Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Lori Rader-Day--What's Your Obsession?

DEBORAH CROMBIE: I am such a fan of Lori Rader-Day and I am beyond chuffed to have her visiting us again here on JRW. And this book, WRECK YOUR HEART, I have to tell you, is an absolute corker! It's a pick-it-up-and-don't-put-it-down read, so I'm warning you. Block out some time for this one. 

And this cover?? If there were awards for most fun covers, this one would definitely be in the running!





What’s your obsession?

By Lori Rader-Day

I have been lucky enough to be invited to visit Jungle Red Writers for every one of my books.

In my guests posts here, I have talked about Muppets and nail polish and cookies made of ground-up angel’s wings. About the metaphor of the time loop in the movie Groundhog’s Day reflecting the realities of writing. On the death of Saturday morning cartoons, the “Dukes of Hazzard,” and the hazards of nostalgia. About the fantastic cream teas and afternoon teas I’ve enjoyed as “research.” About stargazing and my cousin the astronaut and my childhood, viewed from the back of a motorcycle. And about the playlists I have always made for my books, from the music I listen to as I write.

But really? I have only one topic, no matter what I’m writing about.

Obsession.

Writing is all about obsession, absorption. What can I care enough about to spend the vast amounts of time required to write a novel? What can I care about, even as the muddled middle stagnates, as the first draft’s finish reveals my disappointments and the long road of revision ahead? What can I care about all the way to the last, teeny, tiny edit, when I can finally let it go? 



(My agent once said of my editing process, "No one does it like this, Lori," and I am still chilled by that.)

Time passing means we never cross the same river twice, as the saying goes. What I’m obsessed with right now might be spent in the process of writing, used up, and I’ll never think about it again. (Except when I’m holding up a copy of the book in front of readers and explaining why they should join me in my obsession, at least for a few hundred pages.) I might regret the loss of that obsession, that glorious time when I was able to dedicate myself fully to a topic, when it was my job to care so much about, say, the historical records of one lovely English house once owned by Agatha Christie.



 
(It was a lovely time to be obsessed with Agatha's house while I was stuck in mine in the pandemic lockdown.)

As writers we get asked a lot… isn’t it easier to write a book once you’ve already done it a few times? The truth is… no. It gets harder. One of the reasons this is true, I suspect, is that we are worried about stepping into that river and finding the same water. We don’t want to write the same book over and over. Even series authors want to outdo themselves from book to book. But as a standalone author, I am at pains to keep discovering new things to obsess over to form the basis of my character’s job and life and dilemma. For each book, I must learn enough to, if not to become the leading worldwide expert, then at least not embarrass myself. As someone who is research averse, it’s about finding new topics I don’t mind spending the time on.

For my latest book, Wreck Your Heart, it was music.

Am I a musician? No more than I was a sociology professor, hotel cleaner, handwriting expert, night-sky photographer, construction company administrator, or a rejected and reassigned World War II nurse. No more than I was a mother, or widowed, or kidnapped as a child, or Agatha freaking Christie herself. I write fiction, so I’m allowed to play with these roles, imagine and reimagine what these lives might be like so that my readers receive the same opportunity.

If I do my job right, my readers will wonder about each character… is their obsession mine?

For instance: Am I a good singer? No. But I was willing to put the time the vocalist protagonist of Wreck Your Heart needed. Oh, poor me. I had to listen to music (which I would have been doing anyway; here’s the playlist for Wreck Your Heart). I was compelled to read memoirs by some of my favorite recording artists. I was forced to witness the awe of the shared experience of a live music audience, to watch how audiences interact with performers, how stage lighting paints skin. Again and again, concert after concert, poor me.



(See that little woman with the big shadow on the wall? Look for her in Wreck Your Heart!)

Actually, though Wreck Your Heart is about a musician yearning for rockstar status, the book became, in the end, about obsession, about putting your whole self into what you care about, about laying yourself open to criticism and derision and vulnerability by being your truest self. Loving something or someone fully is what makes us human. The thing you love most can be the lens through which you see the world in all its brightest colors.

I said it to Jungle Red Writers readers long ago: obsession is good for you. It’s been good to me. As soon as I figure out my next obsession, I’ll start singing about it. So to speak.

What are you obsessed with, Jungle Red readers? Tell me everything.


