James Anderson via Livestream

James Anderson, author of Lullaby Road, was just here at the Poisoned Pen, and Patrick Millikin interviewed him. Before I give you several other links, here’s the link to the Web Store if you want to order a signed copy. https://bit.ly/2mOjfyL

Lullaby Road

There are several links to share for this event. First, if you’d like to see Patrick’s interview with this fascinating storyteller, you can watch it on Livestream. https://livestream.com/poisonedpen/events/8028223

In the course of the interview, Anderson refers to an interview he did with Kaye Barley. He also talks about his book trailer for Lullaby Road, one with original music. Those can both be seen on this blog. Here’s the link to the interview and the book trailer, featured on Jan. 19. https://bit.ly/2DOxXgn

Dana Stabenow on Setting

If you’ve read any of Dana Stabenow’s books, you know how important the setting is. Her most recent book, Silk and Song, takes place along the Silk Road. Her Kate Shugak mysteries, such as the latest in the series, Less Than a Treason, takes place in Alaska. You can find copies, including signed ones of Silk and Song, through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2F9m0Bq

And, just recently, you could find Dana herself talking about the background of the books on “Imported Ink”. Here’s the link to Stabenow’s guest blog, “Between Two Continents with Dana Stabenow”. https://bit.ly/2DDbBSw

Of course, you can always find interesting pieces on Dana Stabenow’s own site, https://stabenow.com/

Christopher Reich via Livestream

We know everyone can’t make all of the events at the Poisoned Pen. Fortunately, you can watch and listen to many of them via Livestream. Christopher Reich kicks off a new series with his novel, The Take. You can find signed copies through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2DvUca2

Take

Here’s the description.

From New York Times bestselling author Christopher Reich, an international spy thriller featuring Simon Riske: one part James Bond, one part Jack Reacher

 
Riske is a freelance industrial spy who, despite his job title, lives a mostly quiet life above his auto garage in central London. He is hired to perform the odd job for a bank, an insurance company, or the British Secret Service, when he isn’t expertly stealing a million-dollar watch off the wrist of a crooked Russian oligarch.
Riske has maintained his quiet life by avoiding big, messy jobs; until now. A gangster by the name of Tino Coluzzi has orchestrated the greatest street heist in the history of Paris: a visiting Saudi prince had his pockets lightened of millions in cash, and something else. Hidden within a stolen briefcase is a secret letter that could upend the balance of power in the Western world. The Russians have already killed in an attempt to get it back by the time the CIA comes knocking at Simon’s door.
Coluzzi was once Riske’s brother-in-arms, but their criminal alliance ended with Riske in prison, having narrowly avoided a hit Coluzzi ordered. Now, years later, it is thief against thief, and hot on their trail are a dangerous Parisian cop, a murderous Russian femme fatale, her equally unhinged boss, and perhaps the CIA itself.
In the grand tradition of The Day of the Jackal and The Bourne Identity, Christopher Reich’s The Take is a stylish, breathtaking ride.
*****
Fortunately for you, this is one of the events that’s now available on Livestream. You can watch Patrick Millikin interview Christopher Reich. https://livestream.com/poisonedpen/events/8026933

Neil Olson’s The Black Painting – Hot Book of the Week

Here’s a Hot Book of the Week you might not recognize, Neil Olson’s The Black Painting. You can order a signed copy through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2FUwwxD

Black Painting

Here’s the summary.

An old-money East Coast family faces the suspicious death of its patriarch and the unsolved theft of a Goya painting rumored to be cursed

There are four cousins in the Morse family: perfect Kenny, the preppy West Coast lawyer; James, the shy but brilliant medical student; his seductive, hard-drinking sister Audrey; and Teresa, youngest and most fragile, haunted by the fear that she has inherited the madness that possessed her father.

Their grandfather summons them to his mansion at Owl’s Point. None of them have visited the family estate since they were children, when a prized painting disappeared: a self-portrait by Goya, rumored to cause madness or death upon viewing. Afterward, the family split apart amid the accusations and suspicions that followed its theft.

Any hope that their grandfather planned to make amends evaporates when Teresa arrives to find the old man dead, his horrified gaze pinned upon the spot where the painting once hung. As the family gathers and suspicions mount, Teresa hopes to find the reasons behind her grandfather’s death and the painting’s loss. But to do so she must uncover ugly family secrets and confront those who would keep them hidden.

A masterful, deftly plotted novel, The Black Painting explores the profound power that art, and the past, hold over our lives.

