
As part of serving on the Board of Trustees
of the library, I have the opportunity to attend
many workshops and special events. Last June,
I went to the Book Expo in
New York City. If you are not familiar with this
event, it is probably the most important event
in the publishing business. It is open only to
book sellers, librarians and those in the publishing
field. So unless you fit in one of those categories,
you can not go. Advanced copies of books are
given away for free, as well as promotional materials
such as bookmarks, book bags and posters. Honestly,
I spent the day walking around in utter amazement
as publishers basically threw books at you hoping
that you would like their author and eventually
purchase their books for your organization. Many
authors attend the event, tirelessly signing
their books. I met Melissa Banks, Jack Klugman
and Carly Phillips to name a few. As an avid
reader, let's just say it is like being
a kid in a candy store! However, as with any
event, there is just not enough room for everyone
to be there. For the authors that can not attend,
their books are piled nicely in stacks randomly
placed around the exhibition hall for distribution.
It just so happens that
on that day I stumbled upon the book MOST
WANTED. I will be the first to tell you that I do judge
a book by its cover. I know what you're
thinking, but at least I am honest! While my
genre of choice is romance, I do like to read
a mystery every once in a while. However, I
picked this book up solely for my husband who
reads mostly crime stories. The cover was intriguing
and the book jacket made it sound like a scene
right out of C. S.I., one of his favorite television
shows. Well, my gut instincts were right. He
could not say enough positive things about
this debut novel. He passed the book along
to my mom who read the book in a day. Not only
was he hooked, but my mom became a Michele
Martinez fan as well. With two glowing recommendations,
I was convinced that this book must be a winner.
I put aside my romance novels and delved in.
After a few late nights of staying up way past
my bedtime, I finished it. Moms (and sometimes
husbands) are always right. Find this book in our catalog.
As I have mentioned before, I lead a book club
for stay-at-home moms and I knew this murder
mystery would pique their interest. Even though
they do not come out and say it, I know they
may not particularly care for all of my selections,
especially the romances. So, I crossed my fingers
and sent Michele an e-mail asking her to call
in for our discussion. Most of the time, I never
get a response. To my surprise, Michele immediately
e-mailed me back and enthusiastically agreed.
We corresponded via e-mail for about a month
or so and set up the date.
When the night arrived,
we all gathered around the speaker phone at
the library and listened to Michele answer
each and every question that we asked of her
in full detail. She was funny, informative
and so down-to-earth. We had such a good time
that afterwards, we sent her a photograph of
our book club so she could “meet” all
of us. If you go to her web site, you can see
the photo displayed in her photo album. Honestly,
how cool is that? If I had to describe her in
one word, it would have to be gracious. Michele
Martinez is a class act. I am so honored to be
able to call her a friend.
Here is what she had to
say…………
JEN: What made you leave behind your successful
law career and become an author? Has writing
always been a secret passion of yours?
MICHELE: I went through a lot of years struggling
to balance being a prosecutor with being a mom
to my two boys (who are now 6 and 9). It was
a tremendous amount of stress, but I loved the
job and felt very committed to it. Finally, while
I was in the midst of doing a case on a very
brutal push-in robbery crew, I started having
really bad nightmares. One of the nightmares
was so vivid that I woke up and wrote it down
the next day, and decided it would make a really
cool opening scene for a book. Once I realized
that, I became possessed with the idea of writing
this novel that was developing in my head. That
nightmare became the push-in robbery sequence
in Most Wanted and led to my career
switch.
JEN: Surely the most obvious question, but one which we all want to know, is
your character Melanie modeled after yourself?
MICHELE: Melanie and I share a number of important
characteristics. We were both federal prosecutors
and moms, and struggling to make those two roles
fit together. We both grew up in modest circumstances,
of half-Puerto Rican heritage, but them went
to Ivy League schools and became professionals
and had top deal with the self-confidence issues
that creates. Other than that, I would have to
say Melanie is really her own person. She has
a different family, marriage, child, office,
apartment etc. etc. and that all adds up to not
being so much modeled after me.
JEN: Were you still working as a prosecutor when you wrote Most Wanted?
MICHELE: When I started it, yes. But I didn't begin writing in earnest
until after I left the U.S. Attorney's Office.
JEN: How did your peers feel about you writing a criminal suspense novel? Has
anyone confronted you about a character appearing to have some of his/her
similar character traits?
MICHELE: My peers were supportive, but yes, some people definitely asked if
Bernadette was based on my old boss. (She isn't! My old boss was tough,
but she had a heart of gold.) A lot of my peers openly say they want to do
just what I have done and ask for my advice.
JEN: Describe for us how you felt when you were a prosecutor when you crossed
the police tape and entered a crime scene. What thoughts would run through
your head?
MICHELE: I was always struck by how the crimes committed out in the open, in
and among lots of people. At least that was true in New York. I remember
once going to the scene of a particularly brutal murder I was presenting
evidence about to a grand jury, though I went there long after the fact.
(Often, we relied on autopsy and crime scene photos rather than visits because
the cases were assigned to us well after the crimes took place.) In this
case, the murder occurred in a garage that was part of a complex of perhaps
six single-car garages all attached together. I had this image in my head
of some weird, isolated garage in the middle of nowhere, but it was just
a normal garage, with lots of people around. The only place I visited that
truly seemed scary was a big landfill out in Brooklyn that was used as a
dumping ground for bodies by both organized crime and a lot of street gangs.
That place, you could walk through it and because it was actually isolated
and creepy, you felt like murders could take place there. But mostly, crime
scenes just seemed strangely normal.
JEN: In your opinion, how accurate is the television show C.S.I.?
MICHELE: Sorry, I have never seen C.S.I. But I can tell you that “The
Wire” on HBO is phenomenally accurate.
