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Susan A. Royal

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Susan A. Royal

Tag Archives: mystery

WEARING MANY HATS

28 Monday Sep 2015

Posted by Susan A. Royal in article

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

horror, mystery, sara jayne townsend, writing styles

I’m delighted to be doing a blog swap with Sara Jayne Townsend today. She’s making a return visit to my blog and I’m visiting hers as well. She’s going to talk to us about WEARING MANY HATS. A great big welcome to her and everyone else who stopped by.

Come on in, sit down and relax. Help yourself to tea or coffee and we have fresh Caramel cake as well. All comfy? Good. Let’s hear what Sara has to say.

Most of us wear many hats in our lives. Many women wear several at once – that of daughter; of mother; of wife; of friend; of sister.

The two hats I wear most days are those of employee and writer, as I juggle the writing around the day job. But the writer role is divided into two further hats – that of crime writer, and of horror writer. 

Some people might think that these are very different genres, with very different readerships. But there are more similarities than you might think. Both generally feature characters dying in horrible ways. Often the protagonists are trying to get to the bottom of this mysterious death. But with crime, the end of the story is to reveal the killer, whereas in horror, quite often the killer is known fairly early on, but the emphasis is on how to stop them – especially if there is a supernatural element.

However, I do approach both genres in different ways (and hence the wearing of different hats). The Shara Summers novels are amateur sleuth mystery novels. Plotting is vitally important in these novels. A trail of clues will lead my amateur sleuth to the killer and she must pick up on the clues if she is to solve the mystery. And perhaps the reader will discover the killer before she does. There are no supernatural elements to the Shara Summers novels. The killer is always a human being, with foibles and weaknesses. And it is, of course, generally the weaknesses that lead to them getting caught.

I approach horror in a very different way. Although plotting is just as important to me in this genre (my writing style involves writing a plot summary of every novel before I begin writing chapter 1), the hunt for the killer is not so straightforward. Often the protagonists are dealing with something supernatural and fantastical, and completely out of the realm of their reality. Before they can actually work out how to stop the killer, they have to accept that what’s going on is something they previously dismissed as impossible. People will have died before they get to the point that they can believe in the existence of the Big Bad. After that, it might be a case of discovering what can bring down the Big Bad, for if it’s a supernatural creature it can’t be killed the way a human can.

I tend to let loose with the gore a bit more in the horror novels. The deaths in the Shara Summers novels are a bit more restrained. People can get shot, and stabbed and so on of course, but the deaths in the new horror novel THE WHISPERING DEATH are far more graphic – for the purposes of the plot I wanted people to be ripped apart in a way that would have the main characters thinking that nothing human could do that to a person. That’s not necessary in my crime novels.

I get that not everyone likes graphic horror, and that fans of my crime may not necessarily be into my horror, and vice versa. And that’s OK. But I write both crime and horror because I am a fan of both genres. There has to be a few more of us out there.

I like writing both genres for different reasons, so I am planning to carry on wearing both the ‘horror writer’ hat and the ‘crime writer’ hat for the foreseeable future. But not at the same time. Maybe one day I’ll start to forget which hat I’m wearing when I write, but it’s not happened yet!

Sara Townsend (45) small

Sara Jayne Townsend is a UK-based writer of crime and horror, and someone tends to die a horrible death in all of her stories.  She was born in Cheshire in 1969, but spent most of the 1980s living in Canada after her family emigrated there.  She now lives in Surrey with two cats and her guitarist husband Chris.  She co-founded the T Party Writers’ Group in 1994, and remains Chair Person.

She decided she was going to be a published novelist when she was 10 years old and finished her first novel a year later.  It took 30 years of submitting, however, to fulfil that dream.

Her latest horror novel, THE WHISPERING DEATH, about a group of live action roleplayers who unwittingly release an ancient evil during a game, has recently been released by Kensington Gore Publishing.

Learn more about Sara and her writing at her website (http://sarajaynetownsend.weebly.com) and her blog (http://sayssara.wordpress.com). You can also follow her on Twitter (https://twitter.com/sarajtownsend) and Goodreads (https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/3500282.Sara_Jayne_Townsend) or join her Facebook Group, “Imaginary Friends” (https://www.facebook.com/groups/301037281383).

FINAL COVER2 (188x300) Dead Cool 200x300

Thanks so much for the interesting article, Sara. I read both genres, but I’ve never really thought about comparing the two. Everyone please stop by in at Sara’s blog at http://sayssara.wordpress.com  and see what I have to say.

Murder, Mayhem and The Minister

10 Tuesday Feb 2015

Posted by Susan A. Royal in Interview

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

JQ Rose, Murder To Coda, MuseItUp Publishing, mystery, Susan A. Royal Blog

My guest author today is J. Q. Rose. And if the title to today’s interview didn’t grab your attention, then check out the photo of her in the little red convertible below. Woohoo!!

But don’t stop there. Read on to find out more about this lovely lady.

J Q Rose

After writing feature articles in magazines, newspapers, and online magazines for over fifteen years, J.Q. Rose entered the world of fiction. Her published mysteries are Sunshine Boulevard, and Coda to Murder released by Muse It Up Publishing. With her non-fiction book for girls, Girls Succeed!, she returns to her first love, writing about real people. Blogging, photography, Pegs and Jokers board games, and travel are the things that keep her out of trouble. She spends winters in Florida and summers up north camping and hunting toads, frogs, and salamanders with her four grandsons and granddaughter.

