Today
we sit down for an interview with private investigator Lee Alvarez, the star
sleuth of author Heather Haven’s Alvarez Family Murder Mysteries.
What was your life like
before your author started pulling your strings?
Soooo much better. I mean, she really has me running
over rooftops, down and dirty in the mud, being shot at, etc. You name it; I do
it. I can’t tell you how many of my shoes have been ruined since I met her. I
keep asking her why she won’t let me sit in my client’s office snooping at online
files, sipping a double latté, while wearing my latest Vera Wang find. I simply don’t
get it! What did I ever do to her? For instance, in my last adventure I am in
disguise as a dishwasher at a cooking school. I can’t tell you what that did to
my nails. My manicurist sobbed like a baby.
What’s the
one trait you like most about yourself?
The glass is always half full. I’m a positive, upbeat
sort of person. I love life and everybody in it until they prove to me I
shouldn’t. Which many of them do. That’s more or less a PI’s lot in life, the
hardened criminal. Here I am, about as hard as a two-minute egg. But I don’t
want to be any different. Embrace life, I say. Give people the benefit of the
doubt. Take care of small animals and those less fortunate. Salute the flag.
Let’s face it, I’m a walking Hallmark card.
What do you
like least about yourself?
Sometimes I leap before I look, but I try to watch
that. You don’t want to be leaping into something that could hurt your Jimmy
Choos. And I’m impulsive by nature, hot-blooded, all that Latina stuff. I try
to be even-tempered. I try.
What is the
strangest thing your author has had you do or had happen to you?
In the latest book, The Culinary Art of Murder, she puts me in a disguise that makes me
look just like Albert Einstein. I wear a salt and pepper wig, sort of like a
Brillo pad on steroids, false buckteeth, and thick glasses. Baggy black pants,
a huge white shirt, and imitation Crocks on my feet complete this ghastly
getup. I am a real bow-wow. And then to add insult to injury, I get to stand on
those feet and wash about a gazillion dirty dishes, pots, and pans while trying
to find a killer. What I do for a living!
Do you
argue with your author? If so, what do you argue about?
You’re kidding, right? Argue with Heather? Not me. I
tend to roll over with all fours in the air and bark.
What is
your greatest fear?
That people won’t read about me and my family’s
adventures running a detective agency in the heart of Silicon Valley. I might
have to go out and get a real job.
What makes
you happy?
Well, I’m pretty blessed. I have a great life, a
great job, barring a few scrapes and bruises here and there, and let’s not
mention the time I was shot. But I got married recently to a wonderful guy who
thinks I’m about as great as I know he is. I’m working on having it all. I
mean, why not?
If you
could rewrite a part of your story, what would it be? Why?
Well, there’s two things: One – I can’t sing worth a
tinker’s dam, which is too bad. I love to sing. But my brother says I have a
voice that can clear out a stopped up sink. And two – The biggest love of my
life is ballet. Unfortunately, I wound up being a so-so ballerina, no matter
how hard I worked at it. Not much of a choice – mediocre dancer or first-rate sleuth.
But I still do a barre every day. At that time, I’m as good as Pavlova, if only
in my mind.
Of the other characters in
your book, which one bugs you the most? Why?
My mother makes me crazy.
I say this because Lila Hamilton Alvarez is perfect. Really, truly. All my life
I have lived in the shadow of the most beautiful, in-control, stylish,
intelligent, and knowledgeable woman on this planet, my mother. But there’s
another side to her, which is really annoying. Example: I’m told I take after
my father in nearly every way. Dark hair, twilight colored eyes, fiery temper.
When I was a kid, everybody would say, “Lee’s got her daddy’s features and her
mother’s fixtures.” But nobody ever said that around Mom. Way too crude.
Gender-based innuendos are not made around L. H. Alvarez. She would be
scandalized. My mother also can’t tolerate people who use abbreviations (like I
just did) or nicknames, such as calling me “Lee.” She’s called me Liana, since
I dropped out of the womb. Whoops. Scratch that remark. Back to being crude.
Of the other characters in
your book, which one would you love to trade places with? Why?
I don’t think anybody. My
philosophy mirrors Oscar Wilde’s - Be
yourself. Everyone else is already taken.
Tell us a little something
about your author. Where can readers find her website/blog?
I think Heather is a pretty nice lady when I can
get past how she sends me out and nearly gets me killed every time I turn
around. But she does let me wear designer clothes and I do have the occasional
zinger to say. Now if she’d just get me valet parking wherever I go, we’d have
something.
You can find Heather at her website. She loves it soooo much. Says it really shows who she is. And I’m
featured nicely on it. Actually, all of us characters are. She’s real fair like
that.
What's next for you?
Heather’s got me hopping! The seventh of the
Álvarez Family Murder Mysteries will come out next year, Casting Call for a
Corpse. She hasn’t started it yet per se, so I’m fairly safe for the moment.
However, what she’s working on now is the second book of the spinoff series,
The Lee Alvarez Mystery Novellas. This series features hubby, Gurn Hanson and
me. We’re sort of a Nick and Nora Charles in today’s Silicon Valley. The first
book, Honeymoons Can Be Murder, is already out. She’s merciless, almost
getting me killed in book one, even though I had a sprained ankle. Now she’s
writing Marriage Can Be Murder, book two. I’m crossing my fingers I’m
going to make it through another one of her stories. Mercy, Heather, mercy!
The
Culinary Art of Murder
Book Six of The Alvarez Family Murder Mystery
Lee’s Uncle Tío is smitten with the guest chef at a
Silicon Valley culinary arts institute. When the woman is arrested for the
murder of a fellow chef, a reluctant Lee agrees to help prove Tío’s lady love
innocent. But Lee suspects the ambitious, southern belle of a cook might just
be guilty. Undercover work at the institute proves to have more pitfalls than
whipping up a chocolate soufflé. The killer isn’t done and tries to get Lee out
of the way permanently. But just who is the murderer? The accused? One of her
two sons? Another inmate from a cooking school with more
to hide than dirty dishes? With secrets as plentiful as sauces, the nagging
question remains, if Lee proves the lady chef guilty, will Tío ever forgive her
for sending his new love to jail?
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4 comments:
Thanks so much for sharing Lee's interview, altho I disagree with something she said. I have never known her to roll over and bark like a dog. Everything else, on the nose. Thanks, the author, Heather
"I tend to roll over with all fours in the air and bark." -- That's funny (and, smart, too!)
I love these interviews or blogs about the characters in books. Great job on this one. I also loved that line "roll over on all fours" very creative. I love your sense of humor also.
Thank you, Angela and Roseanne. I have a good time with Lee.
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