A Haunted Contest

SEE THE WINNERS HERE (Prizes must be claimed by October 31)

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In honor of the Tuesday release of WHERE ALL THE DEAD LIE:

I thought we'd do something different this time around. Since this is a book that at its heart is a ghost story, I thought it might be fun for you to share your own personal brush with a ghost, or share your favorite ghostly story.

To enter, all you have to do is leave your ghoulish tale in the comments.*

On October 15, I will announce the winners.

At stake:

2 copies of the fabulous DVD CASTLE GHOSTS OF SCOTLAND

3 $25 giftcards to the winners' choice of bookstore

5 copies of Daphne du Maurier's REBECCA 

and signed bookplates to all entries.

Winners will be drawn at random from the comments - all save 1.

GRAND PRIZE: The creepiest, scariest, spookiest tale will be my Halloween gift to my readers - with your permission and byline, of course. I'll send it to all of my newsletter list and post it on my blog, Facebook and Twitter. Word limit is 1500 or less.

My editor and I will do the judging, so make it good!

*For safety sake - I highly recommend you write your story in Word or RTF format, then copy and paste into the comments, so you don't do a lot of great work then lose it. It doesn't happen often, but sometimes, Squarespace likes to clear its throat.

9.16.11

My post from Murderati today:

It’s that time again.

I have a new book out on Tuesday. And since I’m at Bouchercon today, I thought I’d take this moment to share with you the journey I went on writing WHERE ALL THE DEAD LIE.

(Journey? It was more like a hike up Everest, K9, and Rainier, all in a week.)

I got the idea for WHERE ALL THE DEAD LIE on September 14, 2009, and started writing the book July 23, 2010. It was easier in the beginning. Or so I thought.

But back to the book's inception. I’d just returned from vacation, and had an unbelievable amount of work on my plate. I was getting ready to shoot the video for the OWN Network, so my thoughts were not exactly on writing as much as what I would wear. I was revising THE COLD ROOM, which was three books ago. I was starting to work on THE IMMORTALS, and slightly fleshing out a concept for SO CLOSE THE HAND OF DEATH. I was not thinking four books from that moment. Not at all. And yet, I was in the car, and heard a song by Tori Amos called “Welcome to England.”

And I saw Taylor stepping off a plane at Heathrow, into the waiting arms of Memphis Highsmythe. You may remember Highsmythe from THE COLD ROOM, the wounded Scottish Viscount who joined the Metropolitan Police of London – New Scotland Yard – a man who in many ways mirrors Taylor – the privileged upbringing, eschewing their parents’ wealth and influence to strike out on their own, a sense on longing, of solitude, even when surrounded by loved ones.

I was curious about why she would do such a thing, but knew I’d have to explore the idea. So I made myself some notes and put the idea away so I could focus on what was at hand.

But ideas like this, so big, so different, wend their way into your psyche. From that moment forward, I was writing toward this book, even though I wasn’t consciously doing so.

When it was time to start working on Dead Lie, I knew much more about the reasons for Taylor’s flight to England.

She’s been grievously injured. She’s not healing. She can’t work. She is deathly afraid of what all of this means.

And most importantly, she can’t talk.

Having a mute protagonist was terrifying for me. Dialogue is a hugely important part of my books, the interplay between Taylor and her team, her lover, the victims of the crimes she investigates – it’s not something I wanted to take from her. But I had to. She had to be forced into a corner and fight her way out. Not fight against a villain, but against herself.

And I wanted it to be more than that. This tale is very much a version of the classic fish out of water, a person set into an environment that is unfamiliar, unsettling. I knew I wanted to set the book in Memphis’s world, London and Scotland, with the Scottish Highlands as the backdrop, at Memphis’s ancestral home. His haunted castle. His Manderley.

Suddenly, I was writing a gothic. In the vein of Du Maurier’s Rebecca.  Complete with a questionable housekeeper, an errant friend, a dead first wife, and a serious case of PTSD.

