Jeffrey Siger & The Mykonos Mob

Jeffrey Siger, author of the Chief Inspector Andreas Kaldis mysteries, is just finishing his book tour for The Mykonos Mob. You can still order signed copies of the latest book, or copies of the others in the series, through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2KOiKQ6

Here’s the summary of The Mykonos Mob.

author of The Dark Iceland series

When corruption lies deep beneath the surface, how can the truth come to light?

The case begins for Athens’ Chief Inspector Andreas Kaldis with a literal bang when a corrupt former police colonel who runs a protection racket on Mykonos is gunned down. Suddenly, Athens’ Chief Inspector Andreas Kaldis is face-to-face with Greece’s top crime bosses on an island whose natural beauty and reputation as an international playground belies the corruption lurking just beneath the surface.

While Andreas and his Special Crimes unit wrestle for answers, Andreas’s wife, Lila, meets an American expat named Toni, a finder of stolen goods and a piano player in a gender-bending bar who has a zest for life and no apparent regard for rules. As Lila and Toni bond over a common desire to mentor young island girls trapped in an exploitative and patriarchal culture, they soon find that their efforts to improve the lives of the Greek girls they’ve come to care about intersect with Andreas’ investigation in ways that prove to be dangerous for all involved…

The Mykonos Mob is a thrilling police procedural, perfect for readers of Martin Walker and Donna Leon!

Additional Praise for the Chief Inspector Andreas Kaldis Series:

“[A] suspenseful trip through the rarely seen darker strata of complex, contemporary Greece.” —Publishers WeeklyTarget: Tinos [is] another of Jeffrey Siger’s thoughtful police procedurals set in picturesque but not untroubled Greek locales.”—New York Times
“Siger paints travelogue-worthy pictures of a breathtakingly beautiful—if politically corrupt—Greece.” —Publishers Weekly STARRED review for Sons of Sparta“Siger brings Chief Inspector Andreas Kaldis some very big challenges in his seventh mystery set in troubled contemporary Greece…The final plot twist proves well worth the wait, but it won’t take readers long to get there as they will be turning pages at a ferocious clip.” —Booklist STARRED review for Devil in Delphi
“Fans of Adrian McKinty’s Sean Duffy books and other police procedurals that handle violence and political issues with black humor will welcome this outstanding crime novel.” —Library Journal STARRED review for An Aegean April

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Michael Barton recently interviewed Jeffrey Tiger for Bookreporter. You might want to check out the Q&A.

Author Talk: April 11, 2019

When corruption lies deep beneath the surface, how can the truth come to light? This question lies at the heart of THE MYKONOS MOBJeffrey Siger‘s 10th police procedural featuring Chief Inspector Andreas Kaldis and his Special Crimes unit. In this interview, Siger explains why he chose Greece as the setting for his mysteries, gives a shout-out to the authors who have most influenced his style of writing and approach to dialogue (while also naming the two literary legends to whom his work is most often compared), and reveals the hot-button issue that may become the foundation of the next installment in the series.

Question: When you made the decision to start a crime series, why did you choose Greece as the setting?

Jeffrey Siger: When I started writing about Andreas Kaldis with MURDER IN MYKONOS, I didn’t intend on creating a series. I thought I’d be writing a stand-alone novel telling the story of a Greek island I had come to know intimately over the course of several decades. I wanted to write about the people, culture and politics of Mykonos, and only settled upon the mystery format because it struck me as the best vehicle for exploring how a tourist island society might respond to a threat to its newfound economic glory.

Greece provides an inexhaustible source of material for the two central elements of this series: (1) a serious, modern-day issue that my characters must confront and overcome, and (2) a perspective on that issue to be found in the ancient past. There is no place on earth more closely linked to the ancient world than Greece — it is the birthplace of the gods, the cradle of European civilization, the bridge between East and West. Spartan courage, Athenian democracy, Olympic achievement, Trojan intrigue — all sprung from this wondrous land.

As for Greece’s place in the modern world: just look at a map, and you’ll immediately realize how many of the greatest issues facing the modern world are centered in Greece’s Mediterranean neighborhood. I’d venture to say that no western country is closer to what challenges our planet today than Greece. It is a paradise for mystery writers….as more seem to be realizing every day.

Q: Every mystery writer has a number of favorite predecessors. Can you name two or three whose work was particularly influential in laying the groundwork for Inspector Kaldis and his resourceful policemen?

JS: That’s such a hard question for me to answer, because those I think of as having most influenced my style of writing are not commonly associated with the crime fiction genre. Cormac McCarthy is a favorite of mine on so many levels, as is Steinbeck, and I admire the pacing of Tom Clancy. But in my approach to dialogue, I think of myself as influenced more by the cadence of poets (Robert Frost, believe it or not) and the decisive rigor of playwrights (such as August Wilson).

I see Kaldis and his crew as having naturally evolved without any conscious input on my part. Having said that, my work is most often compared to that of Ed McBain and Donna Leon, two literary legends to whom I am deeply honored to be compared.

Q: One trademark of the Chief Inspector Kaldis series is the setting shifting from one Greek island to another from book to book. Aren’t you in danger of running out of options at some point?

JS: In order to run out of Greek island locales  — not to mention the plethora of utterly intriguing mainland venues — I’d have to live more than a thousand years…and that would be at a two-book-a-year pace!

Q: Another of your distinctive trademarks of this series is your use of a hot-button issue as the engine that drives the plot of each novel. In your previous book, AN AEGEAN APRIL, it was the mistreatment and exploitation of the immigrants who continue streaming into Greece year after year. In THE MYKONOS MOB, you explore the effects of the island’s ever-expanding popularity with the tourist trade upon the lives of its native occupants. Which issue might become the foundation of the next Chief Inspector Kaldis novel?

JS: So many things happening in our world call out for Kaldis to intervene, but at the moment there’s an idea percolating in my mind that has its hooks deeply into me. It’s a battle raging on an island close by Mykonos that has islanders seeking to preserve their agrarian ways pitted against those seeking to maximize tourism profits. It is a dilemma facing many of the world’s tourist paradises, but particularly so the Greek islands. And it can lead to murder. That’s all I have to say about that for now. Stay tuned…

Q: Living half the year in Greece as you do, you have a very special perspective on the issues that most concern contemporary Greeks. Do you ever have a hankering to write a novel that features an American setting? And if so, in what section of the country would you like to have it set?

JS: In Greece, I’m blessed with contacts who give me inside perspectives on what goes on behind the scenes. That’s hard to replicate back in the USA. However, if I were to place a book in an American setting, I’d likely use the northwestern New Jersey farm community I call home when not in Greece. It has so much mood to offer, not the least of which is that generated from its modern history as the location where Friday the 13th was filmed…and several folks actually named their sons Jason in its honor!

Q: If Netflix or HBO was to come calling with a plan to develop an on-location film or miniseries based on one of the Kaldis novels, with which one would you suggest they commence? And in the unlikely event that you were consulted regarding the actors they ought to hire, play casting director for a moment.

JS: Funny you should mention that. Let’s just say that I don’t count my film deals — or leading actors — until they’re hatched. However, and hypothetically speaking, I’d say the place to start is with the first in the series, MURDER IN MYKONOS, because it plumbs the spirit of Greek islands in general, and Mykonos in particular, while establishing the personal integrity of Andreas Kaldis that carries forward throughout the series. As for lead actors, I’m so bad at that, but others have suggested Clive Owen or Bradley Cooper.

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Barbara Peters and Jeffrey Tiger had a conversation when he was at The Poisoned Pen. You can “attend the event” via this video.