HALLIE EPHRON: Today it's my pleasure to introduce you all to the writing team of Midge Raymond and John Yunker and DEVILS ISLAND, their brand new crime novel that Publisher's Weekly calls “Suspenseful … This is one nightmare vacation worth taking.”
It's set in one of my favorite parts of the world, down under, and features elusive animals that echo the title of their book...
Both Midge and John are seasoned writers with a particular affection for birds(!) So how did this collaboration come about and how did it be about creatures other than birds?
MIDGE RAYMOND: When writers become obsessed with something, they write about it — which is how my husband, John Yunker, and I both ended up writing novels filled with penguins.
And this was, initially, why the two of us headed to Australia — to see the fairy penguins, a species we were eager to meet. These birds are at once ubiquitous and elusive: While walking around certain Sydney neighborhoods, we saw many penguin awareness signs, but these small, flightless birds are shy and don’t come ashore until after dark, which meant we had to make a real effort to see them.
And while we did manage to track down the penguins, it turned out that on this trip, it was the Tasmanian devil that would capture most of our attention — and our imagination. I recently learned a French term, dérive, which refers to a journey that takes an unexpected path — and realized that this is very much what happened to John and me when we decided to take a side trip to Australia’s island state of Tasmania.
It all began with a four-day hiking trip on Maria Island, which is even more remote than the remote island state. And, we soon learned, it’s this very isolation that allows for the conservation work that is reviving the Tasmanian devil population.
We’d heard of Tasmanian devils but didn’t know that, beginning in the mid-1990s, up to 90 percent of Tasmanian devil populations were vanishing due to a contagious facial cancer (known as Devil Facial Tumor Disease, or DFTD). And the very island we were hiking and camping on was the place that gave this endangered species a chance for survival: Just over a decade ago, twenty-eight healthy devils were released on Maria Island, keeping them safe from the disease that was ravaging those on Tasmania. These healthy, protected animals thrived on the island, offering hope for the entire species.
Ironically, we became obsessed with these devils in part because, despite our proximity, we could not see them; this made them all the more intriguing. From our campsites, we could hear them, late at night, and understood immediately why Europeans named them “devils” (listen to the otherworldly yowls of the devils here, and you’ll see what I mean).
And though we didn’t see devils on Maria Island, we met several of them afterwards, at Tasmania’s Bonorong Wildlife Sanctuary. (Check out some of the sanctuary’s devil photos, and you’ll see that the cuteness of these little marsupials hardly aligns with the horrific sounds they make.)
Even our hiking guides, who were on the island constantly, rarely saw the nocturnal devils — but they had stories. One guide told us how she left out her swimsuit to dry one night, only to put it on the next day and learn that the devils had chewed through the most revealing parts of the fabric. And how she had to wrestle a determined, growling, twenty-pound devil for a container of food that he’d gotten into. (The guide won, though she said it could’ve gone either way.)
Meeting rescued devils and hearing stories of the wild ones made it impossible not to fall in love with them, much as we had with penguins, who are also endangered, also working hard to survive on a changing planet. Visiting and donating to the Bonorong Wildlife Sanctuary was one small way of contributing to their survival — but we wished we could do more.
And the idea for Devils Island was born.
As well as introducing readers to these marvelous creatures, we also knew we had a great setup for a murder mystery: a group of strangers, with secrets, on a remote island as a wicked storm brews. It was as fun creating the human characters as it was bringing the devils into the story.
We are not quite done obsessing over (and writing about) penguins, but spending time with Tasmanian devils, both in person and on the page, was a wonderful dérive. And this, we realized, is why we travel (and also why we write) — to open ourselves up to the unexpected, and to seize the opportunity to learn something new about the world.
Have you ever set out on a journey — whether near or far — that turned out differently from what you expected? Let us know in the comments!
ABOUT DEVILS ISLAND Devils Island is the debut collaboration by Midge Raymond and John Yunker. Midge is the author of the novels Floreana and My Last Continent and the award-winning short-story collection Forgetting English. John is the author of the novel The Tourist Trail and editor of the Among Animals fiction series and a nonfiction anthology, Writing for Animals.
