This week’s Thriller Roundtable–I need some help answering!

The topic is:  which of my books is my favorite–and why?  And do my readers agree?  I’m having a tough time deciding.  Each one has something about it that is my favorite for one reason or another.  But my favorite overall?  I am completely stumped right now.  And I have no idea what my readers’ favorites are, and why.

Help me out here.  Of my books that you’ve read, which is your favorite, and why?  I’d really like to know!

http://www.thebigthrill.org/2017/04/april-24-30-of-the-books-you-have-written-which-is-your-favorite/

 

Advertisement

Check out this week’s Thriller Roundtable

Which thriller writers are skilled at education the public on otherwise difficult public and business programs?

Stop by and check it out–leave a comment if you wish!

http://www.thebigthrill.org/2017/04/april-3-9-which-thriller-writers-are-skilled-at-educating-the-public-on-otherwise-difficult-public-and-business-programs/#comment-36223

The Inspiration Behind MOON OVER RUIN…

For me, there is nothing like a road trip.  Jetting off to faraway places is not my cup of tea, never has been.  I prefer terra firma, and seeing everything there is to see along the way.

Don’t get me wrong.  The views from up in the air can be pretty amazing.  But you can’t really pull over and investigate if you see something interesting, now, can you?

And I prefer out-of-the-way places, not major cities.

In other words…give me wide open spaces!  Because you never know what you will find out there, where there is supposedly nothing.

In this case, it was an abandoned resort up in Canada, situated next to a huge, peaceful lake.  I wish there’d been more identifying information.  I tried to find something about it on the Internet, without a lick of success.  (My BF and I saw another abandoned resort on that same trip and at least found other people’s pictures of it, and its name.  But for this one, not a thing.  Just adds to the mystery, right?)

Looked like a really nice setup, back when it was alive, anyway.  Eight rooms in one single-story building, some other common building overlooking the lake, and some other building (Café?  Storage?  Not sure.  Not about to trespass to find out.)

So.  A cool little place.  In the middle of nowhere.  Set on a lake.  But abandoned and aging.  Just the thing to set off my weird little imagination.  Who stayed there when it was operational?  What was their story?  What stories could the walls tell?  I knew right away this place had the potential to make an appearance in my fiction.  Just a matter of when and where.

Different stories start with different seeds.  For another of my novellas, Skinshift, it was the animal skulls we found in an abandoned campsite on another road trip.  For Ash and Bone, it was a noir-ish mental image I had of a waterfront at night.  And so on.  My stories aren’t always inspired by an irresistible setting.  But some are.  Like Moon Over Ruin.

The Quarry Resort is a fictionalized version of this abandoned resort.  Peter Watson takes a solo road trip to escape a very painful loss.  Or so he thinks.  Then he winds up at the Quarry Resort, alone, at night.  And he gets more than he bargained for.  Way more.

Thanks for reading!

And may I wish you:

Pleasant dreams…or not…

Lisa

MOON OVER RUIN now released!

MOON OVER RUIN, my latest novella, is live and available now on Amazon…

A tragic twist of fate takes away everything that really matters to Peter Watson. After such a profound loss, he can’t make sense of his life anymore. So he takes to the road—alone—to put some time and distance between himself and what happened. He hopes the solitude will help him find a reason to go on, a way to heal.

When he stops to check in at the remote Quarry Resort, he expects to wrestle with painful, intense memories. He does not expect to spend the night fighting for his life.

No matter how far you travel, the darkness inside will find you…

 

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01MT4YWHR/ref=docs-os-doi_0