Here's more about WRECK YOUR HEART: 

Ann Cleeves called it “wisecracking and wonderful.” Elle Cosimano called it “Phenomenal.” Library Journal and Publisher’s Weekly both gave the book starred reviews. 

 

The book is the instant USA Today bestseller Wreck Your Heart, a crime novel with a big heart, about a country and midwestern singer out to catch her big break before family—or murder—wrecks everything.

 

Dahlia “Doll” Devine had the kind of hardscrabble beginning they write country songs about. As part of Chicago’s—yes, Chicago’s—country music scene, Dahlia is an up-and-coming singer in spangles and boots of classic country tunes. Up and coming, that is, until her boyfriend up and went, taking the rent money with him.

 

So Dahlia is back to square one, crashing in the apartment over McPhee’s Tavern where she performs and relying on the kindness of the pub’s owner—again. When the mother Dahlia hasn’t spoken to in twenty years shows up and then disappears again—really disappears, leaving a distraught half-sister Dahlia didn’t know she had—and a body is discovered outside McPhee’s, the two mysteries threaten not just the place Dahlia has made into a home, but everything she’s believed about her past, her dreams for the future, and the people she was just, maybe, beginning to let into her heart.




Lori Rader-Day is the USA Today bestselling author of eight novels including Wreck Your Heart, The Death of Us, Death at Greenway, The Lucky One, and Under a Dark Sky. She has been nominated for crime fiction’s highest award, the Edgar Award, and has won the Mary Higgins Clark Award, the Agatha Award, three Anthony Awards, and an Indiana Author Award. She has also been nominated for Thriller, Barry, and Macavity awards. Lori is a former national president of Sisters in Crime and a former national board member of Mystery Writers of America. She lives in Chicago, where she co-chairs the crime fiction readers’ event Midwest Mystery Conference and teaches creative writing at Northwestern University. Visit her at www.LoriRaderDay.com.

DEBS: And you can stop in today to say hi and tell Lori all about your obsessions!

83 comments:

  1. Congratulations, Lori, on your newest book . . . I'm looking forward to meeting Dahlia and reading her story.
    I guess, more than anything else, I am obsessed with my grandbabies . . . .

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    1. OOH, I’ve never written a grandmother before. Maybe it’s time. Thanks, Joan!

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    2. That “anonymous” is me. Sorry.

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  2. What a great way to describe writing, Lori. I look forward to reading the fruits of your next obsession!

    Right now, other than my grandbabies, I'm obsessed with autocorrect errors and how to make a crime story out of them. ;^)

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    1. Edith, I would definitely read that! There are days when I feel like I’ve spent hours correcting Autocorrect errors!

      DebRo

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    2. Proving that there’s a crime story in everything. Thanks, Edith!

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    3. Amateur hour over here. That anonymous poster is me.

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  3. Congratulations on your newest book. At the moment, I'm obsessed with finding activities to do while I'm in San Francisco.

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    1. Wine tasting in Sonoma.

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    2. Oooh, yeah. That’s a great idea. I’ll see you there, Dru Ann! Thank you!

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    3. The first anonymous is someone else, but the second one is me!

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    4. thanks, I'll look into a wine tasting tour. See you there Lori!

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  4. My current obsessions include trying to keep my landscape plants alive during this prolonged cold spell with nightly freeze warnings in Ocala, Florida, pickleball, and getting my sister down here from Iowa for her first visit.

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    1. Pickleball is sweeping the nation! I wish I had the gardening obsession. That seems like a good one. Thanks, Brenda!

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  5. Lori, congratulations on all the fabulous reviews and recognition of Wreck Your Heart. It's on my TBR. I over meeting you and hearing you speak at Crime Bake!

    I've always loved stories and now reading stories has become my obsession. If I might claim a second one, I have also become obsessed with cooking and baking. It would do me good if exercise could become my third!

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    1. Wouldn’t it be great if we could all obsess a little over exercise? It never seems to catch, with me. Thank you, Judy! Glad we got to meet at Crime Bake!

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    2. And this anonymous person here is me, too. Oops.

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  6. Autocorrect is such a busy body. Lori, I LOVED meeting you at Crime Bake.

