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Archive for October, 2011

Halloween Book Give-away
31
Oct
11
Jennifer Lyon Icon

Today is Halloween in the U.S. and it is fitting for me because I am possessed. Totally, completely possessed. Not by a being, but by an idea. I’ve had this idea circling in my brain for months, and like a good wine, I’ve left it alone to mature. Finally I have a little time to work on it and now I’m eating, sleeping and breathing this idea.

Even weirder, the synopsis was too easy to write. I’ve gotten the comments back from one of my critique partners, and I’m eager to go back and work on the changes. I can see them in my head. I’m telling you this is too easy. I must be possessed.

Don’t believe me?

I’ll show you. First you have to know that I am NOT artistic. I can’t draw. I can’t paint. In fact, I am so artistically challenged, I can barely sign my name. But on Saturday, after I finished the first draft of a synopsis and sent it off for a critique, I decided I’d carve a pumpkin. I haven’t carved a pumpkin in years! There’s a reason for that. In the past, my pumpkin carving attempts have been sad and made me feel like a Halloween loser. They always consisted of sloppy triangles and a weird mouth—the whole thing always looked like a four-year-old did it.

But Saturday, I had to carve a pumpkin! I even went to the store and bought a pumpkin, and I normally avoid the store on weekends. I came home and told my husband.

He grinned and tried really hard not to roll his eyes. But nothing could spoil my mood. I wanted to carve this pumpkin! So I did, and this is the result:

While this is not, by any means, great, it is a shocking improvement from my previous attempts. My husband—the man who has known me for decades, was stunned.

See? I’m possessed by this idea!

From that pumpkin, can you guess what this new idea is about? I have two extra copies of SINFUL MAGIC up for grabs! Leave your guess in the comments and I’ll put you in the contest. I’ll randomly pick two winners. All guesses count!

Boo!
28
Oct
11
Karin Tabke Icon

We Interrupt This Blog For A Deadline!

Sorry for the lame blog today but after 10 days in paradise
and not working on the final touches of my manuscript (I tried to make time, I really did!), I need to drop off the radar
for a few days to wrap up my story.

For your understanding, I have a $15.00 eAmazon gift
certificate to give away to a random commenter.
All you have to do to be eligible to win it is to answer this question:
What was your favorite Halloween costume?

I’ll pick a random comment number and post that person’s name this Sunday BUT if I don’t surface to post my winner this Sunday, I promise to post it next Sunday!

Happy Halloween!

And don’t forget to set your clocks back one hour Sunday night!

Xo

Karin*

Allison Brennan permalink 33 Comments »
LUTHER
27
Oct
11
Allison Brennan Icon

It’s no surprise to long-time MSW readers that I love television. I use TV as a reward. I get my work done, I can watch TV at night. (Late at night, usually after midnight.) I haven’t watched commercials outside of football or kids shows because I no longer watch television shows when they’re on. I don’t even DVR them (and even if I did, they’d be quickly erased because of all the shows my kids DVR.)

I spoil myself because television is a reward. I buy the shows I like through iTunes.

A series can cost anywhere from $5 to $40, depending on the popularity, the number of episodes, and whether there’s a promotion. Most series, however, are between $20-25, less than the cost of waiting for the series to come out on DVD three months after the season is over. At $25, that’s the price of one movie and popcorn for a couple, and to me worth the price because not only can I watch at my convenience, I can re-watch.

But because I pay for television, when most people watch for free, I tend to be a bit more critical than I used to. My time is valuable, but so are my limited television dollars. I’ve very much appreciated that television, like much of the entertainment business, is making necessary changes: they’re releasing new series mid-season so summer is not just reruns; they’re running edgy and experimental series with both stars and young up-and-comers; they’re taking changes and cable networks are competitive with network. In fact, almost all my favorite shows are on cable, with only a few exceptions.

Some shows have blown me away—not just in the quality of production, or the actors, but the storylines are head and shoulders above most everything that’s out there.

Two years ago, I “discovered” JUSTIFIED and have evangelized for this show ever since. This year, I found HAVEN, a brilliant supernatural drama loosely based on the Stephen King book THE COLORADO KID. But today, I want to talk about LUTHER.

First: no spoilers! I’m only halfway through the short season two. But already, I am mesmerized by the raw, brilliant storytelling made even better by the quality of both filming and acting. I love it.

LUTHER is a psychological crime drama produced by the BBC. It’s set in England, and for the first episode or two I had to get used to not only the accents, some of which are quite thick, but the different police procedures in that country. (And, to be honest, I don’t even know if they get them right, but there’s a feel of authenticity so I’m definitely willing to go along for the ride.)

