Saturday, February 28, 2026

Q&A with Natalie Hyde

  




 

Natalie Hyde is the author of the new middle grade novel Briarwood. Her other books include Swept Away. She lives in Flamborough, Ontario, Canada. 

 

Q: What inspired you to write Briarwood, and how did you create your character Callie?

 

A: Inspiration for my writing usually comes from several different sources and then swirls together to create something new.

 

In the case of Briarwood, it started with an article I read while doing research for a nonfiction book. It was about nanoparticles and it mentioned that scientists had discovered that when they added light to water that contained specific nanoparticles, the water boiled in about 20 seconds.

 

This fascinated me but I wondered what that could possibly be used for. Then I remembered the steam technology of the Industrial age and how steam powered huge turbines, locomotives, and ships. But what if it powered small engines, too. What would happen then?

 

Then the setting came out of my memories of summer camps.  When I was young, I was a Girl Guide and I loved going to Guide camp on Lake Huron each summer. So, these ideas combined to become the steampunk summer camp, Briarwood.

 

As for creating Callie, like many of my main characters, she is partly based on my own life experiences. Like Callie, I grew up in an immigrant household. I remember being embarrassed at times for being different—different clothes (for a while, my mother sewed my entire wardrobe), different food, different culture. But like Callie, I learned to rise above the bullying and forge my own identity.

 

Q: What do you think the novel says about secrecy?

 

A: There is a lot of secrecy in the book! But secrecy is not one thing: black or white, good or bad. It is a bit of both.

 

Sometimes secrecy can protect someone or something--like Archer’s work from being stolen or Hank’s reputation from being ruined by his brother’s actions. But it can also be damaging, like when someone hides bad intentions—the mole, or it raises the risk of danger that others could help with if they knew—the threat against Archer.

 

I think more than anything, the story shows that secrets usually don’t last—The truth will out, as the saying goes. Over time, secrets will be exposed and we have to deal with the truth.

 

Q: The Kirkus Review of the book called it an “inventive, immersive celebration of curiosity, courage, and learning.” What do you think of that description?

 

A: I love this description! It is a story of curiosity—starting back with Callie’s g-g-Grandfather Theo, Tesla, Archer, and up to the newest generation of bright scientific minds. It shows where curiosity and imagination can take us.

 

And often that curiosity needs courage. When you put forward new ideas, new technology, or even push back on ignorance, bullying, or hate, you have to be brave. I think many of the characters in Briarwood are brave—brave enough to be themselves, brave enough to face fears, and brave enough to fight injustice.

 

As for celebrating learning…that is something I firmly believe in and worry we are losing that when learning is ridiculed in the news, TV, or movies. I think those who push forward our knowledge of the world, our history, and ourselves should be the real celebrities.

 

Q: What do you hope readers take away from the story?

 

A: First of all, I hope that readers have fun. I also hope that the story incites a feeling of wonder—wonder at the world and at the possibilities of science.

 

I also want them to be left with a feeling of hope. As we stretch the boundaries of what we know and understand, so much can change for the better. The future isn’t something to be feared but to be excited for.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: As is usual with me, I am working on a few different projects. One is a nonfiction book about one of the first woman doctors in Canada, another is a middle grade fantasy story, and then I am just getting the first inkling for a new middle grade story.

 

Also, now that I have grandchildren, I wouldn’t mind branching out into a picture book—but we’ll have to see!

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: Just that if there ever was a steampunk treehouse camp, I’d be the first to sign up to go there!

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Q&A with Elizabeth Partridge

  


Elizabeth Partridge is the author of the new children's picture book biography Imogen: The Life and Work of Imogen Cunningham. Cunningham (1883-1976), a photographer, was Partridge's grandmother. Partridge's other books include This Land Was Made for You and Me. She lives in Berkeley, California. 

 

Q: Why did you decide to write a children’s picture book biography of your grandmother, photographer Imogen Cunningham?

 

A: I often thought about writing a book on my grandmother, Imogen. It took me a long time to decide to actually write it, rather than just imagine writing it. I had a close relationship with Imo and I wasn't sure how to make my inside feelings for her appear on the page to share with others.

