Today author C. l. Tolbert is here to discuss her latest novel Out From Silence. She's also agreed to take part in an interview.
Meet Cindy...
1. What
was your hardest scene to write?
I have a more difficult time
writing emotional scenes. In OUT FROM SILENCE, the scene describing the
daughter’s death, particularly the aftermath of her death and her father’s
reaction to it were the most difficult to write.
2.
What
makes you run screaming?
Right now, as I’m
sitting here in my office at work, it’s my dog who won’t stop licking his paws.
Typically, I’m pretty easy going, but loud, repetitive noises will get to me
after a while.
3.
You’re
about to be dropped in a remote spot for a three-week survival test. Where
would you go? What three tools would you take?
I’d go to one of the
remote islands of French Polynesia since it’s one of the most beautiful
locations in the world. The weather is perfect, and there are no poisonous
snakes or insects. I could live like Robinson Crusoe there with a small axe, a
mosquito net and a small pan for cooking.
4.
What
behind-the-scenes tidbit in your life would probably surprise your readers the
most?
I have a Master’s of Special
Education and taught learning disabled students for ten years before I enrolled
in law school. I practiced law for thirty years before I published my first
book.
5.
If
you had the opportunity to live anywhere in the world for a year while writing
a book that took place in that same setting, where would you choose?
I’ve
always wanted to live in Paris, France. I’ve visited the city five times, and
would love to go back. I write murder mysteries and can easily imagine a plot developed
around the streets of that gorgeous city, especially along the left bank.
Living there an entire year would be the realization of a dream.
6.
If
you could tell your younger writing self anything, what would it be?
I’d tell myself to write on a consistent basis. I won my first
writing contest at age nine, then didn’t submit anything for review again until
2010, which was when I won the Georgia State Bar Journal’s Fiction Writing
Contest. I was fifty-eight years old at the time.
Although I was encouraged to write by teachers when I was younger,
I didn’t, unless I was completing an assignment. But I had stories in my head. I started making feeble stabs at writing
during my recovery from cancer in 2006. I was fifty-four. I wasted more than
forty creative writing years. (Legal writing doesn’t count.)
Stories have a way of being told, finally. But writing must be
honed. It improves with each effort, each page, each edit, each book.
7.
What
does literary success look like to you?
I enjoy writing, and feel
enriched by it. That, in and of itself, feels like success. I enjoy plotting
the story, developing the characters, and building the world the book is based
on. I don’t have a huge reader base at this time, but those who have read my
first book, OUT FROM SILENCE, have enjoyed it, which is important to me. In
this book, a young deaf man is accused of killing his girlfriend in the story,
so the readers have learned something about what it’s like to live in his world.
I’d like to think their lives have been enhanced in some way by reading the
book, which makes the success full circle.
8.
Tell
us about the book you’re working on now.
In
December of 2020 my second murder mystery, THE REDEMPTION, will be published.
It’s the second novel in the Thornton Mystery series and is based in New
Orleans in 1994.
Emma
Thornton is teaching at a law school in the city where she is the director of
the school’s homelessness clinic. The Dean asks her to take on a case where Louis,
a young boy, only sixteen years of age, has been arrested for the killing of
two men at the Redemption, a housing project. Emma immediately suspects there
were two shooters that night, and begins an investigation into the double
murder. During this time frame, since there were two killings, Louis is treated
as an adult and is subject to the death penalty. There is no definitive
evidence, except for the testimony of one witness who incriminates Louis. Emma and her third-year law students find
themselves in treacherous circumstances as they work to free Louis.
*******
Emma Thornton, law student and clerk for a local
attorney, is asked to help defend Adam, a youthful deaf man accused of killing his
girlfriend. The investigation sets her on a dangerous path which nearly costs
her her life, and forces Adam out of his world of silence.
"Out From Silence is a solid debut loaded
with menace, memorable characters, and dangerous secrets—a brooding mystery
rooted deep in the Southern tradition." - Roger Johns, award-winning
author of the Wallace Hartman Mysteries
In
2010 Cynthia Tolbert won the Georgia Bar Journal’s fiction contest for the
short story version of OUT FROM
SILENCE. That story is now the first
full-length novel of the Thornton Mystery Series, which was published by Level
Best Books in December of 2019. She is currently writing her second novel in
this same series entitled THE REDEMPTION,
which is set in New Orleans. This book is scheduled to be published in December
of 2020.
Ms.
Tolbert has a Master’s in Special Education and taught children with learning
disabilities before moving on to law school. She spent most of her legal career
working as defense counsel to large corporations and traveled throughout the
country as regional and national counsel. She also had the unique opportunity
of teaching third-year law students in a clinical program at a law school in
New Orleans where she ran the Homelessness Law Clinic and learned, first hand,
about poverty in that city. The experiences and impressions she has collected
from the past forty years contribute to the stories she writes today.
She
has four children, and three grandchildren, and lives in Atlanta with her
husband and schnauzer.
Thank you, Cindy!
Congratulations on a great mystery!
Readers, do you have any questions for Ms. Tolbert?