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Cheyenne Mitchell writes fast-paced, supernatural thrillers. Her first novel, In The Light of Darkness, was published in 2007.
Hi Cheyenne, please tell everyone a little about yourself.
Cheyenne: I have a Bachelor’s Degree in Journalism/Communication, I was born in Philadelphia, Pa, and I’ve always loved reading fast-paced, exciting novels of which my favorite of all time is entitled The Captains and The Kings by Taylor Caldwell. It’s an over a thousand page novel I read in about four days during the early 1980s. I love writing, singing, dancing, and being with God and family most of all.
When did the writing bug bite, and in what genre (s)?
Cheyenne: My love of writing began at the age of six years old when I was in the first grade. I loved writing poetry, and my favorite Poet has always been Mr. Edgar Allan Poe whose writings were dark, but very heart-felt. I have always been attracted to the supernatural/thrillers with a touch of drama, which is what I myself love to write about.
When you started writing, what goals did you want to accomplish? Is there a message you want readers to grasp?
Cheyenne: I wrote my first supernatural thriller/drama In The Light of Darkness in 1993. It took me three years to write it because I was working full time then. My goal has always been to become a rich and famous novelist, and still is. The message I want readers to grasp from my writings is “what if” this could happen? Or what if this happened to you? I aim to make my protagonists and their problems very identifiable to readers so they can sympathize with them, and to keep them on the edge of their seats with nail-biting suspense and mystery in the process.
Briefly tell us about your latest book. Is it part of a series or stand-alone?
Cheyenne: I have two supernatural thrillers on the market right now. One is entitled The Covering which is the story of two, teenage sisters who cannot figure out what is going on with their family members who are very strange. Celia, who is the protagonist, will take readers on an incredible and exciting journey as she endeavors, along with her sister, Drew, to find out what their family members are hiding from them. It is a novel filled with terror and lots of shock for readers. My other novel, Syroia, is the story of a young man who is only one member of a family who has been tormented for generations by the demonic spirit of a long-dead murderer. However, the spirit he sees after every killing is NOT the one who has actually been terrorizing him, and many others in his family. The Covering is receiving all FIVE stars, and Syroia as well from reviewers.
What is the hook for the book?
Cheyenne: In The Covering: What if nearly two hundred year old vampires were raising two normal, teenage girls who are their own flesh and blood? In Syroia: What if a terrible spirit of someone you never knew is after your soul, but is really someone closer to you than you would ever believe?
How do you develop characters? Setting?
Cheyenne: I must say that all of my inspiration, creativity, and imagination come directly from God ALONE, and nowhere else. It is li
Describe your latest book: Right now, I've got a bunch of different things going on, most of them having to do with the interface of science and literature. I'm developing a show for HBO called Emoticons about punctuation that can turn into robots, but at the same time I'm doing some neuroscience research. It's about [...]
0 Comments on Powell’s Q&A: Josh Bazell as of 1/1/1900
Have you read this book? Rate it:
Note: There is a rating embedded within this post, please visit this post to rate it.Reading level: Ages 12 and up
Publisher’s synopsis: If you had the chance to change one thing about yourself, what would you be willing to give up in exchange?
Fifteen-year-old Will Besting is sent by his doctor to Fort Eden, an institution meant to help patients suffering from crippling phobias. Once there, Will and six other teenagers take turns in mysterious fear chambers and confront their worst nightmares-with the help of the group facilitator Rainsford, an enigmatic guide. When the patients emerge from the chamber, they feel emboldened by the previous night’s experiences. But each person soon discovers strange, unexplained aches and pains…What is really happening to the seven teens trapped in this dark Eden?
Patrick Carman’s DARK EDEN is a provocative exploration of fear, betrayal, memory, and ultimately, immortality.
At Thrillerfest, Michael Palmer shared three tips for writing a thriller: 1. Formulate a what-if question 2. Develop a MacGuffin. 3. Answer the question, Whose book is this?
It's a must read, especially since Montlake Romance is pulling in some big names, and Amazon plans on expanding it' publishing imprint efforts into other genres including thrillers and mysteries.
It's worth keeping an eye on how this story goes!
0 Comments on Amazon's New Publishing Venture as of 1/1/1900
The Camelot Conspiracy E. Duke Vincent Kirkus Reviews May 2011, Overlook
An action novel from veteran TV writer and producer Vincent (Mafia Summer, 2005, etc.) about the Kennedy assassination.
