Wednesday, May 6, 2015

**GIVEAWAY** Interview – Author Shannon Kirk – Method 15/33

Please welcome to the blog another debut author who is bound to be a household name soon and whose new novel I couldn't let slip by when I read the premise. Enjoy our chat about this intriguing new release just out yesterday whose storyline is absolutely unique.
Plus stick around because Shannon's gracious publisher Oceanview is sponsoring a giveaway of one author signed hardcopy of the novel contest deets below.


Here's what one of my all time favorite crime drama author's had to say about Method 15/33

"Completely original and totally kick ass! Shannon Kirk pulls no punches in this adrenaline rush of a thriller where the victim is the one to watch, while the kidnappers learn to fear. Loved ..."- Lisa Gardner, New York Times best-selling author of Fear Nothing




  • ISBN-13: 9781608091454
  • Publisher: Oceanview Publishing
  • Publication date: 5/5/2015
  • Pages: 258
 


Overview

Imagine a helpless, pregnant 16-year-old who's just been yanked from the serenity of her home and shoved into a dirty van. Kidnapped…Alone…Terrified.
Now forget her…
Picture instead a pregnant, 16-year-old, manipulative prodigy. She is shoved into a dirty van and, from the first moment of her kidnapping, feels a calm desire for two things: to save her unborn son and to exact merciless revenge.

Giveaway is for one autographed print copy
US ONLY
of Method 15/33
Please use the Rafflecopter form below to enter
Good Luck
Thanks Oceanview!!

Read an Excerpt:

CHAPTER 1
4-5 DAYS IN CAPTIVITY

I lay there on the fourth day plotting his death. Compiling assets in a list in my mind, I found relief in the planning ... a loose floor board, a red knit blanket, a high window, exposed beams, a keyhole, my condition ...
I remember my thoughts then as though I am reliving them now, as though they are my present thoughts. There he is outside the door again, I think, even though it's been seventeen years. Perhaps those days will forever be my present because I survived so completely in the minutiae of each hour and each second of painstaking strategy. During that indelible time of torment, I was all on my own. And, I must say now, with no lack of pride, my result, my undeniable victory, was no less than a masterpiece.
On Day 4, I was well into a catalog of assets and a rough outline of revenge, all without aid of pen or pencil, solely the mental sketchpad of piecing together potential solutions. A puzzle, I knew, but one I was determined to solve ... a loose floorboard, a red knit blanket, a high window, exposed beams, a keyhole, my condition ... How do they fit together?
Over and over I reconstituted this enigma and searched for more assets. Ah yes, of course, the bucket. And yes, yes, yes, the box spring is new, he did not remove the plastic. Okay, again, go over it again, figure it out. Exposed beams, a bucket, the box spring, the plastic, a high window, a loose floorboard, a red knit blanket, the ...
I assigned numbers to give a dose of science. A loose floorboard (Asset #4), a red knit blanket (Asset #5), plastic ... The collection seemed as complete as possible at the start of Day 4. I would need more, I figured.
The sound of the pine floor rattling outside my jail cell, a bedroom, interrupted me about midday.He's definitely out there. Lunch. The latch moved from left to right, the keyhole turned, and in he burst without the decency of even a pause at the threshold.
As he had at every other meal, he dropped a tray on my bed of now familiar food, a white mug of milk, and a child-sized cup of water. No utensils. The slice of egg and bacon quiche collided with the homemade bread on the plate, a disk of china with a rose-colored toile of a woman with a pot and a feather-hat-wearing man with a dog. I loathed that plate to such an unnatural depth, I shudder to remember. The backside said "Wedgwood" and "Salvator." This will be my fifth meal on this salvation. I hate this plate. I will kill this plate too. The plate, the mug, and the cup looked to be the same ones I had used for breakfast, lunch, and dinner on Day 3 in captivity. The first two days I spent in a van.
"More water?" he asked, in his abrupt, dull and deep, monotone.
"Yes, please."
He started this pattern on Day 3, which, I believe, is what kicked off my plotting in earnest. The question became part of the routine, him bringing my meal and asking if I wanted more water. I decided to say "yes" when he asked and steeled myself to say "yes" each time, although this sequence made no sense. Why not bring a larger cup of water to begin with? Why this inefficiency? He leaves, locks the door, pipes clang in the hall walls, a spit and then a burst of water from the sink, out of eyesight through the keyhole. He's back with a plastic cup of lukewarm water. Why? I can tell you this—many things in this world are unsolved, as is the rationale behind many of my jailer's inexplicable actions.
"Thank you," I said upon his return.
I had decided from Hour 2 of Day 1 that I'd try to feign a schoolgirl politeness, be thankful, for I soon discovered I could outwit my captor, a man in his forties. Must be forty-something, he looks the same age as my dad. I knew I had the wits to beat this horrible, disgusting thing, and I was just Sweet Sixteen.
Lunch on Day 4 tasted like lunch on Day 3. But perhaps the sustenance gave me what I needed because I realized I had many more assets: time, patience, undying hatred, and I noted, as I drank the milk from the thick restaurant mug, the bucket had a metal handle and the handle ends were sharp. I need only remove the handle. It can be a separate asset from the bucket.Also, I was high in the building, not below ground, as I had first anticipated, on Days 1 and 2, I would be. By the crown of the tree outside my window and the three flights of stairs it took to get here, I was most surely on a third floor. I considered height another asset.
Strange, right? I had not yet grown bored by Day 4. Some might think sitting alone in a locked room would cause a mind to give way to dementia or delusion. But I was lucky. My first two days were spent traveling, and by some colossal mistake or severe error in judgment, my captor used a van for his crime and this van had tinted side windows. Sure, no one could see in, but I could see out. I studied and committed our route to the logbook in my mind, details I never actually used, but the work of transcribing and burning the data to eternal memory occupied my thoughts for days.
If you asked me today, seventeen years later, what flowers were growing by the ramp of Exit 33, I'd tell you, wild daisies mixed with a healthy dose of devil's paintbrush. For you I'd paint the sky, a misty blue-gray rolling into a smudged mud. I'd re-enact the sudden action as well, such as the storm that erupted 2.4 minutes after passing the patch of flowers, when the black mass overhead opened in a fit of spring hail. You would see the pea-sized ice-balls, which forced my kidnapper to park under an overpass, say "son-of-a-bitch" three times, smoke one cigarette, flick the spent butt, and begin our trek again, 3.1 minutes after the first hail ball crashed the hood of that criminal van. I morphed forty-eight hours of these transportation details into a movie I replayed every single day of my captivity, studying each minute, each second, each and every frame, for clues and assets and analysis.
The van's side window and how he left me, sitting and able to survey our progress, led to a quick conclusion: the harbinger of my incarceration was a witless monkey on autopilot, a soldier drone. But I was comfortable in an armchair he'd bolted to the floor of the van. Suffice it to say, despite his many protests to my sagging blindfold, he was either too lazy or too distracted to tie the oil cloth properly and I, therefore, ascertained our direction from the passing signs: west.
He slept 4.3 hours the first night. I slept 2.1. We took Exit 74 after two days and one night of driving. And don't even ask about the colossal embarrassment of bathroom breaks at deserted rest stops.
When our trail came to an end, the van rolled slowly down the exit ramp, and I decided to count sets of sixty. One Mississippi, Two Mississippi, Three Mississippi ... 10.2 sets of Mississippi later, we parked, and the engine sputtered in a lurching stop. 10.2 minutes from the highway.From the topmost corner of my drooping blindfold, I made out a field cast in a twilight gray and glazed with a swath of full-moon white. The wisp-scratch branches of a tree draped around the van. A willow. Like Nana's. But this isn't Nana's house.
He's at the side of the van. He's coming for me. I'll have to leave the van. I don't want to leave the van.
I jumped at the loud metal-on-metal scrape and bang of the van door sliding open. We're here. I guess we're here. We're here. My heart ticked to the beat of a hummingbird's wings. We're here.Sweat accumulated at my hairline. We're here. My arms lost all slack, and my shoulders stiffened to straight, forming a capital T with my spine. We're here. And my heart again, I might have trembled the earth to quake, I might have roiled the sea to tsunami, with that rhythm.
A country breeze whooshed in as though rushing past my captor to console me. For a quick second, I became washed in a cool caress, but his presence loomed and broke the spell almost as soon as it came. He was partially masked to me, of course, given the half-on, half-off blindfold, yet I felt him stall and stare. What must I look like to you? Just a young girl, duct-taped to an armchair in the back of your shit van? Is this normal for you? You fucking imbecile.
"You don't scream or cry or beg me like the others did," he said, sounding like he'd grasped some epiphany he'd been struggling with for days.
I turned my head fast toward his voice, as though possessed, intending in my motion to un-nerve him. I'm not sure if I did, but I believe he shimmied backwards a fraction.
"Would that make you feel better?" I asked.
"Shut the fuck up, you crazy little bitch. I don't give a shit what you fucking sluts do," he said loudly and fast, as though reminding himself of his position of control. From the high decibel of his agitation, I surmised we were alone, wherever we were. This can't be good. He's safe yelling here. We're alone. Just the two of us.
By the tilt of the van, I could tell he grabbed hold of the doorframe and hoisted himself in. He grunted from the exertion, and I took stock of his labored smoker's breathing. Typical, worthless, fat slob. Shadows and slices of his movement came toward me, and a silvery sharp object in his hand glistened under the overhead light. As soon as he got into my space, I smelled him, an old sweat, the stench of three-day-old body odor. His breath was like fetid soup on the air. I winced, turned toward the tinted window, and plugged my nostrils by holding my breath.
He cut the duct tape melding my arms to the bolted chair and put a paper bag over my head. Ah shit-breath, so you realize the blindfold doesn't work.
Comfortable in the evil I came to accept in that traveling armchair, I had no clue what was in store for me. Nevertheless, I did not protest our move into what must have been a farm. Given the aftermath scent of cows grazing all day and the high blades and stalks that slapped my legs, I reasoned we entered a field of hay or wheat.
The night air of Day 2 cooled my arms and chest, even through my lined, black raincoat. Despite the bag and the drooping cloth on my face, light from the moon illuminated our trek. With his gun on my spine, and me leading a blinded way with only the moon as my pull, we waded through knee-high stalks of America's grain for one set of sixty. I stepped high so as to punctuate my counting; he sloshed behind in a gunman's shuffle. And such was our two-person parade: one, swish, two, swish, three, swish, four.
I compared my sorrowful march to the watery death of mariners sentenced to the gangplank and considered my first asset: terra firma. Then the terrain changed, and I no longer sensed the moon's presence. The ground gave a bit with my unnecessarily forced and heavy steps, and, by the sprinkle of dry dust around my exposed ankles, I supposed I was on a loose dirt path. Tree limbs scratched my arms on both sides.
No light + no grass + dirt path + trees = Forest. This is not good.
My neck pulse and my heartbeat seemed to catch separate rhythms, as I remembered the Nightly News' account of another teen, who they found in the woods in some other state, far from me. How distant her tragedy seemed to me then, so displaced from reality. Her hands were severed, her innocence taken, her carcass dumped in a shallow grave. The worst part was the evidence of coyotes and mountain lions, who took their share under the evil winks of devil-eyed bats and the mournful glare of night owls. Stop this ... count ... remember to count ... keep the count ... focus ...
These dreadful thoughts caused me to lose my place. I've lost count. Pushing my horror aside, I steeled myself, swallowed a jug of air, and slowed the hummingbird in my chest, just like my dad taught me in our father-daughter Jiu-Jitsu and tai chi classes and just like the lessons in the medical school books, which I kept in my laboratory in our basement.
Given my quick blip of fear upon entering the forest, I recalibrated the count by three digits. After one set of sixty in the dense wood, we skidded into short grass and back under the unencumbered illumination of the moon. This must be a clearing. This is not a clearing. Is this? This is pavement. Why didn't we park here? Terra firma, terra firma, terra firma.
We hit another patch of short grass and stopped. Keys clattered; a door opened. Before I forgot the numbers, I calculated and logged the total time from the van to this door: 1.1 minutes, walking.
I did not get the opportunity to inspect the exterior of the building we entered, but I pictured a white farmhouse. My captor led me immediately up stairs. One flight, two flights ... Upon landing on the third floor, we turned 45 degrees left, walked three steps, and stopped again. The keys clanked. A bolt slid. A lock popped. A door creaked. He removed the bag and blindfold and pushed me into my confines, a 12' x 24' room, with no way out.
The space was lit by the moon through a high triangular window on the wall to the right of the door. To the front was a queen-sized mattress on a box spring, directly on the floor, but strangely surrounded by a wood frame with sides and slats and rungs and all. It seemed like someone ran out of energy or perhaps forgot the boards for the box spring and mattress to rest upon. Thus the bed was like a canvas that had not yet been secured, only rested crooked within its picture frame. A white cotton coverlet, one pillow, and a red knit blanket dressed the makeshift bed. Above spanned three exposed beams, parallel to the door: one over the threshold, the other cutting the rectangular room in two, and the third running over my bed. The ceiling was cathedral and so, with the exposed beams, one could surely hang—if they so chose. There was nothing else. Eerily clean, eerily sparse, a quiet hiss was the only decoration. Even a monk would have felt bare in this vacuum.
I went straight to the floor mattress, as he pointed out a bucket as a bathroom if I had "to piss or shit" in the night. The moon pulsed upon his departure, as though it too let out the air it was holding in its galactic lungs. In a brighter room, I flopped backwards, exhausted, and schooled myself on my roller-coaster emotions. From the van, you went from anxiety, to hatred, to relief, to fear, to nothing. Get even or you won't win this. As with any of my experiments, I needed a constant and the only constant I could have was steady detachment, which I endeavored to keep, along with copious doses of disdain and unfathomable hatred, if those ingredients were needed to maintain the constant. What with the things I heard and saw in my confinement, those additives were indeed necessary. And easy to come by.
If there is one talent I honed in captivity, whether seeded by divine design, by osmosis from having lived in my mother's steel world, by instruction from my father in the art of self-defense, or the natural instinct of my condition, it was akin to that of a great war general's: a steady, disaffected, calculating, revengeful, and even demeanor.
This level repose was not new to me. In fact, in grade school, a counselor insisted I be examined due to the administration's concern over my flat reactions and apparent failure to experience fear. My first-grade teacher was bothered because I didn't wail or jump, screech or scream—like everyone else did—when a gunman opened fire on our classroom. Instead, as the video surveillance showed, I inspected his jerky hysterics, slicks of sweat, pockmarked complexion, enlarged pupils, frantic eye movements, track-lined arms, and, thankfully, fruitless aim. I recall to this day, the answer was so clear, he was drugged, skittish, high on acid or heroin, or both—yes, I knew the symptoms. Behind the teacher's desk was her emergency bullhorn on a shelf under the fire alarm, so I walked over to both. Before pulling the alarm, I shouted "AIR RAID" through the horn, in as deep a six-year-old voice I could muster. The meth-head dropped to the ground, cowering in a puddle of himself as he pissed his pants.
The video, which placed the issue of my evaluation on the front-burner, showed my classmates bawling in huddles, my teacher on her knees imploring God above her, and me atop a stool, trigger fingering the bullhorn at my hip, and hovering as though directing the mayhem. My pig-tailed head was cocked to the side, my arm with the bullhorn across my baby-fat belly, the other up to my chin, and I had a subtle grin matching the almost wink in my eye, approving of the policemen who pounced upon the culprit.

