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Q. When are we going to get more information about
Kinsey's background (i.e. about her time as a lawyer, when she was married, etc.)?
A. Kinsey was never a lawyer. She's strictly blue collar. She
attended maybe three whole semesters of junior college, but it bugged the hell out of her.
She's too rebellious to be a good student. In 'E' IS FOR EVIDENCE, you learn a lot about
her second husband, Daniel. The first husband will probably show up in some future book. I
know who he is, but I don't know when their paths will cross.
Q. Is Kinsey's family going to play any part in any
future stories?
A. In 'M' IS FOR MALICE, the case Kinsey takes on comes to
her through her professional connection to her cousin, Tasha Howard, an estate attorney
with offices in Lompoc and San Francisco. I don't know how those family matters will be
resolved. Family conflicts in the real world aren't always easily settled. Nowhere is it
written that we have to get along with people just because they happen to be related to
us. Kinsey's a maverick. Who knows what she'll do? Ditto, yours truly. I'm rebellious. I
get bored with her family sometimes and then I write about something else.
Q. Who is Kinsey patterned after?
A. Yours truly. Who else? Unless you hate her, of course, and
then I disavow any connection.
Q. Who are your characters based on?
A. I wish I knew the answer to this one. Some characters are
invented out of whole cloth. Some are borrowed from life with a few modifications thrown
in. I've never written about my husband, Steve, or any of my children because I know them
all too well. I see them in all their complexities which makes them impossible to render
on the printed page. Those observed from a distance serve my purposes much better because
I can fill in the blanks any way I choose.
Q. Have you ever met anyone similar to Rosie and
Henry? Are they a mixture of several persons that you've met?
A. Henry is entirely invented though by now I feel he's as
real as anyone I know. The character of Rosie is based on a woman who used to live in the
same apartment building I lived in many years ago. She's taken on a life of her own, of
course. A 'good' character will do that. My favorites are the characters who spring to
life full-blown...talkative, opinionated, pushy, and impossible. I love it when a
character takes over a scene and does the work for me. I sit back and marvel, but it
doesn't always happen that way.
Q. What are you going to do when you come to 'Z'?
A. Having reached the halfway mark in the alphabet, my prime
focus is on writing each new book as well as I can. To think about 'Z' means skipping
right over all the intervening years. At this point, I don't even have a title for 'N'
which is still in the formative stages of the writing process. If you can tell me what
you're going to be doing in the year 2018, then I'll tell you what I'm going to do. I'll
be 199 years old by then so I'll be lucky if I don't spend the day drooling on myself.
Q. Is the Kinsey Millhone series going to end at 'Z'?
Where do you see the series going after 'Z' IS FOR...
A. Your guess is as good as mine on this one. I can assure
you Kinsey Millhone will live on long after the series ends. I have no plans to extend her
adventures, but you never know. Ms. Millhone tells me what's going to happen. I don't tell
her.
Q. What will you write after you run out of the
alphabet?
A. Ask me when I get there. I spent the first twenty years of
my writing career preparing for the mystery genre, which is my favorite literary form.
Believe me, I'll always write. The question is, will I do so for publication? That's one I
don't have an answer in 1996.
Q. What is your background?
A. I was an English major in college with minors in Fine Arts
and Humanities. I attended the University of Louisville my freshman year, transferred to
what was then Western Kentucky State Teachers College for my sophomore and junior years,
and then graduated from the University of Louisville in the summer of 1961. I started
writing seriously when I was 18, wrote my first novel when I was 22, and I've never
stopped writing since. Of the first seven novels I wrote, numbers four and five were
published. Numbers one, two, three, six, and seven, have never seen the light of day...and
rightly so. The eighth novel I wrote was 'A' IS FOR ALIBI.
Q. Where do you get your ideas?
A. Ideas are easy. It's the execution of ideas that really
separates the sheep from the goats. I read newspapers, textbooks on crime. I talk to
private investigators, police officers, jail administrators, doctors, lawyers, career
criminals. Ideas are everywhere. I expend the greatest energy testing ideas...shaping and
structuring and developing a storyline to make sure it's substantial; something that will
entertain the reader from beginning to middle to end.
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