Jess Lourey is the author of the Lefty-nominated Murder-by-Month series set in Battle Lake, Minnesota.
Thank you for letting me interview you, Jess Lourey.
PBS: Your Murder-by-the-Month Mystery series is set in a small town, Battle Lake Minnesota. What lead you to setting this series there? Do you hail from a small town yourself?
JL: I grew up in Paynesville, Minnesota, a small town not unlike Battle Lake. Battle Lake is also a real town, and I was living there when I wrote May Day, the first in the series. They say write what you know, and I’ve always been fascinated by the small town sociology.
PBS: Your main character, Mira James is a bit bawdy, but at the same time has her own moral code that she will not break. Can you tell us about her and how she came to be the heroine of your series?
JL: I loosely based her appearance and hometown on mine so that I wouldn’t have to remember those details, and she grew out of that, this brave, wounded, neurotic, curious, self-deprecating amateur sleuth.
PBS: My favorite Mira James line in May Day is, “Plus there’s not much to do with a four-year degree in English, short of opening a English store.” What are your favorite Mira lines?
JL: Ha! That’s actually one of my favorite lines, too. I have another line, in August Moon, that I really like. Mira is falling for a nerdy woodtick museum curator, and they “bat their eyes at each other like two geeks comparing pocket protectors.”
Here’s my new favorite paragraph, from the upcoming November Hunt (March 2012):
The thermostat on my car was out, or so I figured as I used the tender meat of my hand to scrape a peephole on the inside of my windshield. Thirty years in Minnesota teaches you these handy bits: mosquitoes are attracted to white clothing and pretty much anything else you’d like to wear, a three-party government with a former professional wrestler at the helm isn’t the laugh riot you’d think it’d be, and if your car runs great except for the heater, it’s probably your thermostat.
PBS: Do you already have a plot for your books before you begin writing a new book, or does the plot develop as you write?
JL: When it comes to writing mysteries, I’m a plotter, not a pantser (as in “seat of your pants”). I like to have a rough outline with all the major plot points and the ending sketched out. The story evolves as I write, which is a lot of fun, but I need that road map or I feel like a cornered animal.
PBS: Can you tell us a bit about your newest book, October Fest? And was it fun to write?
JL: I always think they were fun to write when I’m all done with them. 😉 October Fest was inspired by our current political climate in the U.S., where it seems like being mean and vague are more valued than being kind and clear. In the book, two politicians come to Battle Lake, both of them running for a House seat. Here’s the official description:
What do you get when you cross beer, a conservative politician who keeps planting her foot in her mouth, and polka music? Octoberfest in Battle Lake, Minnesota, that’s what. Sarah Glokkmann, hot on the campaign trail, faces off with Arnold Swydecker in a debate held at the cusp of Battle Lake’s premier fall festival. When a too-curious reporter covering the event winds up on the no-breathing list, all fingers point at Glokkmann. But is she being framed? Mira James couldn’t care less. That is, until her best friend ends up in intensive care and Mira must solve the murder to save her friend.
Kirkus Reviews call the book “…funny, ribald, and brimming with small-town eccentrics.” If I manage to make people laugh when they read and guess up until the end, I’ll have done my job.
PBS: What can your readers expect from you in the future? Do you have any plans for books outside of this series?
JL: Thank you for asking! I’ve written a historical novel that is fully-drafted but not yet complete. The novel takes place on an Indian boarding school in 1893 South Dakota. I also have begun work on a young adult series with an edge, and have about 60 pages fleshed out on a magical realism novel that looks at three generations of gifted women.
The Murder-by-Month series are my first babies, though. Last week, I sent November Hunt, the seventh in the series, off to my publisher. I’m thrilled with how that one turned out. It’s my favorite in the series so far. I’m under contract for Death Loves December and plan to have that hammered out before next March. By the way, the title is temporary, so if any of your readers have December title suggestions, send them my way! (www.jesslourey.com)
Comment on the Interview! Five lucky winners will get a signed copy of one of Jess Lourey’s books! The winners will be chosen at random from the comments and we will announce the winners on Tuesday, March 15, 2011.
Thank you everyone, for your comments! We will announce the winners of the signed copies of Jess Lourey’s books right here in tomorrow’s Blog!
Thank you Jess for your interview, comments and for sending us 5 books for our members to enjoy! You Rock!