Saturday, April 27, 2024

Where Do Your Ideas Come From? One Of The Most Asked Questions

One of the most asked questions a writer gets is this one - "Where do you get your ideas from?" - or some other variation of that same question. It can be one of the easiest and hardest questions to answer. And there are as many different answers as there are people writing. I've heard everything from they come from my real-life experiences to the idea fairy, to they come to me in my dreams, and everything in between. I even heard one author tell his audience that his ideas come from magic, and I supposed there may be some truth to that answer.

I mainly write private investigator mystery novels and I find it hard to define exactly where my ideas for the storylines come from. All I really know when I sit down in front of a blank page is that someone will be murdered. But here is a peek at what sparked the idea for the first of my four novels in the Razzman Mystery Crime Files series.

Dead is Forever: This was my first book ever and comes closest to my real life than anything else I've written since. Now don't misunderstand, not close as in the murder and all the shenanigans that happen around it. More like the closest to my life as in the relationships and some of the scenes and conversation between the characters. I knew I wanted to write a murder mystery and I was going through some, let's call it, issues, at the time. Now don't read anything into this that really isn't there, but the murder part of the story just seemed to form from there. 

The story is set in both Syracuse, NY, where I grew up, and Charlotte, NC, where I've lived for almost thirty years. And except for the names being changed, my protagonist, Tony Razzolilto, his friends, the relationships, and the places they hang out at were all drawn from real life. As far as the murders, the people who committed them, and the circumstances behind the plot were all obviously a fabrication used to construct a murder mystery. This book is more of a whydunit rather than a whodunit style of mystery as the reader knows early on who the antagonist is, yet the reasons behind his heinous acts are revealed as the story unfolds. But the real question is where the idea came from for the actual murder mystery part, and that is the conundrum. And all I can say is damned if I know. As a pantser, I discover the story as it unfolds. It comes from some part of my brain as I'm typing and flows through my fingertips onto the blank page. 

So, in Dead is Forever, I find it hard to describe where the idea for the murder plot came from. The backdrop and all the good-guy characters came from what I knew best at the time--my family and friends, relationships, places I frequented, and the two cities where I've lived. Easy-peasy. I'd like to say that I carried through the series with all those same familiarities. But, no, I threw a wrench in the whole thing with all the books going forward. In the second book, Deadly Passion, I advanced the timeline by about five years, so I could make Tony a more seasoned PI, and the only carry over from the first book is the Charlotte location--which is now where all the stories take place--the main character, Tony Razzolito, Scott McHenry, who is the PI he worked with during the Charlotte, NC scenes as well as Rita O'Connor, the Charlotte police captain. Everyone and everything else were left behind in the first book.

I've never had an idea for a storyline come from an idea fairy or from my dreams, although I have dreamt about my characters while I'm actively writing a new story. The latter has helped me solve a few jams my characters were in--or more to the point, the corner I was in that I was trying to write myself back out of. And, yes, I'm fully aware that if I was more of a plotter or an outliner rather than a pantser/discovery writer, I might not write myself into those corners. But where's the fun in that?

Nowadays, my ideas mostly come from the oddest places. For instance, the idea for Dirty Air, the third novel in the Razzman series, came from reading an article in a racing magazine I was flipping through while in a Walmart. And I didn't even read the whole thing. I was fascinated with the first part of the article which had to do with the turbulent air currents caused by the lead race car compromising the aerodynamics of the car behind it, which could cause the second car to lose control. Apparently, this can be used as a racing strategy. Not being a big NASCAR fan, it seemed to me that it was kind of a dirty strategy, thus the term 'dirty air' since the air is deemed dirty in that situation for the cars behind the lead car, which causes the control issues. 

The words, dirty air stuck with me. When it was time for me to start the third book in the series, and living in Charlotte, where stock car racing is huge, I constructed an entire storyline around the words, dirty air, and even used those words for the title of the book. I had never thought of writing a mystery with racing as a part of the story, and if I hadn't happened to have seen that article, probably never would have written Dirty Air.

