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becke_davis
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Guest Blog by Author(s) CHARLES TODD!

Today's guest blog is by the mother-son team known as CHARLES TODD!

 

They visited here once before: 

 

http://bookclubs.barnesandnoble.com/t5/Mystery/January-Feature-Charles-Todd-s-THE-RED-DOOR/td-p/4371...

 

Check out their website here: http://charlestodd.com/

 

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becke_davis
Posts: 29,319
Registered: 10-19-2006

Re: Guest Blog by Author(s) CHARLES TODD!

Charles Todd Biography

 

Charles and Caroline Todd

 

Charles and Caroline Todd are a mother and son writing team who live on the east coast of the United States. Caroline has a BA in English Literature and History, and a Masters in International Relations. Charles has a BA in Communication Studies with an emphasis on Business Management, and a culinary arts degree that means he can boil more than water. Caroline has been married (to the same man) for umpteen years, and Charles is divorced.

 

Charles and Caroline have a rich storytelling heritage. Both spent many evenings on the porch listening to their fathers and grandfathers reminisce. And a maternal grandmother told marvelous ghost stories. This tradition allows them to write with passion about events before their own time. And an uncle/great uncle who served as a flyer in WWI aroused an early interest in the Great War.

 

Charles learned the rich history of Britain, including the legends of King Arthur, William Wallace, and other heroes, as a child. Books on Nelson and by Winston Churchill were always at hand. Their many trips to England gave them the opportunity to spend time in villages and the countryside, where there’s a different viewpoint from that of the large cities.

Their travels are at the heart of the series they began ten years ago.

 

Charles’s love of history led him to a study of some of the wars that shape it: the American Civil War, WWI and WWII. He enjoys all things nautical, has an international collection of seashells and has sailed most of his life. Golf is still a hobby that can be both friend and foe.

 

And sports in general are enthusiasms. Charles had a career as a business consultant. This experience gave him an understanding of going to troubled places where no one was glad to see him arrive. This was excellent training for Rutledge’s reception as he tries to find a killer in spite of local resistance.

 

Caroline has always been a great reader and enjoyed reading aloud, especially poetry that told a story. The Highwayman was one of her early favorites. Her wars are World War 1, the Boer War, and the English Civil War, with a sneaking appreciation of the Wars of the Roses as well. When she’s not writing, she’s traveling the world, gardening or painting in oils. Her background in international affairs backs up her interest in world events, and she’s also a sports fan, an enthusiastic follower of her favorite teams in baseball and pro football. She loves the sea but is a poor sailor—Charles inherited his iron stomach from his father. Still, she has never met a beach she didn’t like.

 

Both Caroline and Charles also share a love of animals, and family pets have always been rescues. There was once a lizard named Schnickelfritz. Don’t ask.

 

Writing together is a challenge, and both enjoy giving the other a hard time. The famous quote is that in revenge, Charles crashes Caroline’s computer, and Caroline crashes his parties. Will they survive to write more novels together? Stay tuned! Their father/husband is holding the bets.

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becke_davis
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Re: Guest Blog by Author(s) CHARLES TODD!

A Bitter Truth

A Bess Crawford Mystery

 

 

A Bitter Truth (Bess Crawford Series #3)  

 

When battlefield nurse Bess Crawford returns from France for a well-earned Christmas leave, she finds a bruised and shivering woman huddled in the doorway of her London residence. The woman has nowhere to turn, and, propelled by a firm sense of duty, Bess takes her in. Once inside Bess’s flat the woman reveals that a quarrel with her husband erupted into violence, yet she wants to go home—if Bess will come with her to Sussex. Realizing that the woman is suffering from a concussion, Bess gives up a few precious days of leave to travel with her. But she soon discovers that this is a good deed with unforeseeable consequences.

What Bess finds at Vixen Hill is a house of mourning. The woman’s family has gathered for a memorial service for the elder son who has died of war wounds. Her husband, home on compassionate leave, is tense, tormented by jealousy and his own guilty conscience. Then, when a troubled house guest is found dead, Bess herself becomes a prime suspect in the case. This murder will lead her to a dangerous quest in war-torn France, an unexpected ally, and a startling revelation that puts her in jeopardy before a vicious killer can be exposed.

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becke_davis
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Re: Guest Blog by Author(s) CHARLES TODD!

A Lonely Death

 

A Lonely Death (Inspector Ian Rutledge Series #13)  

 


Three men have been murdered in a Sussex village, and Scotland Yard has been called in. It’s a baffling case. All the victims are soldiers who have made it home alive from the Great War, which ended two years ago, only to be garroted, with small ID disks left in their mouths. And shortly after Inspector Ian Rutledge arrives, there’s a fourth murder. The killer is vicious and clever, leaving behind few clues. As the stakes ratchet up, Rutledge is determined to find answers, even as he puts his job, his reputation, and even his life on the line.

 

INSTANT NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER

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becke_davis
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Re: Guest Blog by Author(s) CHARLES TODD!

An Interview with Inspector Ian Rutledge, March 1920.

 

Interviewer: Inspector Rutledge, you come from a different background than most policemen today–middle class family, father a solicitor, mother an accomplished pianist, yourself university educated. What interested you in police work rather than following your father into the law?

