Nancy Tesler has
written a string of successful mysteries in her “Other
Deadly things” series but has now self-published a
standalone that’s a bit different. I ask her about the
change.
Q. Nancy, can you
tell us first about the “Other Deadly Things” mysteries and
the character, Carrie Carlin? Her character seems to be
modeled somewhat on yourself. How much of Carrie is you and
how much is fiction?
A. The “Other
Deadly Things” series is the lemonade I made when life
handed me a bunch of lemons and I’m enjoying every drop. The
series is pure fiction but the idea came about as a result
of my own divorce. My amateur sleuth, Carrie, is a
forty-one year old suburban mom of two pre-teenagers and the
“proxy” mom of four animals, whose husband of eighteen years
has run off with a sexy twenty-eight-year-old wicked witch.
Carrie is trying desperately not to fall apart especially
for the sake of her children and to build her practice as a
biofeedback (stress-reduction) therapist. In Book One, “Pink
Balloons and Other Deadly Things,” just when Carrie thinks
her life couldn’t possibly get any worse, she’s accused of
whacking the bimbo. Well, I’m a mother, I’ve been divorced
under circumstances not dissimilar to Carrie’s, I’ve been a
biofeedback professional, and like Carrie, I plead guilty to
having had the occasional homicidal thought. But there the
similarity ends. Carrie is gutsier than I am and
occasionally she’s reckless. She often gets herself (well, I
put her) in situations where even a cop would fear to tread
without back-up. That’s not me. To this day I avoid scary
horror films but I do have a vivid imagination. When I was
in fourth grade I invented a story about a Nancy Drew-like
character named Jean Beacon. I even got away with giving an
oral book report on it.
Q. You’ve gained
quite a following with that series. But now you’ve written a
very different kind of novel. Why did you decide to switch
in the middle of a successful series?
A. When your
protagonist is an amateur sleuth, not a law enforcement
professional, it becomes difficult to have her keep falling
over dead bodies and continue to maintain some degree of
realism. Her profession does bring her in contact with
people from all walks of life which I had originally thought
would provide me with endless material but the character
herself took over. By the end of “Slippery Slopes…” Carrie
has grown. She’s begun to question her motives in
continually endangering her own life. She begins to question
what it is about her that makes her flirt with danger. She
has children for whom she is responsible and she has found a
man she loves who wants to marry her but who is ready to
leave her because of this flaw in her character. When Carrie
agrees to marry her cop lover, it seemed a good place to end
the series.
Q. Tell us about
“Ablaze.”
A. “Ablaze”
started out as a romantic suspense but because I am
essentially a mystery writer the mystery part of the plot
ended up becoming more important than the romance. Some
years back, I’d been doing research on cults for a TV spec
script. When the network unexpectedly cancelled the show,
all the research I’d done seemed to have been for naught
until the plot for “Ablaze” began to form in my mind. My
protagonist, Samantha Barron is a victim/advocate working
for a New Jersey county prosecutor’s office. Her world is
turned upside down when a man with whom she had once been in
love shows up at her office and insinuates himself into her
case. The previous year, attorney Doug Ruark had thrown
Samantha off his elite crisis response team for defying his
orders and running into a burning building to save a dog
that she’d thought was a baby. Samantha is a Munchausens by
Proxy survivor and given the same circumstances, she would
probably do it again. She and Ruark are forced to work
together to save a young witness to a murder from the
machinations of a malignant cult with whom the girl has
become involved, before the cult gurus discover that she can
ID the killer.
Q. What was the
most difficult part about writing this novel?
A.
Unquestionably, the love scenes. I did not want to write
erotic scenes that were gratuitous. I wanted them to be real
and to grow out of the relationship. I’ve read romance
novels where those scenes seem to be written only to
titillate, something that totally turns me off. In the end,
I took out a love scene on which I had worked especially
hard because I thought that the mystery plot was more
important than the romance.
Q. Will you now
return to the “Other Deadly Things” series or will you write
another standalone or a new series?
A. I’m not
sure what I will do. I might pick a character from one of
the previous book and base a series on him or her, or I
might write another Samantha mystery.
Q. You started
out with a traditional publisher but now you self-publish.
Why did you make that move?
A. When the
Bertelsmann conglomerate bought Dell and several other
publishing houses, quite a few of us newer mid-list authors
who were not yet bringing in the big bucks, lost our
contracts. Amazon came along and saved our careers. As the
whole world knows by now, self-publishing has really taken
off. When I was originally published by Dell,
self-publishing was looked down upon by nearly everyone in
the industry. Today many indie authors are reaching a larger
readership and making more money by going the indie route
than if they stayed with a traditional publisher. I have
mixed feelings. If I were again to be offered a contract
with a major publishing house I would probably take it for
the publicity and the exposure to editorial reviews that
would give me, but I would try to hold on to my e-Book
rights and to my great cover artist as well. |