Showing posts with label Crime Writers of Canada author. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crime Writers of Canada author. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 4, 2021

Winona Kent discusses life and her new book Notes on a Missing G-String

 


Welcome to Canadian mystery author, Winona Kent!

 



Winona Kent is an award-winning author who was born in London, England and grew up in Regina, Saskatchewan, where she completed her BA in English at the University of Regina. After moving to Vancouver, she graduated from UBC with an MFA in Creative Writing. More recently, she received her diploma in Writing for Screen and TV from Vancouver Film School.

Winona's writing breakthrough came many years ago when she won First Prize in the Flare Magazine Fiction Contest with her short story about an all-night radio newsman, Tower of Power.

Her spy novel Skywatcher was a finalist in the Seal Books First Novel Competition and was published in 1989. This was followed by a sequel, The Cilla Rose Affair, and her first mystery, Cold Play, set aboard a cruise ship in Alaska.

After three time-travel romances (Persistence of Memory, In Loving Memory and Marianne's Memory), Winona returned to mysteries with Disturbing the Peace, a novella, in 2017 and the novel Notes on a Missing G-String in 2019, both featuring the character she first introduced in Cold Play, professional jazz musician / amateur sleuth Jason Davey.

The third book in Winona's Jason Davey Mystery series, Lost Time, was published in 2020.

Winona's novella Salty Dog Blues was published in Sisters in Crime-Canada West's anthology Crime Wave in October 2020. Salty Dog Blues was nominated as a finalist in Crime Writers of Canada's Awards of Excellence for Best Crime Novella in April 2021.

Another Jason Davey short story, Blue Devil Blues, is one of the four entries in a new anthology, Last Shot, published in June 2021.

Winona has been a temporary secretary, a travel agent and the Managing Editor of a literary magazine. She recently retired from her full-time admin job at UBC's School of Population and Public Health. She's currently the BC/YT/NWT rep for the Crime Writers of Canada and is also an active member of Sisters in Crime – Canada West. After many decades living in Burnaby, Winona moved to New Westminster in 2018, where she is now happily embracing life as a full-time author.


Website: http://www.winonakent.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/winonakentwriter/

Twitter: @winonakent

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/winonakent/

 

Tell us about your life outside of writing.

I've been writing since the mid-1970s and back in those days, it was virtually impossible to make a living in Canada as a writer unless you were Leonard Cohen or Margaret Atwood. So I decided a very long time ago that if I had to work full-time, I would never have a job that actually involved creative writing. I wanted to save my imagination for my own fiction. So I was a temporary secretary and a travel agent. I took a little break for three years while I got my MFA in Creative Writing at UBC, and then after that I went to work for Telus for about 18 years--I was in Word Processing, and then in their Learning Services area. Roundabout 2003 Telus decided to downsize and they offered me a massive amount of money to leave--so I took them up on their offer and went to Vancouver Film School so I could learn how to write screenplays. Then I went back to work--this time at my old alma mater, UBC--and I landed a job in their Department of Health Care and Epidemiology (later the School of Population and Public Health)-- where I was a program assistant looking after MSc and PhD students. I stayed there until October 2019, when I officially retired--and now I'm actually (and finally) a full time writer!

Along the way I've also indulged in some of my more imaginative passions. In 1995 I started a semi-official website for the British actor Sean Bean. It was active until 2012, when I archived it. But one of my legacies was the creation of the original "Death by Cow" list--which detailed all of the films that Sean died in. The title came from the movie The Field, where Sean's run over the edge of a cliff by a herd of cows. I was also granted a ground-breaking interview with Sean when he was in Toronto filming Don't Say a Word.

I have a few interesting hobbies. One of them is family tree research. I have a very mysterious great-grandfather whose birth record I can't find and whose parentage is quite murky. I've done the DNA test and plunged into genealogy head-first. The hero of my amateur sleuth novels, Jason Davey, shares that interest with me. My other passionate interest is the London Underground--and more specifically, abandoned Underground stations. A few of my novels and short stories have included current and abandoned stations in their plots. 

Do you have a work in progress?