With a cast of Mafia dons, politicians, the CIA, the FBI and a snake's nest of anti- and pro-Castro Cubans, the novel piles conspiracy atop conspiracy. It's 1959, and communist Castro has overthrown Batista. Eisenhower plans an invasion by anti-Castro elements. JFK gives the go-ahead but ruins the plan by seeking "plausible deniability." Next come plots, schemes and covert missions to assassinate Castro: by the Mafia, which wants its Havana casinos back; by anti-Castro elements who want their country back; and by the CIA, which wants a Soviet ally overthrown. Vincent relates the story in dozens of short, one-scene chapters covering everything from the failed Bay of Pigs invasion to the Cuban Missile Crisis. His knowledge of mobsters and bureaucrats, and the ugly underbelly of glitzy places like Las Vegas and Miami, lends an air of believability. The protagonist is Dante Amato, war hero turned mafioso with a CIA agent brother. Amato makes two forays into Cuba attempting to kill Castro, one accompanied by the beautiful Cuban refuge Marissa del Valle, a Bryn Mawr graduate willing to bed Fidel if the assignation presents an opportunity to poison him. Vincent does a fine job of moving the bull’s-eye from Castro to JFK, conjuring up the blood-lust resentment of mobster Sam Giancana, who delivered Chicago for the Kennedy campaign, only to be pursued even more fanatically by Robert Kennedy. Characterizations are generally superficial, with Dante realistically amoral rather than heroic, but the author makes intriguing use of historical characters, including E. Howard Hunt, CIA operative turned Watergate burglar. Thrillers thrive on a conspiracy burning away like a fuse on a bomb. With this novel, Vincent strikes a fictional match and explodes the supposed cover-ups, machinations and disinformation surrounding the Kennedy assassination.
0 Comments on First review in for THE CAMELOT CONSPIRACY! as of 1/1/1900
Susan Hill's latest Simon Serralier mystery, SHADOWS IN THE STREET, went on sale in the U.S. last Thursday, and we're thrilled to see that others are loving her wonderful work as much as we are. Did you miss her review in the New York Times? See below for the full review and some other praise that has been rolling in for SHADOWS IN THE STREET.
"As every Trollope reader knows, English cathedral towns can be hotbeds of viciousness and vice. And so it is in Lafferton, where Susan Hill sets her thoughtful mysteries. As if it weren’t bad enough that flesh traffickers from Eastern Europe have been deploying a small army of underage prostitutes on the edge of town in THE SHADOWS IN THE STREET (Overlook, $24.95), the unpopular new dean of the cathedral, a “happy-clappy” Anglican evangelical, and his overbearing wife (“the Mrs. Proudie of St. Michael’s”) are hell-bent on saving the souls of these “Magdalenes,” whether they like it or not. Simon Serrailler, the brooding detective hero, doesn’t appear on the scene until a serial killer begins picking off some of the local working girls who’ve been displaced by the foreign competition. But his absence allows Hill to direct her elegant prose to other characters, especially Serrailler’s widowed sister, observed in depth as she struggles to live with her grief." -- The New York Times
“This is the fifth of Hill's exceptional series (after The Various Haunts of Men, The Pure in Heart, The Risk of Darkness, and The Vows of Silence). Her characters continue to be intelligent and engaging, and the perfect balance of drama, atmosphere, and suspense holds the reader to the very last page. Highly recommended for fans of thoughtful British mysteries, especially those written by P.D. James, Martha Grimes, and Tana French.” -- Library Journal (starred review)
“It is really the characters that are so strong in these novels and even the minor characters are brought to life... As usual, I thoroughly enjoyed this book.” -- Canadian Bookworm Blog
“Hill continues to engage us with fresh characters and intriguing story lines.” -- MostlyFiction.com
"Right from its rain drenched opening lines, Shadows draws the reader into its bleak landscape. Hill is a master at creating atmosphere – the autumn chill hovering over the town seeps right into the story, and tightens its hold on the reader as the plot hurtles towards its climax… strong writing, taut pace and finely etched characters” -- BookPleasures.com
Now Playing -
Where Do We Go Now But Nowhere
by Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds
Life -
Ahh, days off, why do you have to end? FOr the last few weeks, we've been fortunate enough for our days off to fall on the same two days. It's been really nice. We've built a porch, made some fun little trips, worked in the house a bit. In the next few, that'll change a little, my boss is going out of town, so my
2 Comments on The Gloom, I Has It, last added: 8/10/2010
Micro Machine color books?! Sweet<br /><br />"Men Who Hate Women." Ha. Good one<br /><br />Let me know if you'd ever like to contribute an article over at bradmouth.com. I think you'd fit in.<br /><br />theBrad (verla tag))<br />facebook.com/bradmouth
Okay what a dumb commercial. I love the tiny giraffe though. Thanks for sharing the pictures of your travels this weekend. I always enjoy seeing what you have seen.
