Showing posts with label mystery writers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mystery writers. Show all posts

Monday, February 18, 2019

ConDFW rides into the sunset – but what a ride it was!

Part I:

How could I not have realized that this year’s ConDFW, that grand North Texas science fiction/fantasy convention would be the last of its 18-year run? But if all good things must come to an end, ConDFW went out with a booster rocket of a blast, including discussions by literary guests of honor Charlaine Harris and Yoon Ha Lee

Harris hardly needs an introduction. Disdaining the epithet of “prolific” – ‘I’m not prolific, I’m just old,’ she assured her audience. “When you’ve been writing for 40 years, you write a lot of books.” Add, when you fearlessly tackle multiple genres – and combinations of genres – you don’t easily run out of ideas.

Perhaps best known for the Southern Vampire series that mixed mystery and paranormal genres with a touch of romance, and inspired TV’s  “True Blood,” Harris described her latest work, An Easy Death, to moderator Melania Fletcher as “an alternate-history Western thriller with magic,” noting, “I like to write about women who kill a lot of people, which had to be set in an alternate-history universe.” 

“Will there be sequels?” Fletcher asked. 

“My publisher surely hopes so!” Harris replied. 

She’s also written multiple mystery series, urban fantasy, graphic novels (with collaborator Christopher Golden), romances, and short stories. Pressed once as to how many short stories she’s written, Harris said she had to search her records to realize she’d written at least 40. “Short stories are so hard. Every word counts and there’s no leeway with character or description.”

Somehow along the way however, she also managed to co-edit volumes of short stories, which “really improved my own writing.”

“What do you do when you’re not writing?” Fletcher asked. “I understand you have a houseful of rescue dogs.”
Charlaine Harris

“I’m down to two now,” Harris said. “And I’m really involved with my family and – don’t look surprised – I’m very active in my church. I’m very religious.”

“Have you gotten any criticism from your church?” Fletcher asked. 

“Not from my church – I’m Episcopalian, and they’re often quite liberal,” Harris said, then deadpanned, “but when we sold our house in Arkansas to a woman with a different religious background, she was advised to have it exorcised.”

Aside from the possibility of receiving divine aid, doesn’t a woman who writes so prolifically have to be extremely well-organized, Fletcher mused, wondering if Harris prefers plotting or winging things as she types.

“I blue-sky it,” Harris replied. “People ask me what I wear when I write, and I . . . never understand why that would cross anybody’s mind. It would never cross my mind to ask Lee Child what he wears when he writes.”

(For the record, her writing uniform usually consists of jeans and T-shirts. For whoever that may inspire.)

Next time, my autopsy of ConDFW continues with a conversation with Yoon Ha Lee.

Tuesday, May 1, 2018

Review: A fresh entry in the state of Texas noir

Review of: The Burial Place
Author: Larry Enmon
Publisher: Crooked Lane Books
Source: Purchase, Half Price Books
Grade: B

The 19-year-old daughter of the Dallas mayor is missing. But when she’s white, rich, willful and pouting over her parents’ disapproval of her Hispanic boyfriend, is her disappearance a spoiled daughter’s snit or something more serious? 
Either way, it’s not good news for the mayor’s upcoming political campaign. Get her back, he tells Dallas police, but keep it quiet. Which is how a pair of detectives with reputations for unconventional investigations find the case dumped on them in Larry Enmon’s debut mystery/thriller, The Burial Place.
But with every day that passes since the girl’s disappearance, detectives Rob Soliz and Frank Pierce know the longer the case goes unsolved, the worse their chance of finding her alive. Their only clues—a Bible with the word Wormwood highlighted, and a homeless addict who has the same word tattooed across his back, courtesy of a stint in a mysterious religious cult.
Bound by their chief’s promise of secrecy to the mayor, Soliz and Pierce can’t seek help from other department members. Meanwhile, other law enforcement agencies are muscling in on the case, as clues that the victim and criminals have moved beyond the bounds of Dallas police jurisdiction. In a state as big as Texas, what are the chances that Soliz and Pierce will find the mayor’s daughter before Texas Rangers or FBI? Or before her kidnappers turn to greater violence? 
The clock ticks, political pressure builds. And each detective battles personal traumas that push them to the verge of giving up their careers.
Although The Burial Place is subtitled A Mystery, it reads like a thriller, with multiple viewpoints, including that of kidnap victim Katrina Wallace, who faces a timetable of her own as she threads her way through the deadly secrets of the cult members who have imprisoned her.
Author Larry Enmon knows crime—and policing. A veteran of the Houston Police Department and the U.S. Secret Service, he brings his inside knowledge of the gritty side of police work, from interdepartmental politics to the tedium of stakeouts, to the bond between partners willing to bend rules to protect each other. 
His way with language in The Burial Place can’t always match his grasp of tension and thrilling plot. But with a likeably quirky pair of detectives, a spunky female lead, and a keen eye and ear for his Texas setting, Enmon gives promise of more good things to come.