I do! I'm working on the 2nd draft of my next Jason Davey Mystery, Ticket to Ride. Jason first appeared in a standalone novel, Cold Play, where he was an entertainer on a cruise ship in Alaska. Then I brought him back in a novella, Disturbing the Peace, where I gave him a true mystery to work on in Northern Alberta. After that I wrote Notes on a Missing G-String, where Jason had to find some money and a piece of a costume that had been stolen from a stripper's locker at a nightclub in Soho. Last year, in Lost Time, I sent Jason into rehearsals for an upcoming tour of his mother's folk-pop band while he tried to find out what happened to a teenager who'd gone missing decades earlier. And now, in Ticket to Ride, Jason is actually on tour with the band--and it seems like someone is out to kill both him and his mother. 

What was the most difficult section/piece you ever wrote? What made it difficult?

Hands down it was my second novel, The Cilla Rose Affair. My first novel, Skywatcher, was a tongue-in-cheek spy story which had been a finalist in a first novel fiction contest. Unfortunately it was published in 1989, which was basically the end of the Cold War, and the bottom fell out of the spy fiction market and Skywatcher didn't sell very well as a result. My confidence as a writer took a hit and I found myself truly stuck in writer's block for about two years. One of the main characters in The Cilla Rose Affair shared my obsession with the London Underground but I just couldn't find a way to write about it. Then I saw the film Field of Dreams which is about an obsession and a passion. And I realized that I had to immerse my character in his passion and make the reader experience it along with the character, rather than just write about it. I know that sounds like Creative Writing 101, but it was only my second novel and I was a very young writer and still learning. Once I'd got over that hurdle, I broke out of the writer's block and got The Cilla Rose Affair done. And by the way, anyone who says writer's block doesn't really exist, has never truly experienced it. 

What sort of research do you do for your work?

I'm extremely meticulous when it comes to research. I always base my stories and novels on kernels of things that I've experienced myself, but that's usually just the starting point. I love to let my imagination run wild but, because I may not have first-hand experience with what comes next, I have to resort to research. I love doing research and I am so grateful for the existence of the internet. I remember the bad old days when I'd spend days, weeks, months, in different libraries, hunting through card catalogues and microfiche and dusty old stacks of books, writing letters, making phonecalls...the internet opened up the world for me and what used to take three months now takes about 10 minutes. But I'm always conscious that there might be a reader out there who’s an expert and they’ll take issue with what I've written and say, "No! That's not right at all!" So, as a result, I will research something until there is no room for error. One of the greatest accolades I've received recently came from a couple of my writing colleagues who were both absolutely convinced, on the basis of my Jason Davey Mysteries, that I have a background in music, and that I'd either managed a rock band or toured with one. I did take formal piano lessons and music theory for four years... but as for the rest......... 

Which books and authors do you read for pleasure? Is there an author who inspires you?

My favourite authors are Monica Dickens (who was Charles Dickens' great-grand-daughter), John Galsworthy (who wrote The Forsyte Saga) and John Le Carre (The Spy Who Came in from the Cold and every other spy novel he's ever written). More recently I've been spending time with English singer Tommy Steele's autobiography, all three Call the Midwife books by Jennifer Worth (upon which the British tv series was based), Roadie: My Life On The Road With Coldplay by Matt McGinn (fascinating and extremely informative) and, believe it or not, The Railway Children by Edith Nesbit. I've seen the film a few times--it's one of my all-time favourites--but I don't remember ever reading the book, which was written for children. It's absolutely charming.

I'd have to say that Monica Dickens is the author who inspired me from a very early age. She was like me--she worked for a living, but she managed to create fiction from all of her work-life experiences. The novel that made the biggest impression on me was The Listeners, which was about the early days of The Samaritans, the original telephone help line for people in emotional distress. 

Was there a person who encouraged you to write?

There were a few, actually. One was a high school Lit teacher, Sam Robinson. He recognized that I wanted to be a writer when I was 14 or 15 and actively encouraged me. This was back in the days when writers tended to succeed in spite of what we were taught in school, rather than because of it. There was very little creative in the curriculum back in the late 1960s and early 1970s. I was lucky that I went to a very progressive high school. Another was my Grade 12 Lit teacher, Mr. Williamson--I never did know his first name!--who actually let me write a novel for my major class project--and gave me an A+ for it when I handed it in.