2018 Barry Award Nominations

It’s not only movie award season. It’s also time for the announcements of the 2018 mystery award nominations. Deadly Pleasures Mystery Magazine just announced the nominations for the 2018 Barry Awards. Check out the list, and then check the Web Store. https://store.poisonedpen.com

Congratulations to all of the nominees. The winners will be announced at Bouchercon on Sept. 6.

Best Novel
THE LATE SHOW, Michael Connelly (Little, Brown)
THE MARSH KING’S DAUGHTER, Karen Dionne (Putnam)
EXIT STRATEGY, Steve Hamilton (Putnam)
THE FORCE, Don Winslow (Morrow)
PRUSSIAN BLUE, Philip Kerr (Putnam)
MAGPIE MURDERS, Anthony Horowitz (Harper)

Best First Novel
THE DRY, Jane Harper (Flatiron)
SHE RIDES SHOTGUN, Jordan Harper (Ecco)
THE LOST ONES, Sheena Kamal (Morrow)
THE IRREGULAR, H. P. Lyle (Quercus)
A RISING MAN, Abir Mukherjee (Pegasus)
MY ABSOLUTE DARLING, Gabriel Tallent (Riverhead)

Best Paperback Original
SAFE FROM HARM, R. J. Bailey (Simon & Schuster UK)
THE DEEP DARK DESCENDING, Allen Eskens (Seventh Street)
HOLLYWOOD HOMICIDE, Kellye Garrett (Midnight Ink)
THE DAY I DIED, Lori Rader-Day (Morrow)
BLESSED ARE THE PEACEMAKERS, Kristi Belcamino (CreateSpace)
SUPER CON, James Swain (Thomas & Mercer)

Best Thriller
GUNMETAL GRAY, Mark Greaney (Berkley)
SPOOK STREET, Mick Herron (Soho)
THE FREEDOM BROKER, K. J. Howe (Quercus)
THE OLD MAN, Thomas Perry (Mysterious Press)
UNSUB, Meg Gardiner (Dutton)
TRAP THE DEVIL,  Ben Coes (St. Martin’s)

“The world’s greatest adolescent British chemist/busybody/sleuth”, Flavia de Luce

Have you met Alan Bradley’s amateur sleuth, Flavia de Luce? She’ll be back at the end of the month in The Grave’s a Fine and Private Place. You can pre-order a copy through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2DMohTW

Grave's A Fine and Private Place

Here’s the summary of the new book.

“The world’s greatest adolescent British chemist/busybody/sleuth” (The Seattle Times), Flavia de Luce, returns in a twisty new mystery novel from award-winning and New York Times bestselling author Alan Bradley.

In the wake of an unthinkable family tragedy, twelve-year-old Flavia de Luce is struggling to fill her empty days. For a needed escape, Dogger, the loyal family servant, suggests a boating trip for Flavia and her two older sisters. As their punt drifts past the church where a notorious vicar had recently dispatched three of his female parishioners by spiking their communion wine with cyanide, Flavia, an expert chemist with a passion for poisons, is ecstatic. Suddenly something grazes her fingers as she dangles them in the water. She clamps down on the object, imagining herself Ernest Hemingway battling a marlin, and pulls up what she expects will be a giant fish. But in Flavia’s grip is something far better: a human head, attached to a human body. If anything could take Flavia’s mind off sorrow, it is solving a murder—although one that may lead the young sleuth to an early grave.

Advance praise for The Grave’s a Fine and Private Place

“Outstanding . . . As usual, Bradley makes his improbable series conceit work and relieves the plot’s inherent darkness with clever humor.”Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“There’s only one Flavia. . . . Series fans will anticipate the details of this investigation, along with one last taste of Flavia’s unorthodox family life.”Library Journal (starred review)

“Bradley’s unquenchable heroine brings “˜the most complicated case I had ever come across’ to a highly satisfying conclusion, with the promise of still brighter days ahead.”Kirkus Reviews

Acclaim for Alan Bradley’s beloved Flavia de Luce novels, winners of the Crime Writers’ Association Debut Dagger Award, Barry Award, Agatha Award, Macavity Award, Dilys Award, and Arthur Ellis Award

“If ever there were a sleuth who’s bold, brilliant, and, yes, adorable, it’s Flavia de Luce.”USA Today

“Delightful . . . a combination of Eloise and Sherlock Holmes.”The Boston Globe

“[Flavia] is as addictive as dark chocolate.”Daily Mail

*****

If you’re not yet convinced that you should try Flavia’s stories, Alexis Gunderson has a piece called “Why Adults and Kids Should Read the Flavia de Luce Series by Alan Bradley.” Here’s the link to her article in Paste Magazine. https://bit.ly/2DLmjmA

Pendergast is Back!

