Sunday, July 01, 2012

PERILOUS COVE - Rich Bullock - One Free Ebook


Rich, I was thrilled when you told me your debut book was releasing as an ebook. Tell us how much of yourself you write into your characters.
No doubt frighteningly more than I realize. I consciously draw on experiences from childhood, college, vacations, marriage, raising kids, skills and talents, and careers. For example, in Perilous Cove, I used a vacation excursion we had on a whale watching boat, as well as years living near the Pacific Ocean. The result is a character with a job as a tour guide on a whale watching boat.

My mom had a strong personality, but she also liked to have fun and had some great sayings and opinions on life. She’s always in the books in some form, male or female.

And something that many women writers find interesting: my main protagonist is always female. This is a challenge, because I know very little about fashion, makeup, etc. I guess that’s why the suspense genre works for me: If I get in a fashion bind, I can always blow up something or crash a car to render what my characters are wearing inconsequential. You think I’m kidding?

What is the quirkiest thing you have ever done?
Hey, I’m from California—quirky is normal here! But for me I think it was after I finished my first year of college in Dallas. On almost the spur of the moment, my roommate (another Californian) and I decided to take a detour on the way home. We headed north in his ’56 Ford pickup, through Colorado, Yellowstone, up into Canada and across to Victoria, then down through Washington and Oregon to California—all for about $95 each. Those were the days of really cheap gas and no cell phones. We camped out, and slept in the truck when it rained.

When I was in college and borrowed a guy’s car to get to student teaching at the high school, I wouldn’t buy the gas if it was more than $.15 per gallon. When did you first discover that you were a writer?
I’ve always been a voracious reader and, like many readers, I thought it would be cool to have my name on a book on the shelf. But it wasn’t until I was in my fifties that I began learning the craft of writing fiction. Six years later, I entered the 2009 Zondervan First Novel Contest and got a call that I made it into the semi-finals—and that they had to have the completed manuscript in a few weeks. It was only about 80% done. Yikes! When I typed The End, I think that was the moment it struck me: I had written an entire book. I made the deadline.

Tell us the range of the kinds of books you enjoy reading.
Through grade school and teen years, it was exclusively science fiction. Then I branched out to adventure (Clive Cussler-types), and then into mystery and suspense. When I began writing and those female characters cropped up, I began reading romances. I don’t read many. I mean, seriously, do all women have that much angst in their lives? *Note to romance writers: Enough with the second-guessing of whether he loves me or loves me not.

I also really enjoy YA (young adult). Those stories bring a sense of returning to what I love about story. And I guess this list wouldn’t be complete without revealing my guilty pleasure: vampire and paranormal stories. I know, I know, but how can you not want to see how the beautiful, intelligent girl falls for the bad boy bloodsucker?

How do you keep your sanity in our run, run, run world?
Stay away from Facebook for a few days at a time and the whole world around me goes into balance. Amazing. I know as authors we’re required to have a “platform” and all, but the whole social media thing kind of wears me out.

Now, I’m not talking about your blog, Lena. Nope, this is the best thing ever. Really. Not kidding.

Oh, and I live on an iPhone. It tells me where to go, what to do, and who to meet. I’d be a mess without it. I capture writing ideas in Evernote, and read ebooks with Kindle, Kobo, iBooks, and Nook software readers. The iPhone is my only e-reading device.

How do you choose your characters’ names?
Names are great, aren’t they? And so important to the story. I keep a running list in Evernote on my phone and jot an entry whenever I hear a great name.

In this book, Perilous Cove, I changed Natalie’s name and another key character’s name right before I finished the book. After I’d lived with the characters for so many months, the old names just didn’t feel right.

I try to pick unusual names that are memorable, but also straightforward in pronunciation. It bugs me when I read a book and I’m not sure how to pronounce a character’s name.

What is the accomplishment that you are most proud of?
I was a Campus Life leader in Youth for Christ for many years, and I worked with high school students. One guy in particular was a hard case. And while he didn’t give his life over to God in Campus Life, he did later. He went on to become a church youth director, and now pastors a new church in Santa Cruz. He credits his time in our Campus Life club as the beginning of his faith, and he’s leading many others in their faith walk. Now that’s really cool!

Yes, it is. Things like that keep our lives going and growing. If you were an animal, which one would you be, and why?
A fox. Great fur, small and fast, smart (at least in theory).

What is your favorite food?
But there are so many! Hmmm…as I ponder what I’ll have for lunch…I like just about anything Mexican, except I can’t stand cilantro. Tastes metallic to me, like a mouthful of tinfoil that short out the fillings in your teeth, you know? Well, maybe you don’t know if you love the stuff. But there isn’t much better than chips, salsa, and a great burrito.

And I always ask for more cilantro in my food. I love it. All our tastes are different. Differences make the world go round. What is the problem with writing that was your greatest roadblock, and how did you overcome it?
I have a lousy memory, so hands down it was figuring out an organization method for keeping track of scene content, character traits like hair color and type of car, ages, and clues and hints. I’d get about 50,000 words into the book and I couldn’t remember what I’d written. It took me about four years to develop the methodology using a combination of MS Word, a notebook application, and an age/year chart in Excel.

I’m working on my third book, and recently purchased Scrivener and moved the manuscript into it. There is a bit of a learning curve, but I think it’s really going to work for me.

