Book Beat Babes

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Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Chris Karlsen Reveals the Inspiration for Her Mystery/Suspense Book, Silk

Please welcome mystery/suspense author, Chris Karlsen, to Book Beat Babes today. Morgan Mandel
Chris is a Chicago native. Her family moved to Los Angeles when she was in her late teens where she later studied at UCLA. She graduated with a Business Degree. Her father was a history professor and her mother a voracious reader. She grew up with a love of history and books.
Her parents were also passionate about traveling and passed their passion onto Chris. Once bitten with the travel bug, Chris spent most of her adult life visiting the places she'd read about and that fascinated her. She's had the good fortune to travel Europe extensively, the Near East, and North Africa, in addition to most of the United States.
After college, Chris spent the next twenty-five years in law enforcement with two agencies. Harboring a strong desire to write since her teens, upon retiring from police work, Chris decided to pursue her writing career. She currently writes three different series. Her historical romance series is called, Knights in Time. Her romantic thriller series is Dangerous Waters, and he latest book, Silk, is book one in her mystery/suspense series, The Bloodstone series.
She currently lives in the Pacific Northwest with her husband and five wild and crazy rescue dogs.
ABOUT CHRIS KARLSEN'S MYSTERY/SUSPENSE BOOK, SILK 
London-Fall, 1888
The city is in a panic as Jack the Ripper continues his murderous spree. While the Whitechapel police struggle to find him, Detective Inspector Rudyard Bloodstone and his partner are working feverishly to find their own serial killer. The British Museum's beautiful gardens have become a killing ground for young women strangled as they stroll through.
Their investigation has them brushing up against Viscount Everhard, a powerful member of the House of Lords, and a friend to Queen Victoria. When the circumstantial evidence points to him as a suspect, Rudyard must deal with the political blowback, and knows if they are going to go after the viscount, they'd better be right and have proof.
As the body count grows and the public clamor for the detectives to do more, inter-department rivalries complicate the already difficult case.
Purchase on Amazon
Next, Chris reveals her inspiration for Silk.
When A Setting Is Perfect by Chris Karlsen
I was in the middle of writing another book, part of my Knights in Time series, when Rudyard Bloodstone came to me. As a character he was that rare protagonist who was crystal clear in my imagination from the start. But I pushed him to the back of my mind until I finished the other story.

When I started my latest release, Silk, a suspense thriller with Rudyard as the protagonist, I had much of killer drawn out as well. I didn't think twice about the setting either. It had to be Victorian England. I would be hard pressed to name a more atmospheric setting for a murderer. Growing up my parents were big fans of horror films. The films then weren't the gruesome Freddy Krueger or Michael Myers Halloween-slasher types of the 1980's. We watched the typical Hammer Film horrors. Those were the ones where a young Englishman in deep debt agrees to spend the night in a haunted house somewhere in the moors or countryside away from London for a large sum of money. All those movies were set in either Victorian or Edwardian times, which were perfect for a scary movie. Having visited England many times, I was familiar with the Victorian influences, especially in London. So, what better setting for my murder suspense than Victorian London?
I knew with Detective Inspector Rudyard (Ruddy) Bloodstone I make him a veteran of the Zulu Wars of 1879. Eleven Victoria Crosses (the equivalent of the Medal of Honor) were awarded after the Battle of Rorke's Drift (Jan. 1879). Rudyard is a recipient of the VC, but he's a war hero who doesn't believe himself one. To Ruddy, he only did what was necessary in battle. A civilian now, he is a down to earth, determined and clever detective, a keen observer with a droll sense of humor.

The killer, William Everhard, is a wealthy nobleman, a member of the House of Lords, and friend to Queen Victoria. I wanted to hold a mirror to the society of the period, the difference in classes and attitudes but without being too Dickensian. I wanted to show both the good and bad. Mostly, I wanted to use the "feel" of the city. To me, this is the perfect setting: the cold fog, the beautiful carriages pulled by handsome teams of horses, the gardens for strolling, the grittiness of Whitechapel, dark allies and the terror Jack the Ripper sent through the population.

As a writer, one of the biggest joys of writing historical settings is living the period, experiencing the culture, if only on the page. I enjoyed walking Victorian London with the characters in Silk: sitting with Ruddy while he visited his friend's pub, walking around a crime scene taking in every detail with him, or simply strolling through the park with him, and his adopted stray, Winky, on a Sunday afternoon. I even liked sharing the dark and dangerous places I took them when needed.
Setting is more than scenery. I think of it as a living, breathing thing, another character. Like fashioning a character exactly the way you envision him or her, finding the perfect setting is one of the best parts of storytelling.    

Connect with Chris Karlsen at: www.chriskarlsen.com
Please welcome Chris by leaving a comment below.
 

12 comments:

  1. Welcome to Book Beat Babes, Chris! Thanks for sharing how your book, Silk, came about.

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  2. Thank you for hosting Chris, Morgan!

    Chris, what happened to all those great Hammer film horrors--I nejoyed them so much as a teen! They were majorly influential in my writing (horror, supernatural, suspense). I also remember those films set in Victorian London about Jack the Ripper. I wonder why they never give those movies on TV any more. I can't find them on Netflix either. I should probably buy them on Amazon!

    Mayra

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    1. Hi Mayra,
      I'm sorry to say that the last 30 years or so, movie fans want the blood and guts. I think it started with Halloween and each film after got more and more graphic. The old Hammer ones were fun because you knew watching what the character shouldn't do and you'd find yourself talking to the screen, at least I did:)
      CHris

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  3. Sounds like a great read. I love London and there's always something fascinating about the Ripper murders and Whitechapel. A horror fan, too!

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    1. HI Christine,
      London is a great setting for so many types of stories but for murder ones, it is better than any other place IMO. Maybe its the fog or the mix of architecture, or just the feel of "age" but I love the city.
      Chris

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  4. Hi Morgan,
    Thank you for the opportunity to showcase Silk. It is much appreciated. I look forward to chatting with your followers.
    Chris Karlsen

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  5. Fascinating post, Chris. I enjoy history and mystery/suspense. I'm adding you to my TBR list and hope I can get to one of your books soon. And, yes, I loved those old movies, too.
    Marja McGraw

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    1. Hi Marja,
      I'm just not a fan of gruesomeness on the screen for the sake of shock value. I really dislike the slasher movies. There are so many movies that got your heart racing without rivers of blood. I remember being on the edge of my seat when Alan Arkin was stalking Audrey Hepburn in Wait Until Dark. The Marines creeping through the space colony in Aliens 2 was pretty spooky.
      Chris

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  6. Yes, the fog certainly has something to do with it, as well as Jack the Ripper, for sure! Who can't picture the silhouette of a man with a cloak and a "doctor's bag" walking in a dark and foggy cobblestone Victorian London street? Terrifying!
    Mayra

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    1. Hi Mayra,
      I love the contrasts Victorian London presents. I think those enhance the mood. There's the beautiful gardens and the elegant Horse Guards in St. James Park, and the idea of polished carriages. Then there's the fog, and dark alleys, and the way the old gas lamps cast shadows. It's all there.
      Chris

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  7. Chris,
    Welcome to BBB.
    Love Victorian era mysteries-will check yours out.

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  8. Chris ~
    So glad you could join us at BBB. Your story sounds wonderful with a great setting. Sounds as if you've picked the perfect place for a mystery.

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