Jeri Westerson has published five Crispin Guest medieval noir novels. What is "medieval noir" you may well ask? In Westerson's books, "medieval noir" marries impeccable historical research, finely wrought characters, and intricate plotting with a fallen hero trying to survive with honor in the gritty streets of 14th century London's underbelly told with the sensibility of another Chandler or Hammett.
Disgraced knight, Crispin Guest, is one of the more complex and fascinating characters out there. Totally a creature of his medieval time period and culture, he is nonetheless kin to modern noir heroes such as Sam Spade, Chandler's man of honor with a contempt for pettiness. Westerson has been lauded for these books by reviewers and readers alike, with more than her share of starred reviews and major award nominations.
In Blood Lance, Crispin investigates the death of an armourer and winds up in a search for the Spear of Longinus in conjunction (or possibly competition) with his old friend Geoffrey Chaucer.Caught between rebellious factions
in King Richard’s court, an old friend’s honor, and the true ownership of the
spear, it all culminates in a deadly joust on London Bridge.
Jeri Westerson Bio
Raised in a household that not only
embraced history, but medieval English history specifically, Jeri came by her
interest in all things medieval honestly. She worked in a bevy of careers prior
to setting her sights on becoming a novelist. Would-be actress, graphic artist,
theology teacher, tasting host and tour guide for a winery, and newspaper
reporter were among them.
Her critically acclaimed medieval noir series began
with VEIL OF LIES, which garnered nominations from the Mystery Reader’s
Journal Macavity Award for Best Historical Mystery and the Private Eye Writers
of America Shamus Award for Best First PI Novel, the first medieval mystery to
be so honored. The next in the series, SERPENT
IN THE THORNS, garnered more mystery award nominations. The third, THE DEMON’S PARCHMENT,
took yet more nominations from awards committees, including RT (Romantic Times)
Reviewers’ Choice Award. Library Journal gave it a starred review while
Publisher’s Weekly declared it “the best yet in the series!”
The fourth Crispin Guest mystery,
TROUBLED BONES, was released in October 2011 and out of the gate received a
nomination for the RT Reviewer’s Choice Award. It finaled for the Agatha, the
Bruce Alexander Award, and the Macavity, giving it four nominations. Publisher’s Weekly said of the fifth
in the series BLOOD LANCE; “Clever twists and convincing period detail make
Westerson’s fifth 14th-century historical featuring disgraced knight Crispin
Guest one of her best.” Kirkus Review said, “Guest’s fifth adventure
again provides a lively tale of historical interest smoothly combined with a
worthy mystery.” The Richmond Times-Dispatch said, “Written with a
keen knowledge of medieval history, ‘Blood Lance’ is another riveting tale of
honor and heroism, grounded in period detail, a wealth of action and the
continued development of her characters.” Jeri looks forward to the sixth, SHADOW
OF THE ALCHEMIST in the fall of 2013.
Jeri also has short stories in
several anthologies: “Noodle Girl” in SHAKEN: STORIES FOR JAPAN, edited
by Tim Hallinan; “Universal Donor” in the November release of MURDER AND
MAYHEM IN MUSKEGO anthology, edited by Jon Jordan; “Mesmer Maneuver” in
2013′s Operator #5 serial anthology NIGHT OF THE INSURGENTS edited by
Gary Philips. She has done talks around the
country about the Middle Ages, demonstrating her cache of medieval weaponry.
She has been a featured guest on the radio talk show Writers on Writing with
host Barbara DeMarco-Barrett, and a guest lecturer at the Bowers Museum in
Santa Ana. She is vice president for the
southern California chapter of Mystery Writers of America and is also vice
president of the Los Angeles chapter of Sisters in Crime, and co-chair for the
California Crime Writer’s Conference for June 2013. She is also a member of
Private Eye Writers of America and the Historical Novel Society. Jeri is
married to a commercial photographer, has a screenwriter son, and herds two
cats, a tortoise, and the occasional tarantula at her home in southern
California.
For
those new to your series, can you describe the Crispin Guest mysteries? What was
your inspiration for this series?How would you describe Blood Lance to someone who has not read any of your previous
novels?
