Lee Carruthers from Marilynn Larew’s Leee Carruthers
Series sits down with us for an interview today.
What was your life like before your author started pulling your
strings?
I was a recent graduate of
Yale’s masters program in Islamic studies and inhabiting a cozy cubicle at CIA
headquarters in Langley, Virginia, following money laundering and terrorist
funding in North Africa when my life imploded. I learned that my father (also a
CIA officer) was maintaining a second family in Falls Church, Virginia. This
nearly destroyed me. I adored my father. I couldn’t believe he’d betray me like
that. Everybody at the Agency knew I was his daughter. I just couldn’t go to
work and see them stop talking when I walked past the water cooler. Sidney
Worthington (a.k.a. Marilynn Larew) rescued me and posted me to Beirut to
continue my money hacking. It was there that he/she sent me on the first
mission not covered in my job description. I had to acquire a whole different
skill set just to stay alive.
What’s the one trait you like most about yourself?
I like my self-reliance and
unflappability best. They stand me in good stead when I’m doing a “little job” for
Sidney
What do you like least about yourself?
Least? My smart mouth. It’s
going to get me killed one day.
What is the strangest thing your author has had you do or
had happen to you?
In Hong Kong Central she had me escape from a walled village in Hong
Kong’s New Territories by poking roof tiles out and hoisting myself up into the
rafters. I then climbed down the side of the wall using a rope made of torn up
curtains and dropped to the ground, just missing a truck in the parking lot. If
I’d hit it, I would’ve broken my back. I always say it’s better to be born
lucky than smart.
Do you argue with your author? If so, what do you argue
about?
All the time, mostly about
the crazy thing she wants me to do. In The
Spider Catchers, she had me steal an SUV and escape from a terrorist camp.
In Dead in Dubai, she nailed me in a
wooden box and put me on a ship bound for Karachi. She knows how I hate small
spaces.
What is your greatest fear?
I fear two things: small
spaces and heights. She knows that, but she keeps putting me in places like
that any way.
What makes you happy?
Safety. I like a nice quiet
night at home, possibly reading something on my Kindle. The little jobs I do
for her/Sidney are going to get me killed one day.
If you could rewrite a part of your story, what would it be?
Why?
If I could rewrite
anything, I’d rewrite my father’s story I adored him. I thought he was the
greatest man on earth. To find that he had another family and a daughter with
big blue eyes and curly blonde hair broke my heart. It also left me with
serious trust issues. I have a great deal of difficulty trusting men, which has
seriously messed up my love life. I also don’t much like cute little blondes.
Of the other characters in your book, which one bugs you the most? Why?
Two of the characters in my
books bug me, for different reasons. In The Spider Catchers, Alicia should
never have been sent into the field. She was too inexperienced and too naïve.
She managed to fall in love with a human trafficker and wind up in a terrorist
camp, and I had to go after her.
The second person bugs me on
a really personal level. In Hong Kong Central, Secret Service Special
Agent Jennifer Evans is a beautiful blonde with a perfect figure. She is the
partner of Jim Sanders, a man I grew to love in Paris. She broke us up. When we
all met up again in Hong Kong, she tried to keep us apart, a thing Jim said
would never happen again, but she did her best. Blondes give me a pain in the
first place, and her constant interference made life difficult for both of us.
Of the other characters in your book, which one would you love to trade
places with? Why?
Besides me, there are only
two continuing characters in the series – Mike Donovan, Sidney’s chief
researcher, and Sidney Worthington himself. Mike has to stay in place. He does
all the research heavy lifting for me when I’m in the field. Sidney? Yes, I’d
love to trade places with Sidney for a while. I’d love to be the caller rather
than callee. I’d call him in the middle of the night and tell him to pack up
and leave in the morning. Then I’d send him to Aden or the Central African
Republic and see how he likes dodging bullets.
Tell us a little something about your author. Where can readers find
her website/blog?
Marilynn is a historian,
retired from the University of Maryland System, where she taught US frontier
history, the history of the Vietnamese war, Vietnamese military history, and the
history of terrorism. You can see she likes vicarious violence. She knows her
terrorists though. She told me while we were working on The Spider Catchers that
whenever she thought of something rotten for the terrorists to do, before the
week was out they actually did it. She said it made her feel really creepy. She
also studied money and banking. Her dissertation was on the Cincinnati bank
that started the Panic of 1819. I think her most unusual publication is about
Vietnamese military history in 300 BC. She lives with her husband Karl, who is
also a novelist, in a 200-year-old brick farmhouse on the Mason-Dixon line in
Pennsylvania.
Her website is www.arilynnlarew.com.
There you will find introductions to all of my adventures and a short story about
me and an atomic bomb, which is free if you sign up for her newsletter. You’ll
also find an introduction to the adventures of a colleague of mine, Baltimore
PI Anne Carter. I think you’ll like it.
What's next for you?
I’m not sure. I left the CIA
without much thought of what I would do next. I just knew I was tired of the
never-ending job of putting money launderers out of business only to see them
back in under a month.
I have to go somewhere
though. The apartment I lived in in Paris belongs to the Agency. She wants me
to go to Boston. I ask you. Boston in the winter? I have a friend who has an IT
business near Boston. He’s been after me to come and work with him for a long
time, and she wants me to do that, but I’m not sure that
information technology is what I want to do. I might have been saved by the
bell. Sidney called me last night with a little job he wants me to do in Hanoi.
Hong Kong Central
Despite
the fact that she quit the CIA, Lee Carruthers is in Hong Kong doing a little job
for Sidney Worthington. He thinks something is wrong at Wong’s Antiques. Lee
finds Henry Wong—just as he’s being kidnapped by the Chau Fong Triad. What does
a Triad want with an antiquities dealer? That’s one of many questions, as Lee
reunites with an old lover, is caught in the middle of burgeoning democracy
demonstrations, and uncovers secrets that may once again upend her life.
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5 comments:
Any romantic entanglements for Lee? Perhaps with Mike or Sidney?
Because of her work, Lee's romantic entanglements usually don't last long. In Hong Kong Central, she met up with Jim Sanders, a lover from the past, but that didn't work terribly well. Now that she's out of the CIA, maybe she can settle down little. That would leave room for romance.
Thanks for having me, Anastasia. It was great fun. Because of it, she's not speaking to me now, but that will pass. We've got a new book to get out.
From one character to another, I feel your pain, Lee!
It's great of you to give characters an independent voice. I get very tired of just saying what she wants me to. Maybe we should form a union.
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