You’ve written a lot. Most authors never even put out half the content you’ve written. What gives you the drive to keep writing more and more?
I’d just turned sixty when my first novel, Folly, was published in 2007. You don’t have to do the math, I’m a fossil. I’d been a longtime reader of mysteries and wondered if I could write one. I had been a university administrator for many years, so knew I could write nonfiction, but the transition to fiction was something I finally summoned the nerve to try. To make a long story much shorter, I wrote Folly to see if I could. The fantastic response I received from readers was the inspiration to continue writing the series. I once heard an interview with a woman who purportedly was the oldest person alive. The interviewer asked her the secret of a long life. She said, “Guess I just forgot to die.” I’ve been blessed with an incredible home life that’s allowed me to follow my writing passion. After the first book, I simply forgot to stop.
I haven’t personally read everything you’ve written, but my favorite has been The Pier. Tell us a bit about the inspiration for The Pier and the iconic Lost Dog Café.
Folly Beach is a real place. It’s located in the shadows of Charleston, South Carolina, and is as different from historic, stately Charleston as a penguin is to a porta potty. Folly is small, less than a half-mile wide, six-mile long. The Charleston Visitors Guide describes Folly as a “charming bohemian enclave perched on the self-anointed edge of America.” To me, it has an aging hippy, beer-for-breakfast, shared with your Doberman feel. The Folly Pier is a thousand-plus-foot long fishing pier and an iconic feature of the small island. Over the years, several people have committed suicide on Folly Beach. In The Pier a death is ruled suicide by the authorities, but, of course, since Chris and Charles get involved it had to be anything but suicide.
The Lost Dog Cafe is the favorite breakfast and lunch restaurant on Folly Beach. In the series, it’s the place where Chris and his cadre of quirky characters often gather to discuss whatever crime they’re in the middle of solving. As an author, it’s also a fantastic location to do book signings—especially if the books are in the Folly Beach Mystery series!