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Q & A With Author Jaden Terrell on Racing The Devil
(Permanent Press Books January 2012 release)
Q--You put a lot on your lead character including being framed
for murder, trouble shaking an ex-wife, a son with Down
Syndrome and a nephew on the dangerous edge of the Goth
subculture. Can Jared McKean deal with all this?
A—Jared is a strong man, both
physically and emotionally. I see him as the guy who would walk
through fire for the people he loves, and while it pushes him to
his limits, it only makes him stronger in the end. It also
tempers him. Having a son with Down syndrome, a best friend with
AIDS, and an ex-wife he still loves bring out his tender side
and keep him from being your everyday tough guy. I call him a
hardboiled hero with a soft-boiled heart; it’s the challenges
that make him, not just a strong man, but a good one.
Q--You
say you know fictitious McKean better than you know anyone else.
How is that?
A—The
facile answer is that I can see into his head, which is
impossible with other people. The more complete answer is that I
also know all the events, small and large, that have made him
what he is, things he would never confide to anyone, or even
think to. I know things about him that he doesn’t know about
himself yet—for example, that he has half-siblings he’s never
met. In the flesh-and-blood world, you can never get a complete
picture of anyone, no matter how well or for how long you’ve
known them, but in the world of fiction, you can know everything
that matters.
Q--You live in Nashville and set the story in Nashville. What
makes Nashville a good backdrop?
A—Nashville is a city of
contradictions. At the center of the Music Row roundabout,
there’s a bronze statue called Musica, composed of classically
sculpted nude figures, while just a few blocks away is a giant
fiberglass catfish wearing a cowboy hat. We have the Swan Ball,
a “white-tie gala” and one of the top charity events in the
county, followed by the famously tacky Swine Ball and the Music
City Barbecue Festival. Sometimes called the buckle of the Bible
Belt, we have more churches per square mile than any other city
in the U.S.—and also more strip clubs. There’s country music
glitz, suburban ordinariness, gang violence, human trafficking,
and down-home hospitality. Nashville has big-city issues, but
there’s still a rural feel to it. Whatever you want to write
about, you can probably find it here.
Q--You got some really good hands-on experience with local
detectives and by attending the Citizens Police Academy. How did
all this help you write the book?
A—Jared is a former police officer,
so talking with law enforcement professionals gave me insights
into his psychology and experiences. I also learned about
investigative techniques and what is and isn’t
possible—especially about timelines and how long it takes to get
back test results. Most important, it’s given me some valuable
contacts—people I can call or email if I have specific
questions. I hope it’s helped make the books more authentic and
believable.
Q--How
long did it take to write the manuscript?
A—That’s
a hard question! The first draft took six weeks. Editing it took
close to a year. Then I rewrote it several times. This first
book in the series has been through several
incarnations—self-published to independent micro-press to my
current publisher, The Permanent Press, which is a larger
independent publisher. Each time, it’s had significant
revisions. I’ve grown as a writer, and I think that’s reflected
in each new version of the book. So the answer, depending on how
you look at it, is either six weeks or about a decade.
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