Ian Rutledge: I’d thought I’d settled on becoming an architect—the influence of my godfather, David Trevor. His son Ross and I were close and I spent many weekends with them in London or in their Scottish hunting lodge. Building something seemed permanent and useful. Then a remark my father made when I was ten, I think, changed that. He said the law was created so that everyone could expect a fair and impartial justice. There was a murder trial later that summer, and I asked who spoke for the dead man. He told me that no one did, the man was dead. The police gathered evidence, made an arrest, the killer was brought to trial, and if found guilty, punished. That struck me as odd—why shouldn’t the dead man have a voice in what caused his death? My father replied that the law wasn’t set up that way. By the time I’d come down from university, I realized that I wanted to be that voice. It’s how I approach my cases.

Interviewer: Many of your colleagues came up through the ranks, without benefit of university education. Does this present a problem as the Yard expects more training of its officers?

Rutledge: There has been some, yes. (Interviewer’s note: This appears to be an understatement.) It wasn’t that long ago when people expected a policeman to knock at the tradesmen’s entrance, not the front door of a house. But perceptions have changed, and we’ve grown more professional. We all start as a constable, the man who has walked the streets and knows all the people on his watch. He brings this experience to the table, and it’s a good system. But crime isn’t always a simple matter of greed or anger getting the best of someone. It can move quickly out of a local man’s grasp, and the Yard must step in with a broader perspective. I was recently in Northumberland where a local case spread to several other areas because the facts had been blurred or lost over time. This is where training and education come in to provide a broader picture. And this is where the local man must accept a new approach. This is the future of the Yard, but it isn’t always comfortable in the work day. Use your instinct, your head and your observations, Sergeant Gibson at the Yard told me once, and he’s right. These matter. But you must also bring outside experience to the mix.

Interviewer: Chief Superintendent Bowles is involved with this new view?

Rutledge: (Dryly.) I would say that Chief Superintendent Bowles is daily aware of how times are changing for the Yard.

Interviewer: You spent four years in the trenches—1914-1918. And came home unscathed. On the surface. What do you think saved you there, and what has it brought you in terms of your duties at the Yard?

Rutledge: I don’t think anyone came back from that war unscathed. Some of us have scars that aren’t visible. And they’re as raw as the lost arm, the blinded eye, the gassed lungs. Harder to treat, because those who are scarred in the mind can’t turn to anyone for help. Shell shock is considered cowardice, lack of moral fiber. So such men fight it on their own. Some lose that battle.

Interviewer: You lost your fiancée, I understand, because of the war.

Rutledge: (Interviewer’s note: voice terse.) I released her from the engagement. I was no longer the man she had wanted to marry in 1914. And so I set her free. She’s since married and lives in Canada.

Interviewer: Will you tell us about Hamish MacLeod?

Rutledge: (Interviewer: guardedly) He was one of so many young Scots I led into battle, knowing that most of them wouldn’t come back. It was the hardest thing I’ve ever done in my life. But it had to be done, and I was the one who had to do it, then live with it. End of story. But it doesn’t stop their faces from coming back to me.

Interviewer: I understood that Corporal MacLeod was more personal than that.

Rutledge: He was a good soldier. So many of the Scots are, by nature and nurture. I learned to trust his judgment, and I learned to respect his opinions. Standing elbow to elbow with the dead all around you erases a good many barriers of class and rank. You just want to stay alive another hour, another day. We talked when we couldn’t sleep. I got to know him well. And I had to make an example of him for refusing to lead his men back across No Man’s Land that day. Not because he was afraid, but because he knew it was useless, we were going nowhere. The sergeants were dead, the corporals were trying to keep order, and he spoke in front of his men. He left me no choice. (Afterthought) That was probably his intention.

Interviewer: Hamish MacLeod saved your life, all the same.

Rutledge: When the salient blew up, his body covered mine. Yes. I thought he’d saved me to keep me from finding the same peace he’d found. Part of that’s true.. I hear him, I don’t see him, I feel him, I know he’s there, and yet, he’s dead in France, and I don’t believe in ghosts.

Interviewer: You’ve met a number of interesting women in your cases. Do any of them stand out in your mind?

Rutledge: I don’t want to talk about Olivia Marlowe—you know her as the poet O. A. Manning. She’s dead, leave her in peace. All right, yes, her poetry still runs through my head at times. I read her volumes in the trenches. She had something to say to a soldier. I didn’t know then that she was a woman, or that she’d never been to France. Her half-brother Nicholas was there, and she drew on his letters.

Interviewer: What about the young woman in Westmorland? Elizabeth Fraser.

Rutledge: We were both looking for something—peace, a little happiness. There was nothing in the long term for either of us. The isolation in Urskdale made it seem more than it was. And damn it, I nearly got her killed!

Interviewer: Any words you want to say about Meredith Channing?

Rutledge: She’s a friend of friends, and she and I worked well together on a case. She served in France, and she probably knows more about me that I’d like, because of that. Our paths seem to cross uncomfortably often, probably because we move in the same circles.

Interviewer: Tell me something about your cases.

Rutledge: (Short laugh) Before the war I was considered one of the new bright lights. Quick promotion, that sort of thing. And I worked for it. When I was promoted to Inspector I was told I’d developed good instincts, and I’d had a good understanding of people. That helped. And war honed that understanding, you see. You don’t live cheek by jowl with men every day for months on end without learning what makes them what they are beneath the surface. The difference is, I’ve killed. With my own hands. It’s an admission no policeman wants to make. Now that I’m back, Chief Superintendent Bowles prefers to use me outside London. It’s actually more challenging, because I’m often at a scene I don’t know from experience, and I have to build up my local knowledge with or without the help of the policemen on the spot. They’re human, they have their own problems with the Yard coming in and taking over. But the fact is, they keep their patch safe most of the time, and that’s to their credit. I walk away when the case is finished. They stay and face the aftermath of murder.

