For a writer each unique person we see becomes a puzzle or
mystery. We wonder about their occupation, their background, their family life.
We invent lives for them and eventually use them in a story.
It is these mysteries and our inquiring minds that bring
forth books.
My first published book, Marshal in Petticoats, was inspired by thoughts of—what if
an accident prone woman pretending to be a young man was made Marshal of a
small town? While the story is a historical western romance there is mystery
woven throughout the book. Is the Mayor really what he seems; is the hero a
hero or an outlaw? What happened in the hero's past? Will the heroine keep her
identity a secret when it matters most?
The first contemporary western, Perfectly Good Nanny, I wrote started after I heard
on the radio about a youngster who ordered items over the internet with their
parent's credit cards and the parents didn’t know until the items arrived at
their home. A mystery. My book started with a nanny showing up to start a job
and the ranch owner not having a clue why she was there. Mystery- Does he
let her stay or send her packing? Why did she pick a remote ranch to be a
nanny? Why does he not want anything to do with a woman? Why does he need a
nanny? All these mysteries are solved in the book.
I enjoy reading mysteries and I enjoy incorporating mystery
into the stories I write. My action adventure romances, Secrets of a Mayan Moon and Secrets of an Aztec Temple, have a lot of mystery and twists in them.
And to my great joy, I'm just about to write "the end" on my first book of a mystery series that I hope will win over mystery fans.
What was a book you read that wasn't categorized as a
mystery but it had elements of mystery within the pages?
1 comment:
think it was one of Kresley Cole's IAD books
bn100candg at hotmail dot com
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