Great Interview with Marc Rainer Author of the Jeff Trask Crime Series

 

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Everyone Please Welcome

Marc Rainer Author of the  Jeff Trask legal thriller series

 

 

 

 

 

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About the Author:


Marc Rainer is a former prosecutor in the federal and local courts of the District of Columbia, and a former circuit prosecutor for the U.S. Air Force’s Judge Advocate General (JAG) Corps. A graduate of the U.S. Air Force Academy, he has more than thirty years experience in the prosecution of major cases. He is married to a former Air Force OSI Special Agent, and lives in a suburb of a major American city.



A Winter of Wolves will be available via Amazon and in select brick-and-mortar retailers as of October 2016.




 

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According to Goodreads

Federal prosecutor Jeff Trask and a team of investigators are on the trail of what they believe is a lone wolf terrorist who is murdering law enforcement officers in the nation’s capital. Their investigation leads them into a firefight with a cell of radical Islamic terrorists who have something much more terrible in mind. If successful, the terrorists’ plan will threaten the entire eastern seaboard of the United States. The fourth book in Marc Rainer’s Jeff Trask crime drama series is a contemporary historical novel incorporating issues associated with many current events.

A Winter of Wolves is also the 4th volume in the series.  Check out the first three volumes on Goodreads.



          Let’s begin….

          What led you to become a writer?

          After 30 years of service as a federal prosecutor, I had collected hundreds of professional “war stories” from cases. Told correctly, these are also known as “plot lines.” My wife kept saying, “You should write a book,” so I did.

          There’s no better fuel than life experience. Excellent!




          Which authors inspire your writing the most?

          If any served as inspiration, it would be the W.E.B. Griffin  father-son team and series, since it showed me how characters could be developed over the course of a series of novels. I also love the way Michael Connelly writes.

          Haven’t heard of W. E. B. Griffin, but I also love Michael Connelly. Great source of inspiration! 




          inspiration




          What’s your goal in becoming a writer?

          I honestly just wanted to see what I could do. Nothing beyond that. The modest success (about 40,000 sales as a self-published author) has been a pleasant surprise.

          Wonderul. I believe it’ll only get better. The reviews are great!




          What three things have hindered your writing?

          I don’t have three. The only obstacle before I retired was the day job; in other words, having enough time. Since then, the retail bias against self-published authors may have hindered sales, but not the writing itself.

          Having enough time is always a struggle. 




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          What keeps you motivated?

          I just like to write.

          That’s good enough motivation for anyone.





          “Good writing is clear thinking made visible.” -Bill Wheeler




          What is my antagonist?

          I don’t allow those, don’t have one.

          Oh, I love that attitude. Excellent.




          Compared to my previous work, what’s it like being a writer?

          First, I like my boss a lot more. Second, since I was a career prosecutor, I miss the cops and agents – real-life heroes – with whom I had the pleasure of working for years. Third, my schedule is my own now, and being comfortably retired, there’s no pressure. I’m very fortunate in that way.

          This sounds like a very sweet experience. I wish I had it! 







          home




          What would I say to a writer who has given up?

          Find something you believe in enough to NOT give up on. Examine yourself. Why did you give up on writing? Lack of financial success? Self doubt? One can be overcome with perseverance. The other is a sign of some deeper issues. Identify them and start to deal with them.

          Perseverance is the name of the game. I needed to hear this myself. 





          What are the key elements to a legal thriller?

          I try very hard to avoid formulas. In real-life legal work – especially in solving criminal cases –  formulaic approaches can lead to “tunnel vision.” By that, I mean that if you approach a case the same way every time, trying to solve a case using the same method that happened to work the last time, you can miss a lot of clues, make a lot of serious mistakes. Each case involves different people with different motivations. Some criminals act without rational motivation at all; they are creatures of impulse. A crime-based legal thriller by definition has to involve a crime, or series of crimes. After that, I climb on board with my characters for the investigative “ride,” to see where that leads. The solution can occur in or out of the courtroom.

          I agree wholeheartedly. Formulas can be quite boring.  






          justice





          Introduce us to the Jeff Trask series.

          Trask is my fictional alter-ego. A lot of my plot lines are based upon actual cases, and I use trial transcripts from actual cases in the books, with the usual name changes “to protect the innocent” (and guilty). While Trask and I share a lot of experiences, he probably learns faster on the job than I did. I strive for realism. There aren’t any Hollywood gun fights where the good guys snapshoot someone off the roof of a building a hundred yards away with a handgun, then outrun a string of machine gun bullets. I also try not to use the hackneyed lone, tortured soul, alcoholic detective approach. Complex crimes are not solved by rogue superheroes acting alone. They are solved by teams of good people – cops, medical examiners, forensic specialists, and then prosecutors and their staffs – all working together. I’ve been fortunate enough to earn praise from professionals in these fields who say,  “Finally, somebody got it right.” Some critics have said that Trask is “too perfect,” in that he is NOT the typical tortured hero. We all have some demons, but I don’t seek readers who have to look down on a character in order to feel better about themselves. I don’t write literary fiction, and don’t have to apologize for that. The series is about how real teams solve real cases, facing criminals or criminal organizations posing real threats. It also has a lot of dark humor in it, which is also real, in that the guys and gals who do this work for a living have to have that sense of humor to do their jobs without going nuts.

          I love the whole team idea to solving crimes. Not conforming to the typical hero complex is a great way to step outside the box. 





          Outside the box.jpeg





          What are the chief characteristics of Jeff Trask?  

          Smart. Occasionally a smart-ass, in fact. He does not, however, talk down to anyone or use his brain for anything other than finding solutions. He loves classic rock, and always has a jukebox playing in his head, usually providing a theme-based tune to any situation in which he finds himself. For example, in one book, he encounters a crime scene with about a dozen victims – gang members – shot to hell by a rival criminal element. Oingo Boingo’s “Dead Man’s Party” starts playing in his mind. Trask works well with others as long as they are interested in being part of the solution and not the problem.

