Tag Archives: crime fiction

Natural Selection – Felony Stupid Criminals

Once in a blue moon, you stumble over a true crime story that gives you faith in the theory of Natural Selection.  The human gene pool is also suffering from the ravages of global warming and the contents are evaporating at a rapid clip.  The meth-riddled, video game shortened attention, deficit disordered strands of DNA […]

Teaching an Old Dog New Social Media Tricks

“What do you mean, I need to use social media? I’m publishing a book, and I don’t care what Ashton Kutcher had for breakfast!” Well, the conversation with my publisher didn’t exactly go like that, but it was pretty close. I am a dinosaur. I admit it. A year ago, what I knew about social […]

Behind the Cover of Little River

You can’t judge a book by its cover?  Yeah, maybe.  I admit when I browse the aisles in a bookstore, or scroll through the e-book offerings in Amazon, or Barnes and Noble, I look for something more than a flashy, photoshopped image.  I think I’m like most readers when I expect something more – something […]

My Little River Publishing Journey

Every writer’s road to getting a novel published is unique.  No one takes the same turns, makes the same decisions and agrees to compromise in the same manner.  Yes, I said compromise and before the cries of artistic freedom and censorship fall down from the heavens, let me explain how Little River came alive. The […]

Behind the Scenes – Crime in the Caribbean

After my first trip to Jamaica, I wanted to bring my fictional story about human trafficking to life.  I knew the basic plot lines that I wanted to write, but my two decades of work in the criminal justice system didn’t give me enough to flesh out my story.  I’ve seen  the extortion of prison […]

Little River

During a recent trip to Jamaica, I had some down time waiting for my connecting flight and then again waiting in the customs lines in Montego Bay.  My mind wandered, as it often does, but this time,  it drifted and  formed the framework of my novel.  The plot line lay in the faces and unspoken […]