Interviewer: Have you always got your man—or woman? Is there any case in particular you’d like to discuss here?

Rutledge: You do your best to bring in the killer. However hard it is for those around you, or those left behind. It’s what I’m sent to do. I sometimes take more away that I intended. Mainly because there are so many reminders of the war. But you accept what you are dealt and work with it. Here’s a list of cases you might find interesting. I’d rather not discuss them publicly.

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becke_davis
Posts: 29,319
Registered: 10-19-2006
Moderator
becke_davis
Posts: 29,319
Registered: 10-19-2006

Re: Guest Blog by Author(s) CHARLES TODD!

The Books

A Lonely Death

Three men have been murdered in a Sussex village, and Scotland Yard has been called in. It’s a baffling case. All the victims are soldiers who have made it home alive from the Great War, which ended two years ago, only to be garroted, with small ID disks left in their mouths. And shortly after Inspector Ian Rutledge arrives, there’s a fourth murder. The killer is vicious and clever, leaving behind few clues. As the stakes ratchet up, Rutledge is determined to find answers, even as he puts his job, his reputation, and even his life on the line. 

READ MORE >

 

An Impartial Witness

Tending to the soldiers in the trenches of France during the First World War, battlefield nurse Bess Crawford is sent back to England in the early summer of 1917 with a convoy of severely burned men.

READ MORE >

The Red Door

New York Times bestselling author Charles Todd brings back Scotland Yard detective Ian Rutledge in another riveting mystery set in post–World War I England Lancashire, England, June 1920.

READ MORE >

 

Duty to the Dead

England, 1916. Independent-minded Bess Crawford's upbringing is far different from that of the usual upper-middle-class British gentlewoman. Growing up in India, she learned the importance of responsibility, honor, and duty from her officer father.

READ MORE >

A Matter of Justice

At the turn of the century, in a war taking place far from England, two soldiers chance upon an opportunity that will change their lives forever. To take advantage of it, they will be required to do the unthinkable, and then to put the past behind them. But not all memories are so short.

READ MORE >

 

A Pale Horse

Late on a spring night in 1920, five boys cross the Yorkshire dales to the ruins of Fountains Abbey, intent on raising the Devil. Instead, they stumble over the Devil himself, sitting there watching them.

READ MORE >

A False Mirror

Hampton Regis, a small harbor town on the southern coast of England, is a most unlikely place for violence. Yet, one spring morning, a man is found on the strand so severely beaten that he slips in and out of consciousness. 

READ MORE >

 

A Long Shadow

A LONG SHADOW finds Rutledge turned from hunter to prey when a mysterious stalker forces the Inspector to revisit painful memories from the war and confront unfinished business there.

READ MORE >

A Cold Treachery

Charles Todd returns to the world of Scotland Yard’s Inspector Ian Rutledge. This time the embattled Inspector has met his match hunting a brutal killer across a frozen hell and the one witness who may have survived a crime of cold treachery. 

READ MORE >

 

The Murder Stone

The Great War is still raging in the autumn of 1916 when Francesca Hatton's beloved grandfather dies on the family estate in England's isolated Exe Valley. Now a stranger has shown up on her doorstep, accusing her grandfather of being a murderer.

READ MORE >

A Fearsome Doubt

But that past bleeds into the present in a complex murder case that calls into question his own honor...and the crimes committed in the name of God, country, and righteous vengeance.

READ MORE >

 

Watchers of Time

In Osterley, a marshy Norfolk backwater, a man lies dying on a rainy autumn night. But while natural causes will surely claim Herbert Baker's life in a matter of hours, his last request baffles his family and friends.

READ MORE >

Legacy of the Dead

Rutledge is a man walking on the edge of insanity, finding both relief and more madness in his work as a Scotland Yard investigator. Now this series takes Rutledge to the one place that most threatens the balance of his mind: his past. 

READ MORE >

 

Search the Dark

SEARCH THE DARK, the latest in his post- World War I series featuring Inspector Ian Rutledge, sends the war-damaged detective to a small Dorset town to locate two missing children

READ MORE >

Wings of Fire

Inspector Rutledge makes his greatly anticipated second appearance, in a book with the kind of richly developed characters, layered plot, and luminous British village scenes. 

READ MORE >

 

A Test of Wills

In 1914, Ian Rutledge left a brilliant career at Scotland Yard to fight in the Great War. Now, in 1919, he is back, burdened with a heavy secret: he is still suffering from shell shock.

READ MORE >

 

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becke_davis
Posts: 29,319
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Re: Guest Blog by Author(s) CHARLES TODD!

[ Edited ]

Guest Blog by CHARLES TODD

 

We really enjoy reading suspense novels, and that’s probably why we decided to write them ourselves.

 

There’s nothing like sitting on the edge of your seat as you turn the page to see what happens next.  Or staying awake late into the night because you can’t put a book down.  In fact we often receive e-mails from readers we’ve kept awake long after their bedtime, and that’s a compliment.  Other readers tell us they raced through the book the day they got it, and then sat down later to read it again more leisurely.  We’ve done the same, because we were fans long before we were published.

