Guest Appearance with author ~ Linda L. Richards

Do you have any routines, traditions, or superstitions you do before sitting down to write? How do you get the creativity flowing?

I wrote my first ten or so books like a normal person: with a keyboard. I would sit at my desk with a head full of ideas and good intentions in my heart and just hammer away until I was done. 

I had been a journalist, so I knew how to get my ideas to march along tidily. I knew how to tell a story. How to stick with it until it was complete. I knew how to get the job done.

What happened to change the way that I worked and even the way I interacted with my work was that I met a boy. And I started to travel a lot. I was living in Vancouver, Canada. He was living not far from Palm Beach, in Florida and in between I would spend time with family on the Central Coast of California and other places. After spending decades happily rooted to one spot, I was suddenly almost constantly on the move. I still had stories to tell – a lot of them — but I was suddenly spending a lot of time in airports and on planes.

As most everyone knows, there are a lot of constraints around modern air travel. You have to put away laptops on takeoffs and landings and, anyway, sometimes it’s just so squishy, even when you’re in the air, there’s very little room for your laptop and your elbows at the same time.

What I started doing instead was, as soon as I sat down, I would bring out a notebook and a pen and I would start to write. Balancing the notebook on my lap on take off and landing, placing it flat on the tray during the flight. That was the beginning. It grew from there. An extra hour between flights? Out the notebook would come. A longish wait at the doctor’s office? Pen and notebook. Really any time I found myself stuck somewhere with more than ten minutes on my hand, out the notebook would come. 

It changed everything. For one thing, I found myself with a sharply stronger connection to my material. I am the pantsiest of pansters and, when I sit down to write, I never have a clear idea where I’m going. Really, just the broadest of strokes. Using a notebook for first drafts rather than a computer gets me closer to my material more quickly. I’m pretty sure there’s some scientific reason for this. All I know for sure is drawing out the notebook now is like opening up a portal. I read the last few lines of my work in progress and I’m right back there, moving forward with story. I know I use the word “magic” probably too much when I’m talking about my process, but that’s certainly what it feels like: an unlikely gift from the stars.

I’m lefthanded and my handwriting is difficult to read, sometimes even for me, so I tend to transcribe within a few days of writing it. When I’m really in the zone on a first draft, I’ll spend the day writing in my notebook in various locations (a café; my gym; the library; et al) and the following morning I transcribe what I wrote, before beginning it all again.

Once the first draft is complete, it all stays on the computer, but I generally miss the process so much I start right into the first draft of the next book, if I haven’t started it already.

And what about the boy? He is the man I married in 2019. Now when I fly, I’m quite often not writing, but am cuddling or chatting or otherwise spinning dreams with the man I love. But the method? It continues, only the locations have changed.

– Linda L. Richards

Thank you so much, Linda L. Richards, for sharing with us! 

I loved reading how true love is what led her toward a more meaningful writing style that connected her to her work in more depth. After all, that’s what love is supposed to do, right? Encourage us to become the best version of ourselves?

Which brings me to my review of Linda L. Richard’s book. What would you do if you had to leave that version of yourself behind? Would you reinvent yourself? Become someone else?

Read my full review of Insensible Loss

The Endings Series

Her life is over . . . yet somehow she carries on

After attempting to sever all ties to her life as a hired assassin, a woman struggles to understand who she has become. She knows she doesn’t want to kill again–but it proves to be a difficult habit to break, particularly in a world where people are after her and those she loves most.

Adrift and disconnected, she meets an old woman: Imogen O’Brien, a world-famous artist who has spent the last three decades living a hermit-like existence on a rustic desert estate in a national forest. Imogen invites her to stay and work for her, offering mentorship in return as the woman deepens her own interest in art.

What quickly becomes apparent is that elements of Imogen’s past are shrouded in danger, sorrow, and darkness. Rather than growing as an artist, the former hitwoman soon finds herself enmeshed in a dangerous mystery with strands that stretch decades into the past.

Genre: Thriller/Suspense
Published by: Oceanview Publishing
Publication Date: September 17, 2024
Number of Pages: 320
ISBN: 978-1608095148
Series: The Endings Series, Book 4 | Each is a Stand-Alone

Book Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads

Read an excerpt:

CHAPTER ONE

I am gazing into an abyss. When I plant my feet on the edge of the cliff, all I see is a canyon yawing below me. I see the canyon, and my feet, tightly laced into trail runners. Below and beyond my tidy feet, red rock can be seen everywhere, edges softened by millennia, but deadly still. And steep.

Arcadia Bluff. It has a gentle sound, this location. But the reality is anything but gentle. A rough rawness that would seem to be able to accommodate anything one pitched in that direction. Wild west. There’s that, but also more. The secrets of an earth so raw and new, it doesn’t know what it wants to be when it grows up.

