Everyone
in the small town of Sweet Iron knew the teenage daughter of Judge Tippitt and
his wife, Jolene. Melanie Tippitt’s exotic green eyes sprinkled with gold
flecks only added to her haunting beauty. That is why her shocking murder in
the summer of 1971 shattered the innocence of the town. Soon, the inhabitants
sighed with relief when the murderer was sent to prison. Case closed.
Four
decades later, Elizabeth Russell arrives in Sweet Iron with plans for a brief
visit. She extends her stay when she discovers reasons to research the Tippitt
family genealogy and the disturbing tragedy of their daughter’s murder. Her
decision disturbs the tranquility of the town and challenges the truth of what
happened that day at Tippitt Pond…
Case
closed. Or was it?
I’ve interviewed Susan Van Kirk before on WWK because her
writing and characters draw readers into the plots. A Death At Tippitt Pond hooked me from the first page.
Here’s the first hook: A
forty-seven-year-old New York researcher is contacted by a lawyer’s agent about
an inheritance from someone she doesn’t know in a place she’s never been and
has no family. Ticket paid by the estate. Between projects and enticed by
intrigue, she accepts and comes to the small town of Sweet Iron, IL telling
friends she’ll be back within a week. Famous last words….
And that was just the first
chapter. There are many more hooks that compel readers forward until the end is
near and whodunnit is revealed. But there are still unanswered questions, which
I hope, will necessitate Susan to write more about these characters—by reader
mandate!
Please welcome Susan Van Kirk
back to WWK. E. B. Davis
_________________________________________________________________________________________________
Is Sweet Iron, IL based on
another town?
Not exactly. Sweet Iron is a bit larger than Endurance, the town
in my earlier series, and the population is somewhere between the town I live
in now, Monmouth, Illinois, and the town I grew up in—Galesburg, Illinois. But
all the small towns I write about are eventually an amalgamation of the area in
which I’ve lived—west central Illinois.
How did the Tippitts find their
way to Sweet Iron?
Molly Grayson, the librarian at Sweet Iron’s McClendan College,
gives Elizabeth (Beth) Russell a history lesson about that. The Tippitt family
was part of the second group of settlers arriving in Sweet Iron. The first
group found their way from Pennsylvania in the 1830s. Thomas Johannes Bergmann
was the leader, and his family had made their fortune in iron in the early
1800s in Philadelphia. But owner-worker strife and strikes became commonplace
in the iron foundries, and Bergmann foresaw more of the same in the future. An
adventurous visionary, he moved his wife and five children to the new state of
Illinois and founded Sweet Iron, named for his wife’s family—Sweet—and the
product that had made him wealthy. By the time William Webster Tippitt showed
up with his family in the early 1840s, the town was a thriving wilderness outpost,
and Tippitt brought his young wife. They settled into the little town, becoming
involved in the politics and governing, and founding the first newspaper. One
of the characters in A Death at Tippitt
Pond, Jefferson Webster Tippitt, is named for this newspaper editor of the mid-1800s.
Were all adoptions sealed in the
sixties?
Virtually all legal adoptions in the 1960s were closed, meaning
the original birth certificate was either sealed or expunged, and the parents
who adopted the child were listed on the new birth certificate. Information
about the birth parents was unavailable. Previously, adoption had been more
open, resulting in privacy issues. By 1960, twenty-eight states had laws
stating that the original birth certificate could only be seen by court order.
State and federal governments tightened the restrictions during that decade. By
the 1970s, open adoptions became more acceptable, and today it is rare to have
closed adoptions. My character, Beth Russell, was conceived in 1968 in small-town
Illinois where closed adoptions would still have been more common. She
discovers early in the story that she was adopted. (Sorry. Spoiler. Can’t help
it.)
Why has Elizabeth always been
plagued by anxiety?
Here are Elizabeth’s thoughts: “Deep down, Beth had always known
something was wrong. She could remember a conversation with her well-meaning
friend, Gabrielle, who said, ‘But I have grandparents and aunts and uncles and
four brothers and three sisters and nieces and nephews too numerous to mention.
At last count, I think that overwhelms your zero. Don’t you find it strange?’
It was true her parents kept her close to home. No history. No relatives. If
she were honest, even she found it strange.”
Beth had grown up with a few friends in upstate New York, but
ironically, despite being a genealogist, she knows nothing of her own history.
Add to that her green eyes with gold speckles. Where did those come from? Her calm
father had died when she was fourteen, leaving her in the care of her paranoid
mother who was always anxious about something. But what?
Finally, Beth had a horrifying memory of an experience that would
make anyone anxious. Despite her confidence in the freelance work she does for
authors, she is not so sure about her personal life.
How does Elizabeth react when
the DNA analysis comes back positive?
She is literally in shock. This can’t be true. She had two parents—the
Russells—in upstate New York. She knows nothing about this family in Illinois.
However, the more she thinks about it, the more she remembers her gut feeling
that something was wrong. This adoption might be the reason her mother was so
paranoid. The Russells were the only parents she ever knew. Now she finds out
she has biological parents, and no one—not even the Russells—told her the
truth. She feels betrayed and angry at first. Even worse, none of these people
are alive so she can yell at them or ask them why.
Why was Kyle Warner, a detective
for the Sweet Iron PD, charged with taking Elizabeth’s DNA sample for testing?