 

Psychological suspense is not only exciting to read, it’s exciting to write.  You’re delving into the minds of your characters, into their pasts, into what makes them good or evil.   That’s why we like to work with ordinary people driven to commit murder because they believe they have no other option.  What’s equally fascinating is that there seem to be endless reasons why ordinary people kill.   Such a variety of motives and emotions bring the characters alive in our imaginations!  Agatha Christie also understood the power of evil, and sometimes, in the Rutledge mysteries—A MATTER OF JUSTICE for instance, or THE RED DOOR, we find ourselves with characters whose lives leave a lasting impression long after the book is finished.   The woman behind the red door touched us deeply, and we were glad to give her a voice.  And the maid in A MATTER OF JUSTICE was just as touching although far from innocent. And the latest Rutledge, THE CONFESSION, once more points up something we’ve suspected for a long time, that a setting can influence a murderer, and is an essential part of character/plot development.  That’s why we spend time in England for each book, to be sure that a place is as real as the people and the story.

 

There’s nothing like walking the ground before you begin to write. It’s not only the best way to make the setting work with the story, but it’s amazing how often something we find while in a particular village ends up as a part of the plot.  For instance, there’s a headland rescue scene in A LONELY DEATH.  While we were in Hastings, we actually watched a rescue team come in by helicopter to pluck someone off the rocks.  It was fascinating to see the skill and the courage necessary to do what had to be done, and as we spoke to some of the rescue team later, we learned how men saved lives nearly a hundred years before.  

 

Naturally our interpretation of this became an important scene in the book because it was very dramatic to watch and then to write about.  Every one of our mysteries has benefited from these unexpected events that neither our research nor the old photographs we’re lucky enough to find ever show us.  Surprises are part of the fabric of our writing, and we have come to look forward to them.  The fact is, you really have to be there to give that extra punch of life to the story line.  If we hadn’t visited Ashdown Forest at the end of winter, we couldn’t have caught the dreariness, the sense of isolation and bleakness that worked so well in the Bess Crawford mystery, A BITTER TRUTH.  We could tell a hundred stories like that, because no matter what we can learn before we go to England, it’s never quite enough. 

It has been particularly interesting writing two mysteries a year—Ian Rutledge in January, and Bess Crawford in the summer.   They are such different people!   They’re brought into entirely different cases as well, and they handle them very differently.  We keep a file of story ideas, and we’d noticed after a while that a good few of them weren’t really Rutledge’s cuppa, and yet we weren’t quite ready to launch a second series.   When we finally decided to write about the woman’s point of view of the war, it was just a matter of choosing where to begin.

 

Rutledge’s cases are official, that’s to say, the murder has come to the attention of the police in some fashion.  A body discovered, a crime suspected, a witness reporting something suspicious.  Bess, on the other hand, often finds herself involved in a series of events before the murder happens—or is discovered. 

 

We have no idea when we begin either one of the series how the story will end, and that’s another of the reasons why we enjoy writing this sort of mystery—the excitement of not knowing keeps us guessing and involved all the way.  Perhaps one of the reasons the two series have been so popular is that the reader feels the same excitement as they try to get to the solution before we do!

 

Some of this holds true for characters as well. While walking along the streets or sitting in a pub or attending a morning service, we have the opportunity to learn something about the people in a place. Not from the point of view of making real people a part of the plot, but from understanding how living in this village has shaped lives there, and how it could also have shaped our characters.  This makes the people on the page far more vivid, which explains why readers seem to believe in them too.

 

It’s the little things that make a place or a person or a plot device work.  Years ago, we took a cruise through Germany and the Netherlands.  One of the experts on board knew everything there was to know about bricks.  He could guide you into a town or a church, point out where a wall of brick had suffered a fire in one century or an attack by an invading army in another, when it was safe enough to make repairs, and how the structure had managed to survive for so many centuries.  This was a new experience, being able to “read” the past in the different sizes and colors of something as mundane as brick. What’s more, it opened our eyes to ways of expanding our travel experience, and this has been an important aspect of research ever since.  Not just the brick or the stone, but how what we see has been shaped by the past and at what cost.  When people, and their ancestors, have spent their lives in a place, they are influenced by such things.  A copse of trees, haunted by a massacre centuries before, overshadowed the lives of villagers in A LONG SHADOW and turned the people inward.  No one ventured to that wood, and many believed it to be haunted.  A perfect place to bury a body, do you think? Or take THE CONFESSION, the latest Rutledge, where people couldn’t put the past behind them and were ready to kill to protect a secret no one wanted to remember.  Amazing what you can learn about a place when you know not only where to look but how to see. 

 

England has been kind to us, and we’ve made great friends there.  Not only writers but people we’ve met casually while doing research.   No one seems to mind that we write about their country.  After all, Englishmen write about America—Lee Child or Matt Hilton, to name two.

 

We’ve written one short story about Bess, and quite a few about Rutledge, some of them featuring Hamish before the Battle of the Somme.  It has been a challenge writing the short stories, just as it has the novels, but that’s what we thrive on—the challenge of getting it as right as possible and making it as exciting as possible, coming to a satisfactory ending, and keeping the reader guessing all along the way. You make our day when we’ve succeeded.

 

All in all, we’ve grown very fond on Ian Rutledge and Bess Crawford.  Will they ever meet?  It’s a question we’re asked often.  I don’t think so. We never considered Bess a future wife for Rutledge.  She has her own life and her own ideas.  And Rutledge has a way to go and promises to keep before he can find happiness.  His war ended only two years ago, a very short time to heal after the horrors of trench warfare and the dead he has on his conscience. 

 

Post traumatic stress disorder is real, and soldiers continue to suffer from it today.  But it isn’t limited to wartime.  Think about victims of Katrina and survivors of those killed in 9/11, those who have lived through tornados or tsunamis.  They too know what it’s like to be haunted by memories so fresh and real that they can’t shut them out.  If we manage to give one person a better understanding of PTSD through Rutledge’s world, we are glad.

 

At the same time, he’s a very interesting man.  Vulnerable, yes, but compassionate, intelligent, intuitive.  Like most good policemen, he has few illusions, but as he considers the suspects in an inquiry, he must also take into account the damage murder does to the innocent.  Not only the victims but to those who have to go on living when the police have gone and somehow must pick up the threads of a shattered life and mend it the best they can.  As P. D. James has said, there is a need to return the world to order, and yet for those who have lost a loved one, it will be a long time coming.

 

Murder mysteries are fun, but in real life, murder is not.  We’re glad that our cases are never real, and that we leave behind no heartache.   They are good reads, puzzles to be solved, evil to be routed.  And we hope our readers feel the same about the books of Charles Todd.    

 

  +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

 

 

Distinguished Wordsmith
maxcat
Posts: 3,553
Registered: 11-01-2006

Re: Guest Blog by Author(s) CHARLES TODD!

Great blog! I love your books but have not read them in order. I plan to though after reading your blog. I'm so glad that Inspector Rutledge was created; he is a fascinating character.

The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance- it is the illusion of knowledge. Daniel J. Boorstin
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becke_davis
Posts: 29,319
Registered: 10-19-2006

Re: Guest Blog by Author(s) CHARLES TODD!


maxcat wrote:

Great blog! I love your books but have not read them in order. I plan to though after reading your blog. I'm so glad that Inspector Rutledge was created; he is a fascinating character.


Isn't Rutledge wonderful? I've loved this series since it first came out. It's heartbreaking in many ways, but wonderful.

Distinguished Wordsmith
Fricka
Posts: 1,451
Registered: 05-04-2010

Re: Guest Blog by Author(s) CHARLES TODD!


becke_davis wrote:

maxcat wrote:

Great blog! I love your books but have not read them in order. I plan to though after reading your blog. I'm so glad that Inspector Rutledge was created; he is a fascinating character.


Isn't Rutledge wonderful? I've loved this series since it first came out. It's heartbreaking in many ways, but wonderful.







maxcat and becke, I've not yet read any of the Inspector Rutledge books, but I suspect I will be in the near future. I was so intrigued by the description of the book, A Bitter Truth, which features Nurse Bess, that I put a hold request for it from my library. I'm reminded of the quote, " No good deed goes unpunished," which seems like an apt fit for the plot line for this book.

 

Sorry to report I'm still having some technical difficulties in getting on here. My earlier effort resulted in the page going back to the beginning of the thread, only with very faint print, and when I finally got to the bottom of the page, I found that when I clicked the reply button, that nothing happened. That happened TWICE! I finally quit the Mystery Forum by hitting my home key, and then clicking back into the Forum.

Glad to say that this time I actually got the page popping up to write on. ( I guess maybe I need to shoo off a few more butterflies, huh, becke? Those darn gnomes seem to be working overtime in my case!)

 

Don't know if either of the Todds will be responding to our posts, so I'm wondering if you, becke, know the answer to this question: Do they divide the books between themselves, with Caroline writing the Bess books, and Charles writing the Ian books, or do they work on both sets together?

I scrolled back on the intro material, but couldn't find the answer. Not sure now if I've got them confused with another writing team or not.

" A murder mystery is the normal recreation of the noble mind."--Sister Carol Anne O' Marie
Inspired Contributor
leisure_reader
Posts: 175
Registered: 02-04-2010

Re: Guest Blog by Author(s) CHARLES TODD!

Trying to keep track of everthing I want to read...found another author(s)  WOW!

 

J

No one can make you feel inferior without your consent.
- Eleanor Roosevelt

Inspired Wordsmith
eadieburke
Posts: 1,424
Registered: 01-27-2007

Re: Guest Blog by Author(s) CHARLES TODD!

I just started this series with this book:

 

A Test of Wills (Inspector Ian Rutledge Series #1)  

 

Enjoying it very much and looking forward to reading the rest of the series!

Eadie - A day out-of-doors, someone I loved to talk with, a good book and some simple food and music -- that would be rest. - Eleanor Roosevelt
Moderator
becke_davis
Posts: 29,319
Registered: 10-19-2006

Re: Guest Blog by Author(s) CHARLES TODD!


Fricka wrote:

becke_davis wrote:

maxcat wrote:

Great blog! I love your books but have not read them in order. I plan to though after reading your blog. I'm so glad that Inspector Rutledge was created; he is a fascinating character.