This is the original Missing Person poster for the Honorable Joseph F. Crater, gone missing on August 6, 1930. The story of Judge Crater is one of the most interesting unsolved cases in New York--the New York State Supreme Court Justice was last seen leaving a restaurant near Times Square, and simply disappeared.
80 years later, the case is still alive in the public consciousness (here's a quick primer for those who are unfamiliar with Judge Crater). Beloved Overlook author Peter Quinn has taken this story and woven together true crime and historical fiction in The Man Who Never Returned (coming August 5, 2010). Private investigator Fintan Dunne, the hero of The Hour of the Cat, is hired in 1955 to solve the crime.
Here's a picture of Peter Quinn holding one of the first copies of his new book fresh off the presses.
Early Praise for The Man Who Never Returned:
"Quinn delivers a satisfying solution to the real-life mystery of Joseph Crater... Quinn not only makes the existence of clues at such a late date plausible but also concocts an explanation that's both logical and surprising. The depth and complexity of the lead character is a big plus." --Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Freely mixing history, mystery, and novelistic license, Quinn offers a noirish tale... Quinn’s rich, insightful, evocative descriptions of New York, both in Crater’s time and in 1955, will certainly please fans of historical crime novels." --Booklist
"This hybrid of mystery and history builds a compelling case." --Kirkus
0 Comments on Missing Since August 6, 1930: The Man Who Never Returned as of 1/1/1900
I struggled to get past the first 50 or so pages of Stieg Larsson’s The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, thinking, as I dutifully turned the pages, “this is boring and the writing (or translation) is flat.” I’m almost embarrassed to admit this because it seems that everyone I know has been urging me to read this book (people speak of it with the kind of reverence I usually reserve for the likes of Ian McEwan and Toni Morrison) for months. I’m about 150 pages in now and I’m definitely more engaged, but I’m frankly (don’t yell at me) still at a loss as to why this book has been such a huge global success.
And that leads to the subject of Alexander Nazaryan’s piece in the Daily Beast about the decline of the American thriller now that the category has been hijacked by foreigners. Mr. Nazaryan wonders, “Will the American thriller go the way of the American automobile? Will even this small part of our superiority cede to another part of the world?” My response is “Does it matter?”
In fact, it seems to me that anything that revives this rather tired category is a good thing. The problem, as I see it, is not that the foreigners are taking over, it’s that readers have become so used to the big, bloated franchise writers who dominate the bestseller lists (I’m looking at you Dan Brown and James Patterson) and publishers so unwilling to nurture the more daring and intriguing entries into the field that it takes an international Cinderella story to make American readers pay attention once again.
I’m a big fan of intelligent, well-written, well-plotted thrillers with iconic protagonists and thorny moral issues. And it’s always seemed to me that, like jazz, the thriller is a quintessentially American literary form (no disrespect to Dostoevsky and Hugo). Like all things American, however, in order for this genre to evolve and prosper, it needs to allow and be allowed new influences and styles.
What are your favorite contemporary American thrillers?
12 Comments on Thrills and thrillers, last added: 3/27/2010
Thank you for going public (!) with this admission. I couldn't get past the first 30 pages either but dared not tell since, as you mentioned, so many people seem to love it.
Haven't read enough thrillers to form an opinion yet but I'll check back to see what others have to say.
You're not alone on Stieg Larsson. I just started The Girl Who Played with Fire and wrote a similar review here. http://bit.ly/drAIxx
Anonymous said, on 3/24/2010 10:14:00 AM
Stieg Larsson takes a while to get into -- but I found that once the trap sprung, so to speak, I couldn't look away. And Lisbeth Salander is worth getting through a dull setup; if an American thriller would give us such a badass, unapologetic heroine, it might deserve Larsson's sales. But I'm not going to hold my breath waiting.
I used to loved reading thrillers but, as you said, the genre is full of the same ole same ole. I commend you for continuing even though you aren't enjoying the novel. I most recently read Tana French's In the Woods.