Fans of FBI Special Agent A.X.L. Pendergast will welcome the latest book in  the series by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child, City of Endless Night. In their interview with Barbara Peters, owner of the Poisoned Pen, Douglas Preston said it’s going back to the roots of the series. You can buy a signed copy, and it will come with special artwork and a surprise signature. Check out the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2FS7kbk

City of Endless Night

You couldn’t make it to the event the other night? It was recorded via Livestream, and you can watch it. https://livestream.com/poisonedpen/events/8016811

Here’s the summary of the new Pendergast book.

“A consistently exciting and never predictable series.”--Associated Press
When Grace Ozmian, the beautiful and reckless daughter of a wealthy tech billionaire, first goes missing, the NYPD assumes she has simply sped off on another wild adventure. Until the young woman’s body is discovered in an abandoned warehouse in Queens, the head nowhere to be found.
Lieutenant CDS Vincent D’Agosta quickly takes the lead. He knows his investigation will attract fierce scrutiny, so D’Agosta is delighted when FBI Special Agent A.X.L. Pendergast shows up at the crime scene assigned to the case. “I feel rather like Brer Rabbit being thrown into the briar patch,” Pendergast tells D’Agosta, “because I have found you here, in charge. Just like when we first met, back at the Museum of Natural History.”
But neither Pendergast nor D’Agosta are prepared for what lies ahead. A diabolical presence is haunting the greater metropolitan area, and Grace Ozmian was only the first of many victims to be murdered . . . and decapitated. Worse still, there’s something unique to the city itself that has attracted the evil eye of the killer.
As mass hysteria sets in, Pendergast and D’Agosta find themselves in the crosshairs of an opponent who has threatened the very lifeblood of the city. It’ll take all of Pendergast’s skill to unmask this most dangerous foe-let alone survive to tell the tale.

The Edgar Nominees for 2018

The Edgar Award nominees for 2018 were announced on Friday. If there’s a book that appeals to you, don’t forget to check the Web Store for copies. https://store.poisonedpen.com/

Here was yesterday’s news release.

January 19, 2018, New York, NY ““ Mystery Writers of America is proud to announce, as we celebrate the 209th anniversary of the birth of Edgar Allan Poe, the Nominees for the 2018 Edgar Allan Poe Awards, honoring the best in mystery fiction, non-fiction and television published or produced in 2017. The Edgar® Awards will be presented to the winners at our 72nd Gala Banquet, April 26, 2018 at the Grand Hyatt Hotel, New York City.

Best Novel

The Dime by Kathleen Kent (Hachette Book Group – Little, Brown & Co./Mulholland Books)
Prussian Blue by Philip Kerr (Penguin Random House — G.P. Putnam’s Sons)
Bluebird, Bluebird by Attica Locke (Hachette Book Group – Little, Brown & Co./Mulholland Books)
A Rising Man by Abir Mukherjee (Pegasus Books)
The Twelve Lives of Samuel Hawley by Hannah Tinti (Penguin Random House — The Dial Press)

Best First Novel

She Rides Shotgun by Jordan Harper (HarperCollins — Ecco)
Dark Chapter by Winnie M. Li (Polis Books)
Lola by Melissa Scrivner Love (Penguin Random House — Crown)
Tornado Weather by Deborah E. Kennedy (Macmillan — Flatiron Books)
Idaho by Emily Ruskovich (Random House)

Best Paperback Original

 

In Farleigh Field by Rhys Bowen (Amazon Publishing — Thomas & Mercer)
Ragged Lake by Ron Corbett (ECW Press)
Black Fall by Andrew Mayne (HarperCollins Publishers — Harper Paperbacks)
The Unseeing by Anna Mazzola (Sourcebooks — Sourcebooks Landmark)
Penance by Kanae Minato (Hachette Book Group — Little, Brown & Co./Mulholland Books)
The Rules of Backyard Cricket by Jock Serong (Text Publishing)
Best Fact Crime

Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI
by David Grann (Penguin Random House — Doubleday)
The Road to Jonestown: Jim Jones and Peoples Temple by Jeff Guinn (Simon & Schuster)
American Fire: Love, Arson, and Life in a Vanishing Land by Monica Hesse
(W.W. Norton & Company — Liveright)
The Man From the Train: The Solving of a Century-Old Serial Killer Mystery
by Bill and Rachel McCarthy James (Simon & Schuster — Scribner)
Mrs. Sherlock Holmes: The True Story of New York City’s Greatest Female Detective and 
the 1917 Missing Girl Case that Captivated a Nation by Brad Ricca (St. Martin’s Press)