Isn't Rutledge wonderful? I've loved this series since it first came out. It's heartbreaking in many ways, but wonderful.







maxcat and becke, I've not yet read any of the Inspector Rutledge books, but I suspect I will be in the near future. I was so intrigued by the description of the book, A Bitter Truth, which features Nurse Bess, that I put a hold request for it from my library. I'm reminded of the quote, " No good deed goes unpunished," which seems like an apt fit for the plot line for this book.

 

Sorry to report I'm still having some technical difficulties in getting on here. My earlier effort resulted in the page going back to the beginning of the thread, only with very faint print, and when I finally got to the bottom of the page, I found that when I clicked the reply button, that nothing happened. That happened TWICE! I finally quit the Mystery Forum by hitting my home key, and then clicking back into the Forum.

Glad to say that this time I actually got the page popping up to write on. ( I guess maybe I need to shoo off a few more butterflies, huh, becke? Those darn gnomes seem to be working overtime in my case!)

 

Don't know if either of the Todds will be responding to our posts, so I'm wondering if you, becke, know the answer to this question: Do they divide the books between themselves, with Caroline writing the Bess books, and Charles writing the Ian books, or do they work on both sets together?

I scrolled back on the intro material, but couldn't find the answer. Not sure now if I've got them confused with another writing team or not.


Hi Fricka - I'm so sorry you're having problems again. I kept running into problems at BN.com myself yesterday. Maybe something's going on behind the scenes. Not fun!

 

I met Caroline at Magna Cum Murder in 2010 - unfortunately, I was battling some kind of flu bug at the time, or I would have spoken to her at greater length. I've been reading the Rutlege books since the series started and yet I had somehow missed the fact that Caroline and Charles are AMERICAN. I was so shocked to hear an American accent coming from her, my mind totally went blank!  

 

The Bess Crawford books are pretty new, so I know Caroline and Charles don't split the writing by series. I'll post more about this in the next comment box.

Moderator
becke_davis
Posts: 29,319
Registered: 10-19-2006

Re: Guest Blog by Author(s) CHARLES TODD!

BOOKMARKS: Charles and Caroline Todd

 

The name on the cover reads “Charles Todd,” but it really takes two to write the best-selling Ian Rutledge mysteries. There is a Charles Todd, a business consultant and corporate trouble-shooter based in the North Carolina Piedmont, but he collaborates on all his novels with his mother, Caroline Todd.

When I caught up with the duo (by phone), they were both at Caroline’s house in Delaware, getting ready for the publicity blitz for their 11th Rutledge book, “A Matter of Justice,” which officially comes out Dec. 30 from William Morrow. In particular, they’re signing dozens and dozens of copies for friends in the book-selling business.

“We’ve become a warehouse,” Caroline Todd said.

“About this time every year, we shift from writing and solving mysteries to working with the UPS,” Charles added.

The Todds are no strangers to the Wilmington area. Both used to participate regularly in the Cape Fear Crime Festival. Charles has friends down here, and he tries to come down regularly to gig flounders near Castle Hayne and sample the shrimp and oysters from Alford’s Seafood.

In the past decade, they’ve churned out 12 novels — 11 Rutledges, beginning with “A Test of Wills” and one stand-alone mystery, “The Murder Stone.” Plus, they’re planning to get busier, but more on that later.

“We sat down with the idea of writing a murder mystery,” Caroline Todd said. “We were interested in psychology and suspense, and we settled on a period [the early 20th century -- just after World War I] that would permit the detectives to do the detecting, instead of leaving it all to the forensics team.”

“They didn’t have ‘Co-Authors for Dummies’ when we got started,” Charles joked, so they evolved their unique system of collaborating. The two work scene by scene, writing everything out together, by a system on consensus.

“That way, you can’t tell that Charles wrote one chapter and Caroline wrote the next,” Caroline said.

“Our goal is not to confuse the reader,” Charles added — although most Rutledge mysteries offer a surplus of red herrings and wrong turns.

Both Todds are devout Anglophiles: Caroline majored in English literature and history (before going on to earn a master’s in international relations) and she passed her passion along to Charles, a nautical buff who’s made a close study of the two World Wars (as well as the U.S. Civil War.) Both travel together frequently in the British Isles.

The Great War was a natural choice for a setting; the Todds have an uncle/great-uncle who was a World War I flier. Beyond that, “So much was happening in World War I that changed England,” Charles Todd said, “even in the villages where many of these mysteries are set. It gave us a chance to describe what was happening through the eyes of someone who’s been through it.”

It also gives the Todds a chance to paint a more complex detective. “In a way, Ian’s been experienced both sides of the fence,” Caroline said. “He was already a police inspector with Scotland Yard before the War, so he knows how things have changed. And he’s been a murderer himself.”

For those who don’t know the series, that requires a little explanation. The Todds give Ian Rutledge a back story; he spent four years as an infantry officer in the trenches on the Western Front. “We knew it was just impossible for him to survive four years unscathed,” Caroline said, “but if he had been wounded, crippled, it would not have been possible for him to return to the Yard.”

Thus, Ian’s wounds are psychological. Besides a case of shell-shock, he suffers a severe case of guilt. A Scottish corporal named Hamish McLeod saved his life — but, back in the rear, Hamish was charged with insubordination under fire and court-martialed. (Of course, there were plenty of mitigating circumstances which, of course, were overlooked by the military bureaucracy.) By a cruel twist of fate, Ian was ordered to command Hamish’s firing squad.