          The characteristics of the protagonist help readers fall in love with them. 





          Any planned releases for 2017?

          The next book in the series has already started to take shape in my head. It will find its way to a keyboard some time next year.

          Looking forward to it! it’ll give me some time to catch up in the series.





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          Favorite quotes:




          “Government’s never react well, but they over-react superbly.” Robert Lassiter, Trask’s fictional mentor.





          Connect with Marc Rainer

          Facebook | Goodreads | www.marcrainer.com | Amazon




          Thanks Marc!

          Begin 2017 with a challenge. Join the Book Hoarders Bucket List Reading Challenge.

           

          Join the Goodreads group: Book Hoarders Bucket List Challenge.

           

          A Challenge for Book Hoarders Like Me at SallyAllenBooks.com

           

          Don’t miss the inaugural powerhouse event of 2017!! Check out Mystery Thriller Week on my other site: Mysterythrillerweek.com

          Thanks for ridin’ the Train folks!  Come again!

          toy-train-2

          Benjamin Thomas

          @thewritingtrain

          http://www.thewritingtrain.com

          Story of the Writer Series with Author Kelley Kaye

           

           

           

           

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          Welcome back to the Story of the Writer Series!

           

           

          This is the story of Kelley Kaye…

           

          !

          Meet Cozy mystery, YA Paranormal and Memoir writer Kelley Kaye!

           

           

           

           

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          Are you originally from Southern California? 

          I was born in Salt Lake City, Utah (and in answer to your next question, no, I am not), but raised in a Western Colorado town called Grand Junction. Because I have MS and my body responds poorly to extremes in temperature (GJ gets really hot AND really cold), we moved to San Diego, the finest city in America and very temperate, in 2011.

          I’ve been there once and had a very pleasant experience. 

           

           

           

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          How long did you teach English?

          My first teaching job was in South Lake Tahoe, California from 1992-1994. Then I had that awful MS diagnosis in 1994, so I moved back home. I then taught English and Drama at my old high school (!) from 1994 until we moved to California in 2011. So…nineteen years? The Chalkboard Outlines® cozy mystery series was written in a fictional Colorado mountain town called Pinewood, which is a combination of both schools and towns in which I’ve taught.

          Nice. I’m still trying to learn English! You could teach me a thing or two. 

           

           

           

          Why did you decide to write a memoir?

          Haha. I didn’t plan it, at all—I’m usually a fiction lover because I can make up anything I want in my fictional worlds. Real life is hard, and depressing sometimes, and therefore I don’t want to write nonfiction. Then I got in this ridiculous fight with my husband, on the phone in the middle of an Office Depot parking lot, and my solution to this fight was this epiphany on how I wanted to live my life. Since I’ve lived 22 years with a Chronic Illness, and I was infertile for like 12 years before I was able to have kids, I applied this solution to these elements, included my outlook on family and wellness in light of these, and tried to put my own goofy and positive spin on the whole shebang. The result is a sort of hybridized self-helpy medical memoir with weirdness built in. I’m trying to find an agent for this book because I’d like to be able to expose it to some of those publishers that absolutely won’t look at you if you’re unsolicited and knocking at the door without an invite. I think there are a lot of people dealing with Chronic Illness or Infertility, and I know even more who appreciate some nuttiness in their day.

          Thanks for sharing this, Kelley. Certainly this isn’t easy to deal with. I see it on a daily basis working in therapy. I often have to console people. 

           

           

           

           

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          Tell us about your book, Death by Diploma.

          I am obsessed with mysteries—have been since Nancy Drew, Trixie Belden and Encyclopedia Brown. I also love Shakespeare, because, you know—English teacher. That man knows more about human beings and what makes them tick than a Sigmund Freud/Charles Darwin/Jon Stewart mashup. So, mysteries are Thing One, Shakespeare is Thing Two, and then there is this amazing and fertile idea field called High School. For years I just spent too much time observing and eavesdropping on this crazy place, but when I started really writing I wanted to tap in to that. Death by Diploma is a cozy mystery that takes place in a high school, and the sleuths/suspects are this wicked fun amalgamation of me and all my colleagues and friends. The Chalkboard Outlines® series is going to be an amazing place to put all those three things together! I think the two main characters, Emma and Leslie, are as much a part of what makes the book fun as solving the mystery is.

          Wonderful!

           

           

           

           

          “Mystery creates wonder and wonder is he basis of man’s desire to understand.” -Neil Armstrong

           

           

           

           

           

          Who or what inspired you to become a writer?

          People always talk to me like this was some sort of a choice. I’ve always loved stories, have read obsessively since I was three, and because of this there are always stories in my head. The stories have to come out, somehow. It’s crucial to my mental health. So I let the stories out, and then there’s much less likelihood of a meltdown. Meltdowns bad, stories good.

          No, seriously, when I read good writing it makes me want to make my own stories better. Other writers inspire me to write.

          OH! I was just thinking of this today. I would love to talk to you regarding your reading obsession and experience with books.  I know the need to get the stories out of my head! 

           

           

           

           

           

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          What’s your goal in becoming a writer?

          I would love it if lots of other people wanted to read my stories, and I’m always working to make them better. But like I said before, writing isn’t so much a choice for me as it is a compulsion, and I’d probably keep doing it even if no one else was reading. But I hope you are!

          I’ll definitely be reading (or listening) to your stories. I’m drawing a connection here. So your obsession is reading, and your compulsion is writing. Not bad actually. 

           

           

           

           

          “If you would tell me the heart of a man, tell me not what he reads, but what he rereads.” -Francois Mauriac 

           

           

           

          What three things have hindered you from completing your writing? (Conflict)

          Ugh. There are so many things that hinder us. My teaching job was a big one—doing that job well takes an INORDINATE amount of time and energy, so before I had babies (with the exception of when I was getting my Master’s) I did my writing during the summers. Having children definitely makes it harder to write, although I feel so ungrateful for saying that—it took me a long time to be able to have babies! They’re so great. But also, complete energy suckers.

          And the other thing for me has to do with the MS. I can only write for short periods of time, because I get really tired and because my stupid fingers stop working. Literally. They curl up into little balls of refusal, or sometimes they arch up in rigid protest. It’s ridiculous. Then I have to rest or sleep or zombify for like an hour at a time before they will start working again, and I tell ya—it really puts a cramp in my style. That’s three, right?

          We have two boys–and they both are professional energy-sucking vampires. By the time 8:30 pm rolls around, I’m burnt toast. BUT I’m impressed  given all of your life experiences, you were still able to pull of writing a novel. That’s impeccable!!

           

           

           

           

           

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          What keeps you motivated?

          I am motivated by the fact that my husband is supporting a family of four in one of the most expensive cities in the world on a teacher’s salary, just to allow me to pursue this dream called “Writer.”

          Oh wow. That’s very touching. It’s so important to find support in this wacky world of writing. It’s like learning to surf in the storm. 

           

           

           

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          What’s your antagonist? What’s in the way of achieving your dream?

          Really, I think my biggest antagonist is time. I feel like I need hundreds of years and 53 hours in every day to be able to tackle the millions of ideas in my head, so time or a lack thereof is my biggest antagonist. And it’s further exacerbated by the fact the hours I DO have are further limited by my own body, when the MS hits me with fatigue or appendages that don’t do what I ask them to do.

          Ugh. I completely understand this one. When it’s time to write, I’m too pooped to party. Or I don’t end up writing when I do have time. Ugh!

           

           

           

          Have you ever wanted to give up?

          Nope.

          I love your nope.

           

           

           

          Why do writers quit?

          I don’t know. I think sometimes they don’t realize, when they start, how much work it is. And a lot of them—well, this is true for all of us, really—don’t like criticism. But people take it differently, ya know? Like if you can’t take criticism as either a) a need for improvement or b) a need to surround yourself with someone else or as c) par for the course, then maybe you’d be tempted to give up. But I  think you should work on making it one of those three, or maybe you do need to find a new occupation. Because really, it’s not supposed to be easy. If it were easy, everyone would do it.

          This is so true. Writing is a lot of work. There’s so many elements to tie together you need to be a seamstress. 

           

           

           

           

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          What would you say to those who have given up?

          I would tell them to look inside their heart for the reasons they want to write. If their motivation comes from that source (your heart), think again about not quitting, and then don’t! If they are looking for a way to get famous or make a lot of money, weeeeellllll…maybe in that case they should look elsewhere. (Unless they are okay with fame in their own mind—always a fun place to be!)

          Yes. I love it. This is great. 

           

           

           

          Favorite quotes?

          Every day above ground is a good day. I don’t know who said that originally, but I say it every day. This second one I can give proper credit to: it’s Ralph Waldo Emerson: “What lies behind us and what lies before us are small matters compared to what lies within us.” Isn’t that a great quote?

          Mm—I just love it!

          AWESOME. Love both of them.

           

           

           

          “Every day above ground is a good day.” -Pitbull

           

           

           

           

          “What lies behind us and what lies before us are small matters compared to what lies within us.” -Ralph Waldo Emerson

           

           

           

           

           

           

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          Death by Diploma

          Book Trailer

          Audiobook Sample

          Get the Audiobook on AudioBoom! Death by Diploma is narratred by the terrific voice of Angie Hickman which is on sale for $1.99.

           

          Connect with Kelley:


          Kelley Kaye on Facebook

          Kelley Kaye’s Cozy Mystery

          Kelley’s Website

           

           

           

           

          Thanks Kelley!!

          Thanks for riding the train folks….

           

           

           

           

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          Up for a challenge? Join the Book Hoarders Bucket List Reading Challenge

           

          A Challenge for Book Hoarders Like Me at SallyAllenBooks.com

           

          Don’t miss the inaugural powerhouse event of 2017!! Check out Mystery Thriller Week on my other site: Mysterythrillerweek.com

           

           

           

           

           

          Benjamin Thomas

          @thewritingtrain

          http://www.thewritingtrain.com

          Watch “To Watch You Bleed: A Novel by Jordon Greene | Official Trailer” on YouTube

           

          Behold, the best Book Trailer I have ever seen…

           

           

           

          to-watch-you-bleed

           

           

           

          A Dark New Psychological Horror Thriller by Jordon Greene

           

          Truly creepy…

           

           

           

           

           

           

          Available on Kindle & Paperback February 21, 2017

          Pre-order Now on Amazon

           

           

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          Jordongreene.com

          Facebook | Twitter | Amazon

           

           

          Don’t miss the inaugural powerhouse event of 2017!!

          Check out my other site: Mysterythrillerweek.com

           

           

          Benjamin Thomas

          @thewritingtrain

          http://www.thewritingtrain.com

           

           

           

          Story of the Writer Series: Author Lynda Filler

           

           

          Please Welcome Lynda Filler

          Author of the  Jet World Series & Target in the Sun

           

           

           

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          Glad to have you with us Lynda!

           

           

           

           

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          Are you fluent in Spanish?

          No, I speak Spanish poorly but with a Canadian accent and say “eh” at the end of the sentence.

          I’ve never heard a Canadian accent before.

           

           

          Can you share some pictures of Mexico with us?

          Lynda dwells in the lovely land of Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco

           

           

           

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          Why did you chose to start writing?

          I’ve been writing all my life. Poetry in my twenties and my first novel. I tossed it by accident last year preparing for a hurricane!

          Oh no! That’s too bad, but it’s understandable given the circumstances! Glad you’re OK.

           

           

           

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          How has bestselling author Russell Blake influenced your career?

          Now that’s a great question. I think RB personalised the process for me. Because of his invitation I started writing JET Exposed  in Kindle Worlds.  The story was super fun and seemed to take on a life of it’s own. I have three novellas for his World, and two for Toby Neal. As a matter of fact, I may have to write another this year.

          Wow. It’s not everyday you have a bestselling author invite you to write books! 

           

           

           

          According to Goodreads 

          Jet: Exposed (Jet World #) Book 1 

          JET EXPOSED, A SUSPENSE THRILLER, UNCOVERS A DARK AND DANGEROUS WORLD OF HIGH-LEVEL INTRIGUE, PASSION, POWER AND GREED

           

           

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          The US government is in the throes of cyberwarfare with China. Luke Raven, a high-tech billionaire, is the only man that can save America from the deadly fallout. Jet, a highly trained operative, returns from Kosovo to retrieve two hundred and fifty million dollars in diamonds safely stored in Uruguay. Spotted by a drug cartel, she is chased up the Pacific coast of Mexico where she is saved by ex-Navy Seal Zach, a member of ‘Raven’s Group’.
          Luke and his team recruit Jet to help execute a dangerous, highly classified special operations mission that is crucial to national security…Jet completes the critical Team Profile. They take their high-paced adventure across the USA and over the ocean to Paris. The action culminates in Shanghai, China where an ultra-wealthy and ruthless business tycoon possesses highly sensitive information that would have catastrophic results in the wrong hands. But will they get there soon enough to secure the information from their enemies?

          New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Russell Blake

           

           

           

          “A writer should have the precision of a poet and the imagination of a scientist.”-Vladimir Nabokov

           

           

           

           

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          What is your goal in becoming a writer?

          My goal is creative expression. I want to tell stories that entertain, inspire, create wonder and border on magic. I want my readers to be transported to a place they’ve never been and feel the story as it enfolds.

          YES. That encapsulates it perfectly. I love it. I don’t think I could’ve said any better.  Creativity unbound.

           

           

           

           

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          Did you write poetry before fiction?

          I think I did but I started writing so many years ago that it all blends in for me. I published poetry first The Love Fix in 2009, then Love Rehab 2011 and I (Spy) Love in 2013. Poetry for me is prose in short bursts, sometimes rhyming, more than often stream of consciousness. I wish there was another word for what I’ve written so more people would be inspired to read it. I know they would enjoy my sometimes senseless or emotional or erotic writings.

          I began with poetry as well, then progressed to fiction. 

           

           

           

          Share two of your favorite poems.

           

          Someone Forgot

          someone forgot

          to rewind my clock

          instead my time

          is time/warped/locked

          is cut in half

          is set to explode

          when all I asked

          was time to reload

          the memories

          the mistakes to fix

          time to love deeply

          time to mix

          what is soul

          important

          what is naught

          mundane

          money chased

          now seems so lame

          someone forgot

          to rewind my clock

          Tick

          Tock

           

           

          The Love Fix

          too many have come before you

          and left before you

          and promised nothing

          and in the past, nothing was enough

           

          I love these two poems. They really say a lot, especially the second. Words can be very powerful when used to convey meaning, experience or the past. Well done.

           

           

           

           

          “Poetry is an echo, asking a shadow to dance.” Carl Landburg

           

           

           

          What motivates you?

          Love. Love of life, and the amazing men I’ve loved. The Creative Process for creation itself.

          Wonderful. You can’t beat love of life! There’s something about the ability to create that’s so exhilarating isn’t’ it? 

           

           

           

           

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          What’s your antagonist? Or what’s in the way of achieving your dream?

          Time. Never enough time for all I want to create on so many levels.

          Ah yes, father time. They say time and tide wait for no man. 

           

           

           

           

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          Name three of the most difficult things as a writer.

          • Time to learn to hone ones craft.
          • Time to learn to market ones work.
          • Belief that you are good enough

          These are all great opportunities to learn throughout our writing life. You have a great beginning! 

           

           

           

          Never stop learning, because life never stops teaching-purehappylife.com

           

           

           

          What is it about thrillers that you enjoy?

          Oh the fun and the mystery and the thrill of the unknown. When I write I have no idea, even when I plot, where the story is really going to go! Thrillers are only limited in your mind.

          I love thrillers too!  The fun, mystery, intrigue, action and suspense all wrapped into one. 

           

           

          Have you learned to write from the heart?

          Absolutely. My poetry is totally from the heart. And that is both the strength and weakness in my writing, it’s from the heart. If I don’t cry at some point in my story I didn’t get it right.

          That’s amazing. I’ve heard several authors say they cry when they write. I’ve definitely been there. It must be the release of passion from us to the page. Sweet isn’t it?

           

           

           

           

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          Why do writers give up?

          Lazy. In it for the wrong reasons.

          Tough love.  

           

           

          What would you say to them?

          • If you think you can, you can.
          • Don’t listen to criticism.
          • Write for the love it it, the art of it, not the money.

          I especially appreciate your last statement. It definitely rings a bell. Art is beautiful; you never know where it might take you.

           

           

           

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          Write for the love it it, the art of it, not the money.- Lynda Filler

           

           

           

           

          What’s your next project or book release?

          Thanks for asking. My novel TARGET in the SUN is amazing. Great reviews. I thought it was a one-off but favourite readers have been asking me what happens to Carlos and Mia. And what about Sofia and Lucia. Without giving any of the story away, I’ve been surprised by events in several of the chapters. I started with a newspaper story and moved on from there. I LOVE this book VANISHED in the SUN. Pub date expect December 1st.

          Can’t wait! Drop us a line when it’s ready!

           

           

          THANKS LYNDA!

           

           

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          Lynda Filler
          Best Selling Kindle Worlds Author, Novelist and Poet

          Amazon author page

           

           

           

           

          THANKS FOR RIDING THE TRAIN FOLKS!

          COME BACK AND SEE US!

           

           

           

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          PS

          Check out my other site: Mysterythrillerweek for more fun and action!

           

           

           

           

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          Benjamin Thomas

          @thewritingtrain

          http://www.thewritingtrain.com

           

           

          Cozy Mystery Author Mary Feliz

           

          Introducing Cozy Mystery Author Mary Feliz

           

           

          Welcome Mary!

