Running With Quills, Blogsite for Jayne Ann Krentz, Elizabeth Lowell, Stella Cameron, and Suzanne Simmons
Susan Andersen
Suzanne Simmons



Stella Cameron
Stella Cameron




Lori Foster
Suzanne Simmons



Jayne Ann Krentz
Jayne Ann Krentz




Elizabeth Lowell
Elizabeth Lowell




Suzanne Simmons
Suzanne Simmons






Welcome to Running With Quills, your online newsletter designed to keep you up to date with what your favorite authors (that would be us) are doing throughout the year. Here you will find the release dates of our new books and get information about our backlists. We'll preview our cover art here long before the books hit the stores and we'll keep you informed about works-in-progress and special projects. You'll also receive advance notice of signings and appearances. From time to time we'll give you a peek at our worlds, tell you what we're reading, and introduce you to some new authors.

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

ELIZABETH TALKS WITH STELLA

THE WRONG HOSTAGE--FIRST TIME IN PAPERBACK!

STELLA:
Sheesh, Elizabeth, I've got finger-cramps from turning the pages so fast. I have a sneaky feeling you've got an inside edge when you write a cling-to-your-seat story like THE WRONG HOSTAGE. I know you, and I know Evan was a crime reporter for years. Just how much of THE WRONG HOSTAGE is real?

ELIZABETH: Well, I've never had a child kidnapped, thank God! But if you’re asking about the book’s backdrop, it’s all quite real. Even though it has been a long time since Evan traded in his journalistic hat for that of a novelist, we still follow doings along the border with Mexico. Our information on what’s really happening (as opposed to what major media outlets call news) comes from many sources, including people “on the ground.”

STELLA: I knew it, insider information. In THE WRONG HOSTAGE the tunnel under the border plays a big part in the plot. It's real, isn't it?


ELIZABETH. The earliest tunnel I ever heard about was from Don Quick, then with the DEA (Drug Enforcement Administration). We roasted cabrito and nopales over a campfire, he taught me how to use his hand gun, and pronounced me good enough to stop a man at twenty feet.

Then he showed Evan and me a lonely little house on the desert, just on the California side of the border. In the 19th century, when the contraband was Chinese immigrants and ten-tael tins of opium, a tunnel ran from beneath the house to a cave on the Mexican side. Quick knew about it because his father had been a Customs agent who rode horseback through the desert in search of bootleggers from Mexico.


The fact that the tunnel Evan and I imagined for THE WRONG HOSTAGE was actually discovered a few months ago—in the precise place we imagined it would be!—just proves that truth is at least as strange as fiction.

STELLA: Don Quick? Of course, Amanda's dad. What about St. Kilda Consulting? Is that real?

ELIZABETH: (groan....no relation to Amanda Quick at all!) St. Kilda Consulting is our creation, but it’s based on what’s happening in the real world. One of the FBI agents who once worked with Evan left the FBI and started his own kidnap/ransom insurance business, because he saw how difficult it was for American corporations to protect their employees outside the U.S.

Other people Evan worked with have gone on to think tanks, started their own advice/security businesses, etc. In the Post Cold War world, gigantic just doesn’t get most jobs done. Many non-combat jobs in war zones go to private contractors, from feeding soldiers, to electronics maintenance (and operation) of high-tech weapons, and even the training of Iraqi policemen. Some companies are run by former special forces personnel. Many are run by former government employees from the military services to the CIA, FBI, and any other agency that requires expertise in the shifting reality of geopolitics and transnational crime.

I certainly wouldn’t be surprised to find that one or more private businesses such as St. Kilda Consulting exists. Whether we know it or not, we need them.

STELLA: No arguments from me. And the love story grips in all the right ways--just as I would expect. Joe Faroe is a classic Lowell hero--strong and vulnerable, smart and yet dumb as only a guy can be about women, and sexy. Did I mention sexy?

ELIZABETH: What can I say? No love, no story. Not for this woman. Faroe demanded a special heroine, one who could go toe-to-toe with him, yet touch him with her own vulnerability, her own needs. Grace Silva is a great match for Faroe—even if neither one wants to admit it!


STELLA: THE WRONG HOSTAGE paperback is on sale April 24th.

ELIZABETH: Some folks will find it in the stores a week before that, some a week after. Let me know when Y'ALL find it!