(Continues...)




Shannon, Hi Welcome to The Reading Frenzy

Tell me a little about your novel Method 15/33
Method 15/33 was a super fun novel to write. It’s about a pregnant, sixteen-year-old who is kidnapped by those who wish to harvest her baby and sell it to the highest bidder. Problem for them is that she’s a clinical sociopath, and as such, she’s able to spend her captivity, late in her pregnancy, plotting an intricate escape and excruciating revenge. I wanted to write a thriller that not only had a strong female lead, but also one where the victim is actually the aggressor.

Shannon that’s quite a premise, wow! 
What does the title mean?
Thanks! “Method” is meant to relate to the lead character’s devotion to science and the scientific method in all facets of her life. The numbers 15 and 33 are labels given to certain “assets” she uses in her escape.

Shannon 15/33 was a 2013 William Faulkner Creative Writing Competition as a novella. How much was changed to make it a full-length novel?
It’s not so much that anything changed, it’s that I was able to expand on certain twists and themes and add a twist. I had always wanted 15/33 to be exactly how it is now.  I entered 15/33 in the Faulkner contest as a novella, the shortened version, because as a new author I was trying to get some street cred, and with the 2013 Faulkner deadline nearing, I simply entered the manuscript in the shortened version so as not to lose a whole year for the next year’s deadline. I really respect what the Faulkner Society does for new authors.

Shannon, your plate sounds very full, wife, mom, practicing attorney, author.
When do you find time to write?
I write every single free second I can.  In the car when my husband’s driving, on the train in to work (in Boston) and home, if I’m waiting at the airport or on a runway or on the Amtrak, which is often, I also get up very early, and I stay up late, I try to find every free second I can to write because I absolutely love to write. I can lose eight whole hours to writing, thinking only one hour has passed. It’s almost like a drug to me. A wonderful free drug that doesn’t have physical side effects. :) I tell people that my writing fits into my life because it is no different from a hobby anyone else would do because they love it, such as horseback riding, or knitting, or scrapbooking, or coaching all four of your children’s sports teams. Professional attorneys, doctors, whatevers the world over find time to do these things they love. I just do it with writing. And since I don’t do other things I should be doing, such as cooking or cleaning or grocery shopping with any regular frequency or focusing on the fact that I need new curtains in all my windows, well that gives me more time too.

Shannon do you eventually want to write full time or do you need all the different career avenues you’ve chosen to keep you busy?
I plead the fifth.

Shannon you’ve gotten some really great press on the novel, besides some rather super starred reviews, I know for a fact that my friend Hank Phillippi Ryan doesn’t give praise easily and she’s said . “Wow. Ridiculously good. Crazy good. Brilliantly heart-stoppingly nail-bitingly original, this is a true thriller tour de force. Shannon Kirk is an instant star." Congratulations!
How do you feel about reviews in general? Will you read them all, some?
If I were talking to you right now, you’d hear me squeal with joy at you reading me Hank’s review. Honestly, her review, I read it every single day (have it blown up in my office) and it always makes me happy. Hank and other pretty darn awesome writers were kind enough to take the time and review Method 15/33, including F. Paul Wilson, Lisa Gardner, and Len Rosen. They absolutely did not have to do this. They didn’t know me. But they did take the time nonetheless, and that was incredible of them, and I truly appreciate the time they took.  So how do I feel about reviews? Well those reviews and those of some kind early readers and the trade reviews, Publishers Weekly and Booklist, they have, to put it plainly, pretty much blown my mind.  I’ve been working alone, basically in the dark, by myself, writing away just because it makes me happy and then all of a sudden great people take the time to say something nice about it. For a writer, it just doesn’t get any better than that. These reviews are invigorating, validating, encouraging, and keep the fire burning inside me.
Will I read all reviews? No, I will not. I started to read all the reviews in the beginning, and as with all books, Method 15/33 is not for some people. I read a negative review and not preparing myself for it, it killed me. I know it shouldn’t have, but in all honesty, it really did. I couldn’t write for a good solid two weeks because of that one review, ignoring all the other positive reviews, and when I realized how much I had allowed that one review to impact me and how I allowed myself to not do something that makes me happy, I decided to try to avoid reading all reviews. I don’t write for everyone and it would be a fool’s intent to even try.