Coming up with ideas for a story is not as hard as one might think. The hard part, at least for me, is fleshing that idea out across two-hundred and sixty or more pages and having it all fit together in the end. THAT is the question that should be asked - not where our ideas come from, but how do you take that germ of an idea and make it grow into a full-length novel. Because that's where the magic truly happens. 

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As always, I appreciate you taking the time to read my blog. And of course, your thoughts and comments are always welcome. πŸ˜Š








You can find my books here: The Razzman Mystery Crime Files

Until next time...😎

Monday, April 15, 2024

Don't Miss RC & JP Carter's Magnolia Bluff Debut!

Rob and Joan Carter are two of the busiest and most respected people in our industry. Under their pen names, RC & JP Carter, they are the talented writing team behind the award-winning O'Rourke Crime Novels series. They also host the extremely popular Meet the Author Podcast every Wednesday evening and are paranormal investigators as well as active members of the Tampa Bay Spirits Paranormal Research Group based in Tampa Bay Florida. The latter spawned a second podcast called Haunted Campfire Tales, where Rob and Joan, along with other paranormal investigators from the Tampa Bay team, host a monthly livestream show dedicated to conversation and stories centered around everything and anything to do with paranormal activity. And if their plate wasn't already full enough with all of that, they also find time to publicize and support other indie authors every single day through their Indie Book Source website.

Last year Rob and Joan were invited to join and become permanent members of the Guild of Underground Authors writers group and participate in our Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles project. The result is the April 20th release of A Chance Of A Ghost, book 23 in the series. I have to say, I'm very excited about this addition to an already wonderful series. As paranormal investigators, the couple know their way around a story with a fun, haunted twist.

Whether you've already enjoyed the first 22 books in the series or you're discovering the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles for the first time with this book, all can be read as standalone novels. Of course, I highly recommend reading them all for maximum enjoyment! And, if you haven't done so yet, you can order the entire series here: MBCC Series

You can order your copy of A Chance Of A Ghost for the limited time special price of just 99¢ by clicking here: A Chance Of A Ghost

From the back cover of the book:

Danny & Maria have moved their young family from Tampa, Florida to the outskirts of Magnolia Bluff, Texas. They have spent the last year and a half renovating an old Victorin mansion. It had been neglected for years and needed a lot work. Now, most of the work is done. During renovations they would hear things go bump in the night, Floorboards would creak. Sometimes, tools would be found in very odd places. They did not think much of that until their son woke up screaming for them in the middle of the night. He had seen a shadowy man at the foot of his bed. Danny immediately called his cousin Mike in Tampa.

Mike and his wife are paranormal investigators with Tampa Bay Spirits. As soon as they got the call, they packed up their car and headed west. While enroute to Magnolia Bluff, Maureen sees in her mind's eye a shadowy figure walking through the house. The closer they get to Magnolia Bluff, the stronger Mike feels someone in Magnolia Bluff will be murdered.

Is Mike's premonition correct? Is there a shadowy figure walking through the mansion? Who is the shadowy figure? Why is he there? What is lurking in the attic? Who is in danger? What else will the team discover during their visit in peaceful Magnolia Bluff?

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I don't know about you, but a chill just ran up my spine!😧

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You can learn more about the Carters and their books here: RC & JP Carter Bio and books







Connect with the Meet the Author Podcast here: Meet the Author











Connect with Tampa Bay Spirits here: Tampa Bay Spirits








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As always, I appreciate you taking the time to read my blog. And of course, your thoughts and comments are always welcome. πŸ˜Š








You can find my books here: The Razzman Mystery Crime Files

Until next time...😎

Sunday, March 31, 2024

Best & Worst Advice

I was listening to a Sisters in Crime podcast the other day and it got me thinking about the best and the worst advice I'd ever received as a writer. What struck me at the time was the answer for the worst advice given to the featured guest writer. The interview was with Katherine Hall Page, and she said that it wasn't exactly advice that was given to her, but more like a catch-all phrase that she felt was terrible advice:

Write what you know.

It may be good advice in general, but her thought is that it's much more interesting to write what you don't know. I agree. As a writer of mysteries, I've never committed a murder, yet I write about them in all my books. I certainly didn't know how to do that before writing about it. And even now, I wouldn't be good at it in real life because it's something I really don't know about. I've also never been involved in a kidnapping, but I wrote about a judge being kidnapped in one of the short stories included in my book, The Razzman Chronicles.

