I have actually read this book several times. I yearn for a sequel! This is a tender story about a retired school teacher and her late husband’s best friend on a quest to find out the true story of the JFK assassination as the 50th anniversary of the day approaches. Olivia has always accepted the facts as presented and never questioned any of it until an encounter with a strange man in the grocery store who asks if she thought Oswald did it.
Having never thought about it much she decides to do a little research. She reads several books, watches documentaries on tv and finds she has more questions than answers and so decides she wants to go to Dallas. When she tells her friend and neighbor Bill about her plans he does everything he can to talk her out of it but Olivia is determined and so Bill makes plans to join her on the journey that will change their lives.
I too, always accepted the facts as presented about the assassination until I read this book. I began to look at things differently too!
Elizabeth Horton-Newton is an awesome story teller. Her characters come alive and you feel as if you know them. Olivia’s growth is something I particularly enjoyed watching. I was also thrilled to read a love story that didn’t involve twenty somethings but was a mature relationship that grew from a good friendship.
This is one of my very favorite books and I highly recommend it! I give it 5 0ut of 5 stars!
Dragonfly Books is delighted to share news from Electric Eclectic Books. Two of our authors have novelettes with them. But in addition to Elizabeth Horton-Newton and Neil Douglas Newton, Electric Eclectic has an excellent selection of novelettes by many fine indie writers.
On April 10th author Paul White released his latest addition to their catalog, “A New Summer Garden”. This is a twisted tale of crime and revenge. Elizabeth has read and reviewed the book and you can get her opinion on her blog, Between the Beats.
“There are thousands of stories in Central City. Here are just a few of them from the mind of Adam C Mitchell, three hardboiled noir novellas and a gripping short, all following private eyes, detectives and crooks all set against the backdrop of the 1940’s…”
A collection of stories born out of the dark dimension that is known simply as Netherspace.A dimension ruled by the Macabre, by demons and things that give nightmares causes to worry. Are you really ready to follow travellers, monks, hunters, and necromancers and more in this dark place? Are you prepared for Netherspace?
As publishers, we like to learn about our authors. What makes these creative folk tick? Where do their ideas come from? What secrets lie within those imaginative brains?
Meet Adam C. Mitchell whose ability to step into the past and write some of the most intriguing crime noir tales on Amazon. After reading his interview you undoubtedly want to read his books.
Interview with Adam Mitchell
Q1/When did you first start writing and when did you first write professionally?
I wrote a lot during my time at secondary school but as I’m heavily dyslexic I never did anything with it until a story was picked up for a local anthology. Which after I left school in 2003 gave me the seed of an idea to try doing something with it. I have been writing professionally as an Indie author since 2010, which is when I first wrote a short story which later became PART 1 of THE LOST ANGEL, which was published a year later.
Q2/ Your books are crime noir. That’s unusual in today’s book market. What attracts you to that genre?
What spurred me originally to write noir, especially noir based around the 1940’s and not the more modern noir stylings, was as I struggled at school I was often in the school library taking refuge from English lessons, this was where a librarian helped me get to grips with reading properly and also encouraged me to read things I wouldn’t normally have read. This was where my love for authors like Raymond Chandler, Dashiel Hammet, James Elroy, and other such authors came from.
The other thing I love about the 1940’s noir style and especially the crime markets set in it, as there were no forensics (which I find a right pain to write about). It was also a more human style of writing focusing more on characters, their lives, their motivations, and failings. Rather than just the simple story.
Q3/ Have you ever written in any other genre?
I have dabbled in other genres. Currently, I have a science fiction short story collection called NETHERSPACE, and a pulp-styled adventure novel called EYE OF THE FIRE, both out on Kindle and paperback. I am also close to publishing a semi-autobiographical satirical novel through Dragonfly Books called, BEER, WOMEN AND THE WRITTEN WORD, which will be on both Kindle and Paperback. There are also plans for a classic styled Space Opera book on the horizon with a touch of classic noir thrown in for good measure. Keep your eyes open on my author page and Dragonfly’s pages for more details. (Adam’s Website Adam C. Mitchell
Q4/ What kind of books do you read? Who are some of your favorite authors?
I devour almost any hardboiled Noir writer who writes old school noir, but I have a small soft spot for one or two modern noir writers most notably James Elroy. Currently, I am reading a lot of Charles Bukowski’s books; the style and feel of his books lends itself to how I like to write.
Q5/Can you remember the first book you read?
WOW, that’s a tricky question as due to my dyslexic barrier I avoided books until I was in my late teen. The first one I read cover to cover after the joy of books and the written words had me in its grasp was Audlous Huxley’s BRAVE NEW WORLD, followed shortly by THE RINGWOLD saga by Larry Niven.
Q6/Your characters are very realistic. Do you base them on real people or are they straight from your imagination?
That’s a loaded question really, who wants to be based on a baddie, or someone that gets killed off gruesomely, lol. But yes the characters mainly from THE LOST ANGELwere loosely based on actors who’d inspired me, most notably their mannerisms rather than their appearance, with the main PI character and Main Character Eddy being based on Nathan Fillion (PI) and Ray Lolita. Other than THE LOST ANGEL the characters are purely out of my imagination.
Q7/Who is your favorite character that you created and why?
Out of all the Noir books the two characters that stood out for me were JACK MALONE the PI from THE LOST ANGEL, (a recurring character in most of my books). I loved this character because I built and wrote him around all the great PI detectives on the silver screen as well as all the clichés to for that matter. The second character I fell in love with was the dame that would later become his wife, PEGGY ELLEN, in the new book, THE QUEEN AND THE VIPER. A female character that I created to break all the stereotypical molds of the female leads in this 1940’s genre being weak or just eye candy and constantly in need of saving. This character can kick ass and take names better than most men in the books I write. Also, I hope to use her to springboard a series of 1940’s superhero books. (Still a pipedream but, THE QUEEN AND THE VIPER has set the groundwork.)
Q8/When you write, do you have a specific method you use? Do you write straight through from beginning to end or do you write pieces at a time?
Generally, as I write in parts, rather than chapters, I start with a character and then put him or her in a situation which would form for example the end of Part 1 and then work backward, thinking how would A, B, C, and D happen to get to that situation. The books kind of spurs from that, I then do the same method for each part of the book and I usually write four. Making sure each one links up smoothly.
Q9/If you compare your writing to another author, who would it be?
I don’t like to compare my work to other writers as everyone is different, however, I think no matter who we are, even if we don’t know it, subconsciously we borrow and emulate authors or books we love. So if I had to say who do I emulate if only a little I’d say Chandler.
10/If one of your books could be made into a film, which one would you choose? Who would you want to play the different roles?
Now that’s the dream and again I think I ’d choose THE QUEEN AND THE VIPER, and have Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone play the PI Jack Malone and his future wife Peggy Ellen. With Josh Brolin to play the aging hero THE VIPER. Of course, if I had the chance to see this on the silver screen I’d have to do it like they did in the 2006 film THE GOOD GERMAN and have it all in black and white with a retro feel about it.
Q11Are you working on anything right now? Would you like to share the plot?
I’m working on a few things like I said before. A space opera book with a hint of noir, but that’s still a pipe dream at the moment. But the one that should be out soon once the editing gods have cast their eye over it, is the Semi-autobiographical book BEER, WOMEN AND THE WRITTEN WORD, I won’t give too much away other than to say yes it’s based heavily on my life during the birth of my daughter, the main character is again heavily based on little old me, and it’s got a hint of the Bukowski and John Fante style to it, is un-politically correct and very adult and naughty in places. Here’s the blurb below.
“The book you have in your hands follows the path of Mitchell’s
alter ego Harry Block.
Through the High’s and Low’s of a job he hates,
Impending parenthood, the trials and misadventures of
redemption and a rather successful career in alcoholism.
All the while dealing with the stuggles of the written word
And writers block (No pun intended)”
12/ In addition to writing books, I see you design your book covers. Have you done covers for any other authors?
I do dabble and have done a few covers for indie authors Samantha L. Latham, D.M Pennington, and my dad’s, Charles Mithell’s debut novel Valon. As a rule, I don’t charge the rather high rates a lot of designers do, as all us indie’s have tight budgets and every penny counts. Instead, all I ask is they buy a paperback of mine and then review it.