           

           

           

           

           

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          “Trying to solve the mystery is what I enjoy most about writing.”-Jon Ronson

           

           

           

           

          How long have you lived in the Silicon  Valley?

          I moved to Mountain View in 1982 and lived in the area for 34 years. My husband and I recently relocated about 50 miles south to live at the beach.

          Sounds inviting. Haven’t been that far north in California just yet. 

           

           

           

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          How has living there affected your writing?

          Silicon Valley is a unique area that changes quickly. It’s an incredibly gorgeous setting with a mild climate, but it’s also crowded with lots of traffic. The tech companies that originally created the area did so because of its proximity to Stanford University and a number of other large educational institutions, and education is highly valued. Movies, television, and newspaper articles have focused on some of the regions flashiest characters, but I don’t think they capture what the day to day life is like for ordinary people. I’ve tried to do that in my mysteries.

          Nice touch. It would be good to get an inside scoop of what life is like inside the valley! 

           

           

           

           

           

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          How long have you been writing fiction? 

          In the late 90s, I wrote two young adult historical novels about a young Latina woman who was a refugee in Monterey following the Mexican American war. I wasn’t able to attract a publisher and self-publishing wasn’t as prevalent as it is now, so I put them away and focused on writing communication materials for schools and other local programs. I’ve learned a lot about narrative structure since then and plan to go back and re-edit them. A few years ago, I decided to try again, and chose to write mysteries because I love them, and I knew I’d have fun writing the stories even if no one else saw them.

          Oh great!  I would love to hear more of the stories you wrote back then. I’m curious how you came to writing mysteries though. What made you switch?

           

           

           

           

          “My life was a mystery even as I lived it.”-Melissa Gilbert

           

           

           

           

           

          What other kinds of professional writing have you done?

          I’ve worked in Corporate Communications and Public Relations for financial and high-tech companies, and did a lot of community relations writing for the schools and programs my children were involved in.

          Wow, you’ve lived a writing life. In my experience writing professionally and writing fiction have been mutually beneficial, however I definitely prefer fiction!

           

           

           

           

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          Tell us about some of the short stories you’ve written.

          I’ve written a grand total of ONE short story. It won a few contests, which was fun. I have the greatest admiration for short story writers — one false move and the story crashes and burns — they are incredibly difficult to craft. But I find it easier and more enjoyable to write novels.

          Sounds like it was fun, especially if it won contests. I had no idea about the difficulty in crafting short stories.

           

           

          How did you craft Maggie Mcdonald?

          The series began because I wanted to do something new in the cozy mystery genre. At the time I started writing series, most of the amateur women sleuths were young single women or recently divorced women who were caterers or crafters. But I wanted to write about an older character who was happily married and juggling a career and kids. Raising a family is hard work and doing it while you’re trying to catch bad buys and launch a successful business is probably only possible in fiction, but I wanted Maggie to try. I felt that making her a personal organizer would give her access to the places people keep secret — their closets and underwear drawers.

          I love her already! She sounds adorable, witty, and very capable. It takes a lot of skill to the potter of a great character.

           

           

           

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          How do you relate to Maggie personally? 

          Maggie shares part of my world view, but she’s thinner, fitter, braver and younger.

           

           

          Do she have a sidekick?

          Maggie’s permanent sidekick is her golden retriever, Belle. In each of the books, a different character takes precedence as her primary helper. But her sons and her husband Max are always helping out.

          I like it. You gotta love a good sidekick! 

           

           

           

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          Tell us a little about the setting for Address to Die For.

          The book takes place in Orchard View, a fictional compilation of Palo Alto, Los Altos, and Mountain View. The McDonalds move into a large 100-year old craftsman home Maggie’s husband inherits from his great aunt. The house is based on an actual home, The Griffin House, which is now part of the Foothill College campus and is awaiting renovation. Griffin House was designed by a prolific Bay Area architect Frank Delos Wolfe in 1903.

          I’ve been thinking a lot about setting recently and it’s importance in these kind of genres. By the way, I absolutely love this book cover!

           

           

           

           

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          What are the elements of a good mystery?

          I think the most important part of any mystery is the characters. I love the books of Louise Penny and miss her characters between books. Even the secondary characters have developmental arcs across each book and the series. I can’t begin to touch Penny’s deft skill, but I’ve tried to bring those elements into the Maggie McDonald series.

          This is definitely a skill one should have in their books. Learning how to pull it off takes time though.

           

           

           

           

           

           

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          Can you tell us about the next book in the series?

          Scheduled to Death will be released in January, Maggie works to help friend, client, and Stanford University physicist Lincoln Sinclair escape a murder charge. In Dead Storage (July 2017) Stephen Laird is held responsible for the death of a local restaurateur.

          Sweet!  I have the first book, and looking forward to the second and third installments. Your covers are so beautiful and captivating. 

           

           

           

           

           

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          The job of the artist is to always deepen the mystery…-unknown

           

           

           

           

           

          Support your authors by buying a book and posting a review. Without it they would fall!

           

           

           

           

           

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          CONNECT WITH MARY

           

          Like her Facebook page

           

          Mary Feliz

          Author of the Maggie McDonald Mysteries

          ____________________________________________

          Silicon Valley Professional Organizer Maggie McDonald has a penchant for order that extends beyond her clients’ closets and sock drawers. When murder comes to Orchard View, Maggie must set things right.

           

           

          Address to Die For (Kensington Publishing) July, 2016

          Scheduled to Death (Kensington Publishing) will be released January, 2017

          Dead Storage (Kensington Publishing) will be released July 2017.

           

           

           

           

           

           

          Hey folks, thanks for ridin’ the train. Come again, and don’t be a stranger!

           

           

           

           

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          PS

          Check out our other site at: www.mysterythrillerweek!

