Tuesday, February 23, 2016
Bad reviews-Oh My. What’s a Writer to Do?
Romance with Suspense, Secrets and Sizzling Sunsets.: Bad reviews-Oh My. What’s a Writer to Do?: Ever get a bad book review? Every author has. What to do? Can you do anything? Should you do anyth...
Saturday, February 6, 2016
It Should Have Been Just Another Termination, but it was anything but...visit with cozy mystery author Linda Thorne...
It
Should Have Been Just Another Termination for Human Resource Manager
Judy Kenagy, but it was anything but...An interview with cozy mystery
author Linda Thorne, as she discusses writing, books and human
resources manager Judy Kenagy...
Hello one and all! How are you today? I hope everyone is doing well and happy, or at least trying to do so! Staying warm? I hope so. It’s so great to be with all of you again. Welcome back everyone to my writing blog where I try to share whatever I think may interest you: Whether it is writing information, interviews with other authors, and anything connected to writing. Welcome to an Interview with Linda Thorne, Author of the cozy mystery, Just Another Termination.
"At long last, she lands a job with a good employer, but the trouble is just beginning…
Human resources manager Judy Kenagy hopes her days of running from bad bosses and guilt-ridden memories are over. But alas, she’s barely settled in when a young female employee is found shot to death, spinning her new workplace into turmoil. Small-town police chief, Carl Bombardier solicits Judy’s help in her role as the company’s HR Manager. While working with Judy, he shares his fanatical interest in a twenty-five-year-old double homicide he believes is linked to her last and worst bad boss. To make matters worse, the trusted assistant of her monster ex-boss starts showing up, keeping the unwanted connection going. When the pesky trusted assistant turns up murdered, Judy learns there’s a connection with the shooting death of the employee. She starts sleuthing at the crime scene and stumbles upon an important piece of evidence. Can she solve all of the murders with this single find? If she does, will she finally be freed from the demons of her past? Or are things not as they seem?"
Hello one and all! How are you today? I hope everyone is doing well and happy, or at least trying to do so! Staying warm? I hope so. It’s so great to be with all of you again. Welcome back everyone to my writing blog where I try to share whatever I think may interest you: Whether it is writing information, interviews with other authors, and anything connected to writing. Welcome to an Interview with Linda Thorne, Author of the cozy mystery, Just Another Termination.
Linda Thorne began pursuing her
true passion, writing, in 2005. Since then, she has published
numerous short stories in the genres of mystery, thriller, and
romance. Her debut novel, Just Another Termination, is the first in a
planned series of mysteries that tell the story of Judy Kenagy. Like her lead character, Thorne is
a career human resources manager. She has worked in the HR profession
in Arizona, Colorado, Mississippi, California, and now, Tennessee.
She holds a BS degree in business from Arizona State University and
has completed a number of graduate-level courses in her field.
Welcome Linda and thanks so much for joining us here. Shall we begin
to learn more about you, your writing, and your debut novel, Just
Another Termination?
Author Linda Thorne
SJ: We've had husband and wife
team amateur sleuths. We've had retired school teachers, bored
housewives, brilliant foreign sleuths, and teenage sleuths in cozy
mysteries, how did the idea for Judy Kenagy, human resources manager
come about?
Linda: This goes back to the ease and safety of writing what you know. Like my character, I’m a career human resources manager. I’ve spent most of my years in human resources trying to get out of the field. I finally resigned myself to the fact that this is the job I’m most skilled at and where I can make the most money. So, I’m stuck in HR, but I can allow my lead character to take on a secondary role as an amateur sleuth then live vicariously through her, experiencing the adventures.
Linda: This goes back to the ease and safety of writing what you know. Like my character, I’m a career human resources manager. I’ve spent most of my years in human resources trying to get out of the field. I finally resigned myself to the fact that this is the job I’m most skilled at and where I can make the most money. So, I’m stuck in HR, but I can allow my lead character to take on a secondary role as an amateur sleuth then live vicariously through her, experiencing the adventures.
SJ: Do you have a favorite sleuth
from books/TV or film? Why is he/she your favorite?
Linda: Jessica Fletcher from the
Murder She Wrote TV series is my favorite. I’ve watched every
single show, and rerun after rerun. I think the reason I like her so
much is because, while showing sensitivity and empathy toward others,
she’s always snooping behind the scenes to seek out the murderer.
She has the smarts and the intuition.
SJ: What was the most difficult
problem you encountered in writing a mystery?
Linda: Keeping the conflict going.
I seemed to keep defaulting back to writing the story, forgetting the
reader thrives on conflict. The climax chapters were booming with
conflict from the get go, but I had to really work had getting it
into the rest of the book.
SJ: What was the easiest thing for
you to write about?
Linda: Scenes with human resources
issues. I’ve been handling them for so long that writing about
anything involving the profession is a skip and a jump.
SJ: What do you love most about
being a writer? Least?