 

The first thing I did was find sources where she had talked with other people about her life to find out what I didn't know about her. Then I could combine my experience of her, and what she'd told me about her life, with what she'd said in interviews and oral histories.

 

I also knew many family stories from my dad, her son, who was a great raconteur. I ended up with lots to say, and then had to decide what was important to keep. That's always a good problem to have as a writer!

 

Q: What do you think Yuko Shimizu’s illustrations add to the book?

 

A: I adore Yuko's illustrations. She brought so much to the manuscript I'd written. She illustrated Imo's childhood so richly that Imo's whole world sprung to life.

 

Then once Imo picked up a camera and started photographing, Yuko went all-out. She not only illustrated Imo's photographs in her art work, she made these amazing views where the reader is seeing what Imo sees through her camera lens.

 

Q: The Publishers Weekly review of the book says, “An artist’s joy for photography resounds in this absorbing picture book…the warmth-filled work emphasizes Cunningham’s childhood love of the outdoors and her close, supportive relationship with her father.” What do you think of that description?

 

A: This review really captured what I hoped to get onto the page, so I was thrilled. It also called out a part of Imo's story that was incredibly important to me.

 

Imo's father, Isaac, was incredibly supportive of her, as well as being quite a character in his own right. I had heard stories about him all my life from my father, who was close to him, as well as hearing stories from Imo about him. I wanted Isaac to really figure in the manuscript as a tribute to him.

 

I also wanted to give a bit of his supportive nature to any kid reading the book who wants to be an artist but doesn't have that kind of amazing support. He lives on in the book with Imo, encouraging kids to go for their dreams.

 

Q: What impact did it have on you to write the book, and what do you hope readers take away from it?

 

A: With her father's support, Imo lived the artistic life she wanted to live. And what a legacy she left all of us in her photographs! I want readers to have a feeling for her and when they encounter her images as they grow up they will bring a bit more to looking at her work than they might have. 

 

Working on this book was deeply moving. It opened up floodgates of memories I have of being with Imo. That was a gift to me!

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: I've got two artists I'm working on right now. I'm doing a picture book on Edith Heath who started Heath Ceramics and nearly singlehandedly revolutionized the kinds of tableware we use these days.

 

I’m also doing a longer more complicated manuscript on Hung Liu, an American painter who grew up in China and was profoundly shaped by Mao's cultural revolution. It's complex and beautiful because of the politics and how they shaped Hung's work.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Elizabeth Partridge. 

Q&A with Lisa Slage Robinson

  


 

 

 

Lisa Slage Robinson is the author of the new story collection Esquire Ball: Stories from the Great Black Swamp. She is a former corporate attorney and litigator, and is a director for Autumn House Press. She lives in Pittsburgh. 

 

Q: What inspired you to write Esquire Ball?

 

A: When my youngest daughter left home for college, I decided to go back to school to get an MFA. I attended Chatham University (of Rachel Carson - Silent Spring fame), a lovely little ivy-covered college tucked away in between the Squirrel Hill and Shadyside neighborhoods of Pittsburgh.

 

I was in my 50s and my wonderfully talented cohort of peers were mostly in their 20s and early 30s.

 

They were writing contemporary essays and stories about their everyday challenges as young professionals, their day jobs as writers, teachers, museum administrators, editors, construction workers, bartenders, bakers, and sandwich makers. And because we were at Chatham, they incorporated landscape and place.

 

I wanted to entertain my classmates, to be one of them. So, I traveled back in time to the 1980s, and mined my early days as an attorney for inspiration.

 

I wrote stories about newly minted lawyers, short narratives in which my characters grappled with small, everyday decisions that challenged their notions of right and wrong, the letter vs. the spirit of the law, as they pushed themselves forward towards their notion of success.

 

I kept swirling around the question: What path would their ambition and inexperience lead them to take?

 

I set the stories in Toledo because that was where I started my legal career. With Toledo as the backdrop, I could summon the emotions and anxieties of a young associate.