This is fascinating . . . now I'm looking forward to reading "Devils Island" . . . .
ReplyDeleteThanks so much, Joan! We hope you love it!
DeleteCongratulations on following the detour! I had no idea about the Tasmanian devils and their endangerment, or about the tiny penguins. Thank you for that.
ReplyDeleteMost of my dérives have come when I've traveled solo, especially in Japan and in the US. The unexpected conversation, the invitation to dance with a group, the bit of information I otherwise wouldn't have known - all delightful.
Don't tasmanian devils sound fascinating! And boy would I love to see those tiny penguins. Closest I've come is puffins. Fabulous puffins.
DeleteHallie, I adore puffins! And the tiny penguins are adorable, too.
DeleteEdith, thank you for your kind words! I love your comments about dérives from traveling solo; this is so true. The best thing about traveling, I think, is getting out of our comfort zones and having the unexpected happen. Like Tassie devils. :)
MIDGE AND JOHN: Congratulations on your new book! I am glad you got to see the Tasmanian devils & that their population is growing on remote Maria Island.
ReplyDeleteMost of my travels abroad have been solo ones. Although I have a general plan of what to see, the most delightful surprises have occurred when I take an unexpected detour.
I so agree. And with food, too, traveling. The snacks you never anticipated can make the day. But then, I travel on my stomach.
DeleteHallie, I'm smiling over your comment - I too travel on my stomach! Trying new foods in a new culture is so much fun and so enlightening. (Though I confess, in Australia, we tried so hard to embrace Vegemite. It just didn't happen. But we tried.)
DeleteGrace, thank you for your note! It's so great to have a general plan but to make room for the detours, which are usually the most fun.
So true!
DeleteMe, too, Hallie!
DeleteWe adored our one trip to Australia! I still get email from the Conservation Ecology Center where we fell in love with the endangered bandicoots (I think that's right.) I'm more of a planner than a taker of detours but this sounds a wonderful result!
ReplyDeleteBandicoots! How did I miss them? For me it was all about the parrots. Talk about flashy.
DeleteBandicoots and parrots and devils and echidnas and wombats ... Australia is incredible for wildlife, isn't it? Though we feel as though we saw a lot of the wildlife, John and I want to go back yet again ... there's so much more to see. And I could watch wombats graze all day long.
DeleteLucy, you certainly don't have to take detours to have an incredible trip! While the detours are fun, I have to say that John's amazing planning for our trip made it what it was ... finding the Maria Island Walk, for example. And deciding to take a little cruise on Doubtful Sound rather than the more popular Milford Sound in New Zealand.
I was blown away by the parrots in Australia. Apparently Sydney alone is home to a greater diversity of parrot species than most countries. There's a great book about how songbirds originated from Australia: Where Song Began by Tim Low.
DeleteCongratulations on your new book. It sounds amazing!
ReplyDeleteThe research trip sounds fascinating. I would love to hear more about your 4 day hiking experience on that remote Australian island. Was it organized and guided or did you go alone? Knowing just enough about Australia's deadly fauna to be cautious, were you ever in locations where you had to be particularly careful? Did you finally see any penguins?
When we were younger, our plans were looser and more flexible. We headed out on our own and had adventures that took us to places we hadn't planned on seeing. Now, we go with guides. We still see a lot, but it is different. I would say that the most unique derive was in Hawaii one February when we saw whales everywhere around the islands, in the bays, in the straights, and occasionally from our hotel windows. Inspirational!
A good guide is worth their weight in gold. We had a great one in Trinidad and saw birds we'd never have otherwise seen (some at night!)
DeleteJudy, while we explored on our own for most of the trip, we did have a guide for this Tasmanian portion, since guides are needed to go to the places we visited (totally remote and uninhabited). The company we traveled with is the Maria Island Walk: https://www.mariaislandwalk.com. And we had two terrific guides who knew everything we needed to know about the poisonous snakes, the biting ants, and of course the gorgeous landscape and wildlife! We did take care with where we stepped and where we sat, and our guides reassured us that the snakes wanted to see us even less than we wanted to see them. (We didn't encounter any deadly snakes -- there are four species of them in Tasmania, though I think only one on Maria Island -- but of course, in DEVILS ISLAND they make an appearance!) :)
DeleteAnd yes, we did see penguins! We saw them on mainland Australia, outside of Melbourne, of all places. There is a big colony outside the city where they come ashore at night.