Best Critical/Biographical

From Holmes to Sherlock: The Story of the Men and Women who Created an Icon
by Mattias Bostrom (Grove/Atlantic — The Mysterious Press)
Manderley Forever: A Biography of Daphne du Maurier by Tatiana de Rosnay (St. Martin’s Press)
Murder in the Closet: Essays on Queer Clues in Crime Fiction Before Stonewall by Curtis Evans (McFarland Publishing)
Chester B. Himes: A Biography by Lawrence P. Jackson (W.W. Norton & Company)
Arthur and Sherlock: Conan Doyle and the Creation of Holmes by Michael Sims (Bloomsbury USA)

Best Short Story
“Spring Break” — New Haven Noir by John Crowley (Akashic Books)
“Hard to Get” — Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine by Jeffery Deaver (Dell Magazines)
“Ace in the Hole” — Montana Noir by Eric Heidle (Akashic Books)
“A Moment of Clarity at the Waffle House” — Atlanta Noir by Kenji Jasper (Akashic Books)
“Chin Yong-Yun Stays at Home” — Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine by S.J. Rozan (Dell Magazines)

Best Juvenile

 

Audacity Jones Steals the Show by Kirby Larson (Scholastic — Scholastic Press)
Vanished! by James Ponti (Simon & Schuster — Aladdin)
The Assassin’s Curse by Kevin Sands (Simon & Schuster — Aladdin)
First Class Murder by Robin Stevens (Simon & Schuster — Simon & Schuster BFYR)
NewsPrints by Ru Xu (Scholastic — Graphix)

Young Adult

 

The Cruelty by Scott Bergstrom (Macmillan Children’s Publishing Group — Feiwel & Friends)
Grit by Gillian French (HarperCollins Publishers — HarperTeen)
The Impossible Fortress by Jason Rekulak (Simon & Schuster)
Long Way Down by Jason Reynolds (Simon & Schuster — Atheneum Books for Young Readers)
The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas (HarperCollins Publishers — Balzer + Bray)

TV Episode Teleplay

“Episode 1” — Loch Ness, Teleplay by Stephen Brady (Acorn TV)
“Something Happened” — Law and Order: SVU, Teleplay by Michael Chernuchin
(NBC Universal/Wolf Entertainment)
“Somebody to Love” — Fargo, Teleplay by Noah Hawley (FX Networks/MGM)
“Gently and the New Age” — George Gently, Teleplay by Robert Murphy (Acorn TV)
“The Blanket Mire” — Vera, Teleplay by Paul Matthew Thompson & Martha Hillier (Acorn TV)

Robert L. Fish Memorial

 

“The Queen of Secrets” — New Haven Noir by Lisa D. Gray (Akashic Books)

Mary Higgins Clark

The Vineyard Victims by Ellen Crosby (Minotaur)
You’ll Never Know Dear by Hallie Ephron (HarperCollins — William Morrow)
The Widow’s House by Carol Goodman (HarperCollins — William Morrow Paperbacks)
Uncorking a Lie by Nadine Nettmann (Llewellyn Worldwide — Midnight Ink)
The Day I Died by Lori Rader-Day (HarperCollins — William Morrow Paperbacks)
Grand Master

Jane Langton
William Link
Peter Lovesey

Raven Award

Kristopher Zgorski, BOLO Books
The Raven Bookstore, Lawrence Kansas

Ellery Queen Award

Robert Pépin

Interview with James Anderson

I was unsure whether to post the book trailer for James Anderson’s latest novel at the beginning or end of this interview. But, the trailer for Lullaby Road is so powerful, I thought it might tempt you to read further.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PACypLvl8MI?rel=0&w=560&h=315]

James Anderson will be at the Poisoned Pen on Wednesday, Jan. 24 at 7 PM. Lullaby Road has been selected as this month’s pick for the Hardboiled Crime Club. Signed copies are available through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2mOjfyL

*****

Even if you can make it on Wednesday, I think you should read this revealing interview with James Anderson. I asked a friend to do the interview. Kaye Wilkinson Barley is a writer and probably Anderson’s biggest fan. I knew her questions might bring out insights that no one else might discover. Kaye, thank you for interviewing James Anderson.