Coda To Murder 333x500

Pastor Christine Hobbs never imagined she would be caring for a flock that includes a pig, a kangaroo, and a murderer.

Here’s a little teaser for Coda To Murder: Pastor Christine Hobbs has been in the pulpit business for over five years. She never imagined herself caring for a flock that includes a pig, a kangaroo, and a murderer.

Detective Cole Stephens doesn’t want the pretty pastor to get away with murdering the church music director. His investigative methods infuriate Christine as much as his deep brown eyes attract her.

Can they find the real killer and build a loving relationship based on trust?
Now we come to the part of the interview I love. I get to pick J.Q.’s brain and find out all kinds of different things about her, things I might not learn from reading her bio. J. Q. will you describe what you consider your ideal writing conditions.A sunny day, a quiet time with no one in the house, no one outdoors mowing the lawn or grinding-gear garbage trucks on the street, cool enough that I need my old tattered flannel shirt to keep me cozy, freshly trimmed nails, cup of coffee or tea (I’m trying to keep a cup of water on my desk to sip to alleviate caffeine), Facebook and email done, my desk chair adjusted to the correct height, and laptop works with no hiccups.I’ve heard a lot of authors say they need quiet. I don’t mind background noise as long as it stays in the background. 

Name a book/author you can read again and again and always learn something new.

Stephen King’s On Writing Not crazy about his auto biography but the information “on writing” is inspiring, practical, and presented in his tell-it-like-it-is style.

I’ve read On Writing as well, and I agree.

Can you tell us a little about your current WIP?

I’m having so much fun creating a mystery/romance/paranormal. Yes, that’s a LOT of genres to juggle in one book. My main character, Lauren, is the daughter of a funeral home director, like me. She has to return home to help in the business and to help care for her mother with Alzheimer’s disease. We all know there are dead bodies at a funeral home, but the body of a murdered man is dropped off in the funeral home garage. At least they picked the right funeral home because Swartz across town does a terrible job of embalming. Besides worrying about her mother, the police investigation into the murder targeting Lauren and her family as suspects, a shadow man keeps interfering in her life. See what I mean? A lot of genres and I haven’t even mentioned the romance yet!

Now this sounds intriguing. No wonder you need for it to be quiet when you write. Your mind is going a hundred different directions!

 

As authors, we all need to feel as though our writing is ‘reaching’ our readers. Tell me, what is the best compliment you ever received as an author?

A reviewer who mentioned she enjoyed the “gentle love story within the murder mystery” said the following about Coda to Murder—“I can honestly say that I was completely surprised by the final unmasking of the killer, who had me fooled along with everyone else.” The mystery writer within me jumped for joy because the twist at the end that surprises the reader is my goal.

Wow, that’s fantastic.

Now, Describe one of your favorite characters and tell us who you patterned them after and why. I had a great time writing Gloria Hart. She is the main character in my mystery/horror novella, Sunshine Boulevard. Gloria is the essence of all the ladies who live in my Senior Community. I was able to exaggerate the characteristics of women past 60 to make her fun and interesting. Trying to keep healthy, being in a long time marriage where she and her husband, Jim, know each other so well, caring so much about people in her community and always believing in the good part of people were just some of her traits I wove into the story.

I’m like you. I love to incorporate real ‘characters’ into my stories.

Here’s a fun question. What is something we’ll never catch you doing?

You’ll never catch me eating shrimp. I was raised in Central lllinois—miles away from shrimp beds. (Now I hear there are shrimp farms though that could be “farmed” in that area.) I am just learning to like fish, but it has to have lots of batter on it and slathered with tartar sauce before I’ll taste it.

 

Last, but no least. What is the one thing you never seem to have enough time for?

The easiest question to answer—Reading. So many books. I used to only read one book at a time. But nowadays I seem to have two or three going at the same time.

I hear you!

     One of you lucky people can win a copy of Coda To Murder in your preferred format. All you have to do is leave a comment and include your email address. Good luck! J. Q. it’s been wonderful having you here today. Guys, to find out more about J. Q. Rose, go here:

http://tinyurl.com/aeuv4m4

Blog http://www.jqrose.com/

Email jqrose02@gmail.com

Buy links Amazon.com http://tinyurl.com/ap376tb

MuseItUp Publishing http://museituppublishing.com/bookstore/index.php/now-available-in-ebook/coda-to-murder-detail

B&N.com and major online booksellers

 

My Review for A Different Kind of Knight by Mary Waibel

25 Tuesday Nov 2014

Posted by Susan A. Royal in article

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

creatures, fantasy, knights, Mary Waibel, MuseItUp Publishing, mystery, romance

Different Kind of Knight

By Mary Waibel

It’s always nice to find YA stories with strong characters, both male and female, and I especially like it when they’re not cardboard cutouts. Rielle and Brody are human. Even though they’re trying to do the right things, they question themselves and worry they’ve made the right decisions. They make mistakes and learn from them. Add in a mystery, fantastic creatures and romance and it all makes an enjoyable read.

If you have young readers who like adventure stories with lots of action, they will like this book.

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