A Mystery Writer Evolves by Patricia Skalka
Patricia Sk
But since I turned
to writing fiction full time, I find that mostly I don’t go looking for
stories; instead, they come to me. The idea for Death Stalks Door County emerged from the depths of the starless,
moonless night that enveloped me as I sat on a stretch of deserted beach along
the peninsula’s Lake Michigan Shore. The water was quiet that night, the
stillness broken by a soft shushing of waves along the sand. I held out my hand. Nothing. I wiggled my
fingers and but couldn’t see them moving. I could only imagine my hand in the
tarry blackness, just as I imagined shadows floating through the forest at my
back. Anything can happen here, I thought. So much must have happened here I realized
as I listened to the almost silent footfalls of the tens of thousands of people
who had slipped along the water throughout time.
The underpinnings of
life are much the same in the city and the small town. Congestion, noise,
turmoil, pace of living vary tremendously. But people do not. They have similar
dreams; they love and hate and plot revenge on those who have wronged
them. Some have kind, giving hearts;
others are motivated by arrogance and greed. One by one, the characters took
shape in my imagination and the plot line developed. What if? And then, what if
again? What leads a person to commit the ultimate crime; How does the human
heart justify the most grievous wrongdoing? And how does a stranger stop the
killing?
There were many
discouraging moments on the path to publishing Death Stalks Door County. What kept me going was both an affinity
for my characters (I would have recognized them walking down the street) and a
strong sense of obligation to tell their story, because only I knew it and if I
didn’t tell it, no one would. Originally
I intended the book as a stand-alone mystery. But by the time I finished, I was
so caught up in the fictional people and their world I couldn’t abandon them.
One book would lead to another. I’d do what I’d always considered impossible:
I’d write a series.
Death Book Blurb: Introducing The Dave Cubiak Door County Mysteries: smart,
hard-edged detective fiction on a popular vacation peninsula, a scenic
wonderland surrounded by the pristine waters of Green Bay and Lake Michigan
Six deaths mar the holiday mood as summer vacationers enjoy Wisconsin’s beautiful Door County peninsula. Murders, or bizarre accidents? Newly hired park ranger Dave Cubiak, a former Chicago homicide detective, assumes the worst but refuses to get involved. Grief-stricken and guilt-ridden over the loss of his wife and daughter, he’s had enough of death.
Forced to confront the past, the morose Cubiak moves beyond his own heartache and starts investigating, even as a popular festival draws more people into possible danger. In a desperate search for clues, Cubiak uncovers a tangled web of greed, betrayal, bitter rivalries, and lost love beneath the peninsula’s travel-brochure veneer. Befriended by several locals but unsure whom to trust or to suspect of murder, the one-time cop tracks a clever killer.
In a setting of stunning natural beauty and picturesque waterfront villages, Death Stalks Door County introduces a new detective series, “The Dave Cubiak Door County Mysteries.”
Author Bio
I was born and raised in Chicago,
in a little-known neighborhood called Hegewisch. Strictly blue collar, nestled
along the southeastern border of the great metropolis amid belching steel mills
and factories. My mother was a homemaker who passed along her many fine skills.
My father was a carpenter determined that my brother and I would be college
educated.
Books were scarce in my working class home and
family tales were not passed from one generation to the next, so I don’t know
how I acquired the propensity for putting words together into sentences and
stories. But even as a young girl, I sat at the kitchen table and scrawled
simple yarns on sheets of coarse lined-paper. Stories about people always drew
me in. I grew up reading the biographies of famous women – Molly Pitcher, Marie
Curie, Clara Barton -- and came naturally to writing about women and men who
accomplished notable deeds or faced down great challenges. For my high school
and college newspapers, for national weekly and monthly publications and
finally for the Reader’s Digest, I
wrote about people’s accomplishments, heartaches and dreams. I kept journals
during both of my pregnancies so I could give my daughters a portrait of the
world they were about to join.
All the while I wrote about
reality, I read fiction and imagined that one day I would write a story that
was entirely my own. I always loved mysteries: devoured Nancy Drew and read the
Boxcar Children series to my own children, got teary eyed over Lord Peter and
Harriet Vane. Eventually I realized that all of life is a mystery and that in
terms of books, a really good mystery isn’t just a story about who done it; a
really good mystery teaches about life. That’s the kind of mystery I most enjoy
reading and the kind I set out to write.
www.PatriciaSkalka.com
Buy sites:
http://www.indiebound.org/hybrid?filter0=Death+Stalks+Door+County&x=0&y=0
http://uwpress.wisc.edu/books/5315.htm
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/death-stalks-door-county-patricia-skalka/1117596268?ean=9780299299408
http://www.amazon.com/Death-Stalks-Door-County-Mystery/dp/0299299406
Patricia Skalka
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