Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Interview with Sara Mills



Sara Mills is an author, mother, freelance editor and motorcycle racing enthusiast. She loves animals, raises Golden Retrievers, has a house full of hamsters, guinea pigs, turtles, puppies and any other stray that makes its way to her door.

Sara has been writing since 1999 but decided to seriously pursue publication after a life-threatening accident in 2002. Sara loves writing, loves reading and loves helping others make their writing shine. She hates waiting, the pursuit of publication and being rejected. But, who doesn’t?

Aside from motorbikes Sara loves film noir, Humphrey Bogart and The Maltese Falcon.

Miss Fortune and Miss Match are delightful books set in NYC in 1947. Tell us how you got the idea for Allie and these books...

I got the idea for Miss Fortune in the middle of the night, when all good ideas come to me:

One sleepless night I was watching The Maltese Falcon and I started to wonder how different the story would be if Sam Spade had been a woman. She'd never have fallen for Miss Wunderly's charms and lies. She'd have been smart and tough and she would have solved the case in half the time it took Sam because she wouldn't spend all of her time smoking cigarettes and calling her secretary Precious.

The thought of a hard-boiled female detective got my mind whirling.



I paused the movie and sat in my darkened living room thinking about how much fun a female Sam Spade could be. Intrigued but not yet ready to dash to my computer, I changed disks and put on Casablanca (my all time favorite movie ever). The sweeping love story, a tale full of hard choices and sacrifice was what finally made the whole idea click in my mind. If I could just combine the P.I. detective story of the Maltese Falcon with the love story from Casablanca, and make Sam Spade more of a Samantha, I could have the best of all worlds.

These books are so good, I wish I'd written them. How did you set the stage to capture that gritty PI feel without being dark?

I find that a lot of PI stories are gritty and dark, focusing on the worst of the humanity, and while I wanted the "Allie Fortune" mysteries to be exciting and tension-filled I didn’t want them to be stark and hopeless.

One of the things I tried to do to counteract the darkness was to give Allie a multi-layered life. She has cases, relationships, friends and family, all of which I hope combine to make the stories textured, rich and full of life.

Allie is a character I'd love to have coffee with. What did she teach you while you wrote these books?

Allie was a great character to write. One of the things I learned from her was that human relationships (man/woman, mother/daughter, friends) are complicated and full of unspoken rules and expectations. Allie is a rule-breaker at heart and it complicates her life on a regular basis. One of the storylines I loved most is Allie’s relationship with her mother and how it grows and changes and how it’s shaped her.

Another dimension of Allie’s character that really taught me a lot was her willingness to do whatever was needed to help those she loves. There is no price on that kind of friendship and it’s a characteristic I’d like to see more of in myself. Okay I admit it, I’ve got a bit of a friend-crush on Allie. LOL.



One last question: If you could be anywhere in the world right now, where would that be and who would you take with you?

If I could go anywhere right now I’d head to Monterey, California (I’m writing a book set there right now) and I’d plant myself on the beach with a notebook, writing my story as the waves crashed. Sounds like my idea of heaven on earth. There’s something about the wind-shaped Cypress trees and the crash of the surf in Monterey that calls to me. I don’t know why, it just is.

We at Favorite PASTimes would like to thank
Cara Putnam for sharing
her interview with Sara Mills with us today.

Readers, please leave a comment to win a copy of either
Miss Fortune or Miss Match (winner's choice). To be entered in
the drawing, please leave your comment (and your choice) by
8:30 on Friday morning in the form of name [at] domain [dot] com.

Thank you for joining us today!

7 comments:

Deborah said...

oooh i have miss fortune and really enjoyed it. I would love to win a copy of Miss Match!

Amanda said...

Oh an author after my own heart. I am such a Bogie and Hammett fan and these sound so good! I'd love to read Miss Fortune. Thanks!

quiltingreader said...

I'd like Miss Fortune.

13rubberducks [at] gmail [dot] com

Virginia said...

This books sounds like a very intriguing read! I would very interested in reading this book. I have never read your books before.

lead[at]hotsheet[dot]com

mez said...

I'd love a chance to win Miss Fortune. Thanks!

worthy2bpraised[at]gmail[dot]com

sugarandgrits said...

Either book sounds great to me, but since I like to read series in order, I choose Miss Fortune.

Thank you for a chance to win one of your books!

Lori S.
sugarandgrits[at]hotmail[dot]com

Megan said...

I just read the other interview (from the next day!) haha And this one is so different, I thought it would be really repeated, but I learned different things about Sara at each one. I love getting to know the character in this interview. Now I really want to win the book! I would love either, but probably would like to start with Miss Fortune!

Thanks

megan.nadalet at gmail dot com