 

Everything broke open in a wild and wonderful way when I took what I thought would be a brief detour to research a minor detail: how to get a character from her office building to the Lucas County Courthouse. I wondered what route would she walk and how long would it take?  

 

To my delight, I discovered that there is a huge tile mosaic of a frog in the courthouse rotunda (how did I not see this when I worked there?).

 

There are frogs carved into the exterior of the building as well, in the intricately carved “spandrels” - the triangular panels in between the triumphal arches of the Adams Street entrance - and frogs hidden in the rusticated sandstone at the base of the building.

 

In the Beaux-arts style popular during the Gilded Age, the architect David Stine incorporated these whimsical details to pay homage to the marshy landscape inundated with frogs and to the city’s nickname at the time, “Frog Town.”

 

My brief detour turned into a deep dive. I became fascinated with this place that presents as a flat, treeless farmland that was once a swamp, thick with malaria and a forest so dense that day was as dark as night.

 

As I learned about the Great Black Swamp, the local folklore, mythologies, ghost stories, hardships suffered by the early settlers and the Native Americans pushed into the swamp and then driven out of the region forever by the brutal Mad Anthony Wayne, the financial riches gained from draining the swamp and cutting down the forest, my realistic stories started to veer into fabulism as I began to wonder how this spooky landscape affected the DNA of its inhabitants.

 

Was there a genetic memory that informed future generations’ actions? I began to explore magical feminism, as I conjured new mythologies and folktales to explain sexism and greed and unfettered ambition.

 

These questions and a new openness to go follow my weird led to the title story “Esquire Ball” in which Trevor, a young associate, seeks a wife to help him succeed. The Partners see his promise and conspire to help him acquire a helpmeet in the swamp.

 

“Esquire Ball” was inspired by Italo Calvino’s ‘The Prince who Married a Frog” (found in his anthology, Italian Folktales) and Steven Milhauser’s New Yorker story, “The Visit,” in which a writer travels to upstate New York to visit his old classmate and his new wife, a frog.

 

Q: How was the book’s title chosen, and what does it signify for you?

 

A: As a young lawyer, everything is riding on acquiring the title “Esquire.” It is the culmination of years and years of education, taking the LSATs, getting into law school, the daily grind of the Socratic method--where’s there’s no hiding, the law professor can call on you at any moment, exposing your incompetence, the assignment you skipped because you had to work late at the restaurant job that pays the rent,  your inattention because you are daydreaming about the boy who asked you out, or the heartbreak when it’s over, the competition with your classmates over books (in the pre-internet days – casebooks where known to have gone missing, or crucial cases ripped out) or for class rank or for summer associate positions.

 

After you graduate, there’s still the bar exam to take; your whole future that you’ve been dreaming of could dissolve if you fail, and even if you were a brilliant student, the exam is an exercise of endurance and standardized test trickery. Only when you pass the bar can you attach Esquire to the end of your name.

 

In the collection, in the title story, “Esquire Ball,” Mrs. Stash, the wife of the most successful partner of the law firm Strathy, McMahon, hosts a party each year celebrating the firm’s newest associates who have passed the bar. It signifies an ending, the life of a student is over, and a beginning-- the life of a professional and all the corresponding expectations.

 

As for the subtitle, Stories from the Great Black Swamp: The stories take place in Northwest Ohio, in and around Toledo and Bowling Green, a region known as the Great Black Swamp. While the swamp was drained and the forest cut down, vestiges of the swamp still remain in the landscape and the mythology of the place.

 

Q: The writer Margot Livesey said of the book, “Lisa Slage Robinson has a great gift for making readers care about her characters; we want what they want; we dread what they dread. And she is an expert in bad behaviour. Many of her women are not as nice as they seem.” What do you think of that description?

 

A: I love Margot Livesey’s description and her kind attention to detail that led her to this assessment. And what a dream to have Margot Livesey, author of Eva Moves the Furniture, The Flight of Gemma Hardy, Mercury, and so many others, care about your characters!