When I decided to write a medieval mystery series, I
got it in my head to devise a hardboiled detective in a medieval setting, more
or less like a medieval Sam Spade, since, at the time, I was reading a lot of
Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett. Chandler’s Philip Marlowe was styled as
a “white knight,” a man who was led by his own code of honor. And I thought,
why not a real knight under the same
onus? So I took the tropes of the hardboiled detective—a lone wolf with a chip
on his shoulder, hard-drinking, hard-talking, hard-fighting, and a sucker for a
dame in trouble—and put him in the Middle Ages. I made him a knight with
fighting training, a facility with languages, then took his title, lands, and
wealth away so he’d have that chip on his shoulder with down and dirty
backstory, and placed him on the mean streets of fourteenth century London
where he has to eke out a living as a “Tracker,” a medieval PI, hired to find
things. Some of those things turn out to
be a murderer. I think it works well in the shadowy realm of medieval London.
And each book features a religious relic or venerated object, something
everyone wants to get their hands on or can’t wait to get rid of. There’s a lot
of action, adventure, puzzles and twists, and even a bit of romance from the
occasional femme fatale.
In Blood Lance, Crispin is coming home from a long
day of investigating with coins in his money pouch for once, and as he’s
passing London Bridge, he sees a person hurtling down from its heights into the
churning Thames below. Like the knight he is, he dives in to save him, but when
he gets to the man, he is already dead. When he confronts the people living on
the bridge (and it is a city within a city with shops and houses) they claim
that the dead armorer committed suicide, even the man’s fiancé. But Crispin
knows murder when he sees it. And later, when Sir Thomas, an old friend of
Crispin’s from his knightly days, comes calling on this armorer, Crispin
discovers that the armorer was supposed to procure a special relic for the
knight, a relic that would make him invincible in battle. But it’s missing. This
relic is also wanted by another of Crispin’s old friends, the poet Geoffrey
Chaucer, and Crispin is unable to determine if Chaucer wants it to do good or
ill. Now Crispin is caught between rebellious factions in King Richard II’s
court, Spanish spies, an old friend’s honor, and the true ownership of the
famed Spear of Longinus, culminating in a deadly joust on London Bridge.
Who
were your literary influences growing up?Are there any authors (living or dead)
that you would name as influences?
Well, Geoffrey Chaucer for one. I grew up in a
household that loved English history and so we had a child’s version of the
Canterbury Tales (with some of the more juicier tales left out) and I loved it,
along with all the other historical novels on our shelves. I read Anya Seton,
Thomas B. Costain, Nora Lofts—all the greats, but I also became a Shakespeare
groupie in high school as well as a Tolkien geek. Later, when I got caught up
in mysteries, it was Dorothy Sayers, Ellis Peters, and Hammett, Chandler, and
Dorothy Hughes.
What's
your writing process? What is a typical writing day like for you? Do you keep
to a set schedule? What are your writing habits?
I try to keep good writing habits, and with at least
two series at once, you have to do that (I also write under the name Haley
Walsh and pen a gay mystery series, the Skyler Foxe Mysteries.) I start around
7 am and do my blogging, emails, and Facebook. But by 9 it’s time to write. I
outline every novel because I set myself a minimum of ten pages a day and I
have no time to sit and stare at a blank page. I have to know where I’m going, even if I suddenly diverge from my
original path in the outline. If I keep at it and don’t get diverted by
Facebook or what’s on TCM that day, I write till about 3 pm. But sometimes I
write a page or a few paragraphs and wander away. I read something or watch
something on TV and then return to it. Sometimes my best writing comes at
around 5 pm and goes on till 10. It’s when the Muse strikes, but I do try to
keep to that ten page minimum. Theoretically, I would end up with a first draft
in a month’s time, but it ends up being more like three months. Before I write
a Crispin book, I have to take at least two to three months of researching and
outlining first.
What
projects, literary or otherwise, are occupying you at the moment?