STELLA: If you break a toe running an errand (to the bookstore) and have to take a couple of days off to recover, we'll all understand. Buy a copy for your doctor in exchange for a letter of excuse to your boss--you need quality reading time for THE WRONG HOSTAGE!


15 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Stella / Elizabeth

I read the hardcover on the train to/from NYC last June and then finished it at home, staying up too late as is the usual with a new EL/AM book.

Readers....rush to get this one if you haven't already started scouting. I think it was one of the most intense and scariest yet by Elizabeth. The hostage situation with a young smart kid just takes it into new dimensions, tension-wise.

SusanB

7:30 AM  
Anonymous Lou said...

I also read the hardcover edition. It is a really gripping story. As Stella said, you will need to set aside time to read the whole thing at once because you won't be able to put it down!

P.S. Elizabeth, really looking forward to more St. Kilda stories! Is Loss of Innocence one of them?

10:57 AM  
Blogger elizabeth said...

Lou--yes, INNOCENT AS SIN is a St. Kilda story. (So is BLUE SMOKE AND MURDER, which I'm working on now.)

11:40 AM  
Blogger DFender said...

Betty,

Absolutely loved The Wrong Hostage in hard cover, it's on my "keeper" bookcase but, as usual, I'll get the paperback to lend out to friends. It'll be years before I get it back so I keep the hardcovers for meself...LOL. It's my favorite EL story so far.

Can't wait for INNOCENT AS SIN... wahoooo! St. Kilda rocks! Uh, I guess that means you, as the author, do too ;-)

Great job, Stella!

Deb

12:38 PM  
Blogger Elizabeth Guest said...

Elizabeth the First,

I loved THE WRONG HOSTAGE. Couldn't put it down. In fact, I stayed up half the night to finish it. :-) Well worth losing a little sleep over!

Bravo!
EG

12:49 PM  
Blogger Jayne Ann Krentz said...

Count me as another thrilled reader of THE WRONG HOSTAGE! Loved it. And that scary behind-the-scenes stuff was fascinating.

--Jayne

2:24 PM  
Blogger Stella said...

Ditto, ditto, ditto--this is a wonderful book. The depth of the research and the careful use of detail, is admirable. It wouldn't be hard to load in everything you know on a subject.

I have an idea. Since I discovered this morning that I LOST weight on my five-day chocolate extravaganza in San Francisco, why not stock up on luscious goodies and settle down with THE WRONG HOSTAGE. What could be better that reading an Elizabeth Lowell book and losing weight at the same time?:)

Stella

3:17 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I also read the hardcover. It was impossible to put down! Great book. It was my first Elizabeth Lowell book - and it's made me go and get a bunch more!

Carolyn

4:15 PM  
Anonymous Louis said...

Like many others, I read the hardcover edition.

Excellent, excellent book.

Looking forward to your next book!

5:26 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I found the paperback at my local B & N AND the grocery store yesterday. I read the hardcover and i'ts firmly on the keeper list, along with all my other Lowelliana

5:47 PM  
Anonymous Ranurgis said...

Well, I've already sung the praises of this book. So I'll be very happy to get my grubby little hands on my own copy.

It's a really powerful story, kind of scary to say the least but I too believe these things are truly happening even if not quite as imagined in fiction. As you say, truth can be stranger than fiction.

Since today is the 26th, I hope I can find it when I go to some bookstores on Friday after some medical appointments.

Great interview, ladies.

10:03 PM  
Anonymous Lou said...

Elizabeth - Oops, sorry about the mistake in your next book title. I knew it was something about innocence. Very much looking forward to it!

9:57 AM  
Blogger PJ said...

It hasn't shown up yet in my local store but I'll be checking daily until it does. Sounds fabulous! I love this kind of story.

11:13 AM  
Blogger elizabeth said...

Thanks everyone. If I didn't get to you individually, blame it on jet lag.

That's my story and I'm sticking to it!

3:03 PM  
Anonymous Ranurgis said...

Sorry, but I didn't find any of the paperback editions yesterday and I was too tired from my outing to go anywhere today.

I hope to finish EG's "Night Life" soon. I wish there hadn't been this many interruptions but I don't take my favorite books out on a bus-junket and especially not in the rain. So I took something else along to read while I waited for appointments.

We do seem to get books later here.

9:43 PM  

Post a Comment

<< Home

Powered by Blogger