           

           

           

           

           

           

           

          Benjamin Thomas

          @thewritingtrain

          http://www.thewritingtrain.com

           

          Home by Thriller Writer Harlan Coben

           

           

           

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          Home by Harlan Coben

           

           

          • File Size: 1005 KB
          • Print Length: 397 pages
          • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 0525955100
          • Publisher: Dutton (September 20, 2016)
          • Publication Date: September 20, 2016
          • Sold by: Penguin Group (USA) LLC
          • Language: English
          • ASIN: B01COJUGOE

           

           

          HOME  according to Goodreads

          Ten years after the high-profile kidnapping of two young boys, only one returns home in Harlan Coben’s next gripping thriller, to be published in September 2016.

          A decade ago, kidnappers grabbed two boys from wealthy families and demanded ransom, then went silent. No trace of the boys ever surfaced. For ten years their families have been left with nothing but painful memories and a quiet desperation for the day that has finally, miraculously arrived: Myron Bolitar and his friend Win believe they have located one of the boys, now a teenager. Where has he been for ten years, and what does he know about the day, more than half a life ago, when he was taken? And most critically: What can he tell Myron and Win about the fate of his missing friend? Drawing on his singular talent, Harlan Coben delivers an explosive and deeply moving thriller about friendship, family, and the meaning of home.

           

           

           

           

          MY RATING

          Four golden stars isolated on white background

           

           

           

           

           

          In this book, internationally bestselling author Harlan Coben delivers quite a punch. He really knows how to weave a tale with intricate plots that flex their muscle. There’s clearly some major biceps in this one! Largely entertaining and jam packed with suspense. It’ll keep you guessing until the end.

           

           

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          PLOT MUSCLE

           

           

           

           

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          MYRON BOLITAR

          I really enjoyed spending some time with Myron Bolitar, who seems to be a normal level headed guy with an itch to learn the truth. He’s seems like a calm, yet determined person. Which makes him perfect for solving crimes!

           

          WIN

          The book actually begins with a character named Win, who showcases his skills in the opening scenes. If you like a mysterious no nonsense assassin, then you’ll love Win. Together with Myron they make a great team.

           

           

          Wildly entertaining and jam packed with suspense!

           

           

           

          Home is available now

           

          Add it to your Goodreads account

           

          www.harlancoben.com | Twitter

          Facebook

           

           

           

          Have you read this book yet? What was your impression? Tell me in the comments!

           

           

           

           

           

          Benjamin Thomas

          @thewritingtrain

          http://www.thewritingtrain.com

           

           

           

           

           

           

           

           

           

           

           

           

           

           

           

          Mystery Thriller Week Kickoff

          KICKOFF FEB 12-22, 2017

          GET READY FOR THE POWERHOUSE EVENT

          THE MYSTERY THRILLER WEEK BEGINS FEBRUARY 12-22, 2017. DON’T MISS IT

           

           

           

           

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          Mystery Thriller Week is annual event; celebrating the mystery and thriller crime fiction genres and those who write them, published or unpublished. All those who wish to participate must sign up on the author and blogger forms. Spread the good word on Facebook and Twitter using #mysterythrillerweek.

           

           

          Go to Mysterythriller.com to sign up!

           

           

           

           

           

          Benjamin Thomas

          @thewritingtrain

          http://www.thewritingtrain.com

          Watch “How to Write Cozy Mystery Novels with Elizabeth Spann Craig” on YouTube

          WELCOME BACK TO TELEVISION TUESDAY !!!!!!!!!!!

           

           

          Check out this video with Lorna Faith & Elizabeth Spann Craig on how to write Cozy Mysteries

           

           

           

           

           

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          What did you learn? Tell me in the comments!!

           

           

          Benjamin Thomas

          @thewritingtrain

          http://www.thewritingtrain.com

          YA Bound Book Tour: The Row by J.R. Johansson

           

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          **THE ROW BY J.R. JOHANSSON**

           

           

           

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          About the Author
          J.R. Johansson’s books have been published in a dozen languages and more than twenty countries worldwide. She has a B.S. degree in
          public relations and a background in marketing. She credits her abnormal psychology minor with inspiring many of her characters. She lives in Utah with two sons, a wonderful husband, three cats, and a hot tub named Valentino.

          She is represented by the stellar Kathleen Rushall of Andrea Brown Literary Agency

          Blog Tour organized byYA Bound Book Tours

           

          Author Links: 

          Website | Goodreads | Twitter | Facebook 

           

           

           

           

           

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          The Row by J.R. Johansson

          Genre: YA Mystery

          Release Date: October 11th 2016

          FSG/Macmillan

           

           

          Summary from Goodreads:

          A death sentence. A family torn apart. One girl’s hunt for the truth. Seventeen-year-old Riley Beckett is no stranger to prison. Her father is a convicted serial killer on death row who has always maintained that he was falsely accused. Riley has never missed a single visit with her father. She wholeheartedly believes that he is innocent.

          Then, a month before the execution date, Riley’s world is rocked when, in an attempt to help her move on, her father secretly confesses to her that he actually did carry out the murders.

          He takes it back almost immediately, but she cannot forget what he’s told her. Determined to uncover the truth for her own sake, she discovers something that will forever change everything she’s believed about the family she loves.

          Add to Goodreads

          Buy linksAmazon |  B&N | Kobo | Google Play | Books-a-Million | Indiebound | Indigo | Overstock | Powell’s | Target

           

           

           

           

           

           

           

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          *Who’s your favorite football team?

          I’m an absolute freak about the Green Bay Packers. I never miss a game. I usually go out to Green Bay for several games a year, I own stock in the organization, and I helped my son decorate his entire room green and yellow. 😉

          Cheesehead, eh? I’m a 49er’s fan!

           

           

           

           

           

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          *What initially drew you to write?

          The first time I sat down and started writing, I did it as an escape. My life was stressing me out and I had this idea in my mind that just wouldn’t go away. I thought maybe if I wrote it down, it might help, so I did. Not only did it help my stress, but I found something I loved more than I ever would have imagined.

