The Crescent City Mysteries

Today, I’m interviewing Holli Castillo, whose background runs fromholli - author pic competing as a gymnast at the 1984 New Orleans World’s Fair, to working in many positions in theatrical productions, including performing as a Can Can girl.  After she received her JD from Loyola University, she joined the Orleans Parish District Attorney’s office. She quit the D.A.’s office when she had her first child, and is now an appellate public defender.  Sounds interesting to me.

 Jim:  How was it going from the DA’s office to public defender? Aren’t those on opposite sides of the aisle? 

 Holli:   They are the opposite sides, but the knowledge and skill translate well from one to the other. The D.A.’s job is supposed to be to present the truth and let the jury make a determination of whether the defendant is guilty or not. The defense’s job is to make sure that no one cheats in getting a conviction.  That isn’t the way it usually works out. Having done both, I can say both sides have the exact same goal–to win at any cost.  It’s not really so different in the end, and the law is the law.

 Jim:  At what stage did you decide to write?

Holli:   I have been writing stories since I was in Kindergarten and novels since I was in 6th grade.  I didn’t decide to try to write something for publication until I quit the D.A.’s Office to stay home with my first child in 2000.

 Jim:   holli - gumbo-2And how long did it take you from when you first started writing until Gumbo Justice appeared in 2009?

 HolliIt took about 4 years to write the novel.  But then Katrina hit in 2005 and in June of 2008 I was in a head-on collision with a drunk driver and was on my back for a year.  So it actually took 9 years, but only 4 of that was writing.

 Jim:  As with most of us, some personal history influences what gets written.  How did your experience in the District Attorney’s office color your novels?

 HolliNearly all of my ideas are sparked by real cases I’ve handled, either as a D.A. or a defense attorney.  The D.A.’s Office definitely gave me the inside track on how a prosecutor’s office works, especially the office dynamics and criminal procedure.  I can include all aspects of criminal prosecution in my novels.  My protag knows how to do everything I know how to do, she knows the same lingo, she knows how to cheat, etc. holli - jambalaya-2

  JimJambalaya Justice won an award before it was published.  Tell us just a little about that.

 HolliI entered it in the PSWA contest for unpublished fiction and it tied for first place. 

 Jim:  And the third in this Crescent City Mystery Series is called Chocolate City Justice. First, I have to ask, is New Orleans known as the Chocolate City?  I’ve never heard that term applied to New Orleans.

 HolliThe title comes from a speech our mayor made on the first Martin Luther King Day following Katrina.  He gave a grandiose speech about how at the end of the day, New Orleans would be a Chocolate City again, referring to the fact that more white people  were returning to the city than black people.  It caused quite a stir.

Jim: Well, I’ve learned something new today.  That’s good.  Tell us a little about Chocolate City Justice.

 Holli:  Ryan has just been assigned a real plum by prosecutor standards, a child’s birthday party massacre caught on videotape.  But as most things in New Orleans, nothing is what it seems and the case starts to turn into a nightmare.  And then along comes Katrina.  Ryan plans to evacuate, but does an unexpected favor for a friend, causing her to miss her window to escape the storm, ultimately putting her on the radar of the gang she’s prosecuting for the birthday party shooting.  But Ryan isn’t worried.  She’s handled some of the worst criminals the city has to offer, and hurricanes never hit New Orleans. Right? 

 Jim:  And when will that be available?

 Holli:  We’re still working on a release date, but I can safely say this year, sometime in 2014.

 Jim And lastly, where is the best place for us to buy your books? 

 Holli:  They are on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and my publisher’s website, www.oaktreebooks.com

 Thanks so much for having me!

Jim:  It was my pleasure, Holli.

 

The Library of the Future – NOW!

A Glimpse at the Future

 A new library opened up recently in San Antonio, Texas. 

 It has no shelves and no books.

 It is an all digital library.

bibliotech - 1 It has 10,000 free e-books and each can be checked out for 14 days.  The 3M Cloud Library app, which can be linked to a person’s library card, includes a counter which shows the number of days left before the e-book is “returned” to the library, that is, it is no longer available to the person who checked it out two weeks earlier.

 This is not to say that the library has only a large computer.  It occupies about five thousand square feet of space.  This houses, among other things, six hundred e-readers and forty-eight computer stations. So, if you do not have an e-reader; you can go to the library and read books on one of the library’s e-readers. They do have some e-readers that can be checked out along with the book.

 The library also has comic books and graphic novels, magazines, audio books, movies, and music. Through a program called Mango, one can take classes in over sixty foreign languages.

 The library also gives various programs,bibliotech - 2 such as a kid’s story time, hands-on computer classes, and other programs.  You can even reserve a room for a meeting, making it a great place to have writers’ groups.  Just no paper books.

 This is not actually a new concept. Arizona’s Santa Rosa Branch Library tried this as far back as 2002.  But after a few years, residents demanded to have paper books back – and they got them.

 There are some who feel the San Antonio experiment is still premature. There are still many people who prefer the paper books. Others are simply not technologically literate enough to benefit from such a library.

 Then there’s the cost. Training enough people to run the library and instruct patrons might become too expensive. And some feel there is not enough digital material available yet to warrant such a move. Many best sellers do not go to digital for a year or more, thus making them unavailable at this library for an extended period of time.

 One library expert predicts that, on average, perhaps only one percent of libraries per year will go all digital for the next ten years.

 However, academic libraries are moving in this direction at a faster rate. The engineering and technology library at the University of Texas moved to e-books and e-journals in 2010. These have the advantage of being available 24/7.