I am so happy to hear about your whale sightings -- they can be so elusive! Your Hawaii experience sounds absolutely magical. There is something about seeing whales that is so special.
Hallie, I agree about having a good guide! Sometimes it's great to travel on our own -- and usually we do, unless a guide is required to get into remote areas -- but I know from traveling with guides that you learn so much more about everything. So I love that, too.
Congratulations on the new release and your collaboration debut. Travel for me has always been a seat of the pants adventure. So much more fun that way.
ReplyDeleteI get too anxious to go seat of the pants, unless it's somewhere I didn't pay big bucks to get to.
DeleteThanks, Kait! I think back to traveling when I was younger, and it was *always* seat of the pants. Mostly because 1) I was young and 2) there was no internet when I was young, no cell phones, no easy way to plan where to stay because you had to find a pay phone at a train station yada yada yada. And, as Hallie notes, it helps if you don't pay a lot ... back then, I definitely traveled on the cheap! But now I get a bit more anxious about not having at least a bit of a plan, like a hotel room or train ticket. :)
DeleteFunny the things that stay with you. When I sat by a harbor trying to decide which was the right choice marriage, or career, the harbor seals were barking. barking BARKING...... and now looking back I think they really did have more to say than my immature thinking. I still link seals to that day on the bay.
ReplyDeleteYour book will take me to another land and with a critter that Disney totally got wrong. Looking forward to reading it. Thanks and welcome to the world of JRW's.
So interesting, those seals... and how the mind makes (and holds onto) connections.
DeleteCoralee, now there is a story! I love that. And I truly think animals tap into a universal consciousness that we all share ... we don't understand one another's languages, but that doesn't mean we can't understand one another on some level. This is why I love being out among wildlife. (Or, hanging out with my cats.)
DeleteIt's amazing how many people associate devils with the cartoon! I do hope DEVILS ISLAND shows many readers another side of these beautiful creatures.
Coralee, now I’m curious: which did you choose? — Pat S
DeleteCongratulations on your new release! Great premise for a thriller.
ReplyDeleteA relative sent my young son a stuffed Tasmanian Devil which he adored. After we saw them in action on a nature show, my son noted they weren't very cuddly, which was fine with him. Just looked it up: the Columbus, Ohio Zoo has a pair of Tasmanian Devils on loan from the Toledo Zoo.
I'm not sure I've ever even seen a tasmanian devil, beyond the animated version.
DeleteWalking around certain Sydney neighborhoods signs of penguins? I’m still laughing and shaking my head! Having lived in Sydney I can assure you there has never being a penguin that far north. They’d drop dead from the heat. They might mean Melbourne. There are Penguins in Victoria
ReplyDeleteRhys, I believe it was Manly, outside of Sydney, where we saw all these signs on the sidewalks. They must've come ashore at some point there ... perhaps the signs were old (we didn't see any penguins there!). And we were thrilled to have been able to see them outside of Melbourne.
DeleteCongratulations on your new release! The name Tasmanian Devil reminded me of the Bugs Bunny cartoon where Bugs Bunny teases /tricks the Tasmanian Devil. The character was so funny.
ReplyDeleteGreat question about destinations. These days I love to travel. I learned to read as much as I can before traveling to a place instead of relying only on photos. I also bring a foreign language phrase book with me, even if they may speak English in that country. The street signs are Still in that foreign language even if the residents of that country may speak English frequently.
Thank you, Diana! You're not alone ... so many remember the cartoon devil. Back then, I didn't even realize devils were real animals! And a college friend of mine thought woodpeckers were fictional until she came to visit me in California and saw them in my yard. :)
DeleteYou are one of the wonderful travelers who works to learn about the place and learn the language -- it's so helpful to know even a few words. These days, you can hold up your phone to a street sign and have it translated (which I have yet to try), but I actually think it's more fun to be immersed in the language. (Until/unless it becomes absolutely necessary to translate!)
