Book Title: Fire Angel
Author: Susanne Matthews
Publisher: Crimson Romance
Released: April 29, 2013
BLURB:
A malicious serial killer is out for revenge, and he doesn’t care how
many people have to die before he gets it. Using fire as a weapon, he strikes
at random, and the bodies are piling up, leaving the citizens of Paradise
wondering who is next.
Betrayed by the one closest to him, criminal profiler Jake McKenzie
has returned from Afghanistan minus a leg and afraid to trust his instincts.
When the police chief asks for his expertise in identifying the killer, he
agrees knowing this is his chance to prove he can still do the job.
INTERVIEW:
Could you please
start by telling us a little about yourself?
My name is Susanne
Matthews. I live in Cornwall, Ontario, a city on the Canada U.S. border. I’ve
been married almost 42 years to the same man. I have three adult children and
five grandchildren. I love to sit outside on warm summer days and read. I like
to go camping in a tent without electricity, really get away from it all, as
much as I enjoy staying in five star hotels.
I spent over 30 years as an educator, most of that time as a high school
English teacher. I love literature and always dreamed of becoming a writer.
When I finally retired in the fall of 2012, I decided to dedicate myself to
writing full-time and try to make that dream come true. I’ve succeeded. I have
sold three books so far in 2013. The first one, FIRE ANGEL was released April
29, a second one IN PLAIN SIGHT will be released August 12, and the third, the
first book in a series called HOLIDAY MAGIC will be released in November.
Do you plan all your
characters out before you start a story or do they develop as you write?
As an English teacher,
I spent years teaching the writing process—planning your work, making an
outline, writing character sketches, graphing the plot, and then when I started
writing, I discovered that I don’t do any of those things. I get an idea and I just start writing. I’ll
write a chapter and then I’ll go back and, using a screen reader, I’ll revise
the chapter, add to it, and flesh it out. The characters grow from those
revisions, and they carry the novel to the next level. Each time I start to
write, I go back to the previous chapter and then, after I’ve reread it, made
any corrections I feel are necessary, add detail or take some out, I’ll go on
to the next chapter. I might go back to the first few chapters half a dozen
times until the characters have become the people I want them to be, and I’m
satisfied. Some of my friends use visuals to find their characters, but I don’t
find that works for me. I create mine with my imagination, and then they take
on a life and appearance all their own.
How much research do
you do for your books? Have you found any cool tidbits in your research?
I do extensive
research for all of my books and have gotten amazingly quick at finding stuff
on line. I doubt I’d ever have been able to do any of these things forty years
ago when computers in the home were things you saw on television sci-fi shows.
For FIRE ANGEL, I did a lot of research on fire and its properties, and I
learned how to make gummy bears dance. I also discovered that gasoline doesn’t
explode, so when you see cars exploding on television, unless it’s a race car
propelled by something other than gasoline, it’s all Hollywood flash and bang.
It does burn though and makes an excellent accelerant. I also explored Post-Traumatic
Stress Disorder and prosthetics for amputees. For other novels, I’ve learned all
about sailing ships in the seventeenth century, how to use a sextant to guide a
ship, and that Humpback whales rarely deviate more than a few degrees from their
migratory routes. I know how to calculate the speed and distance a sailing ship
could travel in a day. I also discovered dueling in France in the 1600 was
illegal and anyone involved, even a bystander could be arrested and found
guilty. French prisons weren’t nice places, so there were fewer duels fought in
Paris than in other towns and countries. I learned that Martinique is the home of a
deadly viper, fer de lance, that isn’t found anywhere else in the world. For IN
PLAIN SIGHT, I researched conversion disorder, the new term for psychosomatic
illnesses and night terrors. Each book I write has to be researched for
accuracy in the locations, climate, even the time of day when it gets dark in
winter. HOLIDAY MAGIC was set in Philadelphia and New York, so it was necessary
to research local landmarks too. Unless you’re writing fantasy or sci-fi set in
another time and place, you’re bound by the laws of nature, life, and society
as we know it. If someone living in Philadelphia picks up my book, and I talk
about the Swann Fountain, then there has to be a Swann Fountain in the city, so
that the reader can say, “Hey, I know that place! I’ve been there.”
What main genre do
you write in?
I am and always will
be a romance writer. Happily Ever After is essential. There is too much
ugliness in the real world, and I want my books to provide a realistic escape.
Since I write romantic suspense, there are bad guys and gals in those books,
but they always get caught in the end, so the hero and heroine can get on with
their lives together. In my contemporary romances, I like to dwell on internal
and external conflicts that tear soul mates apart, and I especially like
getting them back together. In my historicals, I enjoy having the hero and
heroine face down a challenge together, whether it’s man-made or a force of
nature, to get to their happy ending.
If you had to choose
one person to have dinner with, who would it be? And why?
I think I’d like to
sit down with Nora Roberts and pick her brain. She is the writer who probably
has inspired me more than any other. She writes romance in many different
subgenres, mixes past and present and even does some head hopping here and
there. When she writes as J.D. Robb, she uses the same characters in her books,
doesn’t incorporate new romance but just works with the one she’s established.
I’d love to be able to do that with the characters I created for FIRE ANGEL.
Is there a genre of
book you would like to write but haven't yet?
I’ve always wanted to
write a time-travel story that would have my characters relive past lives. I
have a few ideas in mind for such a story; it just needs a bit more percolating
time before I can actually sit down to write it.
How can readers find
out more about you and your books?
They can check out my
website http://mhsusannematthews.ca
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Susanne lives in
Cornwall, Ontario with her husband. She has three adult children and five
grandchildren. When she isn’t writing, she enjoys reading, chatting on the
Internet with her writer friends, and hearing from her readers. You can learn
more about Susanne at www.mhsusannematthews.ca
BUY LINKS CAN BE FOUND ON GOODREADS AT http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/17660502-fire-angel
GIVEAWAY!
Susanne has kindly offered one lucky commentor a free copy of the book. Make sure you leave your email address! Winner will be chosen on May 31.
Ladies, a great interview! Susanne, it is nice to get to know you better. I was a secondary school teacher, too (history and world geography), and I'm also well aware of the benefits provided by the Internet for all aspects of research. It's an amazing time to be an author. Thank you for an excellent post, and I look forward to reading your novel.
ReplyDeleteoh this is my type of book!! I would love to read this! It reminds me of Kay Hoopers Bishop series!
ReplyDeleteThanks!
Froggy
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