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Archives for February 2016

‘No Shred of Evidence,’ A Talk with Charles Todd

February 22, 2016 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

Charles Todd

Who is Charles Todd?

If you aren’t familiar with “his” many previous novels, you might be surprised to learn Charles Todd is the mother-and-son writing team of Charles and Caroline Todd.

Caroline has a BA in English Literature and History, as well as a Master’s degree in International Relations. Charles has a BA in Communications Studies, and a culinary arts degree.

No Shred of Evidence, the 18th Inspector Ian Rutledge mystery, takes place on the north coast of Cornwall, where four young women are boating on the River Camel. They see a young man on another boat that appears to be sinking. While making a valiant effort to save him, he’s struck on the head by an oar. An eyewitness, a local farmer, accuses the women of attempted murder. Ian Rutledge is called in to review the case. Since the victim is in a coma, there’s no one to refute the eyewitness’s account. Rutledge must deal with competing forces in trying to determine if the women tried to hurt the young man, and what may have motivated them. Other complications arise, and very little is what it seemed to be as the investigation reveals long buried issues and likely motivations.

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Filed Under: About Books, book launch, crime, Huffington Post Column Tagged With: collaborative writing, English history, historical novels, mystery, Post-traumatic Stress Disorder, shell shock, surivior's guilt

‘The Widow,’ A conversation with Fiona Barton

February 16, 2016 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

Fiona Barton-photoFiona Barton is a British journalist who, while working for the Sunday Mail and the Daily Telegraph, spent a great deal of time in court covering trials. This exposure provided the creative spark for Fiona’s debut novel.

The Widow focuses on three people: Jean Taylor, the wife of the prime suspect in a criminal case; Kate Waters, a journalist who is part of the media circus camping out at Jean’s front door; and Bob Sparkes, a detective working the case. A child has gone missing, and Glen Taylor, Jean’s husband, becomes the primary suspect in what appears to be an abduction.

The search for the truth—both in the past and in the present—takes shape through the interlocking narratives of these three characters. Each one tells a story, but some may be more truthful than others.

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Filed Under: About Books, book launch, crime, Huffington Post Column Tagged With: crime, journalism, psychological thrillers, social media

‘Interior Darkness,’ A Conversation with Peter Straub

February 16, 2016 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

Peter Straub-photoPeter Straub needs no lengthy introduction. As a novelist and poet, he has received many literary honors including the Bram Stoker Award, the World Fantasy Award, and the International Horror Guild Award. In 1965, he earned a B.A with honors in English from the University of Wisconsin at Madison; and one year later, an MA from Columbia University. In 1969, he moved to Dublin, Ireland to work on a Ph.D and began writing professionally. Peter collaborated with Stephen King on two novels, The Talisman and Black House.

Interior Darkness, a collection of 16 short stories written over the course of years, demonstrates Peter Straub’s uncanny ability to blur literary genres and pen short stories ranging widely in length, style and tenor, providing a highly entertaining and unusual volume.

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Filed Under: About Books, creativity, Huffington Post Column, Interviews, On Writing Tagged With: horror, novels, personal trauma, short-stories, Stephen King

‘Black Rabbit Hall,’ A Conversation with Eve Chase

February 11, 2016 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

Eve Chase (c) Clare Borg-CookEve Chase has worked as an editor and feature writer for various magazines in the UK.

Black Rabbit Hall, her debut novel, is the story of two women, born three decades apart: fourteen-year-old Amber Alton and thirty-two-year-old Lorna Dunaway. Each has a connection to Black Rabbit Hall, a stately manor house in Cornwall.

Amber spent endless summers at Black Rabbit Hall until an accident changed her family’s lives. Decades later, Loran feels the manor will make a perfect venue for her upcoming wedding, despite its crumbling stone walls and need for repairs. She cannot explain Black Rabbit Hall’s pull on her, but her instincts lead her into the manor’s labyrinthine history and the ghosts of her own past, including Alton-family secrets that have been buried for decades.

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Filed Under: About Books, book launch, Huffington Post Column, Interviews Tagged With: agents, Character, English literature, Gillian Flynn, hybrid genres, journalism, lyrical prose, Paula Hawkins

‘Violent Crimes,’ A Conversation with Phillip Margolin

February 10, 2016 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

2016-02-09-1455022427-6466258-PhillipMargoliscrAnthonyGeorgis-thumbPhillip Margolin, a former criminal defense attorney who defended thirty murder cases, has written many New York Times bestsellers. He is well-known for his Amanda Jaffe and Brad Miller series, and for his many standalone novels.

Violent Crimes is the next novel in the Amanda Jaffe series. Amanda is involved in a complex case involving environmentalists, Big Oil, financial fraud, and murder. Not only must she determine who murdered two attorneys while defending the men accused of the crimes; but also faces the most difficult professional decision of her life.

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Filed Under: About Books, courtroom drama, Huffington Post Column Tagged With: courtroom thrillers, ethics in the courtroom, legal thrillers, perjury, Post-traumatic Stress Disorder, procrastination, search warrants

‘Find Her,’ A Conversation with Lisa Gardner

February 10, 2016 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

LisaGardner_cPhilbrickPhotographyLisa Gardner is one of the best-known names in all of thrillerdom. She’s received praise from Lee Child, Karin Slaughter, Tess Gerritsen, among many others. With more than 22 million books in print, she’s written an FBI profiler series; the Detective D.D. Warren series; and a number of standalone novels.

In Find Her, Flora Dane shares the protagonist role with Detective D.D. Warren. Some years earlier, while on Spring Break in Florida, Flora found herself waking up in a pinewood box.  In pain and disoriented, she began months of captivity at the hands of an abductor.

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Filed Under: About Books, book launch, creativity, crime, Huffington Post Column, Interviews, novel, On Writing Tagged With: creativity, crime-fiction, deadlines, FBI, fear, procrastination

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