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  7. It's so great to see you and WRECK YOUR HEART on my screen this morning, Lori! Your work is inspiring precisely because you give yourself over to obsession when you write, and I love that you are open about that being the key to your well-earned success. Thank you for being such a role model!

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    1. Me??? I’m such a role model, I just realized I was posting responses to these wonderful comments as ANONYMOUS. Sigh. Thank you so much, Brenda!!

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  8. Welcome Lori! Now I definitely want to hear more about your unusual editing process... Can't wait to read this one.

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    1. Oh, it’s a BANGER of a process. I did a webinar for SinC Worldwide about it, if you’re interested enough for an hour-long talk. The short version is: it’s intense, and it goes until the very last second.

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  9. Lori,

    Congrats on the book and all the positive buzz I've been seeing about it. It's on my TBR list for sure.

    When it comes to obsession, I don't think I have any one particular obsession. Any kind of obsession for me is situational. The Super Bowl is coming up, so I'm obsessing over the Patriots hopefully winning the game even though they are the underdogs.

    But then I go to pull a shift at my friend's record shop and I'm obsessed not just with the music, but talking about the music as the opportunity arises AND organizing the music on the sales floor so that it is in as easy to find something order as possible.

    But then I go home and I'm obsessed with reading or watching the many TV shows I want to watch.

    Or when I go to Trivia Night , I'm obsessed with trying to win and demoralize all the other teams by metaphorically cutting their throats with my team's obvious trivia supremacy.

    Or then I get obsessed watching videos on Youtube of people who are seeing the TV show "Firefly" for the first time. Getting to go on their first journey in the 'Verse' is great and I've watched a bunch of channels doing such a thing. Same with those watching "Game of Thrones".

    While my run-ins with obsession happen, they are short-lived and I move easily on to the next thing given the various situations I happen to find myself in.

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    1. I have SO MANY obsessions. They are short-lived but some of them linger, I think, and come roaring back. Like the Muppets, for me. The Muppets have a new show out tomorrow and I AM READY. Thanks for commenting, Jay!

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    2. Lori, the Muppets have a comic book coming out soon called "Muppets Noir" that sees Kermit as a detective. I've already pre-ordered it from my local comic shop.

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  10. Lori, it's always a good day when you have a new book! Congratulations, and I can't wait to read this one, in particular. And personal note: it's been way too long!

    Thinking about obsessions, I have decided I'm a serial obsessor (I may have coined this word, spellcheck does not like it). Through the years I have obsessed over many things: sewing, various kinds of needlework, oriental carpets, buttons, a certain antique silver pattern, refurbishing antiques, herbs and herbal crafts and medicines, designing and building a house, Thor Heyerdahl, writing a book on sewing for profit, building a dream (to me) garden, reading certain authors' works. Partial list.

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    1. I think that’s what we have to be, to be writers. And maybe readers, too! It HAS been too long. Hope you are doing well! Good to see you on here.

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  11. Hi Lori, welcome! Can't wait to read your book! Obsession is an interesting term. I immediately thought of my son, who was diagnosed with high functioning autism as a young adult. He has always had such strong interests and totally poured himself into them. As a child, he poured over baseball cards and the box scores from the games. As a teen, he learned to play bridge, so there were many tournaments in his life and much talk of master points. Now it's academia, which looks like a lasting life path for him.
    My obsessions--sunrises, looking for my coyote neighbors, learning Spanish, and the safety of my immigrant friends.

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    1. These are all fantastic obsessions, especially that last one. COYOTE neighbors is something I could also get into. We have them near us in Chicago, actually. We live near the forest preserve, and that’s a good thoroughfare for them. Thank you!

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    2. My son's in Chicago (U of C grad program) and I've visited a few times. Never seen a coyote in Hyde Park, but I love walking along the lakeshore.

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    3. They use the lakeshore as a byway, too! I saw some in Evanston. Fascinating-looking creatures.

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  12. Lori, I have heard such wonderful things about this book! I can't wait to read it! And I'm very thankful that your obsessions give us such fantastic reading experiences!

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  13. Lori, congrats on Wreck Your Heart. I agree--that cover is fabulous! Living with someone (Youngest nephew) who is obsessed with country music--songwriter, guitarist, singer, I can relate to Dahlia's dreams! So far, no murders in our obsession! :-) And I'm always behind--I need to catch