The Tippitt family lawyer wants to make sure everything is done
legally, and he wants someone he can trust. Kyle Warner is being paid
handsomely on his day off to take this DNA sample to a private lab. They can
make no mistakes because a great deal of money is riding on this
identification.
I was surprised that Elizabeth,
who suffers from anxiety, had no trouble sleeping at the old Tippitt house.
Why?
You would think she would be awake all night with these huge
changes in her life—strange town, strange house, strange story about who she
is. The first night Elizabeth thinks she’ll never get to sleep, especially
since this small town is totally quiet at night—little traffic on the streets,
few people out and about, and few people in town that Elizabeth would even know.
At one point, she even thinks about getting a small fan to help her sleep. But
the minute her head hits the pillow, she’s out. Why? She may not be alone in
Tippitt House.
[Spoiler Alert] Elizabeth is
told that her mother was murdered by her father. Why doesn’t she except that as
fact?
She does at first. In fact, if she is angry at her adopted parents
for keeping this secret, she is even more upset that her biological father is a
murderer. Because of him, she will never meet the mother who first held her in
her arms. As time goes by, however, Elizabeth begins meeting people in town who
knew her parents. When she listens to their stories, a shadow of a doubt
crosses her mind.
We must also understand that Beth was raised by a lawyer-father whom
she often compares to Atticus Finch. He taught her about justice and righting
wrongs, and those lessons weigh heavily on her mind. She is an excellent
researcher in high demand because of her reputation. So her desire to see
justice and the skills of her job make her the perfect person to research the
past and consider what happened that day at Tippitt Pond. Did they get it
right?
What type of evidence can be
found through genealogical records?
Genealogy has a lot to do with connecting dots and making
assumptions. Finding the evidence to substantiate those assumptions is what
genealogists do. Beth can find databases that list births, deaths, and
marriages. That’s basic. Then she will need to explore letters, diaries,
newspapers, and various artifacts that will help her connect the dots. Church
records of baptisms are sometimes helpful sources. However, it works both ways.
Evidence often leads to more questions and theories that she must try to verify.
It can be a very frustrating experience that leads her in circles. In this
series, I plan to have Beth explore some of the past members of the Tippitt
family. Delving into the past helps her better understand the present.
How does Elizabeth know who to trust?
She is faced with a town she doesn’t know, people she’s never met
before, and bits and pieces of information from which to draw conclusions about
her biological family. Lies and secrets abound. Motives and fears add to the
information she weighs. Fortunately, she strikes up a relationship with Molly
Grayson, the college librarian, and Beth bounces her impressions off Molly’s
experience in the town. As she meets the people who were there at Tippitt Pond
that day, or she is introduced to people who knew her parents, she considers
her first impressions of them. She’s travelled extensively in her work life, so
she is good at reading body language. Using the skepticism she learned from her
father, she excels at knowing lies when she hears them. Depending on what she
finds out, she could be a threat to someone.
Elizabeth fled Spring Harbor,
NY, her hometown, because everyone knew everyone’s business. Is this one
element a factor in her decision to stay or leave Sweet Iron?
Absolutely. She left her hometown for that reason and fled to college,
graduate school, and New York City. Very comfortable in a condo in Sea Cliff,
Long Island, she commutes easily to the New York City Public Library for
research and enjoys Broadway productions, lunches out with her friends, and all
the wonderful amenities of a huge city. She can be anonymous. No one knows her
business. When we first meet her in the lawyer’s office in Sweet Iron, she is considering
whether she can catch a plane back to New York that same day once she talks to
him. At various points in her unplanned, extended stay, she is amused, annoyed,
or angry in her reactions to this small town where everyone knows who she
is—“the lady with the weird eyes.” She makes no secret of her desire to go back
to New York where her “real life” and her friends are.
Is Tippitt house haunted? Or is
Elizabeth haunted?
Perhaps a little of both.
I wasn’t sure if A Death At Tippitt Pond was a stand-
alone. But it is labeled as A Sweet Iron Mystery. Is this the start of a new
series? What’s next for Elizabeth and her new friends?
Yes, it is going to be a series. Each of the books will have a
present-day plot with Elizabeth and her new community, but each will also go
back in time to some historical events. I’m planning her research in the next
book to go back to William Webster Tippitt, who built Tippitt House in the
decade before the Civil War.
Susan – congratulations, it sounds like a great combination of a modern tale with historical insights.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Jim. Whenever Elaine interviews me, she asks such insightful questions, and they cause me to think about ideas I hadn't considered before. Thank you, Elaine!
ReplyDeleteWelcome! Congratulations on your new release.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Margaret. And also thanks for the sharing of the info!
ReplyDeleteCongratulations, Susan, on the release of your most recent book. It certainly sounds like a page turner.
ReplyDeleteGreat interview. Loved this book!
ReplyDeleteSounds like a great book--and what a good name for a town!
ReplyDeleteVery interesting book. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteCongratulations, Susan! I love your description.
ReplyDeleteI haven't read the book yet, but it's definitely on my summer reading list.
ReplyDeleteGosh, what an outpouring of affection for my clever heroine, Beth Russell. Obviously, I need to get started researching the next one! Thank you, everyone.
ReplyDeleteLoved this interview with insightful questions and intriguing answers. Ditto to all the comments, Susan and Elaine!
ReplyDeleteI'm definitely intrigued by the book and series! Thank you, EB and Susan, for the terrific interview.
ReplyDelete