J.A.’s
Comments
(group member since Mar 12, 2013)
J.A.’s
comments
from the Ask J.A. Jance - Monday, March 18th! group.
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So you're not the only one who has trouble putting them down.
But thank you for the kind words.

I love his books but he isn't someone I know personally.

It's the Academy for Canine Behavior in Woodinville. You're welcome to tell them I sent you. When my daughter adopted a dog that had been the mommy dog in a puppy mill, she was totally unsocialized, and they evaluated her to decide if Snowflake could be transformed into a family dog. She could and she is. Just yesterday, when the caterers were delivering food to our house for a party, we used one of the essential Academy-learned commands with our rescued dachshund, Bella. We told her WAIT. That means people go in and out doors or gates. Dog does not.

What is your view on the current gun ..."
I missed one. No plans for any new series at this point.

I've been concentrating so hard on the questions that I have failed to say thank you to the people who have said such kind words about my books all through this interview. So let's rectify that. Thank you!!
And thank you for being such long time readers. I don't know about writing another Walker book. I haven't been asked to do one yet, but I'm not ruling it out.

Beaumont is my firstborn character, so I have a real soft spot in my heart for him.

I have no idea who Ollie Weeks is based on. I believe you'll need to ask Stephen King.

Ann wrote: "I have read and enjoyed many of the J.P. Beaumont novels and was entertaining starting the Ali Reynolds series. Would you recommend in any of your series to start from book #1 so I can understand h..."
There are always new readers who come into a series with whatever book happens to be the new book at the time. Some of them choose to start from thee and move backwards. Others prefer to jump to the beginning. There's no rule that you have to start at the beginning, but some of the background storylines--like Joanna's relationship with her mother or Ali's relationship with B. Simpson occur in the background of several books, and that may be more interesting if you're reading the books in order.

A lot of the time I use places I know well. That way I can keep my eye on the story and the character while reporting on the landscape in the background. For places I haven't been, Google Maps and Google Earth are HUGE helps.

What genre(s) do you read when you are not writing?
I still read mostly mysteries. Lee Childs, Michael Connolly, John Dunning, Ann B. Ross, Alexander McCall Smith.
Who are some of your favorite authors? See the list posted above.
What author(s) influenced your writing style? John D. McDonald's Travis Magee showed me that it was possible to write an adult mystery series.
How do you remember what you wrote about what char..."I do my best, but if you read the answer above, about 2.1 million words in the Beaumont series alone, it's not always possible to remember everything with complete accuracy.

What is your view on the current gun debate?
Thanks!"
I really enjoyed Fringe. And I like Person of Interest and the Mentalist.
As for the current gun debate? If we take weapons away from all the law abiding folks, then only the criminals will have guns. See Chicago.

For years Hour of the Hunter has been my favorite. But I think, in September, that Second Watch will pull ahead.

I'm currently reading The Bookman's Promise by John Dunning, and I expect to be reading a new Miss Julia book by Ann B. Ross sometime in April. But right now, I'm working on the next Ali book so reading other people's books has to take a back seat.

Yes, as I replied above. Ali can't go wandering into a HarperCollins book without both of us getting into a LOT of trouble.

Good evening. And thank you for taking the time from your busy schedule to answer questions from your loyal readers. I love your J.P. Beaumont series. I've been reading that fantas..."
In Mysteries you usually don't know who the bad guy is until the end of the book. In thrillers, you often know the bad guy and the question is whether or not he will get away with it. See Hour of the Hunter. You know Andrew Philip Carlisle is the bad guy from the beginning, and he his after Diana Ladd. (By the way, I wasn't allowed in the Creative Writing program at the University of Arizona in 1964 because I was a girl. That explains why Andrew Philip Carlisle turns out to be a former professor of Creative writing from the University of Arizona. A word of advice: Do NOT make mystery writer's mad.

Good evening. And thank you for taking the time from your busy schedule to answer questions from your loyal readers. I love your J.P. Beaumont series. I've been reading that fantas..."
I'm having a tough time seeing the question here. So I'll try to remember. Does the protagonist reflect my view of the world? I'm sure there's some of me in ALL my characters, but my characters and I do not move in lock step.
There's a lot about writing that is utterly magic. I don't know what to say about "tapping into sources." Some things are inspired. In writing my books, however, I try to avoid using real cases because real cases affect real people.
And did I say thank you for coming on board with Birds of Prey. Did you go back and read the earlier books as well?

Good evening. And thank you for taking the time from your busy schedule to answer questions from your loyal readers. I love your J.P. Beaumont series. I've been reading that fantas..."

I write my books where I'm answering these questions in a comfy easy chair in the family room of my home in Tucson with my laptop on my lap. In Seattle I have another comfy chair in a different family room.
I started out reading the Nancy Drew books. I've read mysteries all my life, and so it made sense that I would write what I liked to read. By the end of a mystery, you can usually count on the bad guy getting what he deserves--something that doesn't necessarily happen in real life or in literary fiction. Tony Hillerman told me once, "Literary fiction is where not much happens to people you don't like very much."

Still love "Hour of the Hunter" best. Anymore co..."
Both of our pairs of goldens, Nikki and Tess, named after Nicolai Tesla and Aggie and Daph, named after Agatha Christie and Daphne du Maurier are gone now. Thirteen or fourteen years are all you get, if you're lucky, before they cross the Rainbow Bridge. But the fictional Aggie and Daph have shown up in a couple of Ali books and who's to say they won't do so again?
Hour of the Hunter has always been my favorite, too. I'm assuming that you haven't missed the other three Walker books, Kiss of the Bees, Day of the Dead, and Queen of the Night. The other day, a book seller in Tucson referred to the Walkers as the "of the" books. It made me laugh.