Top Photo (from left to right): M.C. Beaton, moderator Kristi C. Chadwick, Ruth Ware, Lisa Unger (seated), Megan Abbott, and Wil Medearis
An odd encounter with a random drunk woman in his neighborhood propelled Wil Medearis to write Restoration Heights (Hanover Square, Jan. 2019), a debut mystery set in Brooklyn. Medearis lives in Bedford-Stuyvesant, a historically African American Brooklyn neighborhood undergoing white gentrification. He wanted to write about the changes he had observed but wasn't sure how to go about it until that chance meeting gave him his hook: "Okay, I can build something of this. I can trace the disappearance of a young woman through the neighborhood and bring in those feelings about gentrification and racial tensions and use the mystery to pull the reader into that world. " Ruth Ware's The Death of Mrs. Westaway (Scout: Gallery, May) "hinges on one of those moments we all dream about"--a random, unforeseen, huge inheritance. Her protagonist is a young, cynical tarot card reader who sets about defrauding a family of their inheritance in a case of mistaken identity and in turn sets off a slightly nightmarish chain of events. "What makes me excited as a writer and what makes me turn the pages as a reader is conflict, and family is a great place to start," explained Ware. Ware also acknowledged the influence of Josephine Tey's 1949 crime novel Brat Farrar as well as the Cornwall settings of Daphne du Maurier's books. A secret shared between high school friends that comes back to haunt them when they are adults competing for the same thing is the premise of Megan Abbott's Give Me Your Hand (Little, Brown, Jul.). "What would we be without secrets?" asked the best-selling writer. Abbott reads a lot of true crime, and there is often a little snippet that will intrigue her such as the actual case—in which one girl confessed a crime to her friend—that loosely inspired her novel. "I was figuring how to turn this into a book when I read a quote that says, 'You don't have a self unless you have a secret.'" Every secret, Abbott argued, becomes foundational to who you are. "Our secrets become us." Photos ©2018 William NeumannWe are currently offering this content for free. Sign up now to activate your personal profile, where you can save articles for future viewing
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