Rig Theater, Wink, Texas (photo by Whole is One) |
Lynn Chandler Willis is the first woman in ten
years to win the St. Martin's Press/PWA Best 1st PI Novel competition. She
lives in North Carolina with Sam the cocker spaniel. Learn more about her and
her books at her website.
When I was researching settings
for Wink of an Eye, I knew what I wanted. I knew I wanted heat,
desert, dirt, and rugged mountains. Throw a couple cacti in for good measure. I
probably could have settled for any small town in New Mexico, Utah, or Arizona,
but I was drawn to Texas.
Each state in these great United
States of America has its own personality, its own quirks and charms. Most
states are known for one thing or another that is unique to that particular
state. And often, a state's residents, especially the native-born, share
certain characteristics. In Texas, one of those characteristics is Texas pride.
Every Texan I've ever met or talked to loved their state. “Texas” isn't just a
physical place—it's a way of life. Whether it's the ultra urban cities like
Dallas and Houston, or the smaller towns, like Wink, Texans are proud to call
the Lone Star state home.
I started my search looking at
the smaller towns. Google became my friend. I wanted a town with a population
under 2,000, a few mom-and-pop businesses, and at least one somewhat odd-ball
fact. And then I found Wink, Texas. Home of the Roy Orbison museum (call for an
appointment to visit), sidewalks, and two giant sinkholes. My main character,
Private Investigator Michael “Gypsy” Moran, was coming home.
To learn more about the town
Gypsy was running home to, I continued my research and discovered the little
town of Wink, Texas has a weekly newspaper—and it was online! I immediately
subscribed and with each new edition of the small town paper, I fell more in
love with the tiny town. The people of Wink, Texas weren't the oil barons of
Dallas or the country club golf pros of Houston; they were down to earth, working
class people. They were the people I wanted Gypsy Moran to call family.
Although fiction takes the reader
to a make-believe world, the characters need to be real enough for the reader
to be able to relate to them in some manner. In Wink of an Eye, the
main characters are everyday people. They get up and go to work or school, they
eat dinner together at a cramped kitchen table, and they're more likely to
drink a cold beer on their back deck than a dry martini in a penthouse.
They're the people of Wink,
Texas. A place Gypsy Moran is proud to call home.
Wink of an
Eye
When twelve-year-old Tatum McCallen finds his father,
a deputy sheriff, hanging from a tree in their west Texas backyard, he sets out
to restore his dad's honor and prove he didn't kill himself. He and his
disabled grandfather hire reluctant Private Investigator Gypsy Moran, who has
his own set of problems. Like a double-cross that sent him fleeing Vegas in the
middle of the night.
Gypsy agrees to help the kid and his grandfather
Burke because he feels sorry for them. Burke, a former deputy sheriff now
confined to a wheelchair, is all Tatum has left. When Tatum shows Gypsy a
private file his dad had been keeping, Gypsy knows the kid's father was on to
something when he died. Eight missing girls, a cowardly sheriff, and
undocumented workers are all connected to the K-Bar Ranch.
Gypsy is quite familiar with the K-Bar Ranch. Before
running off to Vegas, he spent his summers as a teenager working for ranch
owner Carroll Kinley while romancing Kinley's beautiful daughter Claire. But
Claire, now married to a state senator, is managing the ranch now and is more
involved with the case Tatum's father was secretly investigating than Gypsy
wants to admit.
Aided by adolescent Tatum and reporter Sophia Ortez,
Gypsy begins pulling the pieces of the puzzle together, but it could end up
costing him his life. Or worse—Tatum's life.
Buy Links
6 comments:
Congratulations, Lynn! I had no idea you'd won. It's such a prestigious contest, and for you to be the first woman to have won--yea! We're proud of you. Sounds like a terrific book that I will read.
Thank you! It's been over a year since I won but the memory is still so fresh :)
Congratulations on your prestigious award! And, best wishes with your novel. I think it would make a great Lifetime TV movie.
Thank, Angela! Lifetime, huh...I'll keep that in mind :)
Congratulations, Lynn! Your book sounds terrific - it's on my list!
Brenda
Lived in this interesting small town for numerous years. Was not a "local", but was there long enough to get the idea of how the locals thought and felt. Not a very weather friendly part of the state of Texas, but mostly a place with many nice people. Their school is the center of the town and what could be better for their children.
Post a Comment