 

Cissy Armstrong is a new associate who ribbons in and out of the stories, tying the collection together in the vein of Olive in Olive Kitteridge.

 

She has been saddled with the myth of the good girl, sees it as a curse and at every turn, tries to smash it, in ways big and small. She doesn’t want to be nice. She knows that being mean and emulating the partners’ behavior will be the secret to her success. She swears, shelves her empathy and compassion, engages in risky and predatory sexual liaisons, bends the rules and breaks the law.

 

In the story, “Salad Days,” Cissy reflects:

 

“I know from experience that a lawyer’s success is a by-product of a deep-seated meanness. Meanness like exhaust-stained slush as dark and cold and ugly as Main Street on a bitter January afternoon. That’s what prompts the lawyers I know to represent the Almighty Client, right or wrong, without regard for the truth.

 

Before Mr. Csonka died, before the whole rotten mess stunk so bad that I could no longer ignore it, I cultivated my own little garden of meanness, first planting the seeds of observation and then watering it daily with practice. Without it I knew I would be a failure.”

 

Q: As you mentioned, the book is mostly set in Northwest Ohio in the 1980s—can you say more about the importance of setting to you in your writing?

 

A: A few years ago, I had the great pleasure of spending an afternoon with Amy Bloom (author of Away, Lucky Us, and, most recently, In Love). She told me that when she goes to a museum, she only glances at landscapes but she can spend hours looking at portraits because she is mostly interested in character.

 

She asserted, however, that character informs place and place informs character. The two are inextricably intertwined. How a person responds and adapts to her surroundings – that is very the essence of character. https://www.thefourthriver.com/blog/2019/2/25/interview-the-heart-of-what-i-want-to-tell-you-about-is-not-the-place-a-conversation-with-amy-bloom

 

In my own writing, I always start with character but I took to heart Amy Bloom’s instructions, especially with Esquire Ball.

 

Northwest Ohio in the 1980s was both unique and universal. Toledo was experiencing a renaissance which made it an exciting place to live with the newly revitalized waterfront, construction of the gleaming office tower Seagate One, the World Headquarters of Owens-Illinois, Portside, an indoor festival market place, the Hotel Sofitel, an upscale French hotel, concrete promenades along the Maumee River with fountains, and a summer concert series dubbed “Rally by the River.”

 

The Toledo Zoo, to the envy of larger or more notable concerns, negotiated the loan of giant panda bears for a wild and hot summer, drawing a million people to the region in 1988.

 

Toledo had this big city energy. You could see yourself as a big fish in a little pond which heightened the sense of self-importance, the romance of being “somebody.”

 

The ‘80s was the era of big hair and big ambitions, shoulder pads and the “greed is good” mantra of Gordan Gecko. Dallas was appointment TV. Aspirational wealth, over-the-top luxury, and opulence was celebrated in Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous, Robin Leach closing each episode with the salutation, “champagne wishes and caviar dreams.”

 

This was the place and time Cissy found herself in as she began the early days of her career, the zeitgeist that fueled her actions and how she navigated her life inside and outside of the firm.

 

Northwest Ohio, the region known as the Great Black Swamp, informed the collection as a whole and certain stories in particular.

 

For example, in “Devil’s Hole Road,” Cissy travels to an old farmhouse to resolve a dispute over poorly installed windows.

 

The mother-daughter duo who own the farmhouse school her on the prehistoric history of the region and the glaciers that formed the topography and, ultimately, once the age ice ended, the swamp. They also shared the story about a college frat boy who tried to steal their road sign and then disappeared in a bog.

 

As Cissy examines the windows, a storm brings a moment of darkness which allows her to see her reflection and her soul in the window.

 

Devils Hole Road is an actual road outside of Bowling Green and was named as such because soldiers and settlers were known to have entered the swamp in this area, never be heard from again. The fraternities often stole the road signs for their dorm rooms.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: There are so many projects large and small percolating in my head right now. Marketing a book feels like a full-time job. It has been a blessing to navigate but leaves less time to write.

 

I am, however, grateful for the tug of the page. I have been working on small fragments of memoir that explore my relationship with my mom and feminism.