Now, back at the Yard, Hamish is Ian’s unseen, constant companion — either a ghost or a projection of Rutledge’s tortured unconsious. (The Todds are coy about which he is, although they seem to lean toward the psychological explanation.)

Fortunately for Ian and for readers, Hamish provides a running commentary on whichever case Ian is handling — and his Scottish common sense helps cut through the complications. For a sleuth, he’s a perfect sounding board.

“We actually have a group of Hamish fans out there, who write regularly,” Charles Todd said.

“He has quite a following,” Caroline added.

Which is one reason that poor, tortured Ian won’t be cured of his affliction any time soon. I thought Hamish was a little reserved in “A Matter of Justice” and wondered if the Todds were slowly weaning Ian off of him. No way.

“Each case involves Hamish in a different way,” Caroline said. “Some of them are more up his alley.”

Once a fair-haired boy of the Yard, one of its rare officers to come down from University, Ian has fallen under a cloud with his superiors; in particular, Chief Superintendent Bowles seems to harbor a grudge against him. Thus, Ian repeatedly finds himself dispatched out of London to handle messy little cases in the countryside.

This is no coincidence. “We find the reason for murder in Londong are not as intriguing as in the countryside,” Caroline said. “You have all these little rivalries and grudges,” Charles said.

Thus, those trips to England frequently turn into research. “We set up trips, expecting to go to this place or that place and turn it into a mystery,” Charles said, “but then we stop in some little backwater somewhere, and it strikes our fancy for some reason.

“Americans think England is all the same,” he added, “but there’s a world of difference between, say, East Anglia and Cornwall.”

“You have all these places where people in one villages haven’t spoken to people in another village ever since they refused to help out in the Black Plague of 1349,” Caroline added. “In ‘The Long Shadow,’ we had a forest where no one went because their grandfathers and great-grandfathers never went there, because it was cursed somehow. In England, things like that happen. You’ll have differences of character in a region, depending on whether their ancestors were Celtic or Saxon or Viking. There’s a whole range of potential stories we haven’t told yet.”

Right now, the Todds are hard at work on their 13th Rutledge mystery, for release in January 2010 — “and due at the end of the month,” Charles said.

Before that, however, fans can look forward to a second series from the duo — “I think we’re mad!” Caroline Todd said — with the first novel tentatively set for release this summer.

Titled “A Duty to the Dead” — it will star a female protagonist: Bess Crawford, a British Army officer’s daughter who’s grown up in India and other rough corners of the Empire and, as a result, is a little more self-reliant. “She can see things without the Victorian veil,” Caroline Todd said. Like the others, this new book is a collaboration — although, to signal a change in tone, it will be signed “Caroline Todd” instead.

Set in England around 1916, the novel finds Bess working as a nurse in an Army hospital. When one of her soldier-patients dies, she feels obligated to fulfill his last request. To do, however, she has to probe secrets in his family which have lain buried for more than 15 years. “It allows her to be a sleuth, but not in the detective sense,” Caroline Todd said.

Which raises one final question. Back in the Rutledge series, novel after novel introduces some strong, beautiful, accomplished woman who crosses Ian’s path. When, if ever, will one of them finally land the bachelor detective?

“It’s like introducing the right wife to your son,” Caroline Todd said. “It just doesn’t work.”

Still, she added, there appears to be a strong contender: Meredith Channing, a psychic (probably bogus) who first appeared several novels ago — and according to the Todds, keeps inviting herself back, whether they like it or not.

“She keeps popping up,” Caroline Todd said. “We didn’t plan to put her in ‘A Matter of Justice,’ but all of sudden, there she is. She has a will of her own. Whether that will be enough to wear down that wall Ian has built around himself … I don’t know.”

Moderator
becke_davis
Posts: 29,319
Registered: 10-19-2006

Re: Guest Blog by Author(s) CHARLES TODD!

This might be worth checking out: http://booksprung.com/two-free-short-stories-from-mystery-writers-charles-and-caroline-todd

 

From MYSTERY FANFARE:

 

MONDAY, DECEMBER 28, 2009

Partners in Crime: Charles Todd

 
Partners in Crime: Authors who Write in partnership. Today I welcome Charles Todd, the mother/son writing team made up of Charles and Caroline Todd. They are the best selling authors of the post-WWI historical Inspector Ian Rutledge series (the latest is The Red Door) and A Duty to the Dead, a new series featuring Bess Crawford, set in 1916. Watch the Video for this novel. Charles and Caroline Todd are on tour for their latest mystery, The Red Door. They will be at my home in Berkeley for a Literary Salon on January 14, 2-4 p.m. Pleaseemail me if you'd like to attend.

COLLABORATING—OR ENHANCING

CAROLINE:

I don’t know if I could collaborate with someone other than Charles. For one thing, I’m spoiled, and for another, I’m comfortable.

This wasn’t what I’d expected when we began to write together. It was, in the beginning, just an interesting challenge. Could we or couldn’t we write something worth reading? Charles was on the road and missed his family, I was bored with painting, and it was summer, hot and humid outside. Our first effort was A TEST OF WILLS, and it worked because we had no preconceived notions about how to collaborate, we just created a system that suited us. Of course it helped that Charles and I knew each other well—and the other half of the success lay in genetics. One side of the family was numbers/math oriented. My daughter for instance, learned German by working out her own mathematical formula for sentence structures. My husband could remember chemical formulae and football scores for years running. Charles was the only other wordsmith/history buff, and it was natural that he liked what I liked in terms of films and books and going to visit historical sites.

