In honor of all of us who have questions we wish interviewers asked us, I ask myself a few.
What possessed you to write the Cooper Quartet?
I served as an officer in the Navy at the bitter end of the Vietnam War. I was surrounded by Navy pilots on shore duty. Some of them were fresh home, as was a special SEAL, and my friends at Lemoore Naval Air Station, a mix of carrier pilots and rescue pilots. And they needed to talk. I often think that if the woman officers provided no service other than listening to and absorbing their tales before they went home to their loved ones, we deserved Purple Hearts. The moment I started writing Dead Legend was the moment I began to free myself. If you wonder whether the stories are true, I can assure you that Robin Haas speaks for me.
Why aren’t they more widely read?
I suspect because they don’t fall into ‘the military thriller where SEALS win the war we lost’ genre that is so popular. Rather, despite some intense military action, the four books are about Vietnam’s effects on our country. Whether you were spat on, held a sign or just didn’t give a damn, the War fundamentally changed our society, our music, and our generation. I hope through the series, a reader sees the full arc of the War’s impact through one family’s eyes.
Why are your standalone thrillers set where they are?
I have always loved books in which the setting is a character, so naturally I was drawn to places I knew well.
My first book, Perfidia, takes place in Barbados in 1972, shortly after its independence from England, and shortly after I lived there. It is a beautiful place, but, like most Caribbean islands, it has a darker side to its history. Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park provides a frame of reference. In Perfidia, one of the few remaining Barbadian plantations is caught in a tug-of-war over its existence.
Saving Calypso. I live part-time in the Sierra foothills, eleven miles from Yosemite National Park. When the idea for the story ripened, I needed a place for Calypso Swale to hide off the grid. It was only natural that the beauty and ruggedness that surround me would become a character in the book. It is more than a backdrop for what happens; it becomes a weapon when it is discovered that Calypso is alive.
As for Booth Island, my husband’s family owns an island in the middle of Bob’s Lake, Ontario. Families of French, English and Scots descent farmed this region of Canada since before the War of 1812. Post-World War I, Pennsylvanians surged in and bought up most of the available lakefront property and islands. It mattered a lot to the rural families, especially to those who didn’t benefit. And there you have a plot, hidden and roiling beneath the lake’s surface.
Why write a cozy mystery series set in the Midwest in the 1870s?
Madness. I was spawned in northwestern Illinois, about thirty-five miles due east of the Mississippi River. My father’s family farmed: my mother’s family lived in a small town, one that burgeoned with immigrants and industry after the Civil War. I couldn’t shake the thought that another small town, in the same place, would make a great setting for a series about a country in flux. So I did it.
If Cora Countryman had a theme song, what would it be? I Want to Be Free (Monkees) And Sebastian Kanady? You Belong to Me (Jo Stafford). What about Calypso Swale? I Need a Hero (Bonny Tyler), though I’m not sure why. Calypso is plenty self-sufficient. And Grieg Washburn? Can’t Get You Off of My Mind (Lenny Kravitz) I could go on, but I’ll stop here, no I won’t. One more: Laury Cooper? Paint it Black (Mick Jagger)
Why do you write?
I can’t help myself, never could. I worry that if I didn’t, all the voices in my head might rebel. And then, where would I be?
Find me and my books at https://dzchurch.com.



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