 

I’m also working on a novel, set in the near future, in the same universe as Esquire Ball. I fell in love with some of the lesser characters, particularly Jenny, who liked to experiment on frogs and bunnies--and her boyfriend. It’s a part Frankenstein, part Wizard of Oz exploration of the changing legal landscape.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: Some of the most important lessons I learned about writing and the writing life, I learned from being a long-distance runner. It takes endurance, training (getting the words down on the page), cross-training (reading, reading and more reading, analyzing texts, volunteering time to an indie press or a literary magazine, being a good literary citizen, writing reviews), and a certain obstinance, a refusal to accept rejection.

 

Coming in last place doesn’t mean it’s time to give up, it means that you showed up, tied your laces and did the miles. It means you’re primed for the next race. It’s a marathon, not a sprint. It takes as long as it takes.

 

I had been dreaming about writing a book my entire life. I was writing stories as soon as I could hold a pencil and, before that, daydreaming them. But I got sidetracked along the way, took detours for myriad reasons, but the itch to create, to write, never left me.

 

When I finally committed to it, embraced the writing and reading life, the final product, this book happened.

 

But all the detours, the life that happened, jobs at Bob’s Big Boy and Rizzi’s pizzeria, The Richfield Tavern and Fridays, law school, the law firms, moving to Canada and back, a stint in-house with US Steel, being a daughter, sister, friend and a wife and a mother, the end-of-life caretaker for my mom and other loved-ones and companion to dogs--all of these informed me, made me the writer I am today. It takes as long as it takes. 

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Q&A with Kenneth Paul Callison

  


 

 

 

Kenneth Paul Callison is the author of the new book The Way to World Peace: An Idea Whose Time Has Come. He is the founder of the group A Time for Humanity.

 

Q: What inspired you to write The Way to World Peace?

 

A: I have been thinking about peace since childhood, when air raid drills and the threat of nuclear war were treated as normal. The joy of being alive did not match the fear adults seemed willing to accept.

 

Over time, I became convinced that humanity is living under conditions that threaten its own survival, yet we behave as if this is simply part of life. I wrote this book because I believe we are at a decisive moment. Either we change how we think about security, strength, and one another, or we risk extinction.

 

Q: How did you research the book, and did you learn anything that especially surprised you?

 

A: The book draws on decades of examining history, government, nuclear policy, human behavior, and the recurring patterns of war and deterrence. I studied the scale of nuclear arsenals, the economics of militarization, and the persistence of poverty and conflict.

 

What stood out most was how deeply fear is embedded in our institutions. Deterrence has existed for thousands of years, yet so has war. The most surprising realization was how accustomed humanity has become to living under extraordinary risk.

 

Q: In a Foreword Clarion Review, John M. Murray wrote, “The solutions the book suggests are variously practical and philosophical. Some of its proposals are bold...all of its arguments are direct and unflinching.” What do you think of that assessment?

 

A: That assessment reflects the nature of the problem. The crisis humanity faces is practical and philosophical at the same time. It involves weapons systems and political structures, but also belief, fear, and consciousness.

 

Some proposals may seem bold because they challenge the assumption that violence is inevitable or that military strength guarantees peace. But if the survival of the species is at stake, direct and honest discussion is necessary.

 

Q: What do you hope readers take away from the book?

 

A: I hope readers recognize that violence is not hereditary but learned, and therefore can be unlearned. Governments reflect the consciousness of the people they govern.

 

If humanity wants a different outcome, individuals must accept responsibility for that change. Peace is not passive. It requires organization, courage, and commitment. Extinction is not inevitable, but avoiding it demands awareness and action.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: I am focused on advancing the mission of A Time for Humanity and encouraging participation in the shift the book describes. The ideas in the book are meant to move beyond theory and into lived commitment. The work now is helping people understand that peace is not an abstraction but a responsibility.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: Humanity has reached a point where its technological power exceeds its spiritual development. The next step in evolution is not greater weaponry, but greater awareness. Peace is not a dream. It is the condition required for our survival. The question is whether we will choose it.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Feb. 28

 


 

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY
Feb. 28, 1894: Ben Hecht born.

