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Interview: David Simms Interviews CJ Leede

 

CJ Leede is the author of Maeve Fly. 

Buy Maeve Fly: Bookshop.org

 

David: Maeve Fly is an amazingly cool novel. It seems to flirt with comparisons before veering off into its own happy world. It can’t be pigeon-holed, which is always a great thing to me. What was the inspiration for this debut? 

 

CJ: Oh man, thank you! Well, I was in a strange dark period in life, and I had just moved to LA and was regretting it, struggling with some grief and life things– you know, some time periods are just like that–and it was Covid, and it was pre-election, and everything just felt so ramped up and overwhelming. I didn’t really intend at first to do any of this, the initial idea was really just about Story of the Eye and whether a woman could retell it. What it would look like with a female protagonist. And then everything just spun out (very quickly!) from there. It’s kind of an annoying thing to say, but it was like a hatch in my skull opened, and it all just came to me suddenly. I just had to write it. 

 

David: A female killer–this can be done well, or botched completely. As a psychologist/psych instructor, I’m getting strong sociopath vs. psychopath vibes, but neither truly fit. Maeve handles her job well, but the rest? Are you a fan of studying killers, specifically women?

 

CJ: I love hearing you say this. I went through a phase of being obsessed with serial killers when I was younger (did we all?), but to be honest I have trouble sleeping at night sometimes as is, so it’s less my thing these days. But in terms of Maeve’s psychology, I do LOVE books on things like that. The Wisdom of Psychopaths, The Psychopath Test. I find it so fascinating that the same people who might hurt and destroy in the worst ways might also, with a different upbringing or set of circumstances, become our political leaders, surgeons, or corporation heads. If I had to categorize Maeve, I’d say she’s way more of a sociopath as well, but I’m happy to hear you (as the expert!) say she doesn’t totally fit either. While I love all that, I really wanted this book to be about something different, or for her not to be pigeonholed. I had a professor once talking about Joan of Arc and her visions, the fact that she might be diagnosed or categorized as a schizophrenic now. And then he said, but there’s really no difference. We use certain terms to categorize, but either way, she was seeing and speaking with angels and demons. They can both be true. In terms of Maeve, she is who she is. But her loyalty (her own brand of it) is definitely the guiding light.

 

David: I absolutely love the setting (at least for Maeve’s job). What a juxtaposition of character angles, or is it? What prompted you to place her in the happiest place… in Los Angeles?

 

CJ: I’m so glad! I visited the *theme park in Anaheim* one time before writing this book, and it all really just stuck with me. I’ve always liked it, maybe never loved, but never disliked either. But spending time really looking at it and learning about it was so fun. I’m now a big fan! 

 

David: Speaking of L.A., you nailed both the mystique and gritty feel of the city well. What brought you there from New York? What’s the allure, both personally and in writing?

 

CJ: I came here primarily for what was outside the city. I’m a nature girl, and the scale is so much bigger out here. The forests, deserts, mountains, cities, cliffs, and ocean. It’s just all so sprawling and massive and calls to a very strong part of me. But just like the Park, in the process of writing this book, I fell so deeply in love with this city too. It’s so imperfect, so polarizing, and I really love that about it. There’s a lot not to love, but I think that’s a lot of the charm. Also, name a city that does themed bars as well as LA! 

 

David: Other than the titular character, who else stands out as someone you might want to hang with in the novel? 

 

CJ: I mean, maybe the younger cop. We love to see a Halloween lover! And of course, Lester the Cat. 

 

David: Back to basics – how did your writing evolve? Short stories? Disturbing comics? Traumatizing elementary school teachers with twisted doodles?

 

CJ: In my last semester of undergrad I took a creative writing course and realized I loved it. I thought I was going down a different path, but the writing took hold, and I couldn’t let it go. I applied to grad school a few times and then finally got in, and that was where I learned that my writing was really all horror. And it’s all just gone from there! Maeve is the third book I’ve written, and we’ll see if the other two ever see the light of day! 

 

David: What authors lit your creative fire? Which ones currently stoke it?

 

CJ: Ahh so many! Scott Hawkins, Stephen King, Joe Hill, Jean Auel, Anne Rice, Margaret Atwood, Joe Haldeman, Robert Heinlein, Stephen Graham Jones, Grady Hendrix, Nabokov, Emily Bronte, Thomas Harris, Sayaka Murata, Italo Calvino, John Scalzi, Neil Gaiman, Virginia Woolf, Bret Easton Ellis, the list goes on! 

 

David: Favorite novel and why?

 

CJ: OMG I have to pick ONE?! I really can’t! But I do read Library at Mount Char again and again. And also so many others by a lot of the writers I listed above. 

 

David: Are you new to the writing conference scene? If so, are you stoked for Stokercon? It’s a tradition for new authors to buy interviewers/reviewers a drink, by the way. Either that or a book – we’re not picky!

 

CJ: Brand new! Very stoked. Noted on the drink, you’re on! 

 

David: I’ve read you have two more novels set to roll in the future. Is there anything you can tell us about either one?

 

CJ: The second book is unrelated to Maeve but deals with a lot of the same themes in a VERY different setting. Then I am working on two books simultaneously, and I suppose the *powers that be* will decide which of them will come out after that. I’m very, very excited for all of them though. 

 

David: A degree in mythology and middle ages? What’s the chance either will figure into a future novel? Mythology is such a great launching point for characters, creatures, and the heroine’s journey.

 

CJ: Big chance! Outside of Maeve’s world, I’m very interested in writing things leaning more supernatural, historical, scifi, and fantasy within the horror genre. And probably with romance in there most of the time, because why not?! 