It's funny you mention Bugs Bunny. Growing up in the midwest so many of the species I never saw in person were shaped by these cartoons. I remember when we moved to California and I saw the first roadrunner and how the sounds he made were similar to the cartoon (though less dramatic perhaps). And where we live now in Oregon we have the bird that inspired Wood Woodpecker. But I will say that the Tasmanian Devil looks nothing like the real thing, though they're both voracious eaters.
DeleteOh, so fascinating! This reminds me of a trip to Turks and Caicos, where were wen tto a place called Little Water Cay, which was SWARMING with iguanas. It's known as iguana island, if you can even imagine someplace that potentially hideous. We loved it, of course. And, detail, the guide told me to be especially careful, since although I was wearing flipflops, like everyone else, I alone had red-polished toenails, and the guide warned me that the creatures would think my toes were food.
ReplyDeleteWelcome! xx And if you were named "Tasmanian Devil," how would YOU act?
Oh, Hank, now I want to go to Little Water Cay in Turks and Caicos! That sounds amazing. I adore iguanas...they are the among funniest-looking creatures on the planet, but I think they have a certain regal dignity. (I'll remember about painted toenails; that's a good tip!).
DeleteIf I were named a Tasmanian Devil, I think I would very much enjoy looking cute and acting fierce. :)
Great meeting you Midge and John. How could you not become obsessed with that cute little face? I can easily imagine them being mischievous little, um, devils.
ReplyDeleteHi, Liz! I know, aren't the devils insanely adorable? I love how mischievous they are, too. The swimsuit story our guide told us was a favorite, and made it into the novel. :)
DeleteI had heard the term Tasmanian Devils, but never really knew what they were. They are cute animals! (Although I wouldn't want to tussle with one over food or anything else.)
ReplyDeleteCongratulations on your new book. The island sounds like the perfect setting for a mystery. And such a great title.
Thank you, Elizabeth! Aren't the devils adorable? I couldn't agree more, though -- I wouldn't want to tussle with them either! Those teeth. And their jaws can open up to 80 degrees. And they have the most powerful bite of any living carnivore of their size. (We know so many fun devil facts now!) :)
DeleteHello, Midge, John and Hallie. Congratulations on DEVILS ISLAND!
ReplyDeleteEven when I was young, I rarely went on a trip to another country that wasn't carefully planned, so I'd be sure to see everything I wanted to. I guess that's just the kind of person I am--it's no coincidence that I fell in love with a Swiss German and have been so happy living in super-organized Switzerland for over three decades!!! But lovely, serendipitous events can still happen on trips, even to planners, because of all the interesting new people one meets. Or new penguins! Once in New Zealand, we spent an hour following a special trail where we were supposed to see Little Blue Penguins. We didn't see a single one, so we gave up and took a walk on the beach and came to one with fifteen minutes. He was asleep about six feet from where we were walking on the sand. Even after he woke up, he didn't walk away but stuck around to look at us looking at him. That was fun!
Thank you for your good wishes ... and most of all for your penguin story! I LOVE this. I am actually a huge fan of order in most things in life, so I totally get you. Traveling is one of the rare times when I welcome a bit of chaos! Especially with wildlife, as you learned ... you often have to wait for the unexpected to see what you hope to see. And since John is a photographer, I have much experience sitting around for hours (and hours) as he waits for the perfect shot. I am grateful for his patience, since it's allowed us to see such amazing things (I'm not nearly as patient). I love that you met a penguin who actually hung around to commune with you. That's priceless!
DeleteOOPS. I didn't mean for the post above to be "Anonymous." :)
DeleteThank you for your good wishes ... and most of all for your penguin story! I LOVE this. I am actually a huge fan of order in most things in life, so I totally get you. Traveling is one of the rare times when I welcome a bit of chaos! Especially with wildlife, as you learned ... you often have to wait for the unexpected to see what you hope to see. And since John is a photographer, I have much experience sitting around for hours (and hours) as he waits for the perfect shot. I am grateful for his patience, since it's allowed us to see such amazing things (I'm not nearly as patient). I love that you met a penguin who actually hung around to commune with you. That's priceless!