Friday, February 27, 2026

Q&A with Ellen Meeropol

  

Photo by Jill Meyers

 

 

Ellen Meeropol is the author of the new novel Sometimes an Island. Her other books include Kinship of Clover. She lives in Western Massachusetts. 

 

Q: What inspired you to write Sometimes an Island?

 

A: There were two major inspirations: my ongoing fascination with a small island in Penobscot Bay and my loyalty to characters from my past novels and stories.

 

The island, Vinalhaven, is one of Maine’s Fox Islands and was the place where I started writing fiction 25 years ago. I’ve transformed the real place into the Three Sister’s Island of my imagination, but much of the geography and history is based on fact.

 

Writing fiction, for me, is a simmering stew of memory, research, and imagination. I love the island so much that I’ve imagined a history there for my ancestors who fled their shtetls in the Pale of Settlement (the areas in Russia where Jews were allowed to live) and this place, this combination of reality and fiction, is the setting for parts of many of my novels and stories.

 

My other major inspiration is the characters who’ve accompanied me on this 25-year journey of writing fiction. They are part of my family. I think of this book as a literary family reunion, gathering characters from my previous five novels and couple of dozen short stories.

 

It brings them together in the near future, to continue many of the themes of their fictional lives as their world, and ours, becomes increasingly turbulent and unjust. 

 

Q: The book’s subtitle calls it a “mosaic novel.” How would you describe that, and what was your writing process like?

 

A: I didn’t plan to write another book. After my last novel was published in 2022, I decided to focus on short stories, which can be published in literary magazines. I turn 80 the month after this book is published and am not interested in a book tour. So, I gathered never-completed drafts and wrote new ones, aiming to publish short stories.

 

I soon noticed that many of the stories shared three settings: an immigrant neighborhood on the island in Penobscot Bay, an off-the-grid, activist, cooperative community in western Massachusetts, and a homestead in rural central Maine, where some of the characters gathered to escape climate change and other threats. Three intentional communities.

 

The stories shared themes as well: political activism, multi-generational conflict, the challenge of passing one’s beliefs to younger generations, and migrants fleeing various kinds of danger in pursuit of safety.

 

It became clear that the stories wanted to play together and the characters kept jumping from story to story, insisting on a through narrative. Okay, I agreed, it can be a novel-in-stories.

 

When my publisher suggested the term mosaic novel, I had to look it up. Turns out mosaic novel is a more elegant name for a novel-in-stories, and is a perfect description for Sometimes an Island.

 

Q: Why did you choose to focus on climate issues in the book?

 

A: Along with nuclear war, I believe that the climate crisis is the major threat to human life today and is profoundly connected with issues of injustice around the world.

 

Writing fiction about climate change is as challenging as it is imperative. One must balance the science with the storytelling and balance despair with hope. Writing this novel gave me an opportunity to dramatize those challenges, and to continue the stories of the characters in my 2017 climate fiction novel, Kinship of Clover.

 

I believe that writing is activism and writing about the threats we face as a planet is one way we can reach out and perhaps inspire readers to take action to reverse or mitigate the impending harm.

 

Q: The writer Randy Susan Meyers said of the book, “Sometimes an Island celebrates the fierce, fragile resilience of the human spirit when everything familiar threatens to wash away.” What do you think of that description?

 

A: I love Meyers’ description. Above all, this is a novel about people (okay, characters, but they’re people to me) who face the challenges we may all face very soon.

 

What if many aspects of “civilization” on which we rely for our daily life were to disappear: No internet. No electricity. No email or texting or postal delivery. No grocery stores. How would we live?

 

That’s the situation in which my beloved characters come to find themselves. Many of these characters are old women, with decades of lived experience and problem-solving skills. Can they survive? How do they organize their lives?

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: I rarely start a big project in the months just before and after a book is published, so I’m working on some flash pieces, some poems, and bunch of essays growing from the issues brought up by this book.