Later on, when I was at university working on my BA in English, one of my instructors was Canadian writer Ken Mitchell. He taught me the basics of fiction and I'm still using a lot of his early wisdom. I also remember his favourite pet peeve: "There is no such word as gotten!"

 


NOTES ON A MISSING G-STRING

The first time we met Jason Davey, he was entertaining passengers aboard the Alaska cruise ship Star Sapphire, Eight ‘til Late in the TopDeck Lounge.

Then he came ashore, got a gig playing lead guitar at London’s Blue Devil jazz club, and gained a certain amount of notoriety tracking down missing musician Ben Quigley in the Canadian north.

Now Jason’s back again, this time investigating the theft of £10,000 from a dancer’s locker at a Soho gentlemen’s club. Jason initially considers the case unsolvable. But the victim, Holly Medford, owes a lot of money to London crime boss Arthur Braskey and, fearing for her life, has gone into hiding at a posh London hotel.

Jason’s investigation takes him from Cha-Cha’s and Satin & Silk (two Soho lapdancing clubs) to Moonlight Desires (an agency featuring high class escorts) and finally to a charity firewalking event, where he comes face to face with Braskey and discovers not everything Holly’s been telling him is the complete truth.

As he becomes increasingly drawn into the seamy underside of Soho, Jason tries to save Gracie, his band-mate’s 14-year-old runaway daughter, from Holly’s brother Radu, a ruthless pimp, while at the same time protecting Holly herself from a vengeful Braskey – nearly losing his life, and Gracie’s – in the process. 

Sell link:

https://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/B07TWFBB62


LOST TIME

In 1974, top UK band Figgis Green was riding high in the charts with their blend of traditional Celtic ballads mixed with catchy, folky pop. One of their biggest fans was sixteen-year old Pippa Gladstone, who mysteriously vanished while she was on holiday with her parents in Spain in March that same year.

Now it's 2018, and founding member Mandy Green has reunited the Figs for their last-ever Lost Time Tour. Her partner, Tony Figgis, passed away in 1995, so his place has been taken by their son, professional jazz guitarist (and amateur sleuth) Jason Davey.

As the band meets in a small village on the south coast of England for pre-tour rehearsals, Jason's approached by Duncan Stopher, a diehard Figs fan, who brings him a photo of the band performing at the Wiltshire Folk Festival. Standing in the foreground is Pippa Gladstone. The only problem is the Wiltshire Folk Festival was held in August 1974, five months after Pippa disappeared. Duncan offers Jason a substantial sum of money to try and find out what really happened to the young woman, whose mother had her declared officially dead in 1981.

When Duncan is murdered, it becomes increasingly clear to Jason that his investigation into Pippa's disappearance is not welcome, especially after he follows a series of clues which lead him straight back to the girl's immediate family.

But nothing can prepare Jason for the truth about Pippa, which he discovers just as Figgis Green is about to take to the stage on opening night—with or without him.

Buy link:

https://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/B08GH5S5VG

 

 

Wednesday, April 14, 2021

Hyacinthe M. Miller tells us about Kenora Reinvented

 

Welcome to fellow Crime Writer of Canada, Hyacinthe M. Miller!

I have read this book and am really excited to get to share it with you all. Kenora Reinvented was fresh and funny and I could totally related to Kenora, a woman who has to rebuild her life after it all goes sideways. She's a kickass heroine that I can't wait to read more about! 

Hyacinthe M. Miller is an award-winning author of short stories, magazine and newspaper articles, contemporary women's fiction and non-fiction. She's been published in Borealis magazine and in Herotica 7, Whispered Words, and Allucinor, The Elements of Romance anthologies.

Her debut novel, Kenora Reinvented, (Investigations, Mystery and Seasoned Romance) was published in 2019. Her current works-in-progress include The Fifth Man, book two of the Kenora & Jake series and a general interest text based on interviews with over seventy current and retired police officers around the world about challenges, rewards and leadership in their chosen profession.

Hyacinthe is a founding member and Past President of the Writers Community of York Region. She belongs to professional organizations including Crime Writers of Canada, Sisters in Crime. The Writers Union of Canada, the Alliance of Independent Authors, Romance Writers of America and Sisters in Crime.

She blogs at https://hyacinthemillerbooks.com. Follow her on social media:  Twitter - @sassyscribbler, Instagram - Between.the.Book.Sheets and her author page on Facebook.