When you’re used to the blistering pace of a serial killer thriller, and the ease of writing a mouthy protagonist, having both those crutches taken away from you is at once both scary and liberating. All the rules I’d followed in the books that came before were thrown out the window. I knew I wanted this to be a stand alone – even seven books in – especially because it’s seven books in. And it’s the first book printed in the trade paperback format – so it’s a chance to reset, if you will.

But well before the marketing decisions were made, I was struggling. The story was unfolding in ways I didn’t like. I kept returning to the proposal I’d written, in June of 2010, trying to find the thread that would lead me through.

The truth was, I was scared.

I’m still a relatively young writer – young as in this was only the eighth novel I’d written. I’d just lost my beloved editor, I was trying a completely new genre, and the resistance I was feeling, all self-imposed, of course, was stifling. As much as I wanted to tell this story, I just didn’t believe in myself. I didn’t think I could do it justice.

On the surface, everything was flowing wonderfully – I took two trips to Scotland for research, both of which were amazing – I highly recommend setting books in other countries so you’re forced to go outside of your comfort zone to make the stories come alive. I loaded the book with the things I’d seen – the setting wasn’t ever the problem. It was the story. Despite my proclamations to have a gothic, I kept trying to sandwich in a serial killer subplot.

While I was in Scotland the first time – the Peter Tobin case broke. Tobin is a Scottish serial killer who killed several women and was sentenced to life in prison. While we were in Scotland, the police connected him to Bible John, a serial killer from the 70s.

Now, the possibilities there were endless. And eerily reminiscent of Nashville’s own Wooded Rapist, who worked across town with a different MO and moniker – the Dome Light Rapist…

So I tried to dump all of that into the book, thinking the straight suspense wasn’t going to work.

I was wrong. The serial killer aspect of the book was terribly distracting. In the end, I cut the whole subplot.

There was a second subplot that disappeared – the story of John Baldwin’s son. Too much information, too little space to have it.

And still the book wasn’t working.

I’ve never walked away from a story before, but I nearly abandoned this manuscript several times. The thing about art is recognizing when something isn’t working, and giving yourself permission to walk away.

But I’m stubborn. And I loved this story.  I loved Taylor’s frailty. I loved the backdrop of Scotland. I loved that my incredibly strong heroine was seeing things, hearing things, being driven to the brink of insanity.

And that she had a true attraction to another man.

So I focused all my energy on Taylor and her forbidden relationship with Memphis.

I listened to the feedback form my beta readers, and then wonderful new editor.

I revised and revised and revised.

And two days before I was due to turn it in, the book came to life. After a looooooong conversation with one of my best friends, in which I expressed my desire to toss the book out the window, she said something that made me see all the missing pieces. I rushed through a full revision in two days, and boom, there it was.

You’d think that the more books you write, the easier it gets. The better you get at telling stories. The quicker you can lay down your ideas.

That just isn’t true.

Writers can be incredibly myopic. That’s why we have editors and beta readers and critique groups. It was my tribe that helped me see the forest for the trees in this one. And once I could see that forest, everything was so plain. I just needed to get out of my own way and let Taylor be the star. I’ve always seen her as unassailable. Perfect. Larger than life. In WHERE ALL THE DEAD LIE, she is flawed. Physically and emotionally flawed. Weak, even.

And so much more interesting for it.

And here we are - eight revisions later - with a new baby being born. Makes it all worthwhile, really !

 

Where All The Dead Lie Trailer from JT Ellison on Vimeo.

 

9.13.11

Yippe! Words! Words, spilling and glowing and ripe for the picking, all OVER the page.

I woke up early this morning, full of ideas. I'm working on two projects right now, both of which I can't talk much about, but both are widely different from one another. Or so I thought.  This morning, when I woke with two intense, detailed character sketches in my head, I knew I needed to write them down immediately. So I got up, typed them up, and sent them off and realized - hey, what I just did there is totally applicable to what I have to do next.

So I opened the manuscript, and off I went.

Interesting revelations today. I never thought I could work on two projects at once. I hear you, I hear you, of course I can. I just need to focus. But finding the kind of focus that lets me play with two different sets of characters in two different settings isn't something I've ever been good at. I've always admired writers who can bounce around through their ideas. Working on one story here, one story there, shorts and manuscript and scripts- that's just not my forte.

