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Suspense Radio

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Suspense Radio, brings you the best of the best in suspense / thriller / mystery and horror. Interviews and reviews in the genres.

1090 - Criminal Mischief Episode 26: Storytelling in Dixie
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  • 1090 - Criminal Mischief Episode 26: Storytelling in Dixie

    Here’s the thing about the South—if you can’t tell a story, they won’t feed you. They’ll simply deposit you behind the barn and let you wither away. That doesn’t happen often because everyone down there can spin a yarn. Some better than others, but a story is a story. This is a rich tradition and congers up names like William Faulkner, James Dickey, Eudora Welty, Flannery O’Conner, Tennessee Williams, Mark Twain, Harper Lee, Truman Capote (who spent much of his childhood in Alabama), James Lee Burke, and the list goes on and on. Where did this tradition come from? Since much of the South was settled by Scotch- Irish immigrants, they transported their storytelling skills across the pond. Ever hear of a Scotsman who couldn’t reel off a story over a few glasses of whiskey? Me, either. Plus, the South was rural, poor, and with fewer resources, so much of society revolved around the farm, and hearth and home. Books were a luxury, meaning that family entertainment came from stories told by the fireplace. I grew up in Alabama. Huntsville to be exact. Not your typical southern town. Sure we had acres of farmland, churches on every corner, enough pickup trucks to cause a traffic jam, and a cacophony of country music, but we also had a space program. Snuggled up to the city is NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center where Werner von Braun and cohorts built the rockets that sent men into orbit and eventually to the surface of the moon. Made for an interesting soup of folks. Rednecks and scientist, all dining on barbecue and biscuits, and of course pecan pie. So, what is it that makes Southern storytelling so compelling? It’s the many facets of the area. You can’t write about the South without considering country music, the blues, country stores, cornbread, sweet tea, and the weather. Weather: Weather is a character in Southern stories. The rain, the hair-raising electrical storms, and, of course, the heat and humidity conspire to alter everything in life. The cracking of lightning puts nerves on edge while the sauna-like air wilts your clothing, slows your walk, and stretches out your drawl like back strap molasses creeping over a mess of hotcakes. In his famous “Ten Rules of Writing,” Elmore Leonard admonished authors to never start a story with the weather. He forgot to tell that to James Lee Burke. His Dave Robicheaux series moves around the swamplands of Louisiana, a place where weather is most definitely a character. Don’t believe it. Read the first paragraph of his Edgar Award-winning Black Cherry Blues. Breathtaking. And his evocation of the weather draws you quickly and deeply into the story. Characters: Southern characters are often larger than life. The local sheriff with a big gun and an even bigger belly, the cheerleader with the big smile and bouncy blond hair, the farmer with his coveralls, straw angled from his mouth, and a sun-baked red neck. There’s Gone With the Wind’s Scarlett O’Hara, who defies description, and Scout, who gives a child’s-eye view of her father Atticus as he fights for right and justice in To Kill A Mockingbird. Robert Penn Warren’s All The King’s Men introduced us to Willie Stark, who channels the one-of-a-kind Huey P. Long, a man whose shadow still lays over Louisiana. Not to mention the modern-day Don Quixote Ignatius Reilly in John Kennedy Toole’s masterpiece A Confederacy of Dunces. It seems almost everyone in the South has a nickname. Sometimes even a nickname for their nickname. My Little League baseball coach was known as Breadman—I never knew his real name—and he was mostly called Bread. We played against another coach called Buttermilk—didn’t know his name either—but he was called simply Milk. See, a nickname for a nickname. Language: Yeah, we say...

    Fri, 22 Nov 2024 - 27min
  • 1089 - Interview with Marcia Clark

    We are so honored to bring you ex-criminal prosecutor and current bestselling author Marcia Clark. She joins us to talk about her latest book, TRIAL BY AMBUSH, her first True Crime novel. Marcia Clark is the best selling author of nine legal thrillers and one memoir, starting with four bestselling legal thrillers featuring prosecutor Rachel Knight: The Competition, Killer Ambition, Guilt by Degrees, and Guilt by Association. TNT optioned the books for a one-hour drama series and shot the pilot, which starred Julia Stiles as Rachel Knight. Her most recent series features criminal defense attorney Samantha Brinkman and includes Blood Defense, Moral Defense, Snap Judgment, and Final Judgment. Marcia’s latest thriller, released in September 2022, The Fall Girl, was a standalone featuring two leads with alternating chapters. Marcia narrated the audiobook along with TV writing partner, Catherine LePard.  