Congratulations, Midge and John on your collaboration. Devil's Island sounds like a fabulous premise for a mystery and I can't wait to check it out. Like, Hallie, I love tales from down under.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Jean! Like you and Hallie, I love tales from down under. If you haven't checked out the amazing thrillers of Jane Harper, I highly recommend everything she's written. And John especially is a big fan of Australian writers Tim Winton and Helen Garner.
DeleteThanks Jenn! Also, a few other Down Under authors to include: Graeme Simsion, Richard Flanagan, Alexis Wright.
DeleteHow could I forget Graeme Simsion? One of my favorites! And for another husband-and-wife writing team, check out Graeme's novels written with his wife, Anne Buist: Two Steps Forward, Two Steps Onward, and their newest: The Glass House, which is at the top of my reading stack right now.
DeleteThe back story and the book sound absolutely fascinating!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Kathy! We had tons of fun writing it (and far more fun living the hiking experience than the folks in the novel....) :)
DeleteCongratulations, Midge and John, on Devil's Island! I've never been to Tasmania although I have family there. The Tasmanian Devils are adorable--at least from a distance!
ReplyDeleteOn my second trip to the UK (in my mid-twenties) I traveled solo for six weeks with no reservations, only a bus pass. It was such an experience that I'm sure it altered the course of my life. These days, I do at least like to know where I'm going to put my head, but I'm always open to spur of the moment adventures.
Deborah, how fabulous to have family in Tasmania! (I highly recommend going to visit them. We found it so beautiful, and there is still so much more -- especially the north part of the island -- that we want to explore.)
DeleteYou are an adventurous traveler ... that trip in your twenties sounds incredible. It's the best time to do that sort of traveling, I think -- I don't remember minding where I put my head so much back then, but I definitely do now. :)
Who knew that Tasmanian Devils are so cuddly! You'd never know the whirling dervish portrayed in the Loony Tunes cartoons was the same creature. I'm sad to know they're endangered, but grateful to conservation efforts to save them.
ReplyDeleteMy youngest was a biology major, and in her first year at the Citadel her professor, whose grad student couldn't accompany him, asked her to go to the Falklands for a research project about penguins. She couldn't hold them while he took blood, so he had to train her to do it while he held them. She ended up writing a paper in her sophomore year that led to a full ride PhD program later. And the whole family still has fond feelings for pen-GOO'-ins, as they pronounce it there.
When we were in New South Wales, we were astonished by the masses of parrots and cockatoos and cockatiels. We decided to leave Sydney, so drove (terrifyingly) to the Hunter Valley and on a whim decided to stay at a charming farm/vineyard that had guest houses. We were the only guests, so we had the run of the place, hiking all over, and checking the supposed wombat den, fruitlessly. But the birds! Every morning the trees around our cabin were full of magpies and bellbirds singing otherwordly calls. One misty morning a fallow deer buck with a magnificent rack appeared through a path into the vineyard, then disappeared back into the medieval fairy tale it came from.
Lucky you, Midge and John, to get to spend so much time in that enchanting part of the world. Hope I get to go back, but I look forward to seeing in through your story, as well!
Thanks so much, Karen! What a great experience your daughter had, being able to go to the Falklands for penguin research..that sounds amazing. And I know what you mean about the birds of NSW, and indeed all of Australia -- they're just incredible! And chatty, which I love. It's been years, but I still remember and miss hearing the magpies all the time. We hope to go back, too -- and meanwhile, I hope DEVILS ISLAND is a good armchair trip for you! :)
DeleteThank you, Hallie, Midge, and John, for this post. I did not know specifically about these penguins, and the only Tasmanian Devil I knew was a cartoon. You brought them alive for me and left me inspired. Best of luck with the release of DEVIL'S ISLAND, Midge and John--see you at the launch event on Facebook ( ;
ReplyDeleteThanks, Pam! It's so fun to be able to share these amazing animals with readers who may not know them well. We're so lucky to have been able to get to know them, a bit. And we look forward to seeing you at the virtual launch party!
DeleteFor anyone who'd like to join us (online via Zoom ) for our book launch on September 3, here is a link to sign up: https://form.jotform.com/241984189290973