Cover for A Deep and Deadly Undertow (Gage #7) and a Brief Update

Garrison Gage fans will be happy to know that the seventh book in the series, A Deep and Deadly Undertow, is now with the copy editor and should be out in early September. That’s the cover on the right. (You can click it for a larger version.) Book description will follow soon, but needless to say, this is probably the most consequential Gage book yet. Ghost ships, sunken treasure, dashed hopes and dark betrayals . . .  Even a marriage proposal. It’s got it all. 

If you want a tiny clue of some big changes in Gage’s life, be sure to read Throwaway Jane, the first Karen Pantelli adventure, which features a brief cameo from the curmudgeonly detective. And if you enjoy the book, please do write a review on Amazon or elsewhere. I get a lot of emails from readers who never write reviews, and while I do appreciate your kind words, online reader reviews are even more important these days than reviews from major trades, I think. It’s the new word of mouth. So if there’s one thing you can do to help an author (other than buying his or her books, of course), it’s to write a review of why you liked the book. It doesn’t have to be long. Just a sentence or two is perfectly fine.

More on the Gage book soon. I’d planned to write a few short stories between books, but I’m already hard at work on a new novel, an idea about a local amusement park I’ve been toying with for years. I often find that ideas I mull over too much often turn to mush, or become overly forced and stilted, as opposed to ones I come up with from scratch, but this one’s stayed fresh. I also think I might finally be ready to write it, which I think was the problem with the Big Epic I flamed out on a couple years ago. Just wasn’t ready to write it yet. Though I’m thinking I’m going to take another crack at that one, too. 

My plan right now is to alternate between series books and one-offs, but we’ll see how it goes. Other than that, life in the era of Covid-19 goes on here on Carter Hill (what I’ve taken to calling our 90-year-old Tudor-style house up on a little rise). Our Subaru Forester, which we bought almost 20 years ago, finally had to go, with so many repairs due that we couldn’t justify it for what the car was worth, despite how good the car has been to us (we brought our daughter home from the hospital in it, so it had lots of

sentimental value). We replaced it with a 2016 Nissan Juke, pictured there on the right. We already had a Nissan Pathfinder for bigger family trips, so this is a little town car that can hold four people in a pinch but I think is really intended for two. It has AWD, too, something I pretty much insist on these days, as well as a sunroof and a great sound system. While we bought our Subaru Forester new, I’m a big believer in buying slightly used cars, so someone else pays for the steep depreciation that cars see in those first few years. 

Kids are looking forward to going back to school in a few weeks, such as it is. It looks like it will be almost completely online. I’m typing this on the new flagstone patio I put in over the summer in the backyard. Rosie, our now fourteen-week-old Irish Setter, is sitting at my feet on a beautiful summer morning. The vet cautioned us not to take her off the property much until her series of shots are finished, so we’ve been settling for lots of backyard play, but I’m looking forward to the two of us getting out for some long walks (and eventually hikes!) in the months and years ahead. 

I’ll end this with a recent shot of Rosie. Back before too long. Stay safe out there.

Meet My New Office Assistant: Rosie

I’m coming to end of the next Garrison Gage book, though my writing productivity took a bit of a hit the last few weeks. There’s a good reason for that. I took on a new office assistant, and I’ve had to spend quite a bit of time training her. You see, she’s not so good at typing, editing, filing, cleaning, or really anything most office assistants might do. But boy, is she cute. Her name is Rosie:

She’s a 10 week old Irish Setter. I think she’s about 15 pounds there, so as a female she’ll end up about four times that weight. When I started writing full-time, I promised Heidi and the kids we could get a new puppy. Belle, our Boston Terrier, is still with us, of course, though at 13 years old she’s starting to slow down quite a bit. Our first two dogs were both Humane Society mutts, usually the best kinds of dogs, but this time I had my heart set on an Irish Setter. When Heidi I visited Arlie Winery last summer, on one of our trips to the coast, the owners had a couple of sweet Irish Setters wandering around the property. I said that if we ever got another dog, I think that’s what I would want. My wife found a fantastic and very conscientious dog breeder up in Washington state, one who raised mostly Golden Irish, which are half golden retrievers and half Irish Setters, and for a while that’s the way we thought we were going, which would have been perfectly wonderful, but they ended up having a few pure Irish Setters available and it seemed like fate.

So after a quick, one-night trip to the Puget Sound area, which included a lovely stay just outside of Olympia and a near-perfect evening stroll through the Nisqually National Wildlife Refuge, we returned home with a new member of our family. She’s been handful, of course, but as I told a fellow writer who said dogs were too high maintenance for him, and he’d stick with cats (we love cats too), dogs offer their own special kind of rewards usually commensurate with amount of attention and effort you give them.