You can purchase e-books and print copies from major online retailers: getbook.at/kenorareinvented and https://books2read.com/u/bw2rK0

What would you say are your strengths as an author?

My strengths are imagination, curiosity and persistence. My family jokes that we've inherited a writing gene – my dad was a poet and my mother, a tireless correspondent. Writing has never been difficult. That's not to say what I put down on the page is always good, but once the creative juices begin to flow, the words come quickly.

I'm an inveterate eavesdropper. In the days before Covid shutdowns limited our ability to mix and mingle in public, I actually enjoyed taking public transit because it was a goldmine for characters and stories that I could use as jumping-off points in my writing. Despite the fact there might be dozens of folks in the same confined space, people's conversations tend to be personal (humorous/sad/mundane/shocking) and often quite loud. I've overheard chats about hookups, breakups, new jobs, lottery wins, intimate medical issues – you name it.

I'm also a voracious reader of daily newspapers, magazines, blogs, audio and print books because they are all sources of inspiration. Going down the rabbit-hole of links in an off-beat article often surfaces useful tidbits.

How often do you write, and do you write using a strict routine?

I've spent my professional career writing – legal documents, briefing notes, technical manuals, position papers – so I'm using words every day, usually to convey information in other people's voices.

As much as I understand the concept of planning out a novel, I've always been a pantser. An article in a newspaper, a photograph or an unusual name can spark my imagination and I'll stop whatever I'm doing to scribble a scene into the spiral notebook I always carry. (I've collected several dozen that I flip through periodically. Finding usable literary nuggets that I've forgotten about is a treat!)

Strict routine? I wish. Until recently, I wasn't at all disciplined. Now, because I know how labour-intensive completing a 95,000-word novel can be, every Saturday I spend a few hours at my computer, writing and editing in Scrivener. I can dash off a scene then re-arrange the contents of the project binder and write chapter transitions so that the story unfolds organically. Because my protagonist, Kenora, and her friends and lovers have lived in my head for more than a decade, it's not difficult to pick up from where I left off.

Five years from now, where do you see yourself as a writer?

Well, my ultimate goal is to have all three of Kenora & Jake books in the series published. Along the way, I want to engage more with my readers to hear how they've enjoyed the people and situations I've created. Maybe they'll inspire me to write book four.

If you could offer once piece of advice to a novice writer, what would it be?

One piece of advice? Sorry, that's not possible. Besides, I'm a rebel.

Learn the technical aspects of writing – grammar, sentence construction, language, editing. Write. Read a lot of fiction and non-fiction as well as books on the writing craft. Write some more. Polish it, then put your work away to 'cool' for a while. Take classes from respected authors but don't beggar yourself enrolling in expensive programs. Review your work, keep the parts you like, edit lightly then save the parts that don't quite fit in a catch-all document with a date and distinctive name.

Don't be too hard on yourself – we all write dreck. That's part of the process of getting better. Attend reputable online writing conferences that suit your interests and genres. Find a group of like-minded writers to safely share your work with but focus on writing and don't get distracted by the refreshments.  You'll develop your skills by reading aloud and accepting feedback. Step out of your comfort zone and try poetry or fantasy or historical romance.

Submit to contests that are moderately priced (or free) and that offer constructive critiques of your writing. Be prepared for rejection but revel in the joy of positive feedback or wins. Be realistic – indie publishing has opened up new markets for our work, but the competition is fierce.

Don't stagnate because you can't stop editing – good enough is good enough. Ditch the fear of being judged – that can be a crippling impediment for writers (ask me how I know!). And remember, writing – good writing – is hard work sometimes. But the end results will be worth your commitment!

What would you consider to be the best compliment a reader could give your book?

The best compliment? Resonance. That my novel kept them engaged from start to finish because the characters were relatable, the plot was interesting and the outcomes satisfying. Or that one of my poems or short stories touched their heart or brought back a pleasant memory.

What are you working on now?

I'm working on The Fifth Man, book two in the Kenora & Jake trilogy. It's another riff on the heroine's journey, where Kenora is forced to unravel shocking family secrets, navigate more skullduggery and of course, nurture her seasoned romance with Jake Barclay.