But, the process for one has rubbed off on the process of the other, and suddenly, I have rich characters coming out the wazoo.

This is a Very Good Thing.

Second revelation, in the sandwich book, one of the characters who had paraded onto the scene and really tripped me up is there to tell the story of another character. Aha!

Word, glorious words!

Over 2k on one project and 1K on the other for a total of 3K today! And that's before the blog.

It feels good to settle down and be a writer again.

I had to take a quick break to do a live radio interview, which was lots of fun - I adore radio. There's something so very intimate about it. Tomorrow morning I have a taping for a local TV show, so I need to pick a dress.

And tomorrow evening I head to Bouchercon. For those of you who don't know, it is the largest mystery convention in the world. We're talking hundreds of authors and thousands of readers.

Bouchercon is pretty much our Prom.

Books, panels, parties, dinners.... I am full up with commitments. I'll do my very best to stop in and give updates, because I still have a lot of work to do while I'm gone, so I will be sneaking off to my room to write.

If you're coming, please say hi. Don't be shy, grab me in the hall if I'm blowing past, or come to one of the panels or signings. Bouchercon is a true whirlwind, so remember to hydrate, wear comfortable shoes and stop to smell the roses a few times.

Here's my schedule - so honored to be a part of all three of these:

September 15, 2011 1-2 pm
Panel: TIMEBOMB
When the clock is ticking.
Laura Benedict (M), JT Ellison, Meg Gardiner, Adrian Magson, Daniel Palmer, Simon Toyne

September 16, 2011 2:30-3:30 pm
Panel: MONSTERS
Investigating crime in the age of social networking, google, technology, etc.
Hilary Davidson (M), J.T. Ellison, Chris Knopf, P. J. Parrish, Sam Reaves, Mark Russinovich

September 17, 2011 3-4 pm
MURDER IN THE STACKS:
St. Charles City County Library Mystery Event
Middendorf-Kredell Library
2750 Highway K, O'Fallon, MO
"Thrillers": JT Ellison, author of the Taylor Jackson series; Julie Compton, author of "Rescuing Olivia" and "Tell No Lies"; and Hank Phillippi Ryan, author of the Charlotte McNally series.

Now, off to fold clothes, and pack, and find places for all the shoes I think I'm taking. Have a great night!

9.12.11

It has been a Monday.

I've been scattered, smothered, and covered with Stuff. Fighting with iPhoto. Firefox crashed at least six times while I was trying to write a blog for next week answering some of Rachel's questions. (No, I haven't forgotten - you raised two interesting points that are blogs unto themselves, so I'm posting them next week for the launch-a-palooza.)

I started an interview multiple times, and kept finding myself in the midst of other things. My iPhone doesn't have the right capacity to handle all my music, so as I was making a smaller playlist for it, I hit the wrong button and erased all the music, so it's in massive sync mode. A firetruck plowed into the neighborhood, scaring me half to death, but it was a false alarm at a neighbor's house. (And much too early to see said neighbor in boxers, and nothing else.)

There was a full moon last night, wasn't there?

Sometimes, these crazy, disquieting days are helpful, because you manage to get bits and pieces of multiple projects done. Like laundry, and email, and kitty cat skritchies, and more email, and now this blog.

Only took three hours, but I finally settled my ass down and got things taken care of. Finished the interview. Wrestled the pictures I need together. Managed to have Firefox stay open long enough to get a few other things done. Got the phone synched and working. Wrote this.

So. With that. Here's a link to an interview I did with Lorna Suzuki - she was very kind and asked all kinds of fun questions!

And I'm doing a live radio interview tomorrow with one of my favorite people - Kim Alexander from Siruis/XM Cover to Cover. So tune in!

3 pm EST/ 2 CST/ 1 MST/ 12 PST   Sirius/XM Channel 80

Now need to fold clothes, get manicured and pedicured, pack and charge things, and, and and and and....

See you tomorrow. Hopefully there will actually be a word count! Because really, I is a writer.