It happens that the physical landscape matches what is going on in my heart, but this is mere coincidence. And anyway, everything is connected.

I am in a remote part of one of the largest national parks in the United States, and I am all alone, but for my dog.

Again, aside from that dog, I feel as if I have been alone for my whole life, but that isn’t true. What is true: everyone I’ve ever loved is dead. Some of them by my hand.

But all of that was before. Here is now.

I stand on Arcadia Bluff and the canyon below my feet seems to careen out endlessly. The aforementioned abyss. The red rock, dotted by trees and even the occasional cactus, seeming to sprout from the rock at odd angles, because the perpendicular drop doesn’t support normal growth.

In the distance, far below me, I see a sliver of silvery blue. Maybe it’s a river or the edge of a lake, but when I look straight down, between my feet, I see nothing but rock and cactus and peril. It gives me a funny feeling in the pit of my stomach to look down, so I try to avoid doing that.

We drove in my old Volvo to get here, the dog and I. The car is dear to me. I’ve had it a long time and it performs elegantly. Like a tank. An elegant tank. It is a premium car, or it was, but now it is ancient. In good condition, but unremarkable, one of the things about it that I’ve always cherished: it has never drawn comment. And no one would suspect that under the trunk’s false bottom they would find two Bersa Thunder 380 handguns and a whole lot of cash. The car is now my home, my armory, and my bank. Who needs anything more?

Well, maybe I do. But never mind. The journey, that’s the thing.

To get here, the path we traveled in that old Volvo is a forestry road. The road is marked on maps as little more than a trail. It is unpaved and unremarked. And putting it that way—the path we traveled—makes it sound like a destination. It wasn’t that. It is just the place where, for the moment, we have ended up. When this moment is complete, we’ll travel some more. Maybe come to something else. It’s what we have now, this life made of almost nothing. As you will have guessed, this state of near nothing didn’t happen overnight.

A while ago I left behind the hollowed-out shell of the life I had created. The sham. The farce. The life in which I lived while I processed all of my grief.

Tried to process all of my grief.

Do you know what I discovered? You don’t process grief. It lives inside you, waiting for you to trot through the minefield that is life. Waiting for you to make just that one step and the grief explodes back into your face. If you were to process it—like cheese, like peanut butter—at a certain point it would be smooth and glossy and perfectly digestible. Consume it and forget it. But grief isn’t like that. It waits around because all it actually wants is to bite you in the ass.

I sound bitter. The tonic in a vodka drink. I don’t mean to, but there you are. Sometimes what you feel overrides everything you know.

After I left said reconstructed and hollowed-out life, I didn’t know what to do with myself. I was basically—entirely?—homeless. My dog. And me. Homeless and aimless. I had my car. Several handguns. A few small things that I had come to treasure. And a whole whack of cash. The cash was necessary, because this is what I no longer possessed: any form of identification or credit cards. Or anything that said I was a person at all. I had simply disappeared. You mostly can’t do that forever.

A myriad of small things will trip you up. You can’t travel by air. You can’t book a motel. You can’t call an Uber. Or bank. When you start to think about it, there are more things you can’t do than what you can. After a while you need a landing spot. And you need a plan.

But I’m getting ahead of myself. Here goes another run.

Once upon a time—like a fairy story—I was a mom. A wife. A cornerstone of my community. I had a house. A pebble-tech pool.

A minivan with leather seats and televised communication. I had all of the accoutrements of suburbia, right down to the suburb. Tree-lined streets that I traveled to get to my job and take my kid to his school. I had attractive but not fiendishly manicured lawns. A home. That’s what it was. My husband, my son. Me. We were a family. We had a home.

One day there was an accident. People were killed. My child. Ultimately my husband, too. I was unexpectedly alone. All I had was a whole bunch of mortgaged crap I hadn’t even dreamed of wanting in the first place. After a while of being alone and having no money, I needed a new job and I started taking contracts to kill people.

You see how my narrative breaks down right there? I mean, everything was going along well, from a storytelling standpoint. I’d engaged your sympathy. Maybe even your interest. And then— boom!—I blow all that goodwill with a simple revelation. Yes. Killing people. For money. What kind of nice lady does that? No kind, that’s what. But it let’s you know at least part of why I run.

And so here we are. Standing on the edge of a cliff. And I’m not expecting to jump.

CHAPTER TWO

Lately I’ve noticed that I have become afraid of the dark. It doesn’t make sense to me. I am aware of no new trauma that might have led to this condition. Nyctophobia. I have read about it. I have googled, as they say.