Most of the chapters are written (out of order, of course) and awaiting polishing and organization into a story that sizzles with energy, romance and mystery, and plotlines that flow smoothly to a happy conclusion. 

KENORA REINVENTED

At forty-two years of age, Kenora Tedesco is starting over. Dumped for a younger woman. Fired for insubordination. Stuck with a rusting sedan, dwindling savings and a lakefront fixer-upper in the country, she's worried, restless and frustrated with part-time work. 

When an eleventh-hour interview lands her a job as a private investigator, the former library manager figures her financial and career troubles are finally over. What she didn't bargain for was having to abide by rules. 

Rookie blunders put her second-chance romance with Jake Barclay, a retired cop—and her new boss—at risk. She has her identity stolen. A lovesick embezzler traps her in a storage locker. Danger threatens her family, her friends and her life. But fortune favours the bold. And the tenacious. Kenora fights back, ditching the fear, trusting her judgment, and solving cases. 

With witty dialogue, plot twists and turns, Kenora Reinvented propels readers into a binge-worthy whodunit with enough action to keep them engaged until the last page.

 


Sunday, August 16, 2020

E. R. Yatscoff talks about The Rumrunner's Boy and Fire Dream



Welcome to E. R. Yatscoff, a fellow BWL Publishing author!

I had the pleasure of reviewing Edward's novel The Rumrunner's Boy, which was a finalist for Crime Writer's of Canada's Arthur Ellis Award...

The Rumrunner's Boy:
A great coming of age story set during the U.S. prohibition in the 1920s. The reader learns a lot of history while main character Jarrod has to deal with filling the shoes of his sick father while he grows up fast running rum on the waters of Lake Erie around Windsor and the Erie Islands. While there were spots that could have used a minor edit, I found the book to be a realistic view of what life was like for a young man in the 1920s. Lots of twists, turns, and action. I’d highly recommend for pre-teen/early teen readers.


What would you say are your strengths as an author?
My writers group says it’s my dialogue and action scenes.

How often do you write, and do you write using a strict routine?
I roll a chapter around in my head for some time before I commit it to the page. I usually try to write, or market, or edit a previous chapter

Five years from now, where do you see yourself as a writer?
Instead of a Finalist in the annual Crime Writers of Canada competition I’d like to get in the win column. My next crime novel SERVICES RENDERED is looking good so far.  It has action, some pathos, suspense, and plenty of crime.

If you could offer once piece of advice to a novice writer, what would it be?
Join or start a writers group for feedback and NEVER submit a 1st draft anywhere.  That’s two I know, but I couldn’t decide.

What would you consider to be the best compliment a reader could give your book?
Telling me how much they enjoyed a character
  
FIRE DREAM

Fire Captain Gerry Ormond is launched to national prominence and receives a Medal of Valor. A visit to his hometown after a twenty-year absence unleashes a killer—a vengeful arsonist with ties to an old murder by three fraternity teenagers looking for a treasure. Gerry was one of them. Nick Modano, ex-frat president, now a drug dealer, is the only other participant alive involved in the old crime. Nick never forgets or forgives Gerry for running out on him that fateful night. Karen, his high school sweetheart, ignites a dangerous obsession. Her husband looks good for a recent unsolved arson/murder. Samantha ‘Sam’ Markham, a crack fire investigator, hounds Gerry at every turn. The almost forgotten past has risen from the ooze and taken on a life of its own. It’s a tightrope he walks in a town where old friends are now enemies.



THE RUMRUNNER'S BOY

Jarrod Hooker, 17, steps in for his injured father on a rum running crew in Lake Erie during U.S. Prohibition. It’s a lucrative job they cannot afford to lose. Jarrod is resented by the rumrunners and they set out to undermine him. Carving out respect for himself among rough men might take more than he has. Ill winds begin to blow across the big water when money from a liquor shipment goes missing and the U.S. Coast Guard steps up smuggling patrols. Worse yet, an American gangster, a rogue from the notorious Detroit Purple Gang, tries to seize control of the operation, putting the Canadians in grave danger.

Whatever happens on the next run will change everything for everyone. Amid sabotage and bullets flying, Jarrod must put his trust in the most dangerous man he’s ever met. Although the watery border of Canada and Pelee Island lay only a few miles distant it may as well be a world away.

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