Q&A with Steph Broadribb

The first question has to be, how did a girl from Birmingham (in the UK) end up training as a bounty hunter, in the US?

It was all in the name of research! Once I knew that Lori Anderson would be a bounty hunter I knew I needed to find out as much as I could about the realities of that job – and about how it felt being a woman in the largely male dominated profession of bounty hunting – in order to make Lori as a character, and the story itself, as authentic as possible. I researched it online and via books and TV, but there’s no substitute to getting out there and finding things out first hand. By flying over to California and training with a really experienced bounty hunter, and in getting to speak with some great women who do the job for real, I felt better able to write about Lori’s world and all the challenges she faces.

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Q&A with Kathleen Kent

Moving from a high-powered job in the US Defense dept. to writing historical novels full-time paid off for Kathleen when she decided it was time to call it quits. But not content to write historical fiction, she then turned to (as they say) a life of crime bringing us the Detective Betty Rhyzyk series starting with The Dime.


First of all, would you like to tell us a little about yourself.

I grew up in Texas and attended UT at Austin studying literature and history. What I wanted to be was a writer, but my dad, who was a very practical man, convinced me that being a starving artist was not all it was cracked up to be.  Instead, he argued, I should study business, get a “real” job and write in my spare time.  Which is what I eventually did.  After college I lived and worked in New York for twenty years:  10 years working for the former Chairman of the Commodity Exchange, and then for another 10 years as a civilian contractor to the U.S. Department of Defense in Russia facilitating defense conversion work, converting military plants into civilian use. I wrote a lot during those 10 years, but almost all of it was factual progress reporting to my coordinating CO in Washington.

I did very little creative writing as my job was all consuming, leaving not much time, or energy, to commit to writing a full-length novel.  Finally, in 2000, I decided to take an early retirement and move back to Texas to raise my son and tackle writing creatively.  That’s when I started my first novel, which was published as The Heretic’s Daughter in 2008.  Delightfully, it was successful, which has allowed me to continue writing full time.  I’ve just published my fourth novel, The Dime, which, unlike the first three historical novels, is a contemporary crime novel.

What, if anything, made you switch from writing historical fiction, and turn to a life of crime?

I had just published my third historical novel, The Outcasts, set a few years after the American Civil War, when an editor friend called to ask if I would submit a short story for a crime anthology he was putting together  titled Dallas Noir.  I love crime fiction, but had never tried my hand at writing anything more than a basic outline.  My story “Coincidences Can Kill You” was published in the collection and my agent loved it so much she encouraged me to develop it into a full-length novel.   As I had already started on another work of historical fiction, it took some time to commit to this new genre.  It took half a year to make the mental switch, and change the tone and tempo of my writing.

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Guest Post: Vincent H. O’Neil

A Few Things I’ve Learned About Writing Military Science Fiction
By Vincent H. O’Neil (aka Henry V. O’Neil)

I’ve been writing for many years, and have published books in the mystery and horror genre in addition to military science fiction. I believe I’ve learned a few things going down that road, and would like to share a few of them.

Before I start, I want to repeat something that I say before every presentation I ever give on the topic of writing. Writing is highly creative and deeply individual, so everything in this article is offered as something that has worked for me that might be of use to you. If anything I say here sounds like it wouldn’t work for you, by all means ignore it.

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