 

David: When you’re not gallivanting across the country with the fur plus one family, what are your other passions/hobbies?

 

CJ: I love running and hiking, oddity hunting, reading and learning about anything I can. We do the senior/special rescue dog thing, and occasionally foster as well. I love going to hear live music, and when I can pry myself away from social media (her grasp is strong!), I love flipping back and forth between different languages on duolingo in free moments, just to kind of keep my brain sharp– or try to! But mostly, I’m an outdoor girl, and I like being really physically active. It’s how I do all my best thinking! And I’ve dabbled in MtG too. I always love it but need to get a lot better to play for real!

 

David: Finally, as a writer, I’m asked constantly for advice. As a debut author, what nuggets of dark wisdom would you feed to aspiring writers?

 

CJ: Just write your shit. Don’t worry about the market or what will sell or won’t sell or what will upset your family or your partner or that one person who said that one thing ten years ago that you still think about. Writing and creative expression are the safest spaces that exist. You can decide later if you want to share it or send it out into the world, and most likely the more authentic your work, the more the world will love it anyway! 

 

David: Thanks for answering these! Monster Librarian and our readers thank you plenty!

Wishing you a great year of success with Maeve Fly !

 

Book Review: Shadow Runner by K.J. Fieler

 

Shadow Runner by KJ Fieler

Shadow Runner by K.J. Fieler

Black Rose Writing, 2023

9781685132040

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition

Buy (pre-order): Bookshop.orgAmazon.com

 

The only negative to Shadow Runner is that eventually, like all great stories, it ends.  It would be tougher to put together a better YA fantasy/thriller than this.  Like the Harry Potter series, Shadow Runner has the ability to appeal to young and old alike, although it is oriented to the younger set.  It’s a must-read.

 

As far as genres, this is listed as “steampunk,” taking place in a Victorian-style society where fancy machines run on steam and electricity hasn’t been invented.  Shadow Runner’s basic premise is that young, born to wealth Ada is kidnapped in her pre-teen years by a group of ladies known as the Shadows.  They’re like the Thieves’ Guild in Dungeons and Dragons, taking robbery and assassination jobs from those willing to pay for it.  As Ada grows and learns the trade of the Shadows, she eventually has to make some important decisions that will determine the course of her life.  Is the Shadow life truly the life she wants, and can she compromise the values she grew up with?

 

Despite the above, this isn’t a story about robbing and killing.  At its heart, it’s a beautifully told tale of human interaction.  Ada’s adventures are secondary: the story is more about how she and her mentor, Nadine, have to come to trust and rely on each other, even though they live in a world where friendship can get you killed.  The story adds another excellent layer when Ada shows compassion for a young outcast, Dieb, who everyone else scorns.  The three of them have to decide what matters: their emotional ties to each other, or survival in an uncaring world.  It’s a back-and-forth for all of them, as none of the three characters are one-dimensional: they are all painted with shades of gray.

 

It’s how the author handles them that demonstrates serious writing skill.  Readers will feel and connect with the characters as they try to survive, which isn’t easy with a group of people to whom backstabbing is the norm.  Some parts will make you angry, some will make you cry.  When you love the characters enough that you are unhappy when the book ends, then you’ve just read a pretty special story.

 

Despite the Shadow lifestyle, the author wisely avoids any graphic material. Characters do kill each other, but the author spares readers any messy details.  It helps keep the focus on the interactions of the three leads themselves, which is where the book’s appeal comes from.

 

Bottom line: thiis is the first must-read of the summer for everyone.  There’s room for the story to continue in another book, and there will be a lot of unhappy readers if it doesn’t happen.  Highly recommended.

 

Reviewed by Murray Samuelson

 

Book Review: The Den by Cara Reinard

The Den by Cara Reinard

Thomas and Mercer, Dec. 2022

ISBN: 9781542039765

Availability: paperback, Kindle

 

Cara Reinard’s The Den recycles a tried and true plotline used countless times, and keeps it entertaining enough to ignore that there really aren’t any original twists to the plotline.  You know exactly what you’re getting ahead of time, but it’s fun enough that you don’t care about the lack of originality.

 

In this case, the plot is the trope”‘rich dad with estranged children is about to die and leave inheritance to offspring, all of whom have reason to want him dead.” If you’ve seen the movie Knives Out, then you know the majority of the book plot.  In The Den, the only stab at something new is that if any of the four siblings die before the old man, their share of the inheritance is split among the other siblings.  The rest is standard fare in the book: all the kids have financial problems, and they are all screw-ups in one way or another.  

 

Any of “inheritance plotline” books just need to follow some simple rules to be worth reading.  One, everyone needs to be a suspect and have motive.  Two, the killer or killers’ identities are well hidden until the end of the book.  Three, the author can’t get carried away with their own cleverness and make the mystery too convoluted.  Finally, the book needs to be entertaining.  With The Den, the author succeeds on all four counts.  There are other suspects besides the siblings: the housekeepers, servants and their families all have reason for murder, so there’s a big enough cast of characters to keep the reader guessing.  The identity of the villain(s) is well-concealed until the very end: the majority of readers probably won’t guess correctly, and that’s what is supposed to happen in a book like this.  The plot is twisting enough and clues are scattered throughout, but it doesn’t get too difficult to follow.  Readers will get to the end and feel it made sense. Most importantly, the book is entertaining.  The pacing is quick enough with no wasted time or pointless plot offshoots, and it’s enough to keep the pages flipping.  With a book like this, that’s all you’re looking for.

 

Bottom line: this is predictable fun.  Readers who enjoy mysteries are likely to enjoy this one.

 

Reviewed by Murray Samuelson.