*****

  1. Would you start by introducing yourself to readers?

James Anderson
That’s a tough question. Can we come back to that? ☺ Okay, I know that shouldn’t be a hard question to answer, but for me it is. My younger sister and I were raised in several places around the Pacific Northwest and Northern California. Our father abandoned us at a Greyhound bus station in Salem, Oregon when I was about two or three and my sister an infant. We were taken in for a year or so by a Quaker family until my mother found a job and a place for us to live. I hated high school and barely graduated, got into some trouble, so it was a surprise to everyone (except my mother) when I attended Reed College and later graduate school in Boston. My sister went to University of California at Berkeley.  When I was still at Reed I started my publishing company, which gradually grew into a nationally respected book publisher. Throughout high school and college I was always writing, novels, poetry, essays, etc. I wrote my first novel when I was 16. It was age-appropriate and terrible!

  1. Would you introduce us to Ben Jones?

Ben Jones is an independent truck driver whose daily route takes him up and down an isolated hundred-mile stretch of road in the high desert of Utah. He delivers necessities to the desert rats, eccentrics and self-exiled and for many of them Ben is their only regular contact with another human being. He’s an orphan and, as far as he knows, he is the child of a Jewish social worker and a Native American father. He was adopted by a Mormon couple when he was six or seven and has been driving his truck on State Highway 117 since he was eighteen. He’s just now closing in on forty.

  1. Tell us about Lullaby Road, without spoilers.

Lullaby Road

In my first novel, The Never-Open Desert Diner, Ben accidentally stumbles upon a woman playing a cello in an empty house in an isolated and abandoned housing development in the high desert. In LULLABY ROAD, Ben is contending with winter in the desert and suddenly finds himself responsible for a young mute Hispanic child that has been left at a seedy truck stop in the middle of nowhere. In the process of trying to keep up his regular delivery schedule he is attempting to find the child’s father. Who that child’s father is, and the tragedy and jeopardy  both Ben and the child face, circles back to an event that occurred at the diner, and to its owner, Walt Butterfield, forty years earlier, and provided the narrative core of the first novel. But LULLABY ROAD is not a sequel, though a kind of continuation with recurring characters. It can be read without having read the first one.

  1. What inspired this story?

We all have our hot button issues. Mine happens to be children, particularly children at risk—and these days they are legion. A long time ago I was one of them, and if not for some caring and wonderful strangers, I might not be around today. In many ways I think children around the world, how they are oppressed, ignored, marginalized and even commoditized, are the canaries in our global coal mine. How we treat children is a commentary on who we have become. Children at risk these days are often discussed as a political issue, a problem to be dealt with that denies their fundamental humanity, and ours. Not just border children, but refugee children, and they have been weaponized in an ideological war that pits empathy against fear. Caring about another human being always involves risk—and it would seem that there are many in this world today who are unwilling to assume that risk.

  1. I understand you were a trucker for a short time. (Actually, you’ve done an amazing number of different things and had a wide variety of jobs!) What stories or memories helped you to create Ben?

I was, but for a very brief time. Ben is able to let his mind wander while he drives the desert—I drove a building supply truck and when my mind wandered I crashed the truck! And was fired. There is so much that has gone into Ben, and much of that has to do with my background, which is similar to his—or at least inspired his. There is his reverence for the natural world, particularly the desert and an abiding though occasionally begrudging empathy for his customers. He is carrying some emotional baggage, as are we all, and trying to be a better person and out-distance the sometimes violent and anti-social young man he was. In many ways Ben is as much an exile as the people he serves, and though paradoxical, he respects them and recognizes the kind of human connection and responsibility that is part of their shared desert diaspora. The combination of a harsh environment and isolation often results in a weird hightened awareness of what it means to be human and interdependent, with each other, nature and the environment. Ben has no super power. He doesn’t speak ten languages and isn’t a former Navy Seal. As I’ve said before, if anything Ben’s super power is that he gets up every morning and puts his boots to the floor and goes to work—low pay, long hours and no parades— and tries to be a better person—like most of us. Or at least I like to think so.

  1. Setting and atmosphere are so important in your books. You spend time in the Four Corners region. Tell us about your feelings about that area and the desert.