I’ve never had a puppy before, so I’ve had to do a lot of reading. Even Belle was a year old when she came to live with us. So this has been quite the learning process. While Rosie has certainly thrown a wrench into my productivity lately (and just when I thought I was getting a handle on this whole full time writing thing), she’s also provided something more meaningful to focus on rather than … well, you know. It’s been a heck of a year, and we’re barely halfway through it. Stay safe out there. More soon.

New Book Published: THROWAWAY JANE (A Karen Pantelli Novel)

I hope everyone is doing all right during this trying time. My family’s health is good, the kids are adapting to online schooling, and most days I still manage to get in my daily words, which actually helps me focus on something other than the state of the world. I do think we’ll come out stronger on the other side of this thing, but it may be a pretty bumpy ride getting there.

If you’re looking for some fun escapism right now, please check out my new book THROWAWAY JANE. I’m very excited about this one, the first book featuring a kick-ass heroine named Karen Pantelli. Those of you who’ve read the Garrison Gage books may remember her, and our friend Gage even makes a brief appearance in this book. Karen was a character who stuck with me as soon as she appeared on the page. As you await the next Gage book (I’m working on that one now), I hope you’ll check out her first book length adventure. I had a blast writing it. More information below.

Stay safe, and thanks for reading! 

P.S. There is a little delay with the paperback, a slowdown in printing because of the pandemic, etc, but it should be available soon. The ebook is available from all retailers, however, so I didn’t want my most dedicated fans to have to wait.


Throwaway Jane
A Karen Pantelli Nove
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Former FBI agent Karen Pantelli lives by a simple philosophy: never, ever care. Three years after a tragic mistake ends her once-stellar career, she drifts from one dead-end job to another, quickly moving on when she finds herself getting too attached. A new city. A new life. A new way of forgetting and being forgotten.

Until one chilly night behind a seedy bar, when a frightened girl leaps out of the back of a speeding van.
As they end up on the run in a thrilling chase that spans half the country, Karen soon realizes it’s much easier to say you don’t care than to actually mean it. And that unlocking the secrets in this girl’s extraordinary mind might not only save both of them, but bring down one of the most sinister organizations the world has ever known.  

“Carter’s writing is on target.”—Publishers Weekly

Ebook: Amazon | B&N | Kobo | iBooks | Google Play | Gumroad

Paperback: Amazon | Indiebound

Cover for First Karen Pantelli Book, and Thoughts on Writing in the Time of Coronavirus

That’s the cover on the right for Throwaway Jane, the first Karen Pantelli novel. The book is entering the production stage (copy edits, final proofreading, etc) and should be out in the world by mid-May.

I’ll have a book description soon, but for now I’ll just say that those of you who’ve read my Garrison Gage series may remember Karen as the FBI agent introduced in A Desperate Place for Dying and (after a tragic mistake compells her to leave the Bureau and become something of an aimless drifter) plays a more central role in The Lovely Wicked Rain. What happened to her the last couple years? What has she been up to? I wrote a book to find out, and I enjoyed it so much it’s a good bet I’ll be writing many more, assuming readers like her as much as I do. More detail soon.

Other updates? I’m about halfway done with next Garrison Gage book — who, by the way, has a cameo in Throwaway Jane. It’s relatively brief, but it definitely contains a few tantalizing hints of some changes in Gage’s life, changes that will definitely come to bear in his next adventure. More than that I can’t say, except I’m really putting him through the ringer this time, poor guy.

Nearly six months in to working as a full-time writer, I can’t decide if I’m working all the time or hardly working. Benefit of loving what you do, I guess. Even when it’s hard, it seldom seems like work. That’s not to say it’s always easy. I’ve had good days and bad days, productive days and not so productive days, especially considering the anxiety-inducing state of the world at the moment. Yet even on the toughest writing days, I still feel like I’m following my bliss, to paraphrase Joseph Campbell. That’s all I think you can ask for on a personal level as a human being, to engage in work, hobbies, pastimes, whatever the case may be for each person, that provide you a gateway to a deeply meaningful life.

But the family’s healthy, which is the important thing, and life goes on as it must. With two teenagers in the house nearly all the time (like most of the world, their schools are now online), I guess it’s a miracle I’m sane at all, but we’ve actually had a lot of great conversations and lots of laughter, too. House and yard projects. Teaching my daughter to drive. Some drawing here and there, when I’m not writing. Binge-watching fun escapist television with my wife to forget about the world for a while (Hart of Dixie, I’m looking at you). Mostly, I stay busy. It’s spring here in the Willamette Valley, lush and beautiful and what I always consider a reward for our long, gray, drizzly winters (which I actually don’t mind all that much — they drive out the Californians who dabble with retiring here).

The flowering plum trees outside my office are in full bloom, and on windy days their petals cover the sidewalks like pink snow. It’s a reminder to appreciate beauty wherever you find it.