Malice
Domestic’s 2018 Agatha Nominations for Best First Novel:
Adrift: A Mer Cavallo Mystery by Micki Browning (Alibi-Random House)
The Plot is Murder: Mystery Bookshop by V.M. Burns (Kensington)
Hollywood Homicide: A Detective by Day Mystery by Kellye Garrett (Midnight Ink)
Daughters of Bad Men by Laura Oles (Red Adept Publishing)
Protocol: A Maggie O’Malley Mystery by Kathleen Valenti (Henery Press)
Adrift: A Mer Cavallo Mystery by Micki Browning (Alibi-Random House)
The Plot is Murder: Mystery Bookshop by V.M. Burns (Kensington)
Hollywood Homicide: A Detective by Day Mystery by Kellye Garrett (Midnight Ink)
Daughters of Bad Men by Laura Oles (Red Adept Publishing)
Protocol: A Maggie O’Malley Mystery by Kathleen Valenti (Henery Press)
Micki Browning, V.M. Burns
(Valerie), Kellye Garrett, Laura Oles, and Kathleen Valenti are enjoying having
their debut novels celebrated this year at Malice Domestic. We are so pleased
to welcome them to WRITERS WHO KILL to answer a few questions about their work.
Thanks so much to Micki, Valerie, Kellye, Laura, and Kathleen, and best wishes!—Paula Gail Benson
For many debut
novelists, their first published novel may not be the first one they have
written. What was your path to your debut published novel?
MICKI: Like many writers I wrote a couple
of practice novels. I learned structure by constructing a story that didn’t
hold together. I joined Sisters In Crime and took classes through their Guppy
chapter. My second novel was better, but still not quite there, and I returned
to the classroom. Dialogue classes taught me how to flesh out characters.
During a plotting course, I had a structural epiphany that I used while I wrote
Adrift. The effort paid off. Adrift garnered both Daphne du Maurier
and Royal Palm Literary Awards. I met my agent through the Daphne contest and
signed with her shortly after winning.
VALERIE: I had two ideas for
mystery series when I started my MFA at Seton Hill University. I chose the
other idea for my thesis, but finished early and started writing the second
one. After graduation, I queried my thesis project and then completed THE PLOT
IS MURDER.
KELLYE: Hollywood Homicide is actually the first novel I wrote. Before you hate me
forever, I’ve been a professional writer for over 15 years and have a ton of
screenplays in a drawer somewhere. I swear! I got the idea for the book around
2011 when I drove past a Los Angeles Police Department billboard offering a
$15,000 for information on a murder. I was dead broke at the time so my first
thought was, “I should solve that!” Not the smartest idea—at least in real life.
It did turn out to be a pretty cool idea for a book though. I wrote it on and
off for a few years before finally finishing a decent draft in 2014. That same
year I was lucky enough to be selected for an amazing contest called Pitch Wars, where I found my agent Michelle Richter of Fuse Literary. We
sold the book to Midnight Ink in early 2016.
LAURA: I was fortunate in that
my day job involved writing for digital photography magazines and publications,
so the writing practice and working with editors had been part of my regular
routine. That said, for me, learning to
write fiction was very different.
Fiction proved to be a vast universe, so full of options and
opportunities.
DAUGHTERS
OF BAD MEN is my debut novel but it is my fourth book. I wrote the first three
novels as practice, working on character development and structure, plotting
and pacing, practicing to become a stronger storyteller. My earlier attempts
were done mostly for my own enjoyment, to better understand how a mystery novel
works and how I should approach my own vision of it.
KATHLEEN: My
path to publication for Protocol
started at mile marker forty-something: a mini-midlife crisis in which I woke
up one morning and decided that I’d put off my dreams of writing a novel long
enough. Armed with books on craft and informed by writing seminars, I dove
right in, expecting a smooth journey from concept to manuscript to publication.
How hard could it be? I reasoned. I wrote for a living and was an avid reader
and former English major. I had this whole novel-writing/book-publishing thing
down, right?
Umm…not so much.
Although I had a clear
idea of the story I wanted to tell, it took me nearly four years to tell it.