Of course, that doesn't mean that including scenes from cities I've lived in or places I'm familiar with is a bad idea. Using those places in my stories enhance the enjoyment for myself and the reader because it's what I know. So, in some cases writing what you know, does actually work for me as a mystery writer.


As for good advice I've received, here are a few of my favorites that I've actually taken:

Join a writing community.

This can be in the form of a local critique group with some of your peers, an organization be it local or national, or one of several social media outlets. 

I am somewhat active on a couple of the social media sites - X(Twitter), Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn are the four where I spend most of my social media time. I've met some incredibly talented writers on these sites who also just happen to be wonderful people. I'm a member of the Charlotte Writers Club where I live, and I recently joined the national Sisters in Crime organization as well as the local chapter, Queen City Suspects (yes, men are welcome to join). I also listen to and occasionally interact with writing/writers/readers podcasts. My two favorites are Meet the Author Podcast, hosted by Rob and Joan Carter and The Charlotte Readers Podcast, hosted by Landis Wade, Sarah Archer, and Hannah Larrew. I've been a guest on Rob and Joan's show a few times and I've had a couple of blogposts posted on The Charlotte Readers Podcast website as well as being asked by the hosts to record them for playback on their show.


Do the research.

This is an important piece of advice. My mystery series takes place in Charlotte, NC and just because I live here doesn't mean I'm familiar with everything in the city and surrounding areas. For example, in my novel, Dirty Air, I had to spend hours researching the world of NASCAR and illegal street racing. Did I use everything I learned in the book? Of course not, but it gave me a sense of security and confidence that I could write the story without worrying about whether I was authentically portraying the characters and scenes. Another example was a short story I wrote where several of the scenes take place in Jamaica. I've never been to Jamaica, so research was a crucial part of making sure the story rang true for those scenes.


Carve out a writing schedule and stick to it.

It took me a while to get this one to work for me and I kind of combined it with another piece of advice which is to grow your network to help expand your marketing. Admittedly, since I am now semi-retired this advice has been much easier to make work to my advantage. I work a couple days a week and then have seven or eight days off in a row. The days I'm working my part time job are full eight-hour days and unless I'm against a writing deadline, I don't write on those days. The days off are where my writing schedule is setup. On those days I primarily spend time working on my WIP, and advertising and marketing my work. That includes setting up ads on social media, visiting local bookstores, and networking to get my name and books out there through podcasts, book clubs, the libraries, and anything else that may pop up depending on the month and time of year. I get up early and write a full day on most days and reserve at least two of the days for the advertising and marketing stuff. 


I haven't had any really bad advice. But one piece that's not necessarily bad advice that's been mentioned to me that I haven't taken has to do with my method of writing. The advice was to just get the words on the page and go back later to edit and rewrite. The idea behind that is to not break the flow of writing so you can get that first draft finished. A sense of accomplishment if you will. I admit I've completely ignored that piece of advice. I write around two-thousand words a day - more if I'm really on a roll. The next day, I go back and edit and rewrite what I wrote the day before. I've been told I'm wrong for doing it this way... but I've also been told that there's no one way to write. I choose to go with the latter. 

If there's one thing I've learned through all of this, it's that you need to listen to all the advice. And once you've listened and digested all the advice, do what works best for you. And remember to never stop listening when other writers talk about what advice they've received and what works for them, because you just might learn something new that will work for you too. 

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As always, I appreciate you taking the time to read my blog. And of course, your thoughts and comments are always welcome. πŸ˜Š








You can find my books here: The Razzman Mystery Crime Files

Until next time...😎

Monday, March 18, 2024

A Fun New Mystery for March: Linda Pirtle's Girlfriend Retreat... Cheaper Than Therapy is available now!

First, a quick update: CW Hawes' February 2024 Magnolia Bluff debut, Who Mourns Elektra came out of the gate strong. It was featured in Amazon's top 100 in Religious Mysteries and cracked the top 50 by reaching number 25. Not a bad start for year three of the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles mystery series.