 

For example, I’ve become very interested in how the structure of novels might change in periods of intense political turmoil. Is it a coincidence that mosaic and constellation novels such as A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan and How High We Go in the Dark by Sequoia Nagamatsu have become popular?

 

Or, is it like Paul Klee wrote in 1915, during the first World War, that the “more horrifying the world is, the more art becomes abstract” and fiction about our turbulent world invites nontraditional and non-linear novel structure. Stay tuned!

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: On the balancing seesaws between science and storytelling, between despair and hope, I have tried, in this book, to lean more heavily on storytelling and hope.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Ellen Meeropol. 

Q&A with Wendy Gee

  


 

 

Wendy Gee is the author of the new novel Side Hustle, the second in her Carolina Crossfire series. She served for 21 years in the U.S. Navy and later volunteered with the Charleston, South Carolina, fire department. She lives in Lewes, Delaware.

 

Q: Side Hustle is the second in your Carolina Crossfire series--what inspired the plot of this new novel?

 

A: The initial nugget came to me way back during the turn of the millennium—during the second Gulf War, long before ever I aspired to write a novel. I had many Navy nursing friends who regaled me with tales of battlefield success stories based upon seismic advances in military medicine.

 

Good news under any conditions; however, since these were young adult men and women who’d encountered life-altering injuries that would’ve killed soldiers and sailors in prior wars, they would now be living with these wounds (traumatic brain injuries, amputations, burns, and the like) for the next 60-70 years. I wondered aloud how the US was going to pay for those “survival” expenses.

 

Once I started my writing career, I wanted to expand on that early story idea but I just couldn’t make it work. I set it aside and wrote Fleet Landing, honing my craft and developing a cast of protagonists that I wanted to share in a series.

 

When I came back to the draft I’d shoved in my proverbial bottom drawer, it knew right away the story would need a revised tack: Sydney would accept the challenge of raising funds for injured first responders, who are central to my work.

 

Q: Do you think your character Sydney has changed at all from one novel to the next?

 

A: Grudgingly, yes (her words, not mine). She is not big on introspection or melodrama but recognizes her need to address the issues that are eating at her and interfering with her work. She takes a pretty big step forward in Side Hustle, and there will be more dramatic changes for her in future stories.


Q: Did you need to do any research to write the novel, and if so, did you learn anything especially surprising?

 

A: I absolutely love to do research about the crimes (tangential to murder) I’m writing about, and I savor talking with people who do the work I hope to convey on paper.

 

I have always found those who are willing to share their occupations and challenges with me add more than I could ever uncover by just reading or chasing rabbits (down their hidey holes).

 

In Side Hustle, Sydney has to interview cyberhackers, who enjoy a language and skills beyond my measure. I spoke with many coders and gamers to try and capture the truth of the story, as well as their unique flavor.

 

What they told me and showed me about the easy with which someone can steal your identity online left an indelible impression. I am now a rigorous elite password creator, and I advise all your followers to do the same. No joke.

 

Q: What do you hope readers take away from the story?

 

A: I hope my readers enjoy the ride and I’m grateful they chose to spend time with the characters I developed. I vow to never take that for granted.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: Book 3 in the series, Bent, is what I refer to as Dino’s (Lieutenant Draymond “Dino” Bernadino, CPD) origin story. He is called out to investigate a murder at the iconic pineapple fountain in Charleston’s (SC) Waterfront Park. That event reminds him of his first felony arrest from back in the day.

 

The story is crafted as a dual timeline for the first half, while the second half of the book will be in the present. Sydney is there to assist Dino in her effervescent and aggravating style (his words, not mine).

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: I am working hard honing my craft, and I love meeting readers and prospective readers along the way. I’m also honored to present my work in forums such as this terrific blog for your wonderful followers. Thank you for the invitation to contribute.

 

I hope followers will take the time to grab a copy of my book(s), ask your local library and bookstore to shelve my books, and continue to support writers and artists who are real people.

 

Looking ahead, Book 4 (untitled, as yet) is an art heist story—and you know they’ll be fire, literal and figurative. More to follow.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Wendy Gee.