Carolyn J. Rose is the author of several novels, including Hemlock Lake, Through a Yellow Wood, An
Uncertain Refuge, Sea of Regret, A Place of Forgetting, No Substitute for Murder and No Substitute
for Money. She penned a young-adult fantasy, Drum Warrior, with her husband, Mike Nettleton.
She grew up in New York's Catskill Mountains, graduated from the University of Arizona, logged two years in Arkansas with Volunteers in Service to America, and spent 25 years as a television news researcher, writer, producer, and assignment editor in Arkansas, New Mexico, Oregon, and Washington. She founded the Vancouver Writers' Mixers and is an active supporter of her local bookstore, Cover to Cover. Her interests are reading, gardening, and not cooking.
She grew up in New York's Catskill Mountains, graduated from the University of Arizona, logged two years in Arkansas with Volunteers in Service to America, and spent 25 years as a television news researcher, writer, producer, and assignment editor in Arkansas, New Mexico, Oregon, and Washington. She founded the Vancouver Writers' Mixers and is an active supporter of her local bookstore, Cover to Cover. Her interests are reading, gardening, and not cooking.
Where do you live,
and how has your environment affected your writing?
I’ve lived in
Vancouver, Washington for the past 13 years. The area reminds me a lot of the
Catskill Mountains where I grew up. At least the low mountains do—the Catskills
don’t have towering volcanic peaks or the rounded domes of dozing volcanoes
like Mount St. Helens which I can see from my bedroom window when the leaves
are off the trees. Growing up in the mountains in the 1950s imprinted the
“small-town experience” on me and I’ve drawn on that in writing Hemlock Lake, Through a Yellow Wood, and A
Place of Forgetting. Living and working in the growing city of Vancouver
and subbing in high school here definitely influenced my cozies, No Substitute for Murder and No Substitute for Money.
How many books have
you written?
15. Many are now out of print. Some will soon be revised and
re-released.
Give a short synop of
your most recently published book.
Substitute teacher Barbara Reed knows better than to say the
word “perfect.” Using the P-word is a sure way to jinx romance, finance, and
circumstance.
Despite a chronic shortage of funds, things are looking up
for Barb after the events of NO SUBSTITUTE FOR MURDER. She’s completing grad
school and hoping for a job at Captain Meriwether High School in Reckless
River, Washington. Her drug-cop boyfriend, Dave Martin, wants to move in and
his daughter is all in favor. Even Barb’s tiny dog Cheese Puff has no
objections—undaunted by size, he’s infatuated with Dave’s partner Lola, a drug-sniffing
Golden Retriever.
Then Dave uses the P-word. And Barb’s luck leaves town.
Her car breaks down, her domineering sister comes for a
visit, the condo manager plots to ban dogs, her jailed ex-husband begs her to
be a character witness at his trial, a computer hacker creates chaos at the
high school, and a hulking thug threatens violence.
Just when it appears things can’t get worse, Lola sniffs out
a package in her car and a drug dealer decides Barb and Cheese Puff are his
tickets out of trouble.
Do your characters
take on a life of their own? If so, which is your favorite?
They do. Often I wake up at night having dreamed about them
and what they “intend to do” in the next few chapters. Characters in Through a Yellow Wood told me they were
getting sick and tired of a couple of difficult characters. They assured me
they knew I put those folks there to create conflict, but they felt it was time
I found other ways to stir things up in the community of Hemlock Lake. I took
their advice and killed one character off and arranged for the other to leave
town.
Do you travel to do
research or for inspiration? Can you share some special places with us?
Most of my travel now is through recollection of places I’ve
been in the past—the Catskill Mountains and the Oregon Coast. I’m always
inspired when I return to the place I grew and walk those overgrown paths into
the woods. And I’m always moved by the crash and thrash of the Pacific Ocean
which is just a two-hour drive from where I live now.
What do you think is
the greatest lesson you’ve learned about writing so far? What advice can you
give new writers?
Not every book is for every reader. Make up your mind before
your book is published that you’ll get some one-star and two-star reviews no
matter how engaging your characters are or how tight and original the plotting
may be. Get mad about that, kick some furniture, punch out a pillow, then face
up to reality and get back to writing. Write to tell stories and give your
characters life. Write because that’s what you want to do more than anything
else. Later, go back to those reviews and read them carefully to see if they
contain anything that can help you hone your craft. You might be surprised.
Where do you store
ideas for later use: in your head, in a notebook, or on a spreadsheet?
Without my pack of index cards and the calendars I use to
keep track of plot progression, I’d still be working on my first novel.
We all know how
important promoting our work has become. How do you get the word out both off and
online?
I’m terrible at this. I blog and participate in some groups.
I should do a bunch more but I keep breaking the promises I make to myself to
do that. The messages I received as a child were, “Don’t talk about yourself,
don’t be pushy, let others go first.” With that baggage, it’s hard to promote
myself.
Can you tell us your future
writing goals/projects?
Those Hemlock Lake
characters want me to write a third book and I intend to start on that project
this summer. But I may have to write a third substitute book first. We’ll see
what happens when I clean up my office and get settled at the computer.
Where can folks learn
more about your books and events?
My website: www.deadlyduomysteries.com
Amazon Author Page. http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B003515CZ4
Are your books
available in print and ebook formats? (please provide the buy link for easy
reader accessibility)
Most of them are available in both formats.
7 comments:
I loved No Substitute for Murder! Fun, clever, well paced thriller. Looking forward to the sequel, No Substitute for Money. Any book with a dog named Cheese Puff grabs my attention! Susan :)
Cheese Puffs - the really good ones, not the buy-in-bulk variety - are almost as good as chocolate.
Love your characters, Carolyn. While reading The Big Grabouski (not sure of the spelling here) they really came alive for me. I kept playing a TV sit-com in my mind, and all the problems and antics these players would face from week to week. But I think they would have to fit in Cheese Puff someplace. We couldn't live without him.
Cheese Puff rules!! I love all your books, but seriously, the No Substitute series is probably my favorite. And I agree with Pam. I always picture a TV show or a movie when I read your books. And I'll say again - CHEESE PUFF RULES!
As Carolyn's occassional co-author and full-time spousal unit, I wanted to echo something she said in her advice to other writers. All of us want to be liked. I think many of us lived with it through elementary and high school where we would sometimes do ridiculous things to fit in. Then it dawned on us. No matter what I do, not everyone will like me. So, I'll just be happy with having a smaller core who likes me a lot. Same thing with your books. The people who write reviews just got their hands on the wrong book for their tastes. Or they're having a really bad day and taking it out on you. Or they have a severe personality disorder. Whichever you want to use to not feel bad about a negative review is just fine. Just focus on the good ones and keep writing.
I agree that Carolyn's books are must-reads. I love her humor!
Thanks for the humor compliment, Susan. I grew up with some masters of sarcasm - my parents and brothers - and I'm always happiest when I can make people smile.
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