I’ve “done some research.” So I know a little about the condition that currently plagues me. I’ve read that it is fairly normal or, at least, not uncommon. I’ve read, also, that fear is healthy. In our natural state, I guess, fear is what keeps us alive and safe.

For months, I have found myself waking from peaceful slumber and moving to instant terror when the dark is encountered. The dog smells the fear, or at least that is what I guess. When I wake in this way, I can hear him rustling about as he comes to me. He lays his muzzle on whatever part of me he can reach: my hand or my arm or even a bit of toe. And he’ll stay there like that, breathing quietly, until my demons have passed, or I turn on a light.

Usually, I turn on a light.

There are things you can do, that’s what I’ve read, as well. And there is evolved language around it. You can deal with your triggers or work at desensitizing yourself to darkness. This sort of healthy self-examination has never been my forte, and so after a while, I come up with my own solution: I begin to sleep with the light on. It keeps the demons at bay.

All of this would probably be of more concern if we had a home anymore, the dog and I. But we don’t. As I said, we are traveling, no destination in mind other than a vague and distant future that at present has no shape.

Every day, we cover many miles in the Volvo. The forestry roads in Arizona’s Cathedral National Park seem endless. The park itself seems endless, as well. We keep traveling, only occasionally surfacing for fuel or other supplies. We do that at small gas stations either within the park or just on the outskirts. Places that take cash and don’t ask questions. Then we delve right back into the depths of the park. We just drive and drive and drive, stopping only for calls of the body, as well as those infrequent times when I run out of steam. At those times, since we are out—literally and actually—in the middle of nowhere, I just stop the car, then pitch the small tent that lives over top of the false bottom of the trunk. And then I try to rest.

The closest I ever get to actual rest is when the dog settles down somewhere near me, then gets to snoring peacefully. Something about that sound is hypnotic to me. I’ll surf behind it until, sometimes, falling under the spell of the simple, primal cadence, I fall asleep. In and out, in and out. I float away on a column of dog snores that lead to core sleep, when my subconscious scrambles to make up for time lost.

In the morning we pack up and head out again. Where are we going? Why? I don’t have answers. I don’t even have questions. All I know is that everything is behind me. I’m not hopeful about what is in front of me, but it’s better than going back.

Everyone knows that you can’t go back.

***

Excerpt from Insensible Loss by Linda L. Richards. Copyright 2024 by Linda L. Richards. Reproduced with permission from Linda L. Richards. All rights reserved.

 

Tour Participants:

09/09 Review @ fundinmental
09/10 Interview @ Mystery, Thrillers, and Suspense
09/10 Review @ FullyBookedInKentucky
09/11 Review @ Country Mamas With Kids
09/11 Showcase @ Books, Ramblings, and Tea
09/12 Interview @ Literary Gold
09/13 Review @ Guatemala Paula Loves to Read
09/13 Review @ Melissa As Blog
09/13 Showcase @ Silvers Reviews
09/14 Review @ Ink. Readsalot
09/16 Review @ Book Reviews From an Avid Reader
09/17 Review @ Cozy Home Delight
09/18 Guest post @ Cozy Home Delight
09/19 Review @ dianas_books_cars_coffee
09/21 Guest post @ Cassidys Bookshelves
09/27 Review @ fuonlyknew
10/01 Review @ Catreader18
10/02 Showcase @ Celticladys Reviews
10/03 Guest post @ The Mystery of Writing

Linda L. Richards is the award-winning author of over a dozen books. The founder and publisher of January Magazine and a contributing editor to the crime fiction blog The Rap Sheet, she is best known for her strong female protagonists in the thriller genre. Richards is from Vancouver, Canada and currently makes her home in Phoenix, Arizona. New for 2024: INSENSIBLE LOSS, the fourth book in the Endings series featuring a reluctant hit woman struggling towards the light. Linda’s 2021 novel, the first in this series, ENDINGS, was recently optioned by a major studio for series production. Richards is an accomplished horsewoman and an avid tennis player, and is on the National Board of Sisters in Crime.

Catch Up With Linda L. Richards:
LindaLRichards.com
Goodreads – @lindalrichards
BookBub – @linda1841
Instagram – @lindalrichards
Threads – @lindalrichards
Twitter/X – @lindalrichards
Facebook – @lindalrichardsauthor

This is a giveaway for:  $20 Amazon.com Gift Card, US Mailing Addresses Only
 
Hosted by Partners in Crime Virtual Book Tours  for Linda L. Richards. See the widget for entry terms and conditions. Void where prohibited.

One response to “Guest Appearance with author ~ Linda L. Richards”

  1. forevereadingb24182df85 Avatar
    forevereadingb24182df85

    Awwwww, I loved this guest post!

    Liked by 1 person

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