The second book for 2024 is live now. Girlfriend Retreat... Cheaper Than Therapy is the twenty-second book in the series and is penned by Linda Pirtle. This is the third book the author has written set in that murderous town in the Texas Hill Country and it's a good one! 

A group of Caroline McCluskey's lifelong friends all come to Magnolia Bluff for a nice, relaxing weekend at the Circle R Ranch. Caroline, who is the town librarian, has put together an itinerary that promises to deliver a "weekend like none other," and the retreat certainly lives up to her claim. Relaxing may not be the best way to describe the girl's time in town. They end up facing one catastrophe after another--everything from mistaken identities all the way to murder. Will Caroline, who has proven in the past to be a better sleuth than the police and knows her way around a crime scene, be able to protect her friends during their visit? 

This is Magnolia Bluff after all, where there always seems to be a dead body waiting to be discovered. 

What is really fun about this story is that all of the women who are meeting up for this... not so relaxing weekend retreat are modeled after Ms. Pirtle's own real life girlfriends.

This is an awesome addition to the series and is a fairly quick read that packs a lot of punch. And you can get your very own copy of Magnolia Bluff's newest mystery by clicking here: Girlfriend Retreat

Linda Pirtle is a wonderful, award-winning cozy mystery writer. She is one of the founding members of the Underground Authors and has produced three books for the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles series. But she is also the author of the popular The Games We Play cozy mystery series. She is a retired high school English teacher and spent years teaching the art of writing and understanding literature. She also taught Business Communications at Navarro College before becoming not only an author, but a business owner with her husband, the late Calab Pirtle III. Together they created and built Venture Galleries, a book publishing company. She has also served as editor for some great books presently in the marketplace. 

Becoming a full-time cozy author with a female protagonist was the perfect transition for Ms. Pirtle. She's long been a reader and reviewer of mysteries. She finds herself infatuated with the cozy hometown mysteries written by Agatha Christie and Diane Mott Davidson. And she is fascinated with dastardly murder mysteries solved by the lady next door who relies on intuition, instinct, and deductive reasoning. All the perfect ingredients for her to write her own award-winning cozy mysteries. 

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You can find all the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles mystery books by clicking here: MBCC Series

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As always, I appreciate you taking the time to read my blog. And of course, your thoughts and comments are always welcome. πŸ˜Š








You can find my books here: The Razzman Mystery Crime Files

Until next time...😎




Thursday, February 29, 2024

Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles - In Full Swing for 2024

New year, new mysteries to solve in our favorite small town in the Texas Hill Country. Author CW Hawes just published the first Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles mystery for 2024. Who Mourns Elektra? book 21 in the MBCC series released in February and is available in ebook and paperback. And if you have a Kindle Unlimited account, you can download and read it for FREE.

This is the third novel Hawes has written for the (currently) 21 book series and it's wonderful. If you've been reading along, you are aware that Harry Thurgood, the owner of the Really Good Wood-Fired Coffee Shop has been smitten with the Reverand Ember Cole since the first book, Death Wears a Crimson Hat. Now, twenty-one books later, they are planning their wedding. But as tends to happen in small town Magnolia Bluff, murder and mayhem are trying to get in the way of their happiness. The police detective wants to hang the murders on the couple and arch nemesis, Mary Lou Fight is doing everything in her power to dig up anything she can find to steal their joy and destroy their lives.

The police arrest Harry and Ember for murder, and after they're able to post bail, they begin the quest for proving their innocence. But will they be able to find the real killer and at the same time stop Mary Lou's assault on their good names, or will the couple fall victim to circumstances beyond their control and end up on trial for Murder One?

You can find out for yourself by clicking the link here and grabbing a copy of the newest Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles mystery: Who Mourns Elektra? 

CW Hawes is one of my favorite writers. He has written somewhere in the neighborhood of forty-five to fifty books covering several different genres. He is also an award-winning poet. You can learn more about CW and his work by clicking the link here: CW Hawes

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The Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles is a unique multi-author crime fiction series that began is 2022. The nine books released during the first year were so well received that the authors decided to continue the series the next year. Now, in 2024, we begin year three with another round of fun and interesting mysteries to keep you reading late into the night. 

