HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: Woohoo, and throw confetti! We are welcoming the fabulous and incomparable J.T. Ellison today! Her newest book, A VERY BAD THING, is a very fabulous thing. (If you will allow me the cringey parallel construction.)
Every author will tell you, I think, that there is a thread or a theme that runs through all of their work-- whether it is central to the story or not, it is always there. I know Hallie often talks about how her books are always about trust, and mine are always about the nature of truth, as well as empowerment.
The wonderful J.T. has a persistent and constant theme as well—one you might not have noticed until she reveals it l today. And we promise, no spoilers.
Seeing Doubles
by JT Ellison
I am obsessed with twins.
Growing up, a nascent writer and perpetual planner, I wanted four children, two sets of twins. Two boys, two girls. That felt like a logical way to have children, especially because it would mean I could get a two-fer, more bang for the buck.
It was an odd obsession. I knew no twins. They did not run in our family. I have no idea where I even got the idea, though logic says it was from reading about Romulus and Remus being suckled by a she-wolf in my well-thumbed mythology book that I checked out of my elementary school library so many times the librarian gifted it to me on the last day of 6th grade.
J.T. Ellison is the New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of more than thirty novels and the Emmy Award–winning co-host of the literary TV show A Word on Words. She also writes urban fantasy under the pen name Joss Walker. With millions of books in print, her work has won critical acclaim and prestigious awards. Her titles have been optioned for television and published in twenty-eight countries. J.T. lives with her husband and twin kittens, one of whom is a ghost, in Nashville, where she is hard at work on her next novel. For more information, visit https://www.jtellison.com/.
A VERY BAD THING
From New York Times bestselling author J.T. Ellison comes a taut thriller about one author at the pinnacle of her career, whose past threatens to destroy everything she has―and everyone she knows.
A great writer knows when to deliver a juicy plot twist. But for one author, the biggest twist of all is her own murder.
With a number of hit titles and a highly anticipated movie tie-in, celebrated novelist Columbia Jones is at the top of her game. Fans around the world adore her. But on the final night of her latest book tour, one face in the crowd makes the author collapse. And by the next morning, she’s lying dead in a pool of blood.
Columbia’s death shocks the world and leaves Darian, her daughter and publicist, reeling. The police have nothing to go on―at first. But then details emerge, pointing to the author’s illicit past. Turns out many people had motive to kill Columbia. And with a hungry reporter and frustrated cop on the trail, her secrets won’t stay buried long. But how many lives will they shatter as the truth comes out?
Not that I thought I was destined to become a she-wolf, but you know how imagery sticks in your brain when you’re a child.
Fast forward to adulthood. In what was a true shock to us all, I struggled with infertility. Two sets of twins became a dream of the distant past; the choice of boys and girls went by the wayside. Any child at all became the goal.
When I lost the twins we’d conceived using IVF, I realized my dream was never going to happen. I never thought I’d struggle to have a family. I assumed, like so many, that it would be easy, natural, and achievable.
Fast forward to adulthood. In what was a true shock to us all, I struggled with infertility. Two sets of twins became a dream of the distant past; the choice of boys and girls went by the wayside. Any child at all became the goal.
When I lost the twins we’d conceived using IVF, I realized my dream was never going to happen. I never thought I’d struggle to have a family. I assumed, like so many, that it would be easy, natural, and achievable.
I am a goal-setter and high achiever. A true Type A personality. You can imagine how infuriating it was to learn my body was betraying me. (Turns out I have Ehler’s Danlos and Celiac, which contributed to my infertility. Found that out ten years too late, sadly.) I became instead a forever mother of cats. It’s not such a bad gig. Especially when we adopted—you guessed it—twin kittens.
I channeled my energy into my writing career and birthed a number of books. I didn’t realize that I was writing twins into all of my books until a reviewer pointed it out. She was right. Before, during, and after my childbearing years, they cropped up. And then, it became a thing. I started to add them purposefully. If I couldn’t have them of my own, I could certainly write them into my stories.
There are twins in almost all my work. Identical twins. Fraternal twins. Twins who don’t know about one another. Twins with hidden pathologies, twins who act out their basest desires. Twins who were separated at birth and find each other, whose lives are eerie mimics of one another.
I channeled my energy into my writing career and birthed a number of books. I didn’t realize that I was writing twins into all of my books until a reviewer pointed it out. She was right. Before, during, and after my childbearing years, they cropped up. And then, it became a thing. I started to add them purposefully. If I couldn’t have them of my own, I could certainly write them into my stories.
There are twins in almost all my work. Identical twins. Fraternal twins. Twins who don’t know about one another. Twins with hidden pathologies, twins who act out their basest desires. Twins who were separated at birth and find each other, whose lives are eerie mimics of one another.
I have quite a few Doppelgängers, too; twins that might have been. The complexity of a character who shares a soul with another creates confusion and excellent family dynamics, and allows for some sleight of hand when needed. Exactly what a suspense needs.
There are plenty of examples of stories with twins at their heart—mine are usually secondary to the plot so it doesn’t become a trope. It is a device that I love to use because the mirror reflection of another soul fascinates me. And of course, there are twins in A VERY BAD THING, though I can’t talk about them without spoiling the story. Not surprisingly, it was untwining the twin “situation” in the story that made the book come alive for me and ultimately drove the narrative to its inevitable conclusion.
This isn’t the only theme you’ll see in my stories. Women finding their power is also a huge component, as is finding justice for those who might not otherwise get it. These are rich veins to draw from, and my hope is always to find a path straight to the readers’ hearts, to make a connection that allows a story to come alive and creates characters you love, empathize with, and sometimes love to hate.
How about you? Do you have a favorite theme or trope in thrillers?
HANK: Oh, great question! And wasn’t one day this week National Twins Day? I know some of you are twins—tell us a twin thing!
There are plenty of examples of stories with twins at their heart—mine are usually secondary to the plot so it doesn’t become a trope. It is a device that I love to use because the mirror reflection of another soul fascinates me. And of course, there are twins in A VERY BAD THING, though I can’t talk about them without spoiling the story. Not surprisingly, it was untwining the twin “situation” in the story that made the book come alive for me and ultimately drove the narrative to its inevitable conclusion.
This isn’t the only theme you’ll see in my stories. Women finding their power is also a huge component, as is finding justice for those who might not otherwise get it. These are rich veins to draw from, and my hope is always to find a path straight to the readers’ hearts, to make a connection that allows a story to come alive and creates characters you love, empathize with, and sometimes love to hate.
How about you? Do you have a favorite theme or trope in thrillers?
HANK: Oh, great question! And wasn’t one day this week National Twins Day? I know some of you are twins—tell us a twin thing!
J.T. Ellison is the New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of more than thirty novels and the Emmy Award–winning co-host of the literary TV show A Word on Words. She also writes urban fantasy under the pen name Joss Walker. With millions of books in print, her work has won critical acclaim and prestigious awards. Her titles have been optioned for television and published in twenty-eight countries. J.T. lives with her husband and twin kittens, one of whom is a ghost, in Nashville, where she is hard at work on her next novel. For more information, visit https://www.jtellison.com/.
A VERY BAD THING
From New York Times bestselling author J.T. Ellison comes a taut thriller about one author at the pinnacle of her career, whose past threatens to destroy everything she has―and everyone she knows.
A great writer knows when to deliver a juicy plot twist. But for one author, the biggest twist of all is her own murder.
With a number of hit titles and a highly anticipated movie tie-in, celebrated novelist Columbia Jones is at the top of her game. Fans around the world adore her. But on the final night of her latest book tour, one face in the crowd makes the author collapse. And by the next morning, she’s lying dead in a pool of blood.
Columbia’s death shocks the world and leaves Darian, her daughter and publicist, reeling. The police have nothing to go on―at first. But then details emerge, pointing to the author’s illicit past. Turns out many people had motive to kill Columbia. And with a hungry reporter and frustrated cop on the trail, her secrets won’t stay buried long. But how many lives will they shatter as the truth comes out?
Congratulations, J.T., on your book [and, yes, being a twin, I've noticed the twins lurking in your stories . . . I always notice twins!] I'm looking forward to reading Columbia's story . . . .
ReplyDeleteTwin things . . . people never know which twin you are and always call you the wrong name . . . my grandmother always encouraged us to switch around and go to each other's classes to fool the teacher, but Jean and I never did that . . . the school decided we needed to be separated, so we were almost always in different classes; sadly, no one cared what we thought about that [we hated it] . . .
I just love that you are a twin! It is SO special. And I think it is really difficult to use twins in books—though JT always succeeds.
DeleteJoan, I too hated that separation. M and I were together in kindergarten, but separated for the rest of our schooling.
DeleteJoan, I knew a set of identical twin brothers. One brother went to my high school. The other twin brother went to another high school. They lived in an unincorporated town, which meant that they had the choice of going to a school in my school district or another school in another school district. In their case, it was both!
DeleteHi Joan — I love that you picked up on my twinning. And love that your grandmother encouraged you to be mischievous. She sounds like fun! Hope you love AVBT!
DeleteCongratulations, J.T.! This sounds amazing.
ReplyDeleteI have a great grandnephew and great grandniece who are 3-year-old twins. Total opposites and fascinating to watch. (And absolutely adorable!)
Annette, do they look exactly the same? No differences like a tiny mole on the cheek? There are twin actresses who look exactly the same. I noticed that one twin had a tiny mole on her cheek while the other had no mole at all. I think she was in a mystery movie based on a novel by Alexia Gordon.
DeleteOh, that must be SO cute, Annette!
DeleteSpeaking from experience fraternal twins are no more similar than normal siblings. Her twin relatives are male and female.
DeleteAnnette, I am always entranced by the littlest twins. I bet they are adorable!!!
DeleteDiana, they're a boy and girl and don't look anything alike. He takes after his mom and she definitely favors her dad.
DeleteCongratulations on your new release, J.T., and thanks for sharing the backstory to your running theme of twins. I always love learning about authors' backstories and how they are woven into their work.
ReplyDeleteWomen's empowerment is a favourite theme I like to see in a book; women living as agents of their own lives rather than as shadows or pawns of the men they (often foolishly) fall in love with are who I look for in the stories.
Exactly! ANd I have mine say all the things I wished I had known to say at the time...
DeleteThank you Amanda! I agree, women empowerment is always a fun read.
DeleteI agree with Amanda about loving an empowered woman/character. I especially love it when women show up living unconventional lives or accomplishing things that are unexpected for them.
ReplyDeleteAgreed! Sometimes they have to learn to get there, right?
DeleteOh boy, J.T. this is great! I too am obsessed with twins, no idea why. There were 2 brothers in my class at school, twins born on Mother's Day, which I have always thought was so cool. In my granddaughter's preschool class there was a set of twins and they also had a new set of twin siblings. Double the fun all around!
ReplyDeleteIn a book I wrote the main character's best friends are boy/girl twins and there is some business about how they have different birthdates. That sort of thing is not unheard of at all but when different months and even years are involved, it becomes a much bigger deal. Even different centuries if you want to get really carried away.
There is a riddle I like to ask people - about the boy and girl born on the same day to the same parents but they are NOT twins. Can you figure it out? I came up with it right after I adopted my 2 kittens who were littermates.
Looking forward to read the new book, and all of the books, for that matter.
Judi - yes I can solve the riddle. My brother and sister were both born on the same day to the same parents but not the same year. They are siblings but not twins.
DeleteI should have made it clear they were born on the same day, same year.
DeleteTell us the answer!
DeleteThe boy and the girl are kittens, not people!
DeleteThat’s a fun one - New Year’s Eve babies are fun but twins are incredible!!!
Okay, I'll tell you. They are not twins because there was a third sibling. The are triplets!
DeleteMy youngest son was a New Year's Eve baby!
DeleteCongratulations JT! It's so interesting that twins fascinate you. I'm a twin and have always loved it. Mom told us we were fraternal twins because there were two placentas when we were born. However, we always looked very much alike. We were in different classes in grade school but would trade classes one day a year to play a trick on our teachers. In 6th grade, Miss Tomlinson decided that Margaret had been trying to cheat on a test (I had already taken the test in my class) and gave her an Unsatisfactory for the day. Horrors! Fast forward to middle age. We did some reading and found out that it's possible to have identical twins with 2 placentas. It just depends on when the egg splits. 3 years ago, we did an Ancestry DNA test. It offered Margaret's profile as either a) myself or b) a twin.
ReplyDeleteI was also told that only fraternal twins run in families. My mom had identical twin cousins, identical twin great uncles, and there are also younger generation identical twins who are descended from one of my grandpa's brothers. No fraternal twins in the family at all.
Margaret and I are both delighted to think that our children are genetically closer than most cousins, more like half siblings.
I enjoy many themes in my reading--empowered women, justice for the marginalized, wilderness and wildlife, healing of childhood trauma.
what a fascinating history Gillian!
DeleteOh, that is so intriguing!
DeleteGillian that is so interesting! If you’re identical your DNA is identical but your fingerprints are not. Always a weird anomaly (one that I’ve taken advantage of in a story, too).
DeleteWow interesting Gillian B.
DeleteMy best friends in middle and high school were identical twins but they never did any switches - despite my coming up with suggestions!
ReplyDeleteI just read Katanji Brown Jackson's (Supreme Court Justice) new book, Lovely One, where she talks about how she met her husband in a college class at Harvard. She thought they were friends but she would see him across campus, wave and he'd ignore her. She was upset and asked him why he was so friendly in class but not anywhere else. He said oh you must be waving to my twin brother!
Oh, what a PERFECT rom-com!
DeleteThat really is… Hank, can I call dibs or have you stolen it??? 😂
DeleteSupreme Court Justice Katenji Brown Jackson and her husband Dr. Jackson's romance as she described in her autobiography was so charming. After 25 years + of marriage they seem to be a perfect match. I also read Kelly Ripa's newish autobiography about her life and romance then marriage to her acting partner Mark Consuelos. It is also a charming story of how they met and raised 3 children and how they've moved into empty nesters. (Hard to believe as they both look so young). No twins though in their lives!
DeleteCongrats on the book, J.T. I knew a couple sets of twins in school. Both fraternal, I think, although it was two boys and two girls. They were both exactly alike and different at the same time.
ReplyDeleteYes, I can understand how that might be!
DeleteI love that description Liz—exactly alike but different. We might look the same but there’s no way we are the same people. Fascinating thought.
DeleteJ.T.: I have A VERY BAD THING on my Kindle to read next. Will remember to look out for the twins!
ReplyDeleteTwo recently read thrillers had newly found family members appear (a parent).
Both were good surprises that added to tension & conflict in the story.
Yes, that is a ripe topic, if I do say so myself :-)
DeleteHi Grace! It was so nice to see you at Bouchercon this year! I hope you love AVBT!!!!
DeleteA VERY BAD THING sounds absolutely fabulous, J.T.! I've noticed other authors working a thing out in book after book, whether it's a consistent thread, like twins, or a theme running through each novel. I can't. however, see my own. I'll have to wait for someone else to tell me that!
ReplyDeleteWell, Julia, really????
DeleteJulia it’s always so nice to see you! I think it’s very helpful to have someone else point out the themes. I would say resilience is a major theme in your work.
DeletePS that’s from me JT. Can’t log in today!
DeleteJ.T., welcome to Jungle Reds! I remember meeting you at my first Bouchercon in Toronto! Stories often include twins. Reminded of a Hercule Poirot mystery about twins. And there was a tv detective story (Monk? Diagnosis Murder?) with Robert Carradine as triplets and one of them was the killer!
ReplyDeleteAnd congratulations on your new novel A VERY BAD THING! Not sure if the book that I read was a thriller. I remember the story though I forgot the title. It was published in the last few years - maybe last year or two years ago? The protagonist was a woman who killed many men in self defense. Not MY SISTER IS A SERIAL KILLER. It was another title. Wish I remembered the author's name and the title!
Yasmin Angoe's Nena Knight series?
Deletethe story was set in England. I think it was another writer. all I remember is an orange cover...
DeleteFound it! The author is Katy Brent. Title: HOW TO KILL MEN AND GET AWAY WITH IT. First book in the Kitty Collins series. Not sure if there is a second novel in the series.
DeleteIs it a thriller?
Do your Joss Walker books have twins in them too?
ReplyDeleteI was friends with identical twins from Kindergarten until we moved after 3rd grade. Their younger sister looked very much like them too. It was fun to have a sleepover at their house.
We have identical twin nieces on my husband’s side of the family. They had their own language when they were little. Sadly one of them died by suicide 11 years ago. The family worries about the other one now because they were so very much alike.
oh gosh Brenda, that's scary!
DeleteOh goodness, how sad for that family. So sorry to hear it.
DeleteMy Joss Walker books do not have twins. But now I have a whole new idea for that universe, so thank you!!!
welcome JT--this is so interesting and makes us all want to read the book! My sister is 11 months older and we like to think we're almost twins! I think my books always have family at their core--who constitutes family and what does that mean?
ReplyDeleteYes, so agree! xx
DeleteIrish twins, Lucy, isn’t that what you’re called if you’re born within the same year? I actually have a set in the new book I’m working on! Good to see you!
DeleteLucy, yes your books (especially Hayley Snow in the Key West Food Critic series) are all about maintaining friendships, family relationships and how to be a good friend as well. Love your characters.
DeleteYes Irish twins! and thank you anonymous xo
DeleteLucy, my sister and I are 16 months apart and we often dressed alike when we were young and also often mistaken for twins.
DeleteThe above comment was me
DeleteOh, this book kept me up long past my bedtime!
ReplyDeleteMission. Accomplished. 🥰
DeleteWelcome, JT! What a fascinating backstory for your books, and so interesting that it took someone else to point out the recurring twins theme in your books. A VERY BAD THING sounds like a perfect read!
ReplyDeleteThank you Deborah. It’s always so nice to have someone else point out the themes!
DeleteYes, I think that is so interesting--we just sometimes don't see it...
DeleteI’m reading your Taylor Jackson series right now and have A Very Bad Thing waiting for me on my Kindle!
ReplyDeleteMy father’s maternal aunts were twins. We’d always heard that twins skip a generation so my sister and I were thinking (assuming?) that one or both of us would have twins. Alas, we both struggled with infertility. She adopted two boys and then got pregnant at 39 and had a daughter. I was lucky to get pregnant at 41 and had my son. None of my other relatives on my dad’s side of the family had twins, either, to the best of my knowledge.
Love how strong your female characters are! — Pat S
Hi Pat — I’m so glad you are enjoying Taylor — she really is a kick-butt kind of character. I wanted her to be strong because she is, not because she was made that way.
DeleteI’m so sorry you had infertility struggles. It’s hard, and devastating. But you have a happy ending, which is fantastic.
Nature is so unpredictable...xoxo
DeleteHello, J.T.! I love twin stories. I have identical twin cousins (Brad and Greg) and when we were kids, we used to call them "Greg and more Greg." Poor Brad! LOL. Suffice to say, I love twin stories! Can't wait to read your latest!
ReplyDeleteHi Jenn — I love the teasing between you and your cousins. Poor Brad indeed!
DeletePoor Brad! I am so sorry to laugh at that...xxx
DeleteI'm sorry for your fertility struggle, JT. It's so hard. My son and his wife went through some of the same, and now have a lively and sweet one-year-old adopted daughter.
ReplyDeleteI've always been fascinated by twins, and my latest series features fraternal twin sisters, one of whom is the protag, and her twin's fraternal twin sons. I love exploring their interactions.
Congratulations on your new book!
Hi Edith, I am so glad your son and DIL found their happy ending! That’s wonderful. How fun that you’re writing about twins as well!!
DeleteHaving fraternal twins in a story is so different from identical!
DeleteFavorite tropes in thrillers? Usually family secrets. That can cover a lot of ground!
ReplyDeleteI had twin cousins, Edwin and Earl. They hardly spoke. I think they could communicate with each other mentally. They went off to college together, majoring in engineering; one in petroleum, the other in mechanical. Served in the Army together. Their jobs separated them geographically. Both married women who had children from a first marriage. No children of their own. They both died earlier this year within days of each other.
Hi Pat — agreed, family secrets is a wonderfully deep well to mine. Your cousins sound fascinating! And that telepathic bond is a real thing.
DeleteOh, gosh, that is quite the story...
DeleteJT Ellison, I've always had and still have a deep desire to be a twin. I've never wanted to shine individually but always wanted to be attached with someone who I could share activities who was like me. My hubby is different of course being we have such different personalities. He never would have made it as a twin! And he is an only child.
ReplyDeleteHe would never have made it as a twin! What an interesting comment.
DeleteSo fascinating--sounds like you were meant to have a twin.
DeleteI am the parent of fraternal boy/ girl twins. There are now adults. Life was always interesting raising twins. Fraternal boy/girl twins are abundant in my maternal Grandfather’s family. One of my first cousins had fraternal boy/girl twins too.
ReplyDeleteI was always fascinated with twins growing up.
Oh, tell us more!
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
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