Tag: The SECRET LIFE of ANNA BLANC

  • 10 QUESTION AUTHOR INTERVIEW with Jennifer Kincheloe – Award-Winning Author,

    CHANTICLEER 10 AUTHOR INTERVIEW SERIES
    with award-winning author, Jennifer Kincheloe

    M&M Blue and Gold 1st Place Badge Image

     

    Jennifer Kincheloe won First Place in our Mystery & Mayhem Awards a few years back, but we still remember her contagious smile and her fabulous book, The Secret Life of Anna Blanc. Let’s get into it!

    Chanti: Tell us a little about yourself: How did you start writing?

    Kincheloe: I used to be a research scientist/mother of two. (Actually, I still am) About ten years ago, bemused by the boastful Christmas letters I would get every year in the mail (this was before Facebook), I decided to write a humorous, sort of spoofy Christmas letter. I spent hours on it. And when people read it, they laughed. That’s when I discovered I loved writing.

    Chanti: When did you realize you that you were an author?

    Kincheloe: After I wrote my Christmas letter, I decided to write a screenplay because, in my naïve mind, they were shorter than novels and therefore easier. I had just recovered from an illness and wasn’t working, so I had time to spend on it. When I started writing, I couldn’t stop. It made me high. I wrote all the time. I barely stopped to eat. I would wake up in the middle of the night and write. I took my laptop everywhere. (I still do). When I stopped to consider this, I decided I must be a writer.

    And, by the way, my screenplay was terrible.

    Chanti: I love that feeling when you’re in it deep and words just flow. What a high! What do you do when you’re not writing? Tells us a little about your hobbies.

    Kincheloe: I like kickboxing and hiking. I love theater. I go to the Metropolitan Opera’s film series. I spend time with my family and pets.

    Chanti: It sounds like you have a well-balanced life. Good for you! How do you come up with your ideas for a story?

    Kincheloe: Newspaper articles. I usually base my mysteries on real crimes. The little details in the book, the world-building, typically come from historical sources. For example, I read in a wealthy woman’s diary about how her family had employed a man from China at the turn of the 20th century. He would fill his mouth with water and spit it out in a fine spray onto the clothes he was ironing. That went right into The Woman in the Camphor Trunk.

    Chanti: How do you approach your writing day?

    Kincheloe: I write on my lunch break, nights and weekend. I usually write every day, even if it’s just a paragraph.

    Chanti: Smart. Put something on paper – it doesn’t matter how much. It’s about the habit. I like that. What craft books have helped you the most?

    Kincheloe: I loved Stephen King’s book On Writing. Story by Robert McKee. Bird by Bird by Anne Lamott.

    Chanti: What business books about writing have helped you the most?

    Kincheloe: If I were to look at writing as a business, I would despair. Even the traditional publishing market is flooded and very few authors make a living. What helps me is having an engaging and profitable life apart from writing. This allows me to write for the joy of it. Most authors I know who make a living are a dozen or more books into their career. Some of our finest, most decorated authors do not make a living.

    Chanti: What are you working on now? What can we look forward to seeing next from you?

    Kincheloe: I’m working on the fourth book in the Anna Blanc Mystery series. It deals with mysterious fraternal orders and horrible death.

    Chanti: How exciting! What is the most important thing a reader can do for an author?

    Kincheloe: Email the author and tell them you loved the book and why. Recommend a book to a friend. Give books as presents. Leave reviews on Goodreads, Amazon, library webpages, wherever. Go to their book signing and say hi.

    Chanti: Do you ever experience writers block? What do you do to overcome it?

    Kincheloe: Yes. I overcome it by putting on my big girl panties. In the words of Gail Carriger, “Sandwich makers don’t get to have sandwich block.” I’m a writer. Thus, I write when I don’t feel like it. If I’m burned out, I spend time in nature. A fine book on creative blocks is The Artist’s Way by Julia Cameron.

    M&M 1st Place Gold Foil book sticker image

  • The SECRET LIFE of ANNA BLANC by Jennifer Kincheloe – Mystery Thriller, Female Sleuth, Victorian

    The SECRET LIFE of ANNA BLANC by Jennifer Kincheloe – Mystery Thriller, Female Sleuth, Victorian

    An intractable and pampered debutante with plenty of pluck turns detective in Jennifer Kincheloe’s award-winning debut The Secret Life of Anna Blanc.

    The year is 1907 in Los Angeles. Anna Blanc may be privileged and beautiful, but the one thing she lacks is freedom. Escaping from her possessive father is more difficult than she thinks since she keeps getting caught in humiliating circumstances, which only taints her social status. Regardless, Anna has a mind of her own and determines to get involved in one area that is entirely unladylike: police work.

    Finding an ad in a local paper, Anna finagles her way into an assistant matron position at the LAPD. While on her first assignment at a local brothel, Anna overhears a conversation between of a police officer and a coroner as they examine the corpse of a prostitute. Although the men rule the young woman’s death a suicide, Anna is convinced that the cause of death is murder, especially when she learns that the harlot’s death is just one in a string of murders.

    Anna commences undercover investigations, which she keeps under tight wraps. In the meantime, the LAPD sets up a sting operation to catch a rape fiend. Anna volunteers, working alongside the handsome but unpredictable Joe Singer. While romance seems to brew between the unlikely pair, Anna’s father makes plans for her to marry a wealthy banker, Edgar Wright. Amid the strange love triangle, Anna hopes to nab both the rape fiend and prostitute murderer. Whether or not she can convince the LAPD of her sleuthing capabilities before another murder occurs remains to be seen.

    Kincheloe does a killer job keeping her audience hooked from one page to the next as her protagonist heroine whose insular life evolves as she faces perils of one kind or other. Kincheloe’s highly-developed cast includes only a handful of supporting characters while the bulk of her cast is made up of colorful foils and red herrings, coming in every shape, size, sex, and demeanor imaginable that befits an early 20th-century setting.

    Tight sentence structures dripping with rich metaphorical descriptions and hyperbole laced with sarcasm, wit, and humor grace the pages of this award-winning debut novel. Scenes heavily peppered with romantic tension, sexual innuendoes, replete with unremitting twists and turns shift between characters resulting in a mighty fine read.

    A top-rate novel “inspired by police matron Alice Stebbins Wells, who in 1910 became the first woman police officer in Los Angeles,” The Secret of Anna Blanc has all the elements of going beyond the bookshelf and onto the Silver Screen.

    5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews