SPEED CITY SISTERS IN CRIME

SPEED CITY SISTERS IN CRIME
Showing posts with label Stephen Terrell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stephen Terrell. Show all posts

Sunday, November 10, 2019

Speed City SinC Member Releases New Novel: Stephen Terrell's Last Train to Stratton


Stephen Terrell, member of Speed City Sisters in Crime, has released a new novel, Last Train to Stratton.  The novel is available in print and eBook formats on Amazon.com.
Janis Thornton, author of Too Good a Girl, commented: "Stephen Terrell’s Last Train to Stratton sneaks up on you and yanks you in. The writing is as sensitive as it is tough, and the unforgettable characters are as familiar as they are fresh. Simply put, Last Train to Stratton is a gripping, heartfelt read that will stay with you long after you finish it."
Set in the years between the end of the Vietnam War and the Nation’s Bicentennial, the book follows Zach Carlson, a deeply cynical Chicago crime beat reporter. When Zach’s life in Chicago shatters, he moves to a small Indiana town to run a weekly newspaper, seeking to lose himself in the mundane dullness of small-town America.
Instead of tranquility, Zach finds a town trying to cope with its own fear, anxiety and anger. When Stratton suffers its first murder in decades, Zach’s investigation uncovers secrets that tear away the town’s veneer of innocence and force Zach to face the still-open wounds that eviscerated his life.
This is Terrell’s third novel. It follows two well-received Kisti Newcombe legal thrillers, Stars Fall and The First Rule, both of which are still available on Amazon.com. Below is the opening Prologue to Last Train to Stratton.

PROLOGUE

The times when our lives change, when everything before is altered and everything after is different, are seldom recognized as they happen, rarely understood for the ripples that extend beyond the horizon to places we cannot see. Life does not come with highway signposts that warn “Danger Ahead” or “Go Slow,” or perhaps more importantly “Do Not Enter.”
Robert Frost wrote of two roads diverging in a wood, but most watershed junctures are not so obvious, so visible, so tangible. Instead, significance is concealed among daily comings and goings. The import of decisions and events may not appear for years – decades – a lifetime later, when in quiet reflection, we glimpse the ghosts in our memories, discerning faint shadows of people and happenings that, knowingly or unknowingly, shaped not just the path of our lives, but the way we perceive the human experience. 
While the tumultuous 1960s shook the foundations of society, I cruised through those years on a steady, seemingly well-planned course. I was a budding star in the newsroom, my career progress measured in headlines and bylines. My personal life flourished in an isolated singularity of booze, cigarettes, baseball and uncommitted sex.
But beginning in the fall of 1972, my life transformed like shifting tectonic plates that cause the ground to fall away and reveal an unfamiliar world around me. Looking back on a brief window between Nixon’s zenith and the Nation’s Bicentennial, I can see those transformative moments stacking up in my life one upon another like so much cordwood. Some jarred me instantly like a stray hand on high voltage. Others were part of the mundane daily routine, their significance overlooked until long after the concrete had set.
Such was the case in June 1975. My life shattered, I sat in a cluttered office in a western suburb of Chicago, interviewing for a new job for the first time in more than a decade. It was a small-town job, and in its dullness I expected to find a numbing balm for the pain that scorched my life.
I was wrong.

Thursday, October 18, 2018

When the Writer Loses Control of the Story and the Characters Takes Over


The path a short story takes from inspiration to completion is as wide and varied as short stories themselves. Some authors start with the opening scene while others start with the conclusion and work backward. Some do both. But sometimes the story takes on a life of its own, far different from the author’s original intent.  Author Stephen Terrell discusses the course of creating his short story “Unexpected Gifts.”

“Unexpected Gifts” is the concluding short story in “Homicide for the Holidays,” a collection of a dozen tales of murder, mayhem and even redemption included in Speed City Sisters in Crime's Christmas offering. The hardcover anthology also includes a dozen recipes, each related to a story in the book.  "Homicide for the Holidays” is the perfect Christmas gift for the readers or cooks on your list. The book is now available for pre-order (see below for links).  Release is set for November 1.

Stories Take A Life of Their Own
By Stephen Terrell

My short story “Unexpected Gifts” is quite different than the story I started to write. When I typed out the first words on my computer, the story I envisioned was a dark tragedy of greed, prejudice, and misunderstanding set against a Christmas backdrop. 
But a funny thing happened on the way to the final pages. The characters and the story itself would not let me write what I had in mind. The characters had a different story -- a true Christmas story -- to tell.
“That’s crazy,” you may say.  “You're the one writing the story. You can write anything you want.”
But most writers know that’s not true. A story sometimes takes on its own life and will not let the author have his way. That's what happened with "Unexpected Gifts." The resolution of the story (no, I won’t give it away) is quite different than what was intended when the first pages were written. 
I must admit that the characters knew best. The final version is a much better story than the one I originally planned. Here are the opening paragraphs of “Unexpected Gifts.”

 “Oh, baby, baby, baby! ! !  Momma’s gotta pee.”
Maria Wafford pushed her foot harder on the brake pedal and pulled her knees closer together. She held her breath. If something didn’t move soon, she was going to pee all over the heated white leather seats in her new Mercedes sedan. 
Johnny Mathis came over the seasonal satellite radio channel singing something about marshmallows and Christmas. Maria tried to sing along to get her mind off the intense urge in her bladder, but she couldn’t concentrate enough to follow the words.
“Hurry up. Please!”  The unhearing line of cars creeped forward a car length, then two.  Then stopped.



If you want to know what happens,  you’ll need to buy Homicide for the Holidays and read "Unexpected Gifts." The hardcover is a perfect holiday gift for any reader on your list. 
Pre-orders are now available on Amazon.com (click here)BarnesandNoble.com (click here) and Walmart.com (click here).





Thursday, March 8, 2018

Sprintered Silence: Outstanding Mystery Set in Little-Known World of Irish Travelers

Sprintered Silence by Susan Furlong
Reviewed by Stephen Terrell

Susan Furlong has expertly crafted a wonderful mystery that propels the reader into an entirely new part of Americana that few know exists -- The Irish Travelers who live an isolated existence in the mountains of Appalachian Tennessee and other parts of the South. 

The Travelers really exist. They do, as their name implies, travel, following the seasons doing handiwork throughout the United States. They are a closed society, untrusting of the "settled" outside world. In their world, Susan Furlong finds a textured canvass against which to place her richly woven characters. 

Brynn Callahan is caught between the world of the Travelers and the settled world. She has returned scarred both inside and out from her experience in retrieving bodies in Iraq. Her only true companion is Wilco, her search dog who was left deaf and crippled from the same explosion that severely injured Brynn. When the body of a Traveler woman is found by Brynn and Wilco in the woods near the Traveler settlement of Bone Gap, it sets in motion a series of events that will tear at Brynn, her family and the entire Traveler community.

This is a marvelous first book in what hopefully will be a long and successful series. MUST READ for any mystery fan.

* Susan Furlong is a member of Speed City Sisters in Crime and the author of 12 mysteries.

Thursday, October 12, 2017

Saturday, October 14: Great Day to Meet Speed City Sisters In Crime Authors

This Saturday is a great opportunity to meet our member authors at three events scattered around
Central Indiana.

Stephen Terrell and Russ Eberhart will be at the Indianapolis Author Fair at Indianapolis Public Library Central Branch. The event runs from 10:30 until 4 p.m.  Book signings are followed that evening by a dinner honoring Speed City member and award-winning thriller writer Lori Rader-Day.

Cheryl Shore, Diana Catt and MB Dabney will be signing books at the Greenwood Public Library Author Fair at Greenwood Public Library. The event runs from 1 p.m to 4 p.m

Janis Thornton, Brenda Stewart and Brigitte Kephardt will be signing books at the Elwood Chili Cook Off Food Festival in Elwood, Indiana.  The event runs from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Hope to see you at one of those events.

Sunday, October 1, 2017

Book Review: Northwest Angle -- Another Cork O'Connor Mystery by William Kent Krueger

Northwest Angle by William Kent Krueger
Reviewed by Stephen Terrell

I'm a fan of the Cork O'Connor mystery series, and Northwest Angle is no exception. 

This eleventh book in the series starts with a derecho -- a horrific storm of straight line winds that occasionally sweeps across the prairies. In this case, it sweeps across Lake of the Woods on the US / Canada border, scattering the O'Connor family that is vacationing on the lake. When Cork's daughter Jenny finds herself on one of the thousands of islands in the Lake, she discovers a young woman's body and not far away an infant hidden in a covered hole.

The discovery kicks off the mystery that includes the infant, a mysterious Indian smuggler, a blind Indian wiseman, a reclusive religious group and a cast of quirky characters found on this isolated area that is the northernmost point of the contiguous 48 states. 

As with all of William Kent Krueger's books, it is well written, well paced, filled with tension and plot twists. The characters digress into discussions of religion and philosophy a little too much for my taste, and there is one death that seems a bit out of character and more of a plot point to simply the ending. But this is well worth picking up for a cozy ready on a brisk fall evening.

Sunday, September 24, 2017

Jay County Public Library Presentation Sept. 25 Kicks Off Busy Fall for Speed City Members

A visit to the Jay County Public Library in Portland on Monday, September 25 kicks off a busy fall of presentations and book signings for the Speed City Sisters in Crime and its members.
On Monday at 6:30, several members will be at the Jay County Public Library to discuss writing, The Fine Art of Murder short story collection, and their own books. Taking part will be Brenda Stewart, Stephen Terrell, Russ Eberhardt and N. W. Campbell.
Other upcoming events:

Saturday, September 30, 1-4 p.m., Indianapolis Writers Center: Author and member Larry Sweazy will teach a time management class for writers titled “How Much Time Do You Really Think You Have?”

Tuesday, October 3, 6 pm: Mystery Roundtable at Coal Yard Coffee Shop,
Irvington. Sponsored by the Indianapolis Public Library Irvington Branch, it will feature author and Speed City member Larry Sweazy as moderator.

Saturday, October 7, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m: Porter Books and Bread (Indianapolis), Russ Eberhart will be signing his latest book.

Saturday, October 14: Indianapolis Author Fair at Indianapolis Public Library Central Branch;  Greenwood Public Library Author Fair at Greenwood Public Library; and Elwood Chili Cook Off Food Festival. Speed City Chapter members will be meeting readers at each event, signing The Fine Art of Murder as well as their own books.


Wednesday, October, 25, 2017, 7:30 p.m.   University of Indianapolis, Schwitzer Student Center, Room 010:   Indiana Writers Spotlight Featuring Anthony and Agatha Award-winning author and Speed City Chapter member Lori Rader-Day.

Thursday, October 26: College Park Book Club – Members will be discussing their writing, the inspiration for their short stories, and signing copies of The Fine Art of Murder.

Saturday Nov. 11, 1pm – 4 pm at Indianapolis Writers Center: Author and chapter member Larry Sweazy teaches an overview of the art and craft of mysteries, titled “It’s a Mystery.”

November 16:  Ivy Tech Day of Writing, IFC Commons at the Fall Creek campus. Members will be meeting with student to discuss and encourage writing.


⇨Mark your calendar:   Indiana Historical Society Book Fair – December 4,  featuring The Fine Art of Murder.