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AUTHOR Q&A
What got you started writing?
Divorce, flood and a broken neck--in that order, although I can hardly
recommend this route. But in 1997, the very same elements that were
suddenly making my life read like a bad country-western song also became
the springboard for my writing career. “Therapeutic” journaling, after a
serious equestrian accident, evolved into an inspirational story that
was included in Chicken Soup for the Nurse’s Soul--and re-fueled
my old dream of writing books. Then I married this great guy who shook
his head and said, “stop talking about it and just do it”--you know, the
old Nike approach. And before I could balk, he’d signed me up for an
online writing course and made me put my keyboard where my mouth was.
Not quite three years later, my agent sold the first two books in my
Darcy Cavanaugh mystery series.
Your mysteries are both humorous and romantic. Why that style?
I
spent nearly three decades as an emergency room nurse, the last few
sprinting hospital corridors during our critical national nursing
shortage. In addition to skills like advanced cardiac life support, I
learned how to dodge blood, spit and the right hook of a drug-crazed
gangbanger; to win a bet on blood alcohol levels by sniffing a patient’s
breath--and that it’s impossible not to cry with parents over the loss
of a child. In short, I learned that life is gritty and real and that
sometimes a laugh and a well-timed hug are the only things that keep us
believing in the promise of a happy ending. It has made me a firm
believer that love and laughter are the very best medicine. So now I
send my fictional nurse heroines into the fray for me and I make darned
certain that there are plenty of laughs, a rich dollop of romance
and--always--a happy ending.
Why the cruise ship settings?
I
love cruises! The very first time I stepped aboard a cruise ship (bound
for the Caribbean) it felt like that moment in Wizard of Oz when
everything goes from black and white to color--luxurious surroundings,
gourmet food, champagne, music, entertainment and chocolates on my
pillow. Where else could an over-worked nurse become a princess for
week? I was hooked and--if you glance at the travel industry
statistics--so are a whole lot of other folks. More and more people are
opting for cruise vacations on bigger and better ships. Can you imagine
making use of rock-climbing walls, ice-skating rinks, golf-courses,
top-notch fitness centers, full-service Spas, gambling casinos and
glitzy shopping boutiques . . . all while sailing the ocean at 34 knots?
Trust me, it’s incredible. My books offer a taste of this lifestyle and
a chance for my readers to escape to exotic ports . . . as well as solve
a murder. And, because I’m dedicated, I’m willing to continue to do my
own grueling cruise research.
Where do you come up with your ideas?
I’m
a people watcher. I collect mannerisms, bits of dialogue, body language
and physical traits from people around me much the same way a kid
collects string or frogs or trading cards. I use these things to build
the characters that I then throw into impossible (and always quirky)
situations where their motivation and goals collide with those of the
other characters around them. I based the killer in Dressed to Keel
on someone I “collected” on fall foliage cruise up the North Atlantic
coast. At some point the characters begin to tell me the story and I
see it evolving almost like a series of movie scenes. For me, the most
fun is dialogue, when the characters actually “talk” in my head. In
defense of my sanity, I can tell you that most writers experience this
phenomena and welcome it, knowing that it means the story has begun to
write itself. Which explains the far away look in our eyes. We’re
listening.
Beyond the humor, is there a theme or message in your books?
While the “soft-boiled” mystery genre is considered light reading, I do
think that readers will relate to my heroine’s struggle to “find”
herself and to accept that person for who she is as it relates to career
and relationships. Darcy Cavanaugh climbs the gangway of that first
cruise ship (Dressed to Keel) to escape from the pressures of her
nursing career, worry over an aging relative, and the stinging
humiliation of a failed relationship. Can’t we all relate to that kind
of self-doubt and frustration? Here, too, laughter is good medicine:
when we learn to laugh with ourselves and with others it becomes easier
to accept our flaws and our differences.
What are you working on now?
I’m
completing revisions on the second Darcy Cavanaugh mystery, Aye Do or
Die, which is set for release in the summer of 2007. And I’ve begun
work on a third book in the series, Berth to Death, which has a
Mediterranean setting. Capri, Florence, Venice, pasta, Chianti, gelato
. . . that’s going to be tough research. Visit my website and Blog where
I chronicle how I suffer for my art.
Do
you have any advice for aspiring authors?
Yes, three key things: read, write, and stick with it.
Read
voraciously and then write what it is that you like to read, developing
your own genuine “voice,” not trying to emulate writers that you admire.
Make a daily habit of writing, set goals whether it is x-number
of pages or words. Break it down into small tasks, sit your fanny down
in the chair and (like my dear husband said) “just do it.” If you only
write only one page (250 words) per day, you will finish a book in less
than a year. Consider a writing class (online or community-based). Join
a positive, supportive critique group and get writer (not spouse/friend)
feedback on your work.
Stick with it
and persevere, even
in the face of rejection. Everyone gets rejected: Stephen King’s first
book, Carrie, was rejected 30 times and J.K. Rowling received
about a dozen rejections for Harry Potter. I personally queried 100
agents before signing a contract for representation--that’s ninety-nine
rejections. Take ‘em on the chin and move on. Go for your dream. Trust
me, it’s do-able.
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