    Tue, 19 Nov 2024 - 21min
  • 1088 - Criminal Mischief Episode 25: Stroll Through Forensic History

    SHOW NOTES:   FORENSIC SCIENCE TIMELINE    Prehistory: Early cave artists and pot makers “sign” their works with a paint or impressed finger or thumbprint.  1000 b.c.: Chinese use fingerprints to “sign” legal documents.  3rd century BC.: Erasistratus (c. 304–250 b.c.) and Herophilus (c. 335–280 b.c.) perform the first autopsies in Alexandria.  2nd century AD.: Galen (131–200 a.d.), physician to Roman gladiators, dissects both animal and humans to search for the causes of disease.  c. 1000: Roman attorney Quintilian shows that a bloody handprint was intended to frame a blind man for his mother’s murder.  1194: King Richard Plantagenet (1157–1199) officially creates the position of coroner.  1200s: First forensic autopsies are done at the University of Bologna.  1247: Sung Tz’u publishes Hsi Yuan Lu (The Washing Away of Wrongs), the first forensic text.  c. 1348–1350: Pope Clement VI(1291–1352) orders autopsies on victims of the Black Death to hopefully find a cause for the plague.  Late 1400s: Medical schools are established in Padua and Bologna.  1500s: Ambroise Paré (1510–1590) writes extensively on the anatomy of war and homicidal wounds.  1642: University of Leipzig offers the first courses in forensic medicine.  1683: Antony van Leeuwenhoek (1632–1723) employs a microscope to first see living bacteria, which he calls animalcules.  Late 1600s: Giovanni Morgagni (1682–1771) first correlates autopsy findings to various diseases.  1685: Marcello Malpighi first recognizes fingerprint patterns and uses the terms loops and whorls.  1775: Paul Revere recognizes dentures he had made for his friend Dr. Joseph Warren and thus identifies the doctor’s body in a mass grave at Bunker Hill.  1775: Carl Wilhelm Scheele (1742–1786) develops the first test for arsenic.  1784: In what is perhaps the first ballistic comparison, John Toms is convicted of murder based on the match of paper wadding removed from the victim’s wound with paper found in Tom’s pocket.  1787: Johann Metzger develops a method for isolating arsenic.  c. 1800: Franz Joseph Gall (1758–1828) develops the field of phrenology.  1806: Valentine Rose recovers arsenic from a human body.  1813: Mathieu Joseph Bonaventure Orfila (1787–1853) publishes Traité des poisons (Treatise on Poison), the first toxicology textbook.   1821: Sevillas isolates arsenic from human stomach contents and urine, giving birth to the field of forensic toxicology.  1823: Johannes Purkinje (1787–1869) devises the first crude fingerprint classification system.  1835: Henry Goddard (1866–1957) matches two bullets to show they came from the same bullet mould.  1836: Alfred Swaine Taylor (1806–1880) develops first test for arsenic in human tissue.  1836: James Marsh (1794–1846) develops a sensitive test for arsenic (Marsh test).  1853: Ludwig Teichmann (1823–1895) develops the hematin test to test blood for the presence of the characteristic rhomboid crystals.  1858: In Bengal, India, Sir William Herschel (1833–1917) requires natives sign contracts with a hand imprint and shows that fingerprints did not change over a fifty-year period.  1862: Izaak van Deen (1804–1869) develops the guaiac test for blood.  1863: Christian Friedrich Schönbein (1799–1868) develops the hydrogen peroxide test for blood.  1868: Friedrich Miescher (1844–1895) discovers DNA.  1875: Wilhelm Konrad Röntgen (1845–1923) discovers X-rays.  1876:...

    Tue, 19 Nov 2024 - 35min
  • 1087 - Criminal Mischief Episode 24: Common Writing Mistakes

    SHOW NOTES: Writers, particularly early in their careers, make mistakes. Often the same ones over and over. Here are a few pitfalls to avoid.  OVERWRITING: Too many words  Too cute by far  Strained Metaphors  Purple prose  DIALOG: Tag alert  Characters all sound the same  Inane conversations  “As you know” chatting  SHOW VS TELL: DESCRIPTION: Not too much  Not too little  Just enough—the telling details  SCENES: In and Out quickly—in medias res  Leave question/tension at end  POV: Stay in one at a time  Except Omniscient—hard to do  PACING:  Fast but not too fast  Vary pace  BACKSTORY: How much?  When?  ENTERTAIN:  The one cardinal rule  

    Tue, 19 Nov 2024 - 23min
  • 1086 - Criminal Mischief Episode 23: Apollo 11 and Me

    SHOW NOTES: It’s hard to believe that it’s been 50 years. Exactly 50 years. This show has nothing to do with crime writing or the science of crime. It is rather a step back in world history. And in my personal history. Yes, I was there. Inside the gates of the Cape Canaveral Space Center. July 16, 1969, 9:32 a.m. I remember it like it was yesterday. Please indulge me and join me for this trip down memory lane. The above picture is more or less the view I had of the launch. The sky was clear, the tension thick, and not a dry eye to be found.

    Tue, 19 Nov 2024 - 27min
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