The Underground Authors started as a small group of mostly Texas based writers who banded together to encourage each other and help cross market their individual work. After the group published a book of short stories, each written by one of the authors, with every story being tied to one thread - the boat on the book cover - CW Hawes tossed out the idea of producing a mystery series where the common thread would be a small town in the Texas Hill Country that would be written as a collaborative, yet each book penned by a different member of the Underground Authors. A unique idea in the mystery genre.

Since that time, we've grown from that small group of Texas based authors to a larger group and are spread out from as far north as Canada, all the way across the United States, and even (sometimes) down into Mexico. What we all still have in common, however, is the passion to continue writing stories about all the shenanigans that take place in a small little Texas town called Magnolia Bluff.

You can find the entire series by clicking the link here: MBCC Series

You can find the short story compilation here: Beyond the Sea



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As always, I appreciate you taking the time to read my blog. And of course, your thoughts and comments are always welcome. πŸ˜Š








You can find my books here: The Razzman Mystery Crime Files

Until next time...😎




Monday, February 5, 2024

Rough start to the year, but finally... I can get back to writing!

I ended 2023 the same way I started 2024 -- sick! I came down with what I thought was a severe cold over the Christmas holiday weekend. By December 26th, I was feeling bad enough that I went to see my doctor. They tested me for Covid and the flu. I didn't have Covid, but I was diagnosed with the B strain of the flu. I picked up my Tamiflu prescription and went home where I preceded to have the worst ending to an old year and an even worse start to a new year that I can ever remember. 

Let's just say January was pretty much a blur. I spent the last week of December and most of the first week of the first month of the year in bed. Then, when I thought I was finally on the other side, the wonderful aftereffects of the flu kicked in for the next three weeks culminating in an extremely lo-o-o-ong night in the emergency room due to an elevated heart rate and some other issues. They ran a battery of tests, and thankfully, everything turned out okay in the end. But let's just say I did not get much writing accomplished during the first month of the year.

Although 2024 began with a whimper rather than a bang for me, I choose to believe that it can only get better as the months roll along. The good news is that I am back at my desk and diving into the two projects I've committed to writing this year. First up is my second book in the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles series. It will be the twenty-sixth book in that series and will be released in July. I'm also working on the fifth book in my Razzman Mystery Crime Files series, which will be out towards the latter part of the year.

For anyone who has read Second Chances, which is book seventeen, but my first novel in the Magnolia Bluff series, I think you'll be pleased with my follow up coming in July. The action in the new book starts off quick and intensifies as the story moves along. So, if you haven't had the opportunity to read Second Chances yet, you have until July to get caught up on how my protagonist, retired NYPD narcotics officer Brandon Turner assimilates himself along with his two-year-old Labrador Retriever, into the crazy, crime filled, murderous world of that small-town nestled in the heart of the Texas Hill Country.

You can certainly read Second Chances without having read any of the other books in the series, but in my opinion, you're missing out on some mighty fine storytelling if you don't devour all the books in this wonderful series. And the best part about it is that you can read them in any order you'd like as they are all standalone novels set in the same town. The authors even share characters that interact with their own to keep a continuity in the stories across the series. You can find all the books in the MBCC series by clicking here: MagnoliaBluffCrimeChronicles

For those of you who have read any of my Razzman PI mysteries, I hope you'll be interested and maybe even looking forward to knowing that Tony Razzolito, his partner Scott McHenry, and of course, the inimitable, pizza loving, Brooklynite, Vinny Gabrianno, along with the rest of the cast of characters that are a part of the series will be making a return before the end of 2024. I've got a cool mystery cooked up for the next full length/fifth installment and I can't wait to share it.

More about my new Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles book and the new Razzman Mystery Crime Files book as we get closer to the release dates.

Meanwhile, you can find all the Razzman mystery books by clicking the link below the line🠟


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As always, I appreciate you taking the time to read my blog. And of course, your thoughts and comments are always welcome. πŸ˜Š








You can find my books here: The Razzman Mystery Crime Files

Until next time...😎