Mining Gold from Life Experience by Patricia Stoltey
Marilyn, thank you so much for
inviting me to be your guest today. It’s always a pleasure to see or work with
you, whether we end up chatting at a table at a mystery writers’ conference
(which happened to us too long ago to mention, although I can’t remember if it
was in Omaha, Nebraska or Manhattan, Kansas) or just trading post appearances
on our blogs.
You mentioned that you like to
learn what inspired an author’s works. It’s a fun discussion to have with
published writers because the variety of story triggers is amazing. For some it
might be an oddball character encountered in a coffee shop. Perhaps a dream or
a nightmare. Or perhaps a remarkable incident experienced as a child.
I have had three books published
so far, have one in my publisher’s submission queue waiting evaluation, and
four more stories in various stages from “probably permanent shelf status” to
almost ready for final editing.
Each story and its characters
came from a different place and time.
The most recently published, Dead
Wrong (Five Star/Cengage, November 2014) is about a woman on the run
who is dead wrong about her pursuers. She thinks her abusive cop husband in
trying to track her down. Instead, she’s being hunted by a couple of thugs
employed by the boss of a huge check theft ring because she inadvertently ended
up with the thug’s laptop case containing stolen checks he’s transporting
across country to his boss for laundering.
In Dead Wrong, it’s the
crime that triggered my plot. Many years ago I worked for a medium-sized
company in the south that became the victim of a check theft. As part of the
department that issued the check, I ended up as a witness in both civil and
criminal federal trials. I learned a lot about the check theft ring and how the
crooks got away with that money so fast. Those little details came in very
handy in telling this story.
My first published novel, The
Prairie Grass Murders, is the first of two sister and brother Sylvia
and Willie cozy mysteries. This one was especially fun to write because I took
the characters back to the home where they grew up in central Illinois and set
most of the murders on the old farm where I grew up. Using a setting that
familiar certainly makes descriptions easy to write. The hidden trap, however,
is the tendency to do what I call “memory dumps.” I had to remove a lot of
anecdotes from the first draft because they had everything to do with my
childhood and nothing to do with the plot.
In other manuscripts, I used
places I’ve visited such as the little touristy, gold mining town of Oatman,
Arizona and a nearby gold mine that conducted tours. In another novel, I
plucked an image of a young girl from a dream I had and placed her in a
situation in 1830s frontier Illinois. My current work in process is about a
female serial killer, and that idea was inspired by an agent I heard speak at a
conference about five years ago.
The secret is to recognize those
nuggets are everywhere. We’ve only to dig through our memories and sift through
our daily lives for all the inspiration we need to write that next novel.
Bio: Patricia Stoltey lives in Fort Collins,
Colorado, with her husband and their bossy pet, Katie Cat. A late bloomer who
began writing after retirement from accounting type jobs in the real world,
Patricia has had two amateur sleuth mysteries and one thriller published so
far. Her most recent novel, Dead Wrong, was a finalist in the
thriller category for the 2015 Colorado Book Awards.
For more information about
Patricia and her novels, visit her website/blog (http://patriciastolteybooks.com).
She can also be found on Facebook
(https://www.facebook.com/patricia.stoltey),
Twitter (https://twitter.com/PStoltey),
Goodreads (https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/1105939.Patricia_Stoltey),
and Google+ (https://plus.google.com/115494264819086899639).
Comments
Thanks for this post, especially insight into Pat's writing process. I enjoyed The Prairie Grass Murders, so I bet Dead Wrong will also be a great read. Congratulations on your latest novel, Pat!
I enjoyed reading your article. I agree that the world around us is full of inspiration for writing and that includes our own lives. Congrats on your three fine mystery novels.