Barbara Rogan is another great writer
I’ve met at the Book and Writer’s Forum. She regularly facilitates the monthly
exercises in the Writers Exercise folder. Her exercises always make me stretch
as a writer which shouldn’t come as a surprise to those who know her Next Level Workshops and her work with the Writers Digest Online University. Her blog In Cold Ink is chock full of advice and information on writing.
Barbara’s extensive experience as an editor and an agent shows and she is
generous in sharing her expertise. All eight of her novels have gained great acclaim. Check them all out--HERE--and A DANGEROUS FICTION is getting well-deserved reviews. Literary agent Janet Reid enjoyed A DANGEROUS FICTION so much she's hosting a contest in its honor. Check it out HERE.
click to link to Amazon.com |
Jo Donovan always manages to come out on top. From the backwoods of Appalachia, she forged a hard path to life among the literati in New York City. At thirty-five, she’s the widow of the renowned author Hugo Donovan and the owner of one of the best literary agencies in town. Jo is living the life she dreamed of but it’s all about to fall apart.
When a would-be client turns stalker, Jo is more angry than shaken until her clients come under attack. Meanwhile, a biography of Hugo Donovan is in the works and the author’s digging threatens to destroy the foundations of Jo’s carefully constructed life. As the web of suspicion grows wider and her stalker ups the ante, she’s persuaded by her client and friend—FBI profiler-turned-bestselling-thriller writer—to go to the police. There Jo finds herself face-to-face with an old flame: the handsome Tommy Cullen, now NYPD detective.
A Dangerous Fiction marks the welcome return of Barbara Rogan and the start of a terrific new series.
Zan Marie: If Goodreads had six stars, I’d give A DANGEROUS FICTION six
and a half. It’s that good. It’s a compulsive read full of high tension and
suspense—just what a reader wants. You can’t stop turning the pages.
ZM: I totally agree. ;-)
Barbara: Thank you! Jo is indeed a complicated character. I
like her—she has courage, humor, resilience and loyalty, all traits I
particularly admire—but she is definitely flawed, more so than any other
protagonist I’ve ever created. She’s tough, she can be arrogant, and she has a
very selective memory. As I wrote I had to stifle the impulse to soften her.
She needed those flaws for this story; they play into what happens to her.
Barbara: I’m working on the next Jo Donovan mystery now. I’m
also teaching online fiction workshops through my teaching website, www.nextlevelworkshop.com. I also plan to write a non-fiction book for writers based
on my course, REVISING FICTION. But there are only so many hours in the day,
and that’s taken a bit of a backseat to the fiction.
Barbara:
There is no single favorite, not even a top ten; there are just too many
writers I admire, and I’ve learned from all of them. In mysteries my favorites
include Dennis Lehane, Walter Mosely, Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler, Peter Dickinson, Dorothy Sayers…I could go on and on. I don’t
have a favorite genre, either. I read a lot of mystery and literary fiction,
but some of my favorite books of recent years have been fantasies and
historical fiction. The one thing they all have in common is that they’re
terrifically well-written. If the writing isn’t first-rate, I can’t enjoy the
story.
ZM: Thank you, Barbara, for a wonderful interview and a fabulous book!
Barbara Rogan is the author of eight novels and coauthor of two nonfiction books. Her fiction has been translated into six languages. She has taught fiction writing at Hofstra University and currently teaches for Writers Digest University and in her own online school, Next Level Workshops. She lives on Long Island.
Great interview, Zan Marie! I always enjoy hanging around the Forum--so much to learn from so many people! :)
ReplyDeleteI know! The Forum is the best place on earth for writers. Barbara is one great example of why.
DeleteGreat interview! I love the idea of characters like pull-away see-through biology sheets! If we have to talk genre, mystery is one of my favourites, and I love books like A Dangerous Fiction which have me going in all the wrong directions and yet everything makes sense at the end!
ReplyDeleteI agree with your description of "going in all the wrong directions and yet everything makes sense at the end!" That's a perfect way to describe ADF. ; )
Delete