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Persistent Author Jaden Terrell Creates a Hard-Boiled P.I.
And A First-Rate Whodunit in RACING THE DEVIL
When readers open the pages of RACING THE DEVIL (The Permanent
Press, January release) they will encounter protagonist Jared
McKean, a multi-layered private eye with a gritty edge and a big
heart.
The book is the creation of writer Jaden Terrell, a persistent
author who is anything but an overnight success.
Terrell’s 264-page
novel,
which is drawing praise from fellow authors, is the culmination
of years of honing the mystery writing craft, hanging out with
medical examiners and detectives, attending writers’ conferences
and citizen police academies…and countless setbacks.
After Terrell’s first agent died, a friend published the book
for her through a self-publishing company. A few years later,
the book was picked up by Night Shadows Press, a small
independent publishing company. Finally in 2010, after
contracting for the second book in the series, The Permanent
Press obtained the rights to Racing the Devil as well.
The readers are the beneficiaries of Terrell’s graduation from
the writer’s school of hard knocks.
As the book’s synopsis explains:
Nashville Private Investigator Jared McKean has a son with Down
Syndrome, a best friend with AIDS, an ex-wife he can't seem to
fall out of love with, and a weakness for women in
jeopardy--until one frames him for murder.
“It’s been a long journey to get to this point. I’m lucky to
have a well-known and highly respected publisher in The
Permanent Press, one that’s known for publishing novels with
deep characters and authentic plots and storylines,” said
Terrell, a Nashville resident.
Asked about that long journey, Terrell added, “Some authors are
like Secretariat. They shoot out of the starting gate and blast
like a comet across the finish line six lengths ahead of the
rest of the field. They get the big advance. They get on Oprah.
Their early novels are bestsellers. Well I’m no Secretariat. I’m
Hidalgo. Hidalgo wasn’t the flashiest or the fastest, but when
the rest of the field fell by the wayside or turned back because
the going was too hard, he just kept putting one foot in front
of the other. The writing life is wonderful, but it isn’t easy.
Unless you’re a Secretariat, it comes with rejection, with
failure, with disappointment after disappointment. A lot of
writers decide it isn’t worth the heartache or the stress. But I
knew where I wanted to go, and I knew that if I just kept
writing, kept rewriting, took another workshop, sent out another
fifty queries—whatever it took—like Hidalgo, I would eventually
get there.”
So Terrell picked the brains of Nashville detectives, medical
examiners and psychologists. She participated in police ride-alongs,
talked to assistant district attorneys and took good notes.
“I wanted Racing the Devil to be real for the readers,”
Terrell said. “Not only in terms of Jared’s investigative
skills, but also in terms of his character and temperament. I
knew he was going to be a PI. He’s this tough guy but I
surrounded him with people who bring out the underlying
compassion in him. What you learn, while he’s trying to prove
his innocence, is that Jared is a person who hangs on to the
people he loves. I call him a hardboiled hero with a softboiled
heart.”
Terrell’s hard work on Racing The Devil is reaping early
praise.
-Jochem Steen (creator of Sons of Spade blogsite) said: “The
successful merging of the personal side of Jared’s life and the
murder mystery made this an absolute favorite for me.”
-K. Irvin (author of A Deadly Wilderness) said: “The
whodunit is first rate, but it’s the characters who steal the
show.”
-Sallie Bissell (author of In the Forest of Harm) said:
“Terrell’s got a real ear for dialog, the characters are
compelling and the plot nicely twisted.”
-B.J. Bountford (author of the Shackelford Island Mysteries
said: “I read this mystery in two evenings—kept me up past
midnight.”
For more on Terrell visit
www.jadenterrrell.com
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