"My publisher decided it was a mystery, I thought it was a historical novel," said Peters. But why argue? Peters didn't, and his first novel was published. His premise is this: that the bodies of Jean Lafitte, John Paul Jones and Napoleon Bonaparte were buried together in a small graveyard outside New Orleans. The main character, an amateur historian, struggles to interest his grandson in continuing what has become a lifelong investigation. Peters, himself an amateur historian, spent most of his career in archival research for the Army Corps of Engineers and as a surveyor for the Bureau of Reclamation. He is a Bay area resident. He suggests that following the dictum "write what you know" may not be especially helpful if you're writing about history. "And if you write about what you know, it could be boring," he added. Not if you're a long-haired musician.
But he admits he wrote his novel because he was bored at work. And he agrees with Peters that he didn't write a mystery, either. "I wrote a suspense novel," he said. The witty and irreverent Snyder is working on his second book, tentatively titled "Coffins Got the Dead Guy on the Inside." It's a title he's very fond of and he's not going to give it up easily. It has to do with a joke in music circles. It answers this question: What's the difference between a cello and a coffin? (Snyder has writing in his blood. He isn't sure exactly how he's related to Sherman and Hannah Stein of Davis, but he is related. Hannah is a published poet and Sherman's most recent math book is "Strength in Numbers.")
"I wanted to know about fly fishing," he said, "so I had my character learn in a hurry, taught by a woman." His story involves an investigative journalist who has just lost his job and the only assignment he can get is a style piece on fly fishing, which knows nothing about. The character becomes enmeshed in a search for a killer, a mystery that seems to involve the entire town. Elkjer says publishers categorize books as a convenience to readers. "Writers don't care, they just want to write a good book," he said.
"It takes me six months to a year to write a book," he said. He once published five books in one year, a personal best. He is the author of a series of detective novels featuring New York City/Santa Barbara private eye Dan Fortune. "Cadillac Cowboy" may be the start of a new series featuring ex-CIA operative, ex-drug smuggler Ford Morgan. "Most of my novels involve societal conflict," he said. "Cadillac Cowboy" involves a lumber tycoon, his wife, the redwoods, and a look at how a powerful man treats his wife and others around him.
"We all have only one life, right? "But for every book you read you get an extra life. And if you write books, too, you have lives all over the place."
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Elisabeth's photo enhanced coverage of the Mystery Authors Panel with four mystery writers: Keith Snyder, Ray Peters, Thom Elkjer and Michael Collins can be found in "Four mystery writers introduced at Sacto Reads" |
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