After a host of revisions and murdering enough of my darlings to be classified
as a linguistic serial killer, I finally had a book I loved and began to shop
it around to agents. That’s where the real education began. I had oodles of
requests to read, but they all ended in close-but-not-there
responses. So I narrowed the gap to “there” and edited again (and again).
Finally, success. Jordan at Literary Counsel loved the book as much as I did,
took me on as a client and put Protocol
out on submission. I got bites right away and said yes to Henery Press, a
publisher I not only admired and respected, but that had a team that I knew
would be the perfect fit.
Two years—and
two-and-a-half books—later and I feel like I’ve arrived at my dream
destination. It’s been an amazing journey and I’m so fortunate to have made
some great friends along the way, including my fellow nominees for the Agatha
Best First. I can’t wait to see where the road leads next.
Do you consider your
writing plot-driven, character-driven, neither, or a combination?
MICKI: My writing breakthrough occurred when
I learned to plot from the point of view of the antagonist, but write from the
perspective of my sleuth. I realize this sounds like I’m a plot-driven writer,
the truth is that I find it impossible to suss out the story until I know who
my characters are and what motivates them. I’m really a combination writer,
because plot springs from the characters and characters drive the plot.
VALERIE: My writing is
definitely character-driven. I spend a great deal of time working out my
character’s personalities, faults, likes and dislikes and the story and plot
flows from that.
KELLYE: Probably
a combo. I come from a TV writing background so I live and die by the plot
twist. At the same time, the story is driven by the personality of my main
character Dayna and her unwavering desire to do anything to save her family’s
house from foreclosure. As an amateur detective, she doesn’t make the same
investigative decisions that a Kinsey Millhone or Elvis Cole would make—and
that was one of my favorite things about writing it. Book Riot featured Hollywood Homicide in their Read or Dead podcast earlier this month and one of the things they said was that if
you or I was trying to solve a crime, we’d be bumbling through it like
Dayna—which was my goal.
LAURA: I would say it’s a
combination, but I lean heavily towards character-driven mysteries. I’m
attracted to dialogue and setting, and creating the world where my
characters reside has been one of the most enjoyable parts of writing this
book. I’m particularly interested in
exploring the dynamics between two characters and how they respond when one is
under pressure. How does that impact
their relationship, their ability to work together? The plot is also incredibly important. I just believe that understanding the
characters well helps me explore the storyline more deeply and make the stakes
more personal. Jamie Rush and Cookie Hinojosa lived in my head for a long time
before I understood which case they would choose--and why.
KATHLEEN: I’d
consider Protocol a plot-driven,
character-motivated story. Outside influences start a cascade of events for my
protagonist, Maggie O’Malley, but it’s her responses and inner motivators that
keep the action—and the energy—going. It’s a system of action and reaction in
which the story’s events and Maggie’s responses propel the story (and hopefully
the reader) forward. Ultimately, however, it’s Maggie’s story. If the crises
had happened to anyone else, Protocol
would be a very different book.
What would your
protag’s Olympic sport be?
MICKI: Scuba diving isn’t yet
an Olympic sport, so that’s out, plus it’s winter. I’m going to guess freestyle
skiing. Mer’s never skied before, so anything before she crashed would
definitely be freestyle!
VALERIE: If Samantha Washington
was in the Olympics, she’d strap her grandmother, Nana Jo to her back and
compete in the biathlon. That way Sam could do the cross country skiing and
Nana Jo could shoot.
KELLYE: When chasing a suspect, Dayna says, “I always said I could run
in four-inch heels. It was good to know I was right on that front.” So her
Olympic sport would be the 100 meter dash…in stilettos. She’d get gold for
sure.
LAURA: If Texas hold ‘em were
an Olympic sport, Jamie Rush might medal.
She’d have a shot at the gold simply for her ability to bluff.
KATHLEEN: Maggie’s
Olympic sport would be freestyle skiing. She’s athletic, all about doing her
own thing, and ready to leap into action when the occasion calls for it.