 But, all arguments aside, San Antonio is making a library for the future. Judge Nelson Wolff, of Bexar County said, “A technological evolution is taking place. And I think we’re stepping in at the right time.”

It’s what our great-grandchildren will believe is the norm. Paper books? Antiques.

I’ll be writing more on digital libraries in the future.  They are coming.  I’m Ready.  All my mysteries novels and suspense novels are in paper and e-book format.  Two of my latest are:

A Ton of Gold on Amazon at:  http://amzn.to/12PeHJb  and

Nook at:  http://bit.ly/1kM7p1M

and Cleansed by Fire — on Amazon at:  http://amzn.to/XwCIgs

 

 

Sally Carpenter’s Blog Hop

AS part of Sally’s blog hop, here are my answers to the questions running through this hop.

What am I writing?

Currently, I am finishing up a “final” polish on the second book in the Fr. Frank mystery series, tentatively titled Over My Dead Body.  And I am working on finishing the sequel to A Ton of Gold, which is titled A Silver Medallion.  I expect to have Over My Dead Body ready to shop to a publisher within a month.  And while not exactly writing, the audio version of Cleansed by Fire (the first Fr. Frank mystery) is nearing completion. 

 How does my work differ from others in my genre?

My Fr. Frank series would surely be classified as a Cozy.  But, it doesn’t have a female protagonist, which is common in cozies.  In fact, it has a priest as the protagonist and since the old Fr. Brown books, there haven’t been too many mystery series with a priest as the protagonist.

 In the Crystal Moore series, these are suspense books.  But, the protagonist is not an adventure seeking, super woman.  She is an ordinary computer researcher who gets dragged into dangerous situations.  She’s afraid, but she has a strong conscience that forces her to do what she believes is right.

 Why do I write what I do?

I write pretty much what I like to read.  That is, I am not a big fan of hard-boiled mysteries.  I don’t need to see all the blood and gore.  I am not writing for CSI, so you won’t see every step of the way as a bullet tears through flesh and organs.  In fact, you won’t see any organs and very little blood.  Oh yes, people do get killed.  But you don’t have to see every detail.

 How does my writing process work?

A germ of an idea pops into my head, perhaps from something I read, or hear, or see.  It rattles around in my head for some time. That could be weeks or months. Eventually, it becomes some semblance of a story.  When I begin the hear snatches of dialog in my head, I know it’s time to start writing the story.

Now, take a look at Sally’s answers at:   

http://sandyfairfaxauthor.com

 

Thanks and I hope you enjoy seeing our different answers to the same questions.

jim

 

Musicals & Cannibals

today’s guest is William Doonan, a tenured professor of anthropology and archaeology and a writedoonanphotoBW2r of a number of excellent mysteries.William has spent the last fourteen years helping students explore the structures and functions of past and contemporary cultures. As an active field archaeologist, he spent summers on Peru’s north coast excavating pyramids, mummies, and strange little mud walls. I’ll give you some links to his work below, but first, let’s hear about …

Musicals & Cannibals

 Reading The New York Times today, I came across an ad for the new Broadway musical version of The Bridges of Madison County.  Did we need this?  Apparently we did.

 I’d already been thinking a lot about Robert James Waller’s 1992 book.  I read it when it came out and I read it again last year.  It’s a masterpiece.  I mean it.  I don’t mean I especially liked it.  It was fine, right?  But you have to be impressed.  Weighing in at a mere 38,000 words, it’s basically a novella, and yet it has been selling well for nearly two decades, with more than fifty million copies in print.  It is also a major motion picture and now a Broadway production.  Soon the action figures will be collectables.  

 I don’t entirely understand the frenzy over this story.  And that’s why I’m not a multi-millionaire, multi-million copy author, like Waller.  But I’d sure like to understand it.  No doubt it would make me a better writer.  So I set myself a simple task.  I would start with Waller’s setting – Madison County.  I would pay homage to his central plot points – love found, love lost.  I would maintain his two central characters – middle-aged drifter, and middle-aged farm wife.  Then, because I’m a writer too, I drew on my own insights to imagine what Waller left out.  What elements could have made this a better story?  It came to me in a flash: cannibals.  Also, I don’t have all the time in the world, so I figured I would tackle the project as a short story.  

 I slavedoonan - Coverd for many days, but I’m pleased with the result.  The Cannibals of Madison County is a taught, suspense-laden short story that retains all the poetic nuances of Waller’s work, but also brings in cannibals, which actually really helped tighten up some plot holes.

 So I hope you’ll give my story a read.  At 4400 words, it’s an eighteen-page page-turner.  And because there’s really no market left out there in this cruel literary world for short stories, I decided to hoist it up on Kindle as a Kindle short.  It can be yours free today and tomorrow if you click HERE.  And if you do get a chance to read it, please take a moment to leave a short review.  I’m hoping Robert James Waller is reading this blog, because I think he’d really like it.

 For more information on Doonan and his work, please visit www.williamddoonan - am caliphateoonan.com

Some of William’s novels feature an eighty year-old detective for the Association of Cruising Vessel Operators.  And then he has his suspense novels following archaeologists who go to Peru to investigate the Santiago de Paz pyramids. Good stuff.  Check it out.

 

 

Award-winning Author Shares Highs & Lows of Her Life

Gallery

This gallery contains 3 photos.

Today, Irish-born Christine Lindsay shares iintimate parts of her life and tells us how they have influenced her novels. Stories of her ancestors who served in the British Cavalry in Colonial India inspired her multi-award-winning, historical series Twilight of the British … Continue reading