I am so glad you were honest about this book, I was about to BUY it! Sometimes I think reviewers are afraid to be honest and just parrot what they have heard other reviewers saying-possibly they don't trust their own judgment? Or they don't want to offend? either way, thanks!
I've never been a thrillers' fan but I appreciate your opinion regarding the franchise culture and publishers not willing to take risks with new talents and aspiring authors. That's what worries me beyond the specific book genre.
I can't help but wonder if the advent of ebook-only publishing will allow for a new "pulp fiction" category which will nurture new voices along.
Because it's inexpensive to publish, I see a lot more sub-commercial commercial fiction appearing in independent and small press for Kindle and such, when in paper I used to see only expensive literary and niche works.
I had to look up Thrillers on B&N, just to see what constituted that genre. Guess I'm a Thriller fan. Favorite authors of that genre: Stephen King, Dean Koontz, Allison Brennan, Laurell K. Hamilton (Anita Blake Series), and Charlaine Harris (Sookie Stackhouse Series), to name a few.
I disliked "The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo", personally. I think there was too much lost in translation; the plot was interesting, but the characters and much of the material didn't translate well enough.
LOL! I thought I was the only one who thought it was flat. I HAD to read this book. It was chosen in my reading group. I thought that because I'm part Swedish, it would help, or I'd learn about different foods. Nope. Herring and lingonberries still rule.
I listened to the Steig Larson books on audio, and found them gripping. When I reread the first one in paper format a few months ago, I found it much less so, and harder to get into at first, though once I was hooked, I enjoyed it almost as much as the first time through.
Anonymous said, on 3/27/2010 7:25:00 AM
'Girl' is boring at the beginning, revs up a bit in the middle, and dissolves into cliche at the end, with one of the most obvious 'touch chick' heroines outside of the vampire-killer girls in leather pants. (Crossed with 'the computer wiz' from War Games, circa 1982.) Other'n that, I loved it.
You know who writes pretty good thrillers? Cormac McCarthy. But if they're good, nobody calls them thrillers.
Chabon wrote an okay thriller recently, too--though he could've cut 80,000 words.
Reviews Of Unusual Size -
Man, I've read five books since William Lashner's book review on the 25th. I've gotta get out of this office position before I run out of books!
Books -
UNDER THE LAKEby Stuart Woods1999, 368 pages
1 - A departure for Woods, Under The Lake is a supernatural thriller, complete with ghosts, murder, sex and hillbillys!
2 - The main character, while a decent enough
3 Comments on Books On My Nook!, last added: 3/10/2010
Yeah, big people books. I read them every now and then... or a lot, really. They're easier to find than good kids books at thrift stores, though I did get a few from eva ibbotson, terry pratchett and neal gaiman at Goodwill the other day. Hooray!
Life -
Life carried on when we returned to Poky. I wouldn't say it got back to normal, but things weren't too bad. The main thing was my arm. I started getting extremely claustrophobic at times, I'd get shaky and nervous, sick to my stomach. I also noticed the cold a lot more, getting hot and cold flashes seemingly at random, with the cold always starting in my right arm. I suppose that it
4 Comments on Christmas Holiday 2009, last added: 1/6/2010
Given the size of your last few blogs, I'm assuming your right arm is getting better? I'm so happy you had a Merry Christmas in spite of your recent events. Good score on the Indy Jones Lego set. I'm more of a Star Wars Lego-man but to each his own. You know a toy has staying power if we can still enjoy them now as much as we did when we were kids. Cheers!
Randy - Actually, my arm is just as useless as ever, I've just been slowly pecking away with my left, my right fingers poised exclusively on the space, enter andperiod. It's frustrating, but works. I'm actually looking into the option of a verbal dictation program for the computer that would speed things up a lot and let me start writing again!<br /><br />I've actually always been
Now Playing -
Dog Eared Page by The Matches
Life -
Pretty generic night at work, considering it was a full moon. I think the fridgid cold kept most of the nuts at home, cuddled up with their mescalin and strawberry cheesecake tyrannosauruses. Although my cashier's constant, almost manic, good moods are starting to drive me crazy.
