Today we sit
down for a chat with cozy mystery, traditional mystery, thriller, and romance
author Debbie De Louise. Learn more about Debbie and her books at her website.
When did
you realize you wanted to write novels?
I’d always enjoyed reading and writing. I wrote many
stories as a child, and my family and teachers said I had a talent for creative
writing. In college I wrote some full-length manuscripts that I still have in
notebooks.
How long
did it take you to realize your dream of publication?
My first publications were articles in pet magazines
in the 1990’s. I published a short story in a mystery anthology in 1999. In
2008 I self-published my first novel (it will soon be reprinted with my
publisher). My first novel published by a publisher that became the first book
of my Cobble Cove mystery series was released in 2015.
Are you
traditionally published, indie published, or a hybrid author?
I’m published with Solstice Publishing, a small Indie
publisher.
Where do
you write?
I write at the computer in my living room.
Is silence
golden, or do you need music to write by? What kind?
I need silence.
How much of
your plots and characters are drawn from real life? From your life in
particular?
I’ve used a lot of my experiences and also created
characters based on people I know or knew, but they’re all fictionalized, of
course.
Describe
your process for naming your character?
I don’t have a particular process. I just think up a
name. If I get stuck, I look at a magazine, paper, or other printed material
and choose a first and last name separately from those items. I’ve also had
character naming contests that my readers enter.
Real
settings or fictional towns?
Fictional but based on real ones. I sometimes list
real places, but the main locations are fictional.
What’s the
quirkiest quirk one of your characters has?
In my Cobble Cove mysteries, one of the characters,
an elderly gentleman named Mac, loves to eat peanut butter sandwiches and even
has special recipe for making one.
What’s your
quirkiest quirk?
My fondness for Pusheen, the emoji cat.
If you
could have written any book (one that someone else has already written,) which
one would it be? Why?
This is a difficult question. There are many books I
would’ve have loved to have written. One that stands out is Time and Again by Jack Finney. I love
books with time-travel themes and also enjoy historical mysteries. This book
has beautiful illustrations and depicts the early days of New York City so
vividly.
Everyone at
some point wishes for a do-over. What’s yours?
There are actually a lot of things I would like to
have done differently, but I believe that things happen for a reason. That’s
one of the lines in A Stone’s Throw,
my first Cobble Cove mystery. Everything that’s happened to me was meant to be,
so I wouldn’t do anything over.
What’s your
biggest pet peeve?
When my husband tunes me out while he’s watching TV.
You’re
stranded on a deserted island. What are your three must-haves?
A book to keep me occupied, a cat for company and
comfort, and non-perishable food.
What was
the worst job you’ve ever held?
Secretary in a pool at a large utility company.
What’s the
best book you’ve ever read?
Another difficult question. There are many. As a
librarian, I have a chance to sample a large number of books. One of my
favorites that I read long ago is Katherine Neville’s novel, The Eight.
Ocean or
mountains?
Ocean, even though I don’t swim.
City girl/guy
or country girl/guy?
I’m a bit of both. I live in the suburbs on Long
Island. I like the opportunities for entertainment in the city but also the
quiet and closeness to nature that the country affords.
What’s on
the horizon for you?
I’ve just completed a reprint of my first
self-published paranormal romance, Cloudy
Rainbow, which my current publisher is reprinting with new edits, a few
changes, and a different cover.
Anything
else you’d like to tell us about yourself and/or your books?
I have a cozy mystery series that features a
librarian and a library cat. The cat, Sneaky, has his own blog where he
interviews other pet characters and also author’s real pets. I also have a Facebook group called Cobble
Cove Character chat that is hosted by one of my characters each month.
Reason to
Die
Someone is strangling disabled people in the small
town of Baxter, Connecticut. Detective Courtney Lang and her ex-partner and
ex-lover, wheelchair-bound Bill Thompson, are paired up again and put in charge
of the investigation. During the course of their search, Courtney uncovers information
that points toward a connection between the murders and an unsolved series of
muggings by a masked man, the same man who shot and disabled Bill a year ago on
the night he proposed marriage to her.
Complicating matters for Courtney is her guilt about
Thompson’s shooting, her affair with her new partner, Mark Farrell, and her
unresolved feelings over the deaths of her mother and sister who perished in a
fire while she was away from home.
As the deaths accrue and the “Handicapped Strangler”
as the killer is coined by the press continues to rampage the town adding
victims of different ages, sex, and disabilities to the murder count, Courtney
discovers a clue that could crack open the case but may put her and Bill’s life
in jeopardy.
3 comments:
Thanks so much for featuring me on your blog.
Great interview. I learned a lot about one of my new favorite mystery writers.
Thank you so much, M.A. I'm honored.
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