One of the most sacred regions in the world is located in the Four Corners area (the intersection of Colorado, Utah, Arizona and New Mexico)—Mesa Verde, which is where the ancient puebloan (formerly referred to as Anasazi, which means “Ancient Ones) cliff dwellings are, atop a vast mesa thousands of feet high. I lived in Durango for a while and spent a lot of time at Mesa Verde. I go back as often as I can. But the true answer to your question is more difficult to put into words. As many reviewers have noted, the desert is as much a character in my novels as the people, and why they choose to live as they do, and the natural though terrible beauty, especially in the diffuse red light of Utah, churns my imagination in ways that, for instance, New York City does not. There is magic in the natural world, which is shrinking, and I fear that without it we will lose our connection to what is truly important in the world.

  1. You write poetry as well as crime fiction. Your novels are quite lush and poetic at times. What made you turn to crime?  (AND – where might we find some of your poetry?).

Oh, you’d have to search through small magazines and literary journals around the country going back forty years. I have published quite a lot of poetry and though I have been approached on several occasions by publishers who want to collect them into a book, I have resisted. I read a lot of poetry, and always have, and I find that my love of poetry informs my prose in ways that are distinctive and not often found in crime fiction, or fiction in general. Still, though, I try not to go overboard lyrically and keep the focus on the story and the voice of Ben Jones as much as I can. I don’t think I actually “turned” to crime, and I am not certain my novels can be accurately referred to as “crime” novels. I had a very precarious childhood and young adulthood and crime, particularly violence of various kinds, was a part of my daily life, as a victim and as a witness—in that sense crime, or crimes, as they appear in my novels, are a part of life, part of the fabric of Ben’s life, and not the central focus. Overall, as a novelist, I am much more concerned with the effect violence has on us, directly and indirectly, that can manifest itself over time—a kind of personal geological time that results in seismic events.

  1. What authors have inspired your writing?

My favorite books are probably instructive as to why my own work has such a hybrid nature. My first introductions to crime/mystery/suspense fiction came while I was in college and working night shifts in convenience markets. I was reading these formidable tomes by Friedrich Schleiermacher and Martin Heidegger and others, as well as the Greeks and so on and every once in a while I would reach over and pull a paperback off the spin rack—and as a result my scholarly responsibilities and interests were punctuated by forays into Raymond Chandler and, one of my biggest influences, John D. MacDonald’s Travis McGee series. My reading interests are extremely varied, as they have always been, physics, neuro-biology, biography, history, philosophy as well as nonfiction and memoirs, novels and poetry. As for specific titles, it is an eccentric list of favorites. Tom Sawyer; Wisdom of the Desert Fathers by Thomas Merton; Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind by Shunryu Suzuki; Red, by Terry Tempest Williams; The Devil’s Highway by Luis Alberto Urrea; The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald in addition to writers like Patricia Highsmith, James Lee Burke, Ross Macdonald and Robert B. Parker.

  1. What’s on the top of your TBR (To Be Read) pile?

I cannot see the top of my TBR pile! So, so many. Let me just peek to my right for a glimpse of just one of the piles surrounding me. The new novel by Steve Yarbrough, The Unmade World; the new novel by Luis Alberto Urrea, House of Broken Angels; The Collected Poems of Galway Kinnell; the new book by Gregory McNamee on the history of southwest cooking—Tortillas, Tiswin & T-Bones: A Food History of the Southwest.

  1. Ben Jones has become a favorite.  Is the plan still to have him appear in a total of three novels? Where is Ben heading in the future, besides back on Route 117 in Utah?

That is a very, very tough question. My plan is still for only three books though who knows. Whether there is a third depends largely on whether or not LULLABY ROAD is successful enough to warrant a third. There are other kinds of books, stories, I’d like to write, and I don’t want to dedicate the rest of whatever time I have left to just one character. But anything is possible. The narrative arc that began with The Never-Open Desert Diner is also a personal arc for the character of Ben, and there is still much Ben has to learn, about the desert and the characters, and for Ben himself. Hell, writing is just as much a journey of discovery for the author. What is true for Ben is also true.  There is so much mystery left to explore!

 

And on a personal note, I was lucky enough to read an advance copy of Lullaby Road, and it is exquisite.  As you know, I was (and still am) a cheerleader for your first novel, The Never-Open Desert Diner.  Seems I’m going to be proudly continuing that gig for Lullaby Road.

 

Thanks, Kaye! You were an early and passionate supporter of my work, and I am deeply grateful for your praise and encouragement. It helps keep me going. Fingers crossed for LULLABY ROAD.

*****

Thanks to Kaye Wilkinson Barley for interviewing James Anderson.

Kaye

Kaye blogs at https://www.meanderingsandmuses.com/ You can order copies of her books, Whimsey: A Novel, or My Name is Harley and This is My Story, through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2mOC4BT