Poisoned Pawn
by David
Siegel Bernstein
GENRE: Detective, Mystery
BLURB:
Caleb Jacobs is a man
with a past. After serving on a failed dark ops assignment in Afghanistan, he
leaves Marine Corps Intelligence to try to build a new life in Philadelphia as
a homicide police detective.
Jacobs is happy, for a time, until he is assigned
to solve the murder of Shannon Faraday. During the investigation, he is
convinced the evidence points to him as the killer. He knows it is only a
matter of time before other investigators see the same. He has no alibi and the
clock is counting down.
Behind his partner’s back, Jacobs hires a private
investigator named Lawrence Holmes. The PI is an irritation to the police, but
he is unmistakably brilliant. And, many powerful people in the city owe him
favors. Holmes is a bit odd. He insists on calling Jacobs Watson but claims to
never have heard the name Sherlock. Jacobs can live with this kind of crazy as
long as together they find the real killer.
They quickly link the murder to a series of
seemingly unrelated crimes occurring throughout Philadelphia, and Jacobs
becomes convinced the murder is related to the truth of what had happened
during his time in Afghanistan. Old secrets have come back to haunt him.
Excerpt:
I
felt like shit for having to hire a private investigator, especially one who
was most likely insane. Still, I couldn’t deny that his type of crazy got results.
Reluctantly I handed over an envelope to the man sitting on the sun-bleached
bench.
He
opened it. Satisfied with my offering, he slid it into his jacket. “Ah,
Watson,” he said. “Good to see you again.”
I
shook my head and dropped onto the bench next to him. “My name is Jacobs. Caleb
Jacobs,” I said, hoping the reminder might stick this time.
He
turned to me. “Did you say something?”
I
sighed. “No, Holmes.”
If
I wasn’t desperate for his help, I’d strangle him. Of course my superiors at
the Philadelphia Homicide Unit wouldn’t appreciate that. But I wondered if a
cop hiring a private investigator was any worse of a violation. I needed
Lawrence Holmes for his connections and unique viewpoint, things my PHU
colleagues couldn’t provide. He might not be the fictional character he played
at, but he was a talented PI.
Interview with David Siegel Bernstein
What was the hardest
scene from your book to write?
I
want to start by thanking The Avid Reader for inviting me here. Thanks!
All the scenes in Poisoned Pawn
presented their own unique challenges. However, the trickiest to write were the
quieter moments in the book. Fighting,
sex, murder, are all easy for me to write because there is a forward motion to
them. Having characters sitting in contemplation after the action is tricky,
especially if I don’t want to be boring.
Why did you choose to
write in your particular field or genre?
It
has to do with family. Thanks to my grandmother I had read a library’s worth of mysteries and thrillers before
I left high school and with my father, I watched just about every mystery ever
aired on PBS and BBC.
So, as you can imagine, crime has been brewing
in my noggin for quite a while. I’ve written a few mystery shorts, but this is
my first full length novel. I would like to believe my grandmother would have
loved it. My father reading it is very special to me.
Another reason I chose to write a mystery is because
I enjoy thinking up the perfect crime and fictionally getting away with it…
almost. It is all about creating puzzles that appear unsolvable. My heroes struggle
to a solution and sometimes, if you pay close attention in my stories, so will
you.
I also enjoy writing quirky characters, and
mysteries are especially conducive to quirk. In what other genre could Nero
Wolfe solve crimes while never leaving the house and sipping his afternoon
beer? Where else could Ms. Marple snoop as she knits away without being confined
to a rest home? Where else could Hercule Poirot wax his mustache as his little
gray cells solve a crime? Where else could Holmes, you know, be Homes? Of
course, my characters in Poisoned Pawn are much quirkier and better than
them.
I’ll let you in on a secret. Another reason I enjoy
about writing a mystery: I like catching the baddie.
If you write in more
than one genre, how do you balance them?
Although I like writing mysteries and thrillers,
I’m mostly known for my fantasy and science fiction. The nonfiction I write is
mostly about science. A SF/science mashup is my book Blockbuster Science:
The Real Science in Science Fiction.
Speaking of Genre-a-trois, if you do a deep internet
search you just might find some poetry under my name combining a couple of
genres.
I don’t think there is a need to find a balance
when writing in more than one genre. They riff off of each other nicely.
Sometimes I go solo on a genre, sometimes I go group. It is an open
relationship—a desire thing… not one of balance.
What did you enjoy
most about writing this book?
Heh, finishing it. I’m kidding. I was a bit sad
when I finished and left the Poisoned Pawn universe. What I enjoyed most
was when the characters revealed to me the twists and how to unravel them. They
did all the heavy lifting.
What book that you
have read has most influenced your life?
The Oxford Dictionary. All the words are in it. They
just need to be arranged in such a way as to birth a novel.
Tell us a little
about yourself? Perhaps something not many people know?
To go with my tough guy motif, I own a Toy
Poodle named Ringo Biggles Woofington. He may, or may not, have a guess
appearance in Poisoned Pawn.
I was on the television show Bozo the Clown.
Don’t judge me. I was a cute kid.
I have a kick-ass comic collection (which makes me popular
with the ladies… right?). Oh, and I am a firm believer in supporting the
writing community. I am on the board of directors for the Philadelphia Writers’
Conference and I lead the writers group Words-in-Progress.
Can you tell us
something about your book that is not in the summary?
Shhh. There is no guarantee (from me) that all
the characters survive until the end of the story.
AUTHOR
Bio and Links:
To support his writing addiction and excessively extravagant
lifestyle, David Siegel Bernstein, PhD, is a data scientist who consults as a
forensic statistician. That sounds really boring until you realize that his
clients include the US National Security Agency (NSA), the Secret Service, the
FBI, the Department of Justice (DOJ), and a host of other acronymonious
agencies who cultivate exciting and shadowy reputations. Alas, those
reputations are mere facades that disguise the real reason these organizations
exist, which is to keep him entertained and fed.
When
David wants a break from this spellbinding work, he writes. His fiction credits
encompass two novelettes and sixty shorts. His nonfiction has appeared in
newsletters, popular blogs, academic journals and he is the author of the book
Blockbuster Science: The Real Science in Science Fiction.
He
lives within the shadow of Philadelphia with his wife, Michelle, two children,
Seth and Gwendolyn, and a dog named Ringo Biggles Woofington.
Giveaway:
$25 Amazon or Barnes and Noble GC
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4 comments:
Thanks for hosting!
Thanks for including me in your world!
I appreciate getting to hear about your book. Thank you for sharing!
Np @James, I hope you give the book a chance!
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