Thanks to you all for joining us at
WRITERS WHO KILL. Here’s some additional information about these talented
writers:
Micki Browning
A retired
police captain, Micki Browning writes the Mer Cavallo Mystery series set in the
Florida Keys. In addition to the Agatha
nomination for Best First Novel, Adrift, has won both the Daphne du
Maurier and the Royal Palm Literary Awards. Beached, her second novel, launched
January 2018. Micki’s work has appeared in dive magazines, anthologies, mystery
magazines, and textbooks. She lives in South Florida with her partner in crime
and a vast array of scuba equipment she uses for "research." Learn
more about Micki at MickiBrowning.com
Summary of
Adrift
Marine biologist-turned-divemaster Meredith Cavallo thought
adjusting to a laid-back life in the Florida Keys would be a breeze. But when
the host of a ghost-hunting documentary crew hires her as a safety diver and
then vanishes during the midnight dive, Mer’s caught in a storm of supernatural
intrigue.
Determined
to find a rational explanation, Mer approaches the man’s disappearance as any
scientist would—by asking questions, gathering data, and deducing the truth.
But the victim’s life is as shrouded in mystery as his disappearance.
Still, something happened under the water and before long, she’s
in over her head. When someone tries to kill her, she knows the truth is about
to surface. Maybe dead men do tell tales.
V.M. (Valerie) Burns
V.M.
(Valerie) Burns was born in Northwestern Indiana and spent many years in
Southwestern Michigan on the Lake Michigan shoreline. She is a lover of dogs,
British historic cozies, and scones with clotted cream. After many years in the
Midwest she went in search of milder winters and currently lives in Eastern
Tennessee with her poodles. Receiving the Agatha nomination for Best First
Novel has been a dream come true. Valerie is a member of Mystery Writers of
America, International Thriller Writers, and a lifetime member of Sisters in
Crime. Readers can learn more by visiting her website at vmburns.com.
Summary of
The Plot is Murder
Samantha
Washington has dreamed of owning a mystery bookstore for as long as she can
remember. And as she prepares for the store’s grand opening, she’s also
realizing another dream—penning a cozy mystery set in England between the wars.
While Samantha hires employees and fills the shelves with the latest mysteries,
quick-witted Lady Penelope Marsh, long-overshadowed by her beautiful sister
Daphne, refuses to lose the besotted Victor Carlston to her sibling's charms.
When one of Daphne's suitors is murdered in a maze, Penelope steps in to solve
the labyrinthine puzzle and win Victor. But as Samantha indulges her
imagination, the unimaginable happens in real life. A shady realtor turns up
dead in her backyard, and the police suspect her—after all, the owner of a
mystery bookstore might know a thing or two about murder. Aided by her feisty
grandmother and an enthusiastic ensemble of colorful retirees, Samantha is
determined to close the case before she opens her store. But will she live to
conclude her own story when the killer has a revised ending in mind for her?
Kellye Garrett
Kellye
Garrett writes the Detective by Day mysteries about a semi-famous, mega-broke
black actress who takes on the deadliest role of her life: Homicide Detective.
The first, Hollywood Homicide, was recently nominated for Agatha, Lefty, and
Barry awards. The second, Hollywood Ending, will be released on August 8, 2018
from Midnight Ink. Prior to writing novels, Kellye spent eight years working in
Hollywood, including a stint writing for the TV drama Cold Case. The New Jersey
native now works for a leading media company in New York City and serves on the
national Board of Directors for Sisters in Crime. You can learn more about her
at KellyeGarrett.com and ChicksontheCase.com.
Summary of
Hollywood Homicide
Actress
Dayna Anderson’s Deadly New Role: Homicide Detective
Dayna
Anderson doesn’t set out to solve a murder. All the semifamous, mega-broke
actress wants is to help her parents keep their house. So after witnessing a
deadly hit-and-run, she pursues the fifteen grand reward. But Dayna soon finds
herself doing a full-on investigation, wanting more than just money—she wants
justice for the victim. She chases down leads at paparazzi hot spots, celeb
homes, and movie premieres, loving every second of it—until someone tries to
kill her. And there are no second takes in real life.
Laura Oles
Laura Oles is a photo industry
journalist who spent twenty years covering tech and trends before turning to
crime fiction. She served as a columnist for numerous photography magazines and
publications. Laura’s short stories have appeared in several anthologies,
including MURDER ON WHEELS, which won the Silver Falchion Award in 2016. Her
debut mystery, DAUGHTERS OF BAD MEN, is a Claymore Award Finalist and an Agatha
nominee for Best First Novel. She is also a Writers’ League of Texas Award
Finalist. Laura is a member of Austin Mystery Writers, Sisters in Crime and Writers’
League of Texas. Laura lives on the edge of the Texas Hill Country with her
husband, daughter, and twin sons. Visit her online at lauraoles.com.
Summary of
Daughters of Bad Men
Jamie Rush
understands what it takes to disappear because her parents taught her that long
ago. Leveraging her knowledge of why and how people run from their own lives,
Jamie has built a business based on bringing those in hiding back to answer for
their actions. She takes pride in using her skills to work both inside and
outside the law.
When her
estranged brother, Brian, calls and says his daughter is missing, Jamie
initially turns down the case. Kristen has always been a bit wild, frequently
dropping off the grid then showing up a few days later. But Brian swears this
time is different, and even though Jamie vowed years ago to keep her conniving
sibling at arm’s length, she can’t walk away if Kristen could be in real
trouble.
As Jamie
begins digging into Kristen’s life, she uncovers her niece’s most guarded
secrets. Uncovering the truth will put a target on Jamie’s back and endanger
the lives of those she loves.
Kathy Valenti
Kathleen
Valenti is the author of the Maggie O’Malley mystery series. The series’ first
book, Agatha- and Lefty-nominated Protocol, introduces us to Maggie, a
pharmaceutical researcher with a new job, a used phone and a deadly problem.
The series’ second book, 39 Winks, releases May 22. When Kathleen isn’t writing
page-turning mysteries that combine humor and suspense, she works as a
nationally award-winning advertising copywriter. She lives in Oregon with her
family where she pretends to enjoy running. Learn more at
www.kathleenvalenti.com.
Summary
of Protocol
Freshly
minted college graduate Maggie O’Malley embarks on a career fueled by professional
ambition and a desire to escape the past. As a pharmaceutical researcher, she’s
determined to save lives from the shelter of her lab. But on her very first day
she’s pulled into a world of uncertainty. Reminders appear on her phone for
meetings she’s never scheduled with people she’s never met. People who end up
dead.
With help
from her best friend, Maggie discovers the victims on her phone are connected
to each other and her new employer. She soon unearths a treacherous plot that
threatens her mission—and her life. Maggie must unlock deadly secrets to stop
horrific abuses of power before death comes calling for her.
Such a fun and insightful set of interviews here! I particularly enjoyed the question about Olympic sports and some of the images there--especially Sam strapping Nana Jo on her back for a biathalon and the idea of 100-meter dash in stilettos!
ReplyDeleteCongrats to you all on being named finalists here and best wishes too!
Thank you so very much for hosting us on Writers Who Kill! It's been a pleasure getting to know my fellow nominees. Malice Domestic seems so far away, but I know it will be here in a flash, and it is truly an honor to be nominated for an Agatha Award in the Best First Novel category. I'm still pinching myself!
ReplyDeleteThank you all for this fun interview. I look forward to this every year, Paula!
ReplyDeleteBest wishes to all the nominees - my TBR pile just got a LOT taller.
Fantastic interviews with these great writers.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for having us, and for the warm welcome and best wishes. It's been wonderful getting to know my fellow nominees not just as writers, but as the amazing human beings that they are. I'm so lucky to know them!
ReplyDeletecongrats and best wishes to all!
ReplyDeleteCongratulations on your nominations. I can't wait to meet all of you at Malice and to buy your books there, too.
ReplyDeleteThank you guys again for hosting us and to everyone for the congrats! I loved everyone's answers!
ReplyDeleteI am so excited to meet and interview these folks each year. Thank you all for sharing such great information!
ReplyDeleteThank you! I truly enjoy hearing about the nominees and their work!
ReplyDelete