We use consensus. Well, we didn’t know any better when we started. It sounded like a lot more fun not to divide everything up. So we’ve worked out each scene with the players and the plot in mind, until we have a good grasp of where it fits, where it is leading, and who should appear in it After that, working out the characterizations and the dialog generally goes smoothly. If it doesn’t, we’re back to talking it through. Since we don’t outline this is essentially living with the book and the characters every step of the way. If we don’t know who the murderer is, we don’t force a character to take on that role. We compete with Rutledge in solving the crime.
That’s the comfort part. The spoiled part is that the system seems to work for the new series featuring Bess Crawford, just as well as it does with the long-standing Ian Rutledge mysteries. That’s an “If it ain’t broke” philosophy, but I don’t believe in breaking up a good system just for the fun of it. That would be the equivalent of changing jobs just to see if you can.

However, there’s a lurking snake in this Eden. What would it be like to work with, say, Ken Bruen on a very different kind of story? Where would the parameters be different? And how would the two authors challenge each other in outlook and background, if they came together for a single book but had no other connection?

Don’t read more into this than intended. Rutledge and Bess Crawford are exhilarating to write and we have enough places and ideas to fill dozens of books. That’s the plus of having someone to talk to as we work. But here’s the odd thing about sharing. We can’t write in the same room. Even if we happen to be in the same house, we work on different floors. We each need that space. And the time it allows. We connect by e-mail or instant messenger or a phone call, then mull over suggestions and drafts and ideas. 

Charles and I write short stories in the same way we write novels. When you are used to novel length, 3,000 to 7,000 words can be quite a challenge. It tests your ability as a story-teller, and we like that.

Would I recommend collaborating to others? A qualified yes. A good many authors have tried it and have been tremendously successful. The qualified has to do with choosing a partner. There has to be explicit trust, a small ego, more or less equal abilities, and the same skill at using language. Otherwise the team falls apart or the reader can begin to pick out who wrote what. Seamlessness is the goal for great collaborations.

I ought to add that you must come to some arrangement about money and rights before you begin. Then if success knocks, there’s already a protocol in place to deal smoothly with what’s starting to happen. So far no one appears to have murdered his/her collaborator, and that’s probably why.

CHARLES:

I don’t know if I would want to collaborate with someone else. As Caroline says, it’s comfortable knowing your fellow writer and not having to tip toe around personality differences or quirks. I’d already lived with her quirks for years before we began Charles Todd! No, just kidding. We’re both fairly easy-going. But it is very nice to approach a scene and know that as we discuss it, both of us are committed to Rutledge (or Bess) and want what is going to work best in a given situation. Yes, we argue, we’ve even been known to yell. But that’s the creative process and no hard feelings afterward. The fascinating thing is, we each bring a very different approach and outlook to the table—not just the male/female aspect, but life experiences and hang-ups and dreams. Rutledge is the beneficiary of two fully realized lives. And Bess Crawford is fitting into that picture very well indeed.

A word about research. We do that together as well. But we also branch out and bring back new concepts that might not have been considered before. Even walking a village, we split up, then confer later. We may see the same church or lane or field in very different ways. Then we both go back for a second look. Finding places to leave a body can be interesting. (You don’t want to alarm the local constabulary while trying.)

If I didn’t want to collaborate with someone else, would I consider writing on my own? I sometimes think about it, but we’re busy and happy at the moment. I would like to try to see how all I’ve learned as a collaborator comes to the surface if I were doing it all alone. I expect it is normal to wonder. In airports and hotel rooms, I have played around with an idea or two, trying to see where they might go. It’s actually invigorating, and I tend to come back to Bess or Rutledge with a fresh approach.

Caroline talked about working in totally different spaces. There’s also the time factor. We don’t write on the same schedule. She may be working at midnight, and I may find myself working early in the morning. So far that seems to have no impact of what we do together. Like the Senate and the House working through a bill for the final version, when we come to the point of comparing thoughts and notes, we’re both ready to talk.

What would I say to someone considering collaboration? Patience is a great virtue whether you are working on a book with someone or just changing wall paper. It pays to listen to the other person even when you think your own ideas are right. Since collaborating isn’t common, I expect the problem is finding the right person, one you trust and respect. I’ve learned a lot about the woman who is my mother—and she’s learned a lot about the man who happens to be her son—and the more we both learn, the more the books seem to grow and prosper. That’s our partnership in crime.
Author
JeanHarrington
Posts: 31
Registered: 01-05-2012

Re: Guest Blog by Author(s) CHARLES TODD!

Charles Todd, Your long, stunning list of covers and titles has intrigued me.  Also the dual writing.  Now that's quite a feat. Will have to delve into all those riches.  Glad to have "met" you both.   

Jean Harrington
Moderator
becke_davis
Posts: 29,319
Registered: 10-19-2006

Re: Guest Blog by Author(s) CHARLES TODD!


JeanHarrington wrote:

Charles Todd, Your long, stunning list of covers and titles has intrigued me.  Also the dual writing.  Now that's quite a feat. Will have to delve into all those riches.  Glad to have "met" you both.   


Jean - This is a wonderful series! In some series it doesn't really matter if you start in the middle because the books stand alone. I think this series works best if you start from the beginning and read them in order. Enjoy!