decide to write this way. Eco and Brown are two ends of a spectrum. I’m a massive reader and read very widely. In thrillers now, I like James Rollins. He [sometimes] writes from a religious angle.

RL. Your ARKANE trilogy is certainly a thriller. The thriller is often described as “escapist” literature, a kind of distractive entertainment from the drudgery of everyday life. I’ve never been happy with this idea of escape. To me, fiction, no matter how great or poorly done, offers a portal of possibilities, an opening into possible worlds, and has the potential of going deeper inside us then we often realize.

Are you writing for people to escape or does your fiction have a deeper significance and purpose?

JP. I have to say that when I started writing I had a job as an IT consultant. I really was miserable. Reading fast-paced thrillers was all about escape, about how to get out of this commute for 45 minutes before I get to my job and how to fill my lunch hour when I was really down. I’m lucky now. Since becoming a full-time author and entrepreneur, escape isn’t so necessary. But I want to write fiction on two levels, to make people think about deeper things and at the same time to have a really good ride. I will be writing more in my next series and think it is deeper than the ARKANE series. I‘m addressing some depth issues without trying to lecture people at the same time.

…

RL. After reading the name [ARKANE] the first time and [learning] what it meant it was clear you had an interest in Jung and archetypal psychology.

How did you get interested in Jung?

JP. It was when I studied theology at Oxford. I wrote a paper on psychology of religion and of course Jung was one of the first psychologists I studied. I was particularly taken with Memories, Dreams, Reflections.

redbook

While I was writing Pentecost, Jung’s Red Book was published, his personal journal of breakdown and filled with images. It brought out all the things I had learned about Jung in the beginning of my studies and let me investigate him again. In his life story I found he had been in Tunisia, and in America, and in these places I write about. And, in the Red Book there was this painting of the Pentecost flame (as right). That was amazing to me because as I was researching that whole synchronicity idea for the novel, it actually happened to me. What I love about writing these books is that as I research this stuff it seems almost to be true. I just tweak it a bit. It’s fiction, but it’s based on a whole load of facts.

RL. One of the things that impressed me was that you would bring in some fact that had just happened—like the story of Arafat’s poisoning—and mix it together with ancient arcane things. This brings together disparate things to create a meaning with a trajectory, not just some far out thing, but meaningful things that get through, that aim beneath the surface.

JP. That Arafat story was synchronicity again. And, just the other day, someone emailed me about a show on the Ark of the Covenant. People are always interested in these big archetypal stories. That was part of the reason for writing the books because I wanted resonance with the collective unconscious, the memory we have in our culture around these big religious questions.

RL. Do your dreams ever come into your work, or your work into your dreams?

JP. I don’t record my dreams as in writing them down when I wake up. I definitely dream richly and I have nightmares. I have quite a dark mind, as you will have found in my books with all those violent deaths and horror aspects. I think the supernatural can be horrific. I like the shadow idea and I like going into the darker side of us and I do sometimes dream very violent dreams.

Sometimes, I worry that when people read my books they think that’s me; that I am into violence and death. But part of what’s great about writing is that writing about these dark things helps us reconcile these darker issues. In fact, writers like Stephen King and James Herbert and hopefully me are actually more psychologically normal because we can tackle horror in our work.

Does something grip you and that becomes the basis [of the story]? Or do you plan out, outline, and write from there?

JP. Oh, the idea or image comes first exactly as you say. I am a very visual person. A lot of my writing comes from the places I’ve been—Israel in particular. I’ve been eleven times. A lot of my passion for these topics comes from things I’ve seen in Israel and other places. Also when I’m researching, things really happen! For example, Pentecost was originally called Mandala and was even more about Jung.

Then I was in St. Mark’s Basilica in Venice. I looked up and saw the Pentecost in those golden mosaic stones and this changed the whole book for me. That image. I had the idea for the stones. And then I saw the flame coming from the stones in Jung’s painting. This happens to me all the time. The other day I saw on a billboard a man with an octopus tattoo up his back and this image was seared into my mind. I wrote the scene yesterday in my new book. The man has become a woman with the octopus tattoo and she’s become a whole new character. I plot around the images. And then I do research and find nuggets that help to make it more real for readers.

You can download the whole article as a PDF here. A huge thanks to Russ Lockhart for a great interview!

If you have any questions about anything I have spoken about, please do leave a comment below. Thanks!

Filed Under: Interviews with Thriller Authors Tagged With: carl jung, dreams, interview, red book

Thriller Author Interviews: Boyd Morrison, Author Of The Roswell Conspiracy

September 18, 2012 By J.F. Penn

I'm a huge reader and love to devour action-adventure novels as well as lots of books in other genres (you can check out my Goodreads reviews here).

Boyd MorrisonI also love to talk to authors about their writing process and what inspires them so I'll be sharing more interviews with authors I enjoy, so you can discover them too.

Boyd Morrison is the author of the Tyler Locke action adventure thrillers as well as two stand-alone novels. His latest book, The Roswell Conspiracy, is out now. Boyd is also a professional actor and a Jeopardy Champion. The video interview is embedded below or you can watch on YouTube here.

boyd morrisonIn the video, you will learn:

  • How Boyd became an author. He is an engineer by training and made a pact with his wife. He would support her through 9 years of medical training and when she was a full-time doctor, he would get the same number of years to pursue writing. It took him about 4.5 years to become a published author.
  • How much of Boyd is in Tyler Locke, his hero? Boyd was an engineer and they're about the same height but otherwise Tyler is quite different. Boyd wanted to make an engineering hero in the same way that Indiana Jones made archaeology cool. It's not just nerdy Dilbert types, but a lot of adventurous people e.g. Neil Armstrong, the first man on the moon. Boyd also comes from a family of engineers and he recently realized that Tyler Locke is based on his own father, who died when he was young. He was in the army and went to MIT and had that kind of adventurous spirit.
  • Traveling is a love of Boyd's and he has traveled for research. In Roswell, there is a chase on the jetboats in Queenstown which we have both done. As a writer, you're always looking for new things to incorporate in the writing. It's partly an excuse to go do research e.g. driving fast on the autobahn in Germany. We also talk about writing about places we haven't actually been, using Google maps and YouTube as well as other online resources. On writing fight scenes, based on movie knowledge and workshops, like the ones from Thrillerfest. Raising the stakes is more important than the detail of the fight e.g. if he doesn't land this blow, the bad guy will shoot the girlfriend etc.
  • roswell conspiracyWe also talk about scuba diving as we're both huge fans. Boyd recommends the Great Barrier Reef in Australia, as well as St Lucia in the Caribbean. I mention Ningaloo Reef in Western Australia which is less visited than the Barrier Reef and spectacular. We talk about organizing a thriller writer's scuba diving trip, and inviting James Rollins and Clive Cussler amongst others. It would be a lot of fun!

You can buy The Roswell Conspiracy on Amazon and at other bookstores.

You can find Boyd at BoydMorrison.com and on twitter @boydmorrison

 

Filed Under: Interviews with Thriller Authors Tagged With: author interviews, for readers, thriller authors

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Page 6
  • Page 7
  • Go to Next Page »

Footer

Connect with me on social media

  • Facebook
  • Flickr
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Follow me on Chirp

© Copyright Joanna Frances Penn. All rights reserved.

Love Audiobooks?

Looking for something specific?

Thanks for visiting my site!

I hope you find it interesting! Your privacy is important to me. Read the privacy policy here. Read the Cookie policy here. I hope you find the site useful! Thanks - Jo
I use cookies to ensure that I give you the best experience on my website. If you continue to use this site, I will assume that you are happy with it. Thank you. OkRead more