Linda: The most incredible part of
being a writer is having the power to take the story wherever you
want it to go. You can make poor people rich, help the good and get
even with the bad. You can solve any problem. I love the power to do
whatever I want in my story as if I’m doing it in reality. What I
like least about writing is struggling with the limitations of the
English language. English is so easy to mess up from using the wrong
word to screwing up sentence structure. I don’t speak or write
other languages, but an English teacher once told me that English is
the toughest.
SJ: What writer inspired you most
and how?
Linda: This is a difficult
question since there are so many writers who’ve inspired me along
the way and each one writes so differently. If I had to choose one,
I’d say Caroline Haines because she’s the one who inspired me to
start writing books. I was reading one of her Mississippi Delta Bone
series when I made the decision.
SJ: What is a favorite book you
enjoyed reading and would recommend without hesitation? Why?
Linda: This is a hard one. I’ve
read so many memorable books, but I think my favorite is Lawrence
Block’s Eight Million Ways to Die. Beginnings and endings are
important to me and this book had the best beginning and the best
ending I can remember. When I refer to the ending here, it’s not
when the case is solved and the murderer caught, but the ending going
through the epilogue chapter to the very last page.
SJ: If you could give just one
piece of important writing advice to an aspiring writer, what would
it be?
Linda: Any aspiring writer needs
to want it bad enough to be willing to deal with the rejection and
criticism that follows this profession. Once you go through the
hurdle of your first publication, the rejection part begins to
decrease, but both rejection and criticism will continue throughout
any author’s life. If this is something that will be overly
troubling to you, I suggest you don’t do it to yourself.
SJ: In closing, can you give us a
hint into your next project?
Linda: My second book in the
series is currently a work-in-progress, called A Promotion to Die
For. I really love this story because I based the mystery on
something bizarre that happened to me when I was twenty-two. Someone
broke into the house where I lived. He was scared off by a random
phone call in the middle of the night. The intruder ran off. Shortly
afterward another young woman down the street was murdered. In A
Promotion to Die For, I create a job promotion for my lead, Judy
Kenagy, which will requires her to relocate back to the town where
the exact same thing had happened to her decades earlier. She learns
that the case of the other young woman murdered in the neighborhood,
on that night, has never been solved. She’s put in danger of a
second attempt on her life and she gets to solve the old, cold case.
Now that is some intro for all of us to
bite into. And to get your juices really going, here is a brief excerpt of Just Another Termination for you to enjoy:
I knew I had no business here,
but was it going to cost me more than I’d thought?
Closer in, I could see the yellow
tape was broken or missing in places, but still cordoned off a
circular area of dirt and mud, about twelve feet in diameter. The
tape had been stapled to stakes pounded into the ground, but many of
them had fallen over. This crime scene had already been worked. Two
dirty latex gloves and a staple gun had been left outside the
perimeter, and multiple footprints marred the mud. The absence of a
patrol officer protecting the scene implied the clean-up crew was on
their way.
Inside the partially taped-off
area, someone had outlined where Jimmie Lee’s body had been.
Instead of the typical chalk line, plastic pegs were pressed into the
mud about six inches apart, marking where the body had fallen.
I stepped high over the tape and
into the mud, grateful I’d worn jeans and flat shoes for that
dress-down Friday. Trees towered behind me, the interminable water
before me. I caught a whiff of mildew.
I was no sooner inside than a
rustling sound came from the tangle of maples and I twisted around.
The noise disappeared and I turned
back, catching a glitter in the mud. It came from the waterline where
the soft waves of the Mississippi Sound licked against the cryptic
outline of the corpse. That
noise again.
I
spun around to the whooshing sounds in the maples, my heart
palpitating, but I still didn’t see anything. When I turned back,
the glitter had disappeared. I stooped. I was in a race with the sun,
not to mention wanting to be long gone before the clean-up crew
appeared. With one hand, I frantically ran my fingers through the
muck. Then a final spray of sunlight illuminated the spot and the
sparkle reappeared. This time, I kept my eyes fixed on it, bending,
reaching, touching. Gently, I lifted a metal object, close to an inch
long and about half that in width. Heavy for its size. Twilight had
deepened into dusk. I stood up and whirled round to the same rustling
noise, but this time a crackling blast followed. A gun?
Thank you so much, Linda for allowing us to take some time out of your busy schedule and interview you about your writing. Readers, take note you may purchase a copy of Just Another Termination at:
For more information about Linda and her writing, please check out her website at:
Thank
you all for visiting with us. Until next month...every one please
stay safe. Smile. Be happy. Show compassion. Be nice to others. Put a
little love into your heart. Please speak up for those without a
voice, whether it be a dog, cat, elephant or monkey. One person, one
voice can make a difference. Read a book and pass it on. Leave a
review. Reviews are important for authors. Believe me. I know. Thank
you!
Regards,
S. J. Francis
Advocate for the underdog, and
cat, and supporting writers, et al.
In Shattered Lies: "It's
All About Family." Available now from Black Opal Books and for
sale at all on-line retailers and independent booksellers.
My Black Opal Books Author Page:
And now for some legal stuff:
Copyright 2015 by S.J. Francis. Opinions expressed here are solely
those of the author, S. J. Francis and the guest author and are meant
to entertain, inform and enlighten, and intend to offend no one.
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