          I had the same experience. Beginning with simple escapism in poetry then morphing into full blown fiction. 

           

          *Why have you chosen to write YA?

          Teen years are so formative. They are one of the first times we all start trying to identify and establish ourselves and our independence. We begin to figure out who we are and create and define ourselves. I think we continue to do that again and again at various points for the rest of our lives and so it’s easy to identify with. I love writing characters in that kind of flux and transition. It creates beautifully poignant conflict and tension.

          Wonderful! Conflict and tension is the name of the game.

           

           

           

           

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          *How do you craft your characters?

          I try to start with someone real and flawed and then try to get into their heads. I create their backstory and try to figure out what having a history like the one I gave them would do to these people. I basically just work to make them whole and breathe life into them.

          We all love real and flawed characters. You can’t go wrong there!

           

           

           

           

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          *What is it about psychology that you enjoy employing in your writing?

          I think this ties into the characters question because my psychology background helps me analyze the way a background would make a character who they are. It also helps me get into flaws and communication skill sets and all kinds of stuff to make both characters and relationships well rounded.

          I love this. Your way of crafting characters is very fascinating.

           

           

           

           

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          *Who’s your favorite character you’ve ever created?

          Wow…hard choice. I’m going to name a couple and say why because picking one is just too hard. Finn (Night Walkers’ Series) is the most fun. Piper (Cut Me Free) is the toughest. And Riley (The Row) has the biggest heart.

          Awesome. I can’t wait to read all of your books!!

           

           

          *As a reader, who are your top 3 favorite characters and what do you appreciate about them?

          Peeta – (The Hunger Games) because he was vulnerable in a position that made everyone else hard.

          Caymen – (The Distance Between Us) because I don’t know if I’ll ever find a better depiction of my ideal sense of humor anywhere else.

          Adelina – (The Young Elites) because she’s the absolute best anti-hero I’ve ever seen and I love her for it.

          Vulnerability, humor, and the anti-hero. 

           

           

           

           

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          *Tell us about the protagonist in your new book.

          Riley has walls up pretty high. She’s spent all her life defending her father and having people slander him and her whole family in front of her (and behind her back). She loves her father and believes that he’s innocent. This situation has flipped her perspectives in some interesting ways. She doesn’t trust police or the justice system. She has nightmares of the police coming to her house at night to steal her parents away. She’s very close to her father, but has more normal growing pains in her relationship with her mother. Her whole life was put on hold when her father went to prison and she and her mother have spent years with their lives in limbo as they fight to set him free. So when Riley starts to doubt her father, it sends her whole world spiraling out of control. She’s good, and loyal, and fierce in a situation where no one expects her to be. I loved writing her because it gave me a chance to expose and explore some things in our society that I don’t agree with. Often children and families of criminals are treated like they are guilty too, that they should’ve known and are somehow also responsible. I also got to ask some questions about how we can really be sure that we truly know anyone—or what they’re capable of. These topics fascinate me.

          Totally agree. The story has a great premise and very interesting protagonist. 

           

           

           

           

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          *You seem to write with powerful themes in your stories; I suspect you’re a very passionate person. What’s your process for selecting theme?

          I do tend to gravitate toward powerful themes and I am a passionate person. I’m afraid my process for selecting a theme is far from scientific though. I like to expose myself to as much life as I can. I watch tv, movies, travel, go to the park and watch people, read the news and books. Then I wait for something to strike a particular chord. When it happens and I find myself really wanting to dive into researching a topic or issue more than normal, then I know it’s one I might want to write about.

          LOVE IT. These are the best stories written by the best kinds of authors.

           

           

           

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          *Have you ever cried while writing? If so, what was your experience?

          Yes, actually. The last two books: Cut Me Free and The Row. With both, it has been in a part of the story near the climax where I’m particularly connected to the characters and they’re at their lowest point. I also get a little choked up when I’m writing the end. The most emotional moments for my characters set me off a bit, but I think it usually means I’m getting that emotion to come through on the page in a good way as well, so I’m happy about it.

          You gotta love emotion, it’s the currency of all fiction. 

           

           

           

           

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          *What have you experienced or learned in writing this book as opposed to your other series and stand-alones?

          The experience with this book has taught me to be flexible because I basically went through three different editors over the course of working on it. That’s unusual for me, so it took a bit of adjusting. I’m really happy with the way it turned out though. It was also my first mystery, which meant the tension changed a bit as opposed to my thrillers. The main character was in less danger than I was used to, so it forced me to run the story a little differently. I think I’m a better writer for the experience.

          I like the idea of being a flexible writer. Crafting these kinds of stories are great exercise.

           

           

          *I can tell you enjoy writing about the deep complexities of human life. Can you bring us into your mindset on this?

          People fascinate me. They always have. I remember as a kid looking at a stranger walking down the street and thinking that it felt so random that I was in my body, in my life, and they were in theirs. I used to imagine being in their body. Would I be taller, would my arms be longer, what would the world look like from their perspective? I use this in my writing constantly. We all have struggles. We all have our own pain and triumph. I like to dig around in that and try to see the strength in human flaws and frailty. Through that lens is where we really capture the beauty of humanity.

          We must be twins separated at birth!! People fascinate me as well. I love to connect with people on different levels. FUN!

           

           

          *What do you have next coming down the pike?

          I’m currently working on another standalone thriller and a couple of middle grade projects, so watch for news on those soon!

          We’ll put out a BOLO for all of your upcoming projects. THANK YOU SO MUCH.

           

           

           

           

           

           

          ~~BETWEEN THE PAGES OF A BOOK IS A LOVELY PLACE TO BE~~

           

           

           

           

           

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          THANKS FOR JOINING THE YA BOOK BLOG TOUR

           

           

           

           

           

           

           

           

           

          Benjamin Thomas

          @thewritingtrain

          http://www.thewritingtrain.com

          A new Political Thriller by J.C. Peters

           

          Everyone please welcome J.C. Peters!

