Welcome Melodie Campbell!
Lynn McPherson is delighted to welcome Melodie Campbell as a guest to talk about life, writing, and her new release: The Merry Widow Murders.
When Life Gives You Lemons…(get out the gin and start writing a new series)
By Melodie Campbell
Ah, the timeless question. Where do you get your ideas?
I think it was Stephen King who talked about a little mail-order store in small town America…I’ve never been able to find that store myself. Stephen keeps it a close secret (I hope you’re smiling.)
But I had reason to experience that dilemma about two years ago, a year into the pandemic, and a year after my husband David died.
Damn that covid, and what it’s done to publishing. When Orca Books told me that they were capping the line that carried my Goddaughter series (translation: still selling the books in the line, but closing it to future books, at least for now) I was in a tight spot.
I’d had 10 contracts in a row from Orca! That series garnered three major awards! How could I leave it behind?
Put another way: what the poop was I going to write next?
The Goddaughter series featured a present day mob goddaughter who didn’t want to be one. Gina Gallo had a beloved fiancé who thought she had gone straight. But of course, in each book she would get blackmailed into helping the family pull off heists or capers that would inevitably go wrong. It allowed for a lot of madcap comedy.
Some would say I was a natural to write a series about a mob goddaughter (we’ll just leave it at that.) And I liked the serious theme behind the comedy: You’re supposed to love and support your family. But what if your family is this one?
Issues of grey have always interested me. We want things to be black and white in life, but quite often, they are more complex than that. I like exploring justice outside of the law in my novels. But I digress…
The Goddaughter books brought me to the attention of Don Graves, a well-known newspaper book reviewer up here. He commiserated with the end of the Goddaughter series, and immediately suggested the following:
“Why don’t you write about her grandmother? Prohibition days, when the mob was becoming big in Hamilton.”
The idea burned in me. Except it wouldn’t be her grandmother. (Don is older than me.) It would be her great-grandmother! Coming to age in the time of Rocco Perri and Bessie Starkman…
I settled on 1928, because that was the year women finally got the vote in England. The status of women features very much in this novel. The time frame also allowed me to use the aftermath of WW1, including men like my own grandfather, wounded by gas, and shell-shocked. I would make the protagonist a young widow, because I knew grief – oh man, did I know grief. My own husband had died way before his time, the year before. I could write convincingly about that.
But I would also use bathos to lighten the tale. (I seem incapable of writing anything straight.) The humour of the Goddaughter books finds its way into The Merry Widow Murders, and so far, has generated smiles for prepub reviewers.
The book took me over a year to write, working full time on it. It helped me to channel my grief. It forced me to step out of my comfort zone and write something with considerable depth.
And it taught me that – even widowed – I wasn’t entirely alone. That ideas are beautiful things that can come from friendship, and the good hearts of readers and reviewers you are fortunate to meet along your publishing journey.
1928, At Sea
When an inconvenient dead body shows up in her stateroom, Lady Lucy Revelstoke and her pickpocket-turned-maid Elf know how to make it disappear–and find the killer. But can they do it before the authorities look into her own dodgy past?
“Miss Fisher meets Hitchcock’s The Trouble with Harry. The perfect escapist read!” Anne R. Allen
Called the “Queen of Comedy” by the Toronto Sun, Melodie Campbell was also named the “Canadian literary heir to Donald Westlake” by Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine. Winner of 10 awards, including The Derringer (US) and the Crime Writers of Canada Award of Excellence, she has multiple bestsellers, and was featured in USA Today. Her publications include over 100 comedy credits, 16 novels and 60 short stories, but she’s best known for The Goddaughter mob caper series.
Thanks for visiting, Melodie. Always fun!
Such a pleasure, being hosted on here! Thank you Lynn.
Always happy to have you on, Melodie!
Thanks for an interesting posting!
Thanks for commenting, Kathryn!
It’s so hard to keep up the humor in our writing while real life is handing us lemons. I admire your resilience, Melodie. Wishing you the very best of luck with the Merry Widow!
Thank you, Gay! I got my start as a humour columnist as well as writing standup. I remember having to lock myself in the bathroom to finish a column before getting on a plane to England for my 24 year old cousin’s funeral. I think – since then – I’ve seen tragedy at the heart of comedy. Love harder…laugh more – wait! Maybe there’s another blog post there, waiting to be written 🙂
Congrats on finding a way to move forward. Sounds like a fun book.
Thanks, Mark! I like to think of life like a book, now. Sometimes you have great chapters and they are over before you want them to. And then, a new chapter starts whether you want it to or not!
Must agree that humor in writing comes naturally. The same can be said when a series is orphaned and you either stop writing or find a way to begin a new book or series. Having been orphaned twice and seeing a third series wrap up, I know your pain – as well as the hope for the future. Appreciated your blog and look forward to your new series.
What a wise comment, Debra – thank you. Yes, I use humour to cope with pain, which was rather a revelation to me, later in life. I appreciated hearing your experience with three series – thank you.
Any friend of Lynn’s is a friend of mine. Nice to meet you, Melodie. Best of luck to you with your writing!
Lynn is a doll! Would you believe she took my writing class two years ago, and is my number one success story? I couldn’t be prouder of her. Thanks for commenting, Saralyn!
Aw ❤️❤️❤️thanks so much, Saralyn!!!
Thanks Melodie!
Melodie, how fascinating to read about your journey to a new series. I wish you great success and look forward to reading your Goddaughter and historical novels.
Paula,thank you! This journey through life certainly takes us places we never expected. Many thanks for commenting.
Great interview, Mel. Good to get the background on The Merry Widow Murders before reading it!
Thanks Donna! I hope you enjoy it 🙂
Lynn, thank you for the introduction to Melodie’s series! Sounds delightful!
Thank you Donnell!