I just keep a running file about each character and open it while I’m writing if I need to check something like that. Tell us about the featured book?
The germ of Perilous Cove began when a friend’s husband collapsed from a cerebral hemorrhage. While he was incapacitated, she dug into their finances to pay the bills and found hidden bank accounts, thousands of dollars in cash in cans in the garage, a huge life insurance policy he’d taken out on her without her knowledge, and many other suspicious things that appeared to put her safety in serious question.

In Perilous Cove, Natalie’s husband dies, leaving her with grief, debt, and a nasty mother-in-law. Now someone wants Natalie dead, and all the evidence points to her husband. She flees to the only sanctuary no one knows about, her late aunt’s lighthouse keeper’s cottage in Perilous Cove, California, where she builds a new identity and life. But there is no place safe, especially not Perilous Cove.

I’m going to love reading this book. Please give us the first.
Chapter 1

He’d killed before. Once. Not that he was particularly opposed to it.

Tarz Broderick kicked the shoe of the man sprawled against the wall. The schmuck’s head came up and his eyes slowly focused. Duct tape secured his wrists and ankles. Three outside wraps with three more in-between. Inescapable.

“Nick Moreno, I presume,” Tarz said, watching the man’s eyes dart wildly as consciousness returned. Blood ran from his temple, staining the once white dress shirt.

Tarz turned to survey the small desk area and sighed. It could have been simple, easy in and out. The office should have been deserted. But that’s why they called it work, as dear ole daddy liked to say—often right before a whipping.

Tarz yanked the handles of the filing cabinet, a four-drawer, putty-colored unit of superior quality. Locked. He didn’t have time to mess with finding a key, so he hoisted his pry bar, wedged it into the drawer crack, and drove it home with his palm.

He could have come back later if he’d known someone would be in the office, but he’d rounded the corner into the L-shaped office and there Nick had been, working under the light from a single desk lamp. Oh, well.
Plus, Tarz didn’t have time to waste. He’d promised to drop by his sister’s apartment tonight. Dumb girl had gotten pregnant by a married man. She wasn’t saying who—knew her big brother too well to give up the slimeball’s name.

Tarz shrugged and worked the bar back and forth against groaning metal. Family was family. The money for tonight’s job would buy a nice baby gift for sis, plus keep him living high for a couple of months at least.

Yeah, I’ll really like this book. How can readers find you on the Internet?
My website and blog are at www.perilousfiction.com , and I also interact with readers and other writers on Facebook at www.facebook.com/PerilousFiction . By email it’s rich@perilousfiction.com .


Thank you, Rich, for dropping by to share your new book with us.


Readers, here’s a link to the book. By using it when you order, you help support this blog.
Perilous Cove (Perilous Safety Series - Book 1)


Leave a comment for a chance to win a free copy of the book. Please tell us where you live, at least the state or territory. (Comments containing links may be subject to removal by blog owner.)

Void where prohibited; the odds of winning depend on the number of entrants. Entering the giveaway is considered a confirmation of eligibility on behalf of the enterer in accord with these rules and any pertaining local/federal/international laws.

The only notification you’ll receive is the winner post on this blog. So be sure to check back a week from Saturday to see if you won. You will have 4 weeks from the posting of the winners to claim your book.

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14 comments:

Linda Kish said...

I would love to read this book. It sounds terrific!

California

lkish77123 at gmail dot com

Pamela g said...

This book sounds wonderful. I love going on trips and visiting lighthouses. Texas. Please enter me in the drawing.pgmcneill[at]sbcglobaldotnet

Wendy said...

It sounds like a good book.
wendy
Buffalo, MN

Unknown said...

Perilous Safety series? Wow...i'll be watching for them. i am really amazed at how many men keep their finances hidden from their wives...a friend's son-in-law died this winter, and left his widow with a lot of debt she had no idea he had made. That's always so sad. Thanks, Lena and Rich for a great interview and chance to win.

Marianne from northern Alberta

mitzi underscore wanham at yahoo dot com

Rich Bullock said...

Thanks, Marianne. The "true" story behind Perilous Cove and my friend and her finances made us think her life was very much in danger. She was one of the first readers of the book and loved it, so I guess I did her story justice (although it was quite a bit different in final form). She also just finished the 2nd book, Storm Song, which will be out this month.

Pamela: We love visiting lighthouses, too. In Perilous Cove, the lighthouse is based on Piedras Blancas Lightstation, a few miles north of Hearst Castle on the California central coast. I arranged for a private tour and got a behind the scenes look at its history.

sally apokedak said...

Wonderful interview. I don't need the book because I already bought and read it. I loved it.

Sally in Georgia

Sharon Richmond said...

Enter me!!
Sharon Richmond
Blanch, NC.

Anonymous said...

I really enjoy the suspense novels.
Please enter me in the drawing for a
chance to win this book.
God Bless You!

Dennie Richmond
Blanch, NC

Nancee said...

Great mystery. I'd love to win a copy! Thanks for offering this giveaway!
Nancee in Michigan
quiltcat26[at]sbcglobal[dot]net

melody durant said...

A friend refered me to your writing - would love to win!

Unknown said...

Sounds great! Thanks for the interview.

Brenda
Lake Worth, FL
brendon8@bellsouth.net

Liz R said...

Sounds really good!

Liz R in AL

Diana Gardner said...

Please enter me in the drawing. Thanks! Portsmouth, VA

Shirley T. said...

Sounds like a book I would love to read...thanks Shirley T.