What are twelve good reasons to join the Hard Case Crime
Julie Rose reviews R.J. Ellory's thriller A Quiet Belief in Angelsin the current issue of Historical Novels Review: "A Quiet Belief in Angelsfollows narrator Joseph Vaughan, an author, who recounts the story of his life, from his time as a child in rural Georgia in the early 1940s to a hot, dark hotel room in 1960s New York City, where we learn that Joseph has just shot a man. Previously published in over 20 languages and a bestseller in the UK, A Quiet Belief in Angels is the first of Ellory’s books to be available in the US. In a series of flashbacks and flash forwards, Joseph tells the story of his life, wreathed in heartache and tragedy, defined by a series of child mutilations and murders in his own hometown. When he finally escapes Georgia and moves to New York City to chase his dream of becoming a writer, he finds that has not escaped, and that tragedy and death itself has followed him. Ellory renders mid-20th century America convincingly, with a good sense of place and time, through both description and realistic dialogue. That said, while the Georgia sections ring particularly true, the Manhattan passages suffer from too many historical details shoe-horned in. However, those quibbles are minor. This is a gripping mystery, beautifully written."
0 Comments on R. J. Ellory's A QUIET BELIEF IN ANGELS: "A Gripping Mystery, Beautifully Written" as of 1/1/1900
Hey all! Still recovering from the flu (2 weeks and I can't seem to shake it). Work is grooving along as usual and I am truly learning the extent of my patience. They say having a child teaches one patience (and, yes, it does), but being an agent really tests your skills lol.
Tiny bit bummed. I was invited to an open house for Abrams/Amulet Books, but had to graciously pass. I do hope everyone going has a splendid time!
Let's talk thrillers, my little beasties. I know much is covered out there on writing queries and how to pitch your work to an agent, so I thought I'd start to focus more on some actual writing tips.
So, thrillers. Of course, you have to have a great storyline. Read what's out there, then write about something that hasn't been done before. Not to say you shouldn't have a burned out cop or serial killer in your story, but try to come at it with a different angle.
Some things that shouldn't be different than what's out there--
1. A great lead character. Some editors tell me they want a lead like Harry Bosch (Michael Connelly), some say they want an Alex Cross (James Patterson). One thing I've never heard an editor say is they want a lead character that's nothing like a Cross or Bosch (or Scarpetta or Reacher).
So, what do all of these characters have in common? They are all simple characters with flaws (just like us). Readers remember these characters, relate to these characters.
2. Pacing. The perfect example (at least for me) is James Patterson. Ever notice his chapters run 3-5 pages?
Know why? Because keeping shorter chapters helps increase pacing. Think about it. Each chapter starts with an issue, builds suspense, then leaves you hanging. If the reader is turning the page to find out what happens next every 3-5 pages, chances are they aren't going to be able to put it down.
Other great suspense/thriller writers do the same thing with extra spacing between sections within a chapter.
3. Hook, hook, hook. Two things to cover here. First, you have to start off with a hook. Don't focus on giving too much back story away in the first chapter of the book. In fact, it's better to weave in the back story later, a bit at a time. Don't have your main character walking down the street, window shopping, before you get to the main action. Start with your character right in the middle of the main action.
This one's more me, but I like a book that does all the set up within the first 50 pages. By page 50 I wanna know exactly what the main storyline's going to be, but with enough of a connection to the story and characters to care what happens to them.
Most of that is my flu-medicated opinion, but something to think about if this is your genre.
Stay literate;)
0 Comments on Thrills and chills as of 1/1/1900
rcat4 said, on 2/24/2008 11:58:00 AM
As you may (or may not) know, my "day job" is teach writing as an adjunct professor at college.
When I teach the elements of plot, I do it two ways: the five classical elements, applying to "classic" literature, which includes the exposition, the rising acton, the climax, the falling action, and the resolution; the second way is "modern" literature, which adds a sixth element in the beginning: the Inciting Climactic Event, or the "hook." I teach that it's literally a piece of the climax cut out and put before the exposition to draw the reader into the story within the first few pages.
For example, if you are writing a thriller, say a serial killer-type story, perhaps your hook would be one of your killer's murders.
I tell my students people today have too many things to occupy their iterests, so a writer needs to bacisally stand on a chair and yell and wave his/her arms in order to pull the potential reader away from the Internet, video games, cell phones, HD TV, etc.
Micro Machine color books?! Sweet<br /><br />"Men Who Hate Women." Ha. Good one<br /><br />Let me know if you'd ever like to contribute an article over at bradmouth.com. I think you'd fit in.<br /><br />theBrad (verla tag))<br />facebook.com/bradmouth
Okay what a dumb commercial. I love the tiny giraffe though. Thanks for sharing the pictures of your travels this weekend. I always enjoy seeing what you have seen.