Our Book Club Friday guest author today is Sharon Woods Hopkins, author of the Rhetta McCarter Mystery Series. Sharon is a member of
the Mystery Writers of America, Sisters in Crime, the Southeast Missouri
Writers’ Guild, and the Missouri Writers’ Guild. Her short story, Death Bee
Humble, appeared in the SEMO Writer’s Guild Anthology for 2012. Killerwatt, her first
Rhetta McCarter book, was nominated for a 2011 Lovey award for Best First Novel
and was a finalist in the 2012 Indie Excellence Awards. Learn more about Sharon and her books at her website.
Sharon is offering a a hard copy of Killerwatt to one of
our readers who posts a comment. Please either leave your email address in your
comment or check back on Sunday to see if you’ve won. Our guests can’t send you
your winning books if we can’t get in touch with you. – AP
I find it intriguing to talk
to other writers and learn how they get their ideas for their books and
stories. At a recent book signing event shared with several authors, the ideas
ranged from, “I had the germ of this idea since I got out of diapers,” to “One
day the Lord spoke to me and told me to write.” Fascinating.
For me, the idea of writing
fiction had been swirling around my French Canadian head (In both English and
French) for a number of years. My husband Bill, who is also an author, (Courting Murder) writes prolifically. He
has a head full of ideas. Me, not so much. I had always written non-fiction. I
couldn’t settle on an original idea. That is, until one day at work, when
something happened that propelled me into the story that became Killerwatt.
My real life business is
mortgage banking—not a particularly exciting field. One day following a
holiday, my loan officer received a strange phone message from a Muslim
customer for whom we were completing a refinance of his very elegant home in
Cape Girardeau, Missouri. The gentleman had the wrong number; he was looking
for the man who was teaching him how to fly a plane. (I reproduced this scene
nearly verbatim in Killerwatt.) That
set my mind reeling with “what if’s?” What if we had a terrorist cell right
here in the Midwest? What is there to terrorize in our Ozark Mountain
foothills? I began to write.
I found it easy to put my
protagonist in my own line of work. That saved me a lot of research. Like me,
Rhetta is a mortgage banker who drives a 1979 restored Camaro with a Corvette
engine, which she calls Cami. She is married to a retired judge. While we share
the similarities I listed, that’s where all comparisons between me and Rhetta
end. I don’t honestly think I could do what Rhetta does. Although I own the
real Cami, I don’t drive her every day like Rhetta does.
My series takes place in
semi-rural Southeast Missouri, and surrounding areas. Murder, terrorism and
mayhem can happen anywhere, if you just think about it.
About Killerwatt: After one of her mortgage clients dies in a mysterious
car accident, Rhetta McCarter stumbles upon evidence of a terrorist plot to wipe
out the entire Midwest power grid. No one believes her—not the FBI, local law
enforcement, or her husband. Rhetta convinces her assistant and loan officer
Woody, a former Marine, to help her stop the attack. Problems
mount, and time begins running out, leaving Rhetta alone to stop the bad
guys. Can she do it?
About Killerfind: When Rhetta McCarter's '79 Camaro is destroyed in a
fire, she locates a perfect replacement in an old barn. There’s only one
problem: the body buried beneath it.
Thanks for joining us today, Sharon! Readers, if you’d
like a chance to win a copy of Killerwatt, leave a comment. And don’t forget to
stop back on Sunday to see if you’ve won. -- AP
17 comments:
HI Sharon -- Your book sounds like fun. And I do find it amazing how small incidents can spark big ideas in the minds of writers.
Hi Karen, yes it is fascinating what real life offers to mystery writers! Thanks for stopping by!
KILLERWATT and KILLERFIND are both excellent books!
I am not prejudiced.
Bill Hopkins
(the husband)
Great to read how the mystery writer's mind works. And that there can be a murder in my own back yard. You have me thinking. Looking forward to the next book in the series.
I'm not prejudiced, either.
Ellie Searl,
Friend
Sounds like I should read this one! Until June, we lived within sight of ERCOT, which controls the power grid for most of Texas. They gave tours last year and I got to go inside and ask all my terrorist questions. The guide was very patient.
Hi Kaye, Thanks for stopping by. I bet your tour guide didn't know about what happened in Killerwatt, LOL.
I did quiz him about an airplane attack, esp. since there's a general aviation airport right there, next to the buildings. I'll have to read yours to see!
Thanks for the glimpse into how your mind works, Sharon. Please enter me for a chance to win your book. Thanks. judydee22002@yahoo dot com
Hi Judy. Glad you stopped by!
Sounds like an interesting book. I used to work for lawyers and one of them was a judge for a small township. I'm in the Midwest; Ohio, not Missouri.
Hi Michelle, My husband is retired but still practices a little law. Mostly he writes, too. His first mystery, Courting Murder, came out in October.
Hi, Sharon - What a wonderful and fascinating post. Your book sounds intriguing and unique.
What a fascinating background and excellent book to learn about. Best wishes.
Hi Traveler and Petite, Nice to meet you here on the blog. I hope you leave your emails in case you get selected for a book! Thanks for dropping by!
Sharon,
I find it amazing at how an idea sticks in an author's head, and how three people will see the same thing but only one will say "that's a story idea."
This is a topic near and dear to my heart. In honor of the Big Read, a library push across the country in February, I've been asked to talk to fledgling writers about "where to get your ideas."
In the beginning, it took a nearly formed situation, such as a true crime event to make me think "I could write that." Now something as simple as the way sun glints off a knife can send me into full-fledged story mode.
Great topic. And best of luck with your new book! Maggie
Hi Maggie, you are so right about ideas. Last summer our church hired a company to seal the basement walls, so they dug this neat trench all around the church. It was about 3 ft wide. I thought,"what if someone buried a body there?" Couldn't concentrate on church for imagining all sorts of killings.
A lot of authors I know (and I do know a lot of mystery authors) are like cosmic vacuum cleaners. We suck up all sorts of bit and pieces that come our way, sort out, classify, organize and store for future use, ideas. I've used ideas from my kids, my wife, a fragment of a conversation from a woman passing in an airport, and from my doctor.
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