From IMDb:

“Luther” follows the cases of a troubled yet brilliant English police detective, DCI John Luther (Idris Elba). Separated from his wife, whom he loves passionately, he is torn between an unrelenting approach to solving serial killings and his attempts to rekindle his marriage. Luther is a highly charged emotional man who is not above stretching the law to solve a case or save a life. In episode one, Alice Morgan (Ruth Wilson) proves she is equally brilliant by committing the perfect murder of her parents, which challenges Luther as never before. Alice develops a strange fascination for Luther and their continued exchanges and interplay serve as a backdrop for the rest of the season. Luther’s edgy police tactics make him a serious concern to his superiors, who feel that he is a threat to their reputations and that of the Police force. From the opening credits to the end of season one, “Luther” is a fast paced mystery presented with many plot twists and insights into the human psyche.

The scripts are tight, gritty, and multi-dimensional. The filming compliments the tone and feel of the show. A crime drama like CASTLE is lighter, with brighter colors and a deeper hue, but less contrast and artistic framing. LUTHER, which is a much darker show, is as overcast and gray as England’s reputation. There’re no bright colors, but the sharpness of the imagery even in the grayness adds depth and emotion. (I’m sure Toni, or resident photography expert, would be able to explain all this better than me.)

But to be honest, Idris Elba, the actor who portrays DCI John Luther, makes the show. Not only is he a physically imposing character compared to all the others around him, he is a flawed and tragic hero.

I’ve been thinking about this show a lot while teaching a class over at the Kiss of Death chapter this month. Participants have been asking a lot of questions about how to create flawed characters that readers will still like. Today, I pointed them all to John Luther.

In the first episode, he’s coming back to work after being on administrative leave while being investigated for the injuries a suspect sustained while Luther pursued him. The suspect, a child murderer, is a loathsome person. Did he, or did he not, wait a fraction too long in trying to save the killer from a fall? While the killer is on life support at the hospital, Luther is investigated. The day he returns, he’s called to investigate a double homicide, introducing him to Alice Morgan, one of the most complex and compelling psychopaths created in a long, long time. The intelligence of Hannibal Lecter without the crudity and rather disgusting habit of cannibalizing his friends.

Luther is far from perfect. But what draws me to his character is that he it’s his drive to do what is right for others that ultimately puts him into danger or forces him to choose between two morally or ethically reprehensible choices. Sometimes, there is no good answer, only a lesser evil.

Luther is a brilliant cop. Sherlock Holmes without the arrogance or drug habit. He doesn’t smooth things over or play nice just to get along, but he’s not deliberately or intentionally abrasive. He’s extremely loyal, and his loyalty is also his Achilles Heel.

For example, in the second season he’s guilted into helping an underage prostitute get out of a vile fantasy rape (where a pervert pays to rape her, but where often the prostitute is killed in the process.) Guilted because, while underage, she’s still 17 and as Luther said, she’s made her own choices. She chose to do drugs, to be a prostitute and to leave home. But, as her mother says, Luther drove her to drugs and prostitution because he arrested her father for “accidentally” killing a prostitute, and while in prison he killed himself. Luther goes to the location, talks to Jenny, she doesn’t want to leave, and he walks out. The agony of his decision is evident on his face you can almost hear his internalization.

It’s Jenny’s choice. No one is forcing her.

She’s too scared to leave. She’s going to be killed. She’s only 17.

In the end, he walks in and grabs her while she fights him.

That decision sets up a whole chain of events that are still playing out as I’m about to watch the third of four episodes.

Luther does many illegal things, always for the right reasons. His ethical dilemmas are complex and torture him. Luther is an amazing character, and while Idris Elba deserves much of the credit for his creation, the show itself is truly a well-done masterpiece blending the lead character with an equally talented supporting cast, and compelling, top-notch writing. Crime drama lovers, you won’t be disappointed. And writers? You’ll learn a lot.

It doesn’t get much better than LUTHER. I am hugely thrilled they have contracted for a third season. Two, four, six, ten episodes — I’ll take whatever they want to give me.

Lori G. Armstrong permalink 12 Comments »
BLOOD TIES free digital download for kindle and nook!
26
Oct
11

Ever wanted to try one of the mysteries I write as Lori Armstrong? Here’s your chance! My publisher is making the first book in the Julie Collins mystery series, BLOOD TIES, (which was nominated for a Shamus Award for Best First Novel) available for free from Oct. 21st to Nov. 3rd as a digital download for two weeks for both Amazon kindle and Barnes and Noble nook!

BLOOD TIES link to Amazon.com for kindle

BLOOD TIES link to Barnes and Noble for nook

Here’s the cover, and it looks a little like horror, but it is pure mystery with a kick-ass female protagonist:

Julie Collins is stuck in a dead-end secretarial job with the Bear Butte County Sheriff’s office, and still grieving over the unsolved murder of her Lakota half-brother. Lack of public interest in finding his murderer, or the killer of several other transient Native American men, has left Julie with a bone-deep cynicism she counters with tequila, cigarettes, and dangerous men.