           

           

           

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          The Dog and its Day

           

           

          There has been only one assassination on a Presidential Candidate, Robert F. Kennedy, in 1968. Has the time come for the next serious attempt? Legal Philosopher, historian and author J.C. Peters uses this scenario in his first political fiction novel, The Dog and its Day (Odyssea Publishing), available now on Amazon and major online retailers. As the United States comes to elect the next President in the coming months and with the first debate completed, Peters is compelled to depict the main characters in the book off current political and presidential candidates.

          In The Dog and Its Day, two conservative billionaires decide to hire the best assassin $10 million can buy to kill Republican presidential candidate Ronald Drump, realizing any other candidate would have a much better chance of winning against the notoriously unpopular Valery Clayton. The assassin, an American, is meticulous, methodical and he never fails. As a rule, he does not operate stateside, but the chance to retire in style, with a legendary campaign season swings into high gear, the killer chooses his time, place and method. The hour is fast approaching. One main can change the course of history. The question: who will it be?

          To learn more about the book and author J.C. Peters, visit www.JellePeters.comTwitter, or LinkedIn.

           

           

           

           

           

           

          *How did you go from writing historical nonfiction to fiction?

          After finishing my latest nonfiction history book, World 2.0: A History from Enlightenment to Terrorism and Beyond, which had taken me more than three years to write and research, I was actually planning to take a small break. But as I watched Donald Trump rise in the Republican primaries, I began thinking about how incredibly high the stakes would be if he actually became the Republican nominee, how the entire country could be swayed into one of two very different directions and how the course of history is often determined by just one person. Truth is, I had come upon many Donald Trumps while writing World 2.0. Of course, if one man can change the world, it also takes just one man to stop him. And that is how the story of The Dog and its Day was born.

          It’s amazing how one person can affect the world and turn it upon its hinges.

           

           

           

           

           

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          *Can you note the differences you experienced?

          Interestingly enough, the difference between fiction and nonfiction was far smaller than I had expected. In the last six months of working on my history book, I sometimes fantasized about finally being able to throw off the constraints of having to research and double-check every single fact. In fiction, I thought, I could do whatever I wanted, I would finally be the king of my own universe! But when I started writing The Dog and its Day—actually even before that, when I was still just thinking about the story—I realized that for me at least, the main difference would be to recalibrate reality a few degrees. When it comes to thrillers, I was never that interested in outlandish stories where the villains do unspeakable things. In The Dog and its Day, I wanted to explore how an assassination plot on Donald Trump would be conceived, planned and executed. That turned out to take quite a lot of research as well, but at least I didn’t have to name sources, write footnotes and create an index anymore.

          That’s awesome. I’m writing a my first fictional piece and hope to pen nonfiction one day. 

           

           

           

           

          FICTION REVEALS TRUTH THAT REALITY OBSCURES -RALPH WALDO EMERSON

           

           

           

           

          *Does your book explore a particular theme?

          One man can change history. Nothing is set in stone and history does repeat itself.

          This is very fascinating. I guess it all depends on who is changing history and how they’re doing it. 

           

           

           

           

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          *What can you tell us about these two billionaires and their relationship with one another?

          They are lifelong friends who together founded a coal-mining company 30 years ago and expanded it into a global empire in the decades that followed. They have had people standing in the way of their business interests eliminated before. When one of them suggests to have the Republican nominee assassinated, the other first recoils, but then he realizes the time for moral objections has long since passed.

          Sounds like a great premise! Two power hungry billionaires with their own agenda.

           

           

           

           

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          *Tell us three things about Ronald Drump. 

          He is the Republican nominee for president. A New York real estate developer without any political experience. He is brash, arrogant, notoriously unreliable and far behind in the polls when the two billionaires decide to have him eliminated.

          Well, may the odds ever be in his favor.

           

           

           

           

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          *Tell us three things about Valery Clayton.

          She is the Democratic nominee for president. Her husband, Richard Clayton, was President in the 1990s. She has vowed to close all coal mines in the United States if elected.

          I’m surprised they the billionaires wouldn’t have her assassinated instead. Especially if she’s trying to close the coal mines!

           

           

          *How meticulous is this legendary assassin? 

          He is the kind of man who, if he had an unforeseen chance to take out his mark with a 9mm handgun in a dark forest with nobody else around, would still do nothing more than mumble a greeting and walk on, if he had planned to take him out a day later with a .300 Winchester Magnum from 800 yards away.

          I’ve always thought assassins were cool for some reason. It must be the nature of the job and how they manage to get away with it, or not.

           

           

           

           

           

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          *If you were Ronald Drump and realized an attempt on your life what would you do?

          Probably the same as what the real Republican nominee, Donald Trump, has done. Hire extra private security—much to the dismay of the Secret Service.

          Yikes! Sounds like a high stress job. Whew.

           

           

           

           

           

           

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          *If you had opportunity to change the world as Drump, Clayton, the billionaires, or the assassin which person would you be?

          The billionaires and the assassin can only stop someone else from becoming President of the United States. I would prefer to be in power myself.

          Good answer! 

           

           

          *What is your favorite time period in history?

          I find that once you start digging and are transported back in time, each period has its own unique stories to tell and adventures to share. Fourteenth century France might seem less interesting than World War II at first glance, but once you start exploring the Hundred Years’ War and the Black Death and it all comes to life again, it quickly become another favorite period in history.

          It would be adventurous to be a time traveler and go back to observe how things unfolded personally. 

           

           

           

          If you think you have it tough, read history books. -Bill Maher

           

           

           

          *Will you write more political thrillers?

          I already have a new plot. One that strikes at the heart of the presidency and puts the President in an impossible situation. So yes.

          YES. More political thrillers! Keep us posted!

           

           

           

           

           

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          THANKS J.C. PETERS!!!

           

           

          THANKS FOR RIDIN THE TRAIN!!!

           

           

           

           

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          Benjamin Thomas

          @thewritingtrain

          http://www.thewritingtrain.com