Crispin #6, The Shadow of the Alchemist, is in the
can. Soon I’ll be outlining Crispin #7, The Silence of Stones (for which we
have to find a publisher), but I’m also working on a Young Adult series with
Crispin’s young apprentice, Jack Tucker. Crispin found Jack when he was eleven
years old, an orphaned cutpurse on the streets of London. Jack took a shine to
Crispin and just wouldn’t leave, so Crispin reluctantly took him in as a
servant, but he so endeared himself to Crispin with his bravery and
intelligence that Crispin soon taught the lad to read and write and is in the
process of training him as the next “Tracker.” Jack’s tales will be the stuff
that happens when he disappears from Crispin’s side, with a stronger paranormal
element and feature a strictly Jack-oriented adventure.
What inspired you to write your first novel and make it a
historical novel? Had you always wanted to be a writer? Did you have a
background as a medievalist?
I don’t have a history degree (my degree
is in art) but I had that strong history interest growing up in my parents’
household, who were both English medieval history buffs. We had all sorts of
books on the shelves from historical novels to history texts. But I never had
any notion about being a writer. I first wanted to be an actress, but after
some real world auditions in college, I decided the acting life was not for me.
I turned to my other longtime interest, art, changed my major, and became a graphic
artist for fifteen years in Los Angeles. In my childhood years, though, I
always wrote stories for fun, and even wrote my first fantasy novel when I was
sixteen (with the Jack Tucker tales, with their strong fantasy element, I’m
really going back to my roots). For years after, I wrote novels for fun, novels
no one else knew I wrote. It wasn’t until I semi-retired from graphic design to
have a baby that I was forced to consider a new career (the entire graphics
industry had turned to computers, and I had not!). So I thought of something I
could do at home to raise my son and researched the publishing industry and
thought, why not? How hard could it be? It turned out to be pretty hard. I
wrote historical novels for ten years, never getting a break, until I switched
from historical novel to medieval mystery. Then it all turned around.
Do
you belong to a critique group of other authors?Do you find it helpful? In what
ways?
I do. I joined Sisters in Crime around 2002 when I
switched to mysteries and found a whole world of help, networking, and
information. I was mostly involved in the online group of Guppies (the Great
UnPublished, or Gups, guppies) and found my critique group there. I simply put
out the call for other historical mystery writers and we virtually met. We live
all over the country, from northern California to Oklahoma. I’ve only met one
of them face to face. We communicate strictly online. It’s most helpful to have
other eyes, eyes that know how to construct a mystery, people who will tell you
the truth about your work. My agent will do that, too, but beta readers can
work with you to get the kinks outbefore
I send it to my agent.
What
is your advice to aspiring writers?How important is it for a young writer to be
a reader? What would you recommend they read?
The best advice is to write a lot and to read a lot.
Don’t just read in the genre you want to write in, but all sorts of things.
Everything. You never know where inspiration will come from. I don’t know of
any successful writer who isn’t a reader. And don’t give up. Keep trying to get
that agent. Agents can get you all sorts of contracts. Where would I be without
my foreign contracts?
What
is the most surprising thing you’ve learned in your writing career? What has
been the hardest part about being a writer?
The hardest part is that you put so much of your
time, talent, and sweat into writing a book and you get so little back in
return. And what I mean by that is that authors can seldom make a living in
their chosen career. Editors and agents don’t need a second job, but you might. It’s a crime that this is the
truth of publishing, but there it is. I do write full time, but my husband
supports us.
Also, I spend a great deal of time on promotion. Even
if you are published by a big New York publisher as I am, you will do the
majority of promotion. It’s a shame that one cannot just write, but again, it’s the nature of the beast. And
don’t rush to self-publish. I think you will be doing yourself a disservice.
Perhaps there’s a reason you get rejections. Maybe your work isn’t quite up to
snuff yet. Maybe you need to write something else. You lose a lot of
opportunities—chances to get foreign sales, audio sales, and other contracts—by
going it alone. Don’t be drawn in by the extremely small minority who make the
papers and hit it big as self-published authors. Chances are that won’t be you.
There are thousands more authors who make only a very few sales from their
books as newbies.
Mostly, keep writing, keep reading, network with
other authors by joining professional organizations like Sisters in Crime and
Mystery Writers of America, and always, always,
be professional.
Now don’t forget to check my website for info on my
books, book discussion guides, Crispin’s blog and a cool series book trailer. www.JeriWesterson.com