The one bright spot in her mundane life is the time she spends working part-time as a PI with her childhood friend, Kevin Wells. When the body of a sixteen-year old white girl is discovered in nearby Rapid Creek, Julie believes this victim will receive the attention others were denied. Then she learns Kevin has been hired, mysteriously, to find out where the murdered girl spent her last few days. Julie finds herself drawn into the case against her better judgment, and discovers not only the ugly reality of the young girl’s tragic life and brutal death, but ties to her and Kevin’s past that she is increasingly reluctant to revisit.

On the surface the situation is eerily familiar. But the parallels end when Julie realizes some family secrets are best kept buried deep. Especially those serious enough to kill for.

***

BLOOD TIES is the first book in a four book series. It is not a romance, but it’s the flip side of my writing persona. I have the perfect job — I get to kill people and have sex with cowboys all day long :)

Roxanne St. Claire permalink 139 Comments »
A Picture Worth 100,000 Words
25
Oct
11
Roxanne St Claire Icon

A few months ago, the New York Times ran this photo of U.S. Navy SEALs as they prepare for a night mission to capture Iraqi insurgent leaders near Fallujah, Iraq.  My guess is there were a lot of newspapers dampened with drool that morning. I know mine was.   In a matter of hours, the photo had hit Twitter, courtesy of a few romance writers who no doubt stared at that shot and invented that hero’s goal, motivation, conflict, heroine, backstory, and probably an entire new SEAL series.  Can’t you just see him on a cover?  As a matter of fact, someone did!   

The original tweeters, Christie Ridgway and Alison Kent, started chatting about how inspired they were by the photo. That man is the essence of a hero — fearless, loyal, honorable, and willing to die for what he knows is right.  The tat, scar, and physique spell sexy, but it’s where he is and what he’s about to do that takes my breath away.  That online admiration led to the SEAL of My Dreams anthology for charity.

Within days, Christie and Alison had arranged to obtain the rights for the picture and contacted a group of authors known for their love of a good military hero, asking if we would write short stories with a Navy SEAL hero and donate the proceeds to a military charity.

I was honored and humbled to participate in this remarkable project, one of nineteen authors who contributed eighteen short stories and one tear-jerking forward by Robyn Carr.  When I first heard the ambitious schedule and the quality and quantity of the authors (oh, the deadlines!) I admit I was skeptical that this concept could fly.  Lesson to me: never doubt the power of a Navy SEAL.

SEAL of My Dreams releases on 11/11/11, with eighteen glorious Navy SEAL heroes.  Click here for sneak peaks of stories written by  Jami Alden, Stephanie Bond, Kylie Brant, Helen Brenna, HelenKay Dimon, Cindy Gerard, Tara Janzen, Leslie Kelly, Elle Kennedy, Allison Kent, Gennita Low, Jo Leigh, Marliss Melton, Christie Ridgway, Barbara Samuel, Stephanie Tyler, Loreth Anne White, and yours truly.  Wow, that is some incredible company to be in!

And very special thanks to awesome Bell Bridge Books for publishing the paperback and ebook versions of SEAL of my Dreams, with all proceeds pledged to the Veterans Research Corporation, a non-profit foundation supporting veterans’ medical research.

Many of these authors don’t just write about military heroes, we also have a few special ones in our hearts and lives.  My nephew, an Army Ranger I’ve mentioned here a few times, spent fifteen months in Baghdad and while he returned home to us healthy and whole, his health care costs and issues can be daunting.  I was thrilled to give my time and talent for a program that I know will help thousands of heroes just like my nephew.

My story, “Whirlwind,” is set on the shores of Barefoot Bay, giving readers their first snapshot of the island location that will be front and center in my upcoming contemporary romance series.   I’ve read through the whole anthology and I can assure you this collection is power-packed with romance, passion, danger, action, emotion, and eighteen breathtaking Navy SEALs.

I hope all of the Murder She Writes community members will support the Veterans Research Corporation and pick up a copy of an anthology that celebrates the men of the Navy SEALS and the women who love them.

To help that effort, I’m giving a $25 gift card to the online book retailer of your choice to one commenter.  Just tell us who is your favorite fictional Navy SEAL hero!  (Or real life hero, if you prefer!)  The only stipulation…the winner has to promise to spend $9.99 on SEAL of My Dreams.  The rest is just for fun reading and, trust me, if you read this antho, you are going to have some new favorite authors!  Please support the project and this wonderful organization that helps our heroes after they come home to us.