HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: Don’t get
me started on thank you notes. Whatever happened to thank you notes? If you send
someone a gift, then you MUST send a note. And I’m pretty sure, though I may be
a dinosaur, that email notes don’t usually count. Not for a real THING. Not for
a big thing.
But how about, as the talented
Claire Booth wonders, the little things? And do we all take enough time to
realize how kind people can really be?
I’m trying to figure out how
to cleverly segue the title of Claire’s newest book A DEADLY TURN into a discussion about
GOOD turns. And I can't. So let’s just say—Claire’s thinking about the fun parts of being an
author.
How do you measure up? Has
this happened to you? How do you handle it? And see below for a giveaway!
CLAIRE BOOTH: One of the joys of writing is all the people
I cross paths with along the way. Not while I’m chained to my desk agonizing
over story structure and word count, of course, but afterward—when my books
become reality, and I get to go out into the world and talk about them.
I meet a lot of new people
this way. They come to my book signings or to events like crime fiction
conventions because they love mysteries, so we find one another by way of our
mutual love of books. Many of them have become dear friends.
The other ones there when my
books come out are my tried-and-true, the family and friends whose support is
rock solid and guaranteed no matter what I’m doing.
But today I want to talk
about the people who fall in between.
These are ones I knew—either
in passing or at a very different stage in life—who have gotten in touch because
they heard through the grapevine that I wrote a book. People who I’d never have
renewed contact with if not for their generosity in reaching out.
My elementary school librarian
(hi, Mrs. Walter!). A former boss. A neighbor who played with my younger
siblings when we were all growing up. Another one whose daughter I walked to
the bus stop with every morning.
And none of them had to do
this. That’s what blows me away. They don’t live in the same town or share a
friendship on social media or have a similar kind of attachment that would make
outreach easy. No. Instead, they took time out of their busy lives to track
down and communicate with someone they hadn’t seen or thought about in years. To me, that goes beyond nice and
enters the realm of spectacularly thoughtful.
They certainly made me feel
all warm and happy inside, but guess what else? They made me take a hard look
at myself and realize that I wasn’t a very good “in between.” I’ve heard a
distant someone’s good news, sure, but then did I reach out with a compliment?
Not often enough. So now I try harder. Because I know from being on the
receiving end just how much a short note can mean.
Have you ever had an “in between”
pop into your life? Have you ever been an “in between” yourself? Tell me about
it in the comments!
HANK: SO interesting ! (My home ec teacher came to one of my readings--I almost burst into tears. She's about 90. And she asked me if it's learned to sew yet. )Also. Let’s say someone
send you a thank you gift. Then you kind
of have to send them a thank you for the thank you, which then they have to
rely to. And then you have to acknowledge that you got the reply, then they
have to acknowledge that.
And the whole exchange devolves
into:
See you soon!
Then finally dwindles to:
Xx
What a can of worms!
What do you think, Reds and
readers? How do you feel about thank yous--paper or email? Necessary or not? And a copy of A DEADLY TURN to one lucky commenter!
AND THE WINNER OF AS DIRECTED by Kathy Valenti from yesterday's giveaway is MARY SMITH! Email me at hryan at whdh dot com with your address!
A DEADLY TURN
Sheriff Hank Worth thinks he’s scared a car full of teens
straight when he pulls them over for speeding on a Saturday night and lets them
off with a stern warning and instructions to go directly home. When he responds
to an urgent call minutes later, he realizes he made a fatal error of judgement—every
teen is dead. Struggling to come to terms with his role in the crash, Hank
begins to suspect foul play. While notifying the parents of the children
involved, his suspicions grow when an unidentified body is discovered in one of
their homes and a teenage girl is found after apparently attempting to commit
suicide. Hank believes the incidents are connected, but those around him
disagree. Is Hank right, or is his guilt making him search for answers where
there are none?
Claire Booth spent more than a decade as
a daily www.clairebooth.com,
or follow her on Twitter @clairebooth10 or on Facebook at www.facebook.com/claireboothauthor.
newspaper reporter, spending much of her time covering
crimes so strange and convoluted they seemed more like fiction than reality.
Eventually, she had enough of the real world and decided to write novels
instead. Her Sheriff Hank Worth mysteries take place in Branson, Missouri,
where small-town Ozark politics and big-city country music tourism clash in—yes—strange
and convoluted ways. The latest in the series, A DEADLY TURN, comes out
March 1. The first two, THE BRANSON BEAUTY and ANOTHER MAN’S GROUND, are
available now. Find out more at
A DEADLY TURN LINK: