Characters' Genesis
The “Other Deadly Things” Series:
“Pink Balloons and Other Deadly Things” was my first try at a novel.
Coming as I did from an acting background, I’d started out writing plays
and screenplays. Many writers have been actors in their early years. The
transition is a no-brainer because actors understand how to construct a
scene, how it should build and how it should end. Which doesn’t mean I
didn’t have to spend years developing my new craft. I took writing
classes and joined an excellent writing group. During that time I wrote
a stage-play that had an off-Broadway reading; a film script—a courtroom
drama based on a trial that I’d attended, a spec script for the TV
series, “Cagney and Lacey” that highlighted the bizarre world of
religious cults; and another for the soap opera, “One Life to Live.”
Surprisingly the Soap was the most difficult requiring me to read ten
years of back scripts to familiarize myself with the characters. I came
pretty close to landing the TV job when I was invited by the head writer
to LA to pitch story ideas. This was at a time in my life when six
figure pay was looking really good to me. I’d recently been divorced and
when “Cagney and Lacey” was cancelled before I’d even booked my flight I
was, well—not exactly suicidal but definitely stressed out. My life was
looking pretty bleak. Then the wonderful Ann Loring, my mentor, whose
writing group I’d been attending every Friday evening for more years
than I can remember, suggested I try my hand at a novel. In the mood to
kill a few people, I jumped on the suggestion. Writing great literature,
however, was not in my mind. Murder was. I would write a mystery.
Initially my protagonist was a psychologist, but I hadn’t written more
than a chapter or two when I realized that I knew little about the field
and a lot of research would be required. I didn’t have time for
research. I was in a hurry to knock off the mistress. What profession
did I know about? Biofeedback! I was a biofeedback practitioner myself
and I knew how it felt to be an about-to-be-divorced, stressed-out
stress reduction therapist. Thus Carrie Carlin was born.
Carrie is an almost divorced mother of two pre-teens, caregiver of four
animals and a biofeedback therapist who is having one heck of a time
practicing what she preaches. This is because I’ve insisted on putting
her in situations that would stress out a monk. She’s been described by
reviewers as “loveable,” “engaging,” and “endearing,” but also as
“clever and slightly neurotic,” “exasperatingly stubborn” and “prone to
taking risks. “ One reviewer found her to be “devoted to her children
and so good-hearted that readers find themselves rooting for her and
wanting her to back off while also feeling sorry for her lover….” while
an unhappy Amazon reader felt Carrie needed “parenting skills” and
should see a therapist herself. That, as they say, is what makes
horse-racing.
I wanted Carrie to be someone readers could relate to, flawed, just like
the rest of us but essentially, despite her homicidal fantasies, someone
you’d like to have as a friend.
“Pink Balloons and Other Deadly Things” sold within a few months after
my agent submitted it to several major New York publishing houses.
That’s not to say it didn’t suffer a few rejections along the way but,
like finding your soul-mate, it only takes one. The cherry on the sundae
came the day my terrific editor at Dell asked me what my plans were for
the rest of the series.
“Ablaze” A Samantha Barron Mystery
After writing five books in which Carrie keeps falling over dead bodies,
I realized I needed to move on. After all, despite the high murder rate
in this country today, how realistic would it be to have Carrie stumble
on a corpse every year? It would stretch credibility despite the fact
that, in the last book in the series, it’s looking as though Carrie may
marry her homicide detective boyfriend, Ted Brodsky. I could, of course,
switch protagonists and make Ted my protagonist but I’m more comfortable
writing females. I decided to write a love story, a romantic suspense.
To my surprise, however, I found my thoughts continually straying from
the romance aspect of the story into the suspense area. And there was
all that research on cults I’d done for the “Cagney and Lacey” script
sitting in my desk drawer just begging to be used. It seemed I still
wanted to tell that story. And that story was about a murder. Once a
mystery writer, always a mystery writer.
In “Ablaze,” my protagonist, thirty-one year old Samantha Barron, is the
victim advocate for the Bergen County New Jersey prosecutor’s office. A
Munchausen by Proxy survivor, Samantha, having been a victim of her
mother’s madness, is programmed by her own experience to want to help
people in trouble, especially children. So when a terrified young girl
shows up at her office spouting religious dogma about having seen the
grim reaper standing over a friend who had been “cast into the abyss” at
the Greenwich Village Halloween parade, Samantha has to get involved.
Unfortunately, so does Douglas Ruark, a man with whom Samantha had once
had a love affair that had ended badly.
The San Francisco City Book Review describes Samantha as “a sympathetic
protagonist, bent on saving Miriam, even as she puts herself in
danger... and her nemesis, Ruark as “a dream male lead, tough and
vulnerable..."
And from Grady Harp, Hall of fame top 100 reviewer Vine Voice
“.…Nancy's theatrical experience, both on stage and at the writing
table, allows her to paint the images of cults, terror, passion,
romance, and crime investigation with such deft color that we might as
well be watching a film surrounding our space.…”
ABLAZE is a story about power and greed and about the mind control used
in destructive cults by men corrupted by the power they have gained over
the souls of their followers. The victims of this evil, often done in
the name of God, are the alienated and the vulnerable, but surprisingly,
they are also bright young idealists who are convinced that they are
being shown “the way.” Many people believe that cults died out in the
seventies. Nothing could be further from the truth.
The cult in this book is fictional, a conglomerate of many such groups
drawn from my imagination, but the methods used to recruit and control
its followers are based on my research culled from the experiences of
ex-members.
|