Shannon it seems you and your siblings are all artists.
Did your parent’s influence lead any of you to your arts or do you think you would have eventually landed there anyway?
My parents absolutely influenced each one of us. We call my father Martha Stewart, given the attention he gives to setting holiday tables, days in advance. My mother is a master “felter”—her creations are works of art. I do not recall one single long car ride with my father in which I was not instructed on the genius of Bob Dylan’s lyrics—how my father would stop the song and recite certain lines and how deeply artistic and meaningful they were, you can’t not be influenced by that. Once I had a school project to create an American Indian village. It was not good enough to make simple construction paper teepees, no. I had to go into the lawn and find perfectly-sized twigs to construct perfectly-scaled canvas teepees and then go to the driveway to scrounge for perfectly-sized pebbles so as to build the campfire. I think I’ve mentioned elsewhere that we had to go to antiques shows and flea markets every weekend, all four of us kids. And it wasn’t just that we were required to drag our complaining adolescent bodies through the different stalls, we had to understand the difference between hues of wood patinas and the difference between a “primitive” and a reproduction. Yeah, these sorts of things certainly influence whether you’ll be more inclined to go into the arts. 

Shannon what’s next for you as an author?
Lots of exciting stuff.  My second book will be published next year, a literary fiction piece, called Heavens. It’s completely the opposite of Method 15/33, being about a woman who lies dying in an ICU and visits different Heavens, as though on a shopping trip—there’s a love triangle involved in there are well. 
I write in different genres, trying hard to fight industry pressure (certainly not from my wonderful Publisher, Oceanview, or wonderful agent, Kimberley Cameron), but general industry pressure, to be “branded” in one genre. Hence, Heavens and a couple other literary fiction pieces I have in the works.
But on the psychological thriller side, I’ve got two things on the burners right now. One I’m pretty excited about, its working title is The Goatman Cometh. This one is about creating a real life monster out of your own internal demons. I really like working on this one. And the other psychological thriller is just plain fun to work on because it is the sequel to Method 15/33. The working title is Asbury Grove, and it takes our main character from Method 15/33 and puts her on the case of cracking the mystery surrounding missing women of a certain age and size. There’s all sorts of crazy stuff in this sequel, a hip-hop artist, a secret brothel, bad guys, bad women, a sketchy judge, and a neighborhood that thinks it’s a graveyard. It will probably be just as dark and disturbing as Method 15/33, but I’m hoping it has more dark comedy as well.

 Shannon good luck with the novel.
Thank you! This has been fun!



Are your fan events listed on your website?
Yes, absolutely. Just go to the “News” tab at www.shannonkirkbooks.com





Connect with Shannon - Website - Twitter - Goodreads



MEET  SHANNON:
Shannon Kirk is a practicing attorney and a law professor. She attended West Virginia Wesleyan and St. John’s Universities, is a graduate of Suffolk Law School, and was a trial lawyer in Chicago prior to moving to Massachusetts. She has been honored three times by the Faulkner Society in the William Faulkner-William Wisdom Creative Writing Competition. She lives in Massachusetts with her husband, a physicist, and their son. Method 15/33 is her first novel.





a Rafflecopter giveaway


Today's Gonereading item is:
The Travelflex booklight because
you'll want to stay up to finish this read
Click HERE for the buy page

10 comments:

  1. Thanks so much, Reading Frenzy! Really appreciate your kind comments and giving me the opportunity to answer your interview questions. This is such a great and exciting time for me, the book release happening just yesterday, and to wake up today to this fantastic post, well, I'm pretty much on Cloud 9. THANK YOU!!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Shannon, Thanks for the comment. And it was definitely my pleasure. I can't wait to read this book!

      Delete
  2. Oh my heck, this sounds amazing! Creepy but amazing. I think I might have to run off to Amazon and grab this one. ;)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I know. I mean Ali I really want to read it but it's kind of like The Exorcist where I had to spend a month sleeping with the lights on. I don't know if I'm mentally ready to read this LOL

      Delete
  3. Whoa! That is quite the set up. *blinks quickly*

    ReplyDelete
  4. Oh I need to read this one Debbie...love the premise.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. me too Kim but yikes I need the right frame of mind to read it. It's on the same shelf with Normal right now. LOL

      Delete