JEN: Most Wanted was so fast-paced
and suspenseful. How did you go about writing
it? Plot or characters first? Outline form or
simply chapter by chapter?
MICHELE: Thank you! With Most Wanted,
I wrote and re-wrote and revised it so many times.
I did have an outline, and I also revised the
outline a lot. I always write a detailed outline
before I begin a book-length work, and then deviate
from it at least some. Only once I start writing
do I really figure out what is going on in the
story. The whole process is very strange and
magical. I always feel that the story pre-exists
and I am living it along with the characters.
JEN: How long did it take for you to complete
the book? How many publishers did you solicit
before landing a contract?
MICHELE: Most Wanted took
about 2 ½ years
from when I began writing it to when it was sold,
but I was not working full-time on writing it
during that period. I was also doing things like
figuring out how to get an agent, how to write
a query letter, how to network to meet an agent,
waiting to hear from my agent, etc. All that
took time.
JEN: What does it feel like interviewing a criminal in jail?
MICHELE: It's a little uncomfortable,
but you get used to it. There is a palpable sense
that you are the only woman there among hundreds
of men who don't see women a lot. There
is a bit of restrained violence, but no real
sense that you are in danger because you are
there with your agents, and there are COs all
around. Being locked in feels claustrophobic!
In terms of actually interviewing defendants,
again, I never feel threatened because they were
handcuffed and the agents were right there. Most
of the defendants would lie a lot in the beginning,
and you would have to work through that. Generally
speaking, interviewing defendants was completely
fascinating and often really exhilarating, especially
if you felt you were getting really good information.
JEN: In the novel, what made you choose to have Melanie and Steve in an unhappy
marriage?
MICHELE: This is going
to sound like a non-answer, but it's not. It goes back to what I said
about how the story pre-exists and I experience
it along with the characters. I don't feel
like I chose to give Melanie an unhappy marriage.
That's just the situation she was in when
she came to me.
JEN: Throughout the novel, I constantly feel
sorry for baby Maya as she is shuffled from one
sitter to another. Does this accurately depict
the life of a prosecutor?
MICHELE: I think it accurately depicts moments in
the life of any woman who has a truly demanding
job and little support from her husband. For
Melanie, though, remember that this book takes
place over a period of less than a week, and
a week in which she is working on her most demanding
case ever. Bernadette criticizes her for the
fact that she's been rushing out the door
at five ever since Maya was born. So before the
Benson case, Melanie was home a lot more.
JEN: In the book, Melanie blamed herself for the deaths of her witnesses. Was
it difficult for you to clear your head at the end of the day and leave the
job at work?
MICHELE: Yes. The job was very stressful that way. Plus, and this is especially
true when I was deputy chief of narcotics and responsible for in-taking all
drug cases in the district. I used to get paged all the time at night.
JEN: The prosecutor in Most Wanted is involved in solving the crime
as well as apprehending the suspect. Is that typical? I always thought that
was more of the detective's work.
MICHELE: As a federal
prosecutor, I spent more time investigating
cases than trying them or appearing in court.
What I didn't do was
go out and confront the suspects in person- that
part (like when Melanie ends up confronting Slice
in the burned-out basement) is fiction, thankfully.
JEN: If your book were made into a movie, who
would you want to see play Melanie and Dan?
MICHELE: That's
so hard!! For Melanie, how about Eva Mendes?
For Dan, wow, I have never found the right
guy. Who do you think?
JEN:
I would like to see my favorite Desperate
Housewife, Eva Longoria, play Melanie
and Matthew McConaughey play Dan. If you had
to choose 3 adjectives to describe yourself,
what would they be?
MICHELE: Optimistic, dedicated, caring
JEN:
I know that your new book The Finishing
School was released on my birthday, January
3, 2006. (Good choice of date, by the way!!)
What can you tell us about it? Find this book in our catalog.
MICHELE: The story opens
with Melanie summoned from her bed in the middle
of the night a couple of weeks before Christmas
to view the bodies of two beautiful teenagers
found dead in a Park Avenue penthouse. Melanie's instincts tell
her that what initially looks like a drug overdose
is in truth something even more sinister. The
girls were students at an exclusive Manhattan
private school and the daughters of wealthy families
with dangerous secrets to protect. They were
also deeply involved in a dangerous New York
City nightclub scene. Melanie is committed to
finding the truth, but she has to contend with
the complications of her own personal life, as
she is paired again with the hard-to-resist FBI
agent Dan O'Reilly, and as the investigation
takes her to Puerto Rico, where she confronts
her own troubled past.
JEN: Any public appearances scheduled?
MICHELE: Yes! My tour started in January and
I would love for everyone to come out to one
of my events and meet me. Here is my schedule!
Wednesday, April 26; 2:45
p.m.
Edgars Symposium panel
New York, New York
Thursday, April
27;
9:00 a.m.
Texas Library Association Annual Conference
George R. Brown Convention Center
Houston, Texas
Wednesday-Saturday, May 17-20
Romantic Times Booklovers Convention
Daytona Beach, Florida
(Panel on May 17, time TBD)
Tuesday-Wednesday, June 22-28
American Library Association Annual Conference
New Orleans, Louisiana
Thursday-Sunday, June 29-July
2
International Thriller Writers' ThrillerFest
2006
Phoenix, Arizona
Thursday-Sunday, September
28-October 1
Bouchercon 2006
Madison, Wisconsin |
I hope you have enjoyed my interview with Michele
Martinez. Please be sure to e-mail me let me
know what you think of her writing. I have no
doubt that you will become a Michele Martinez
fan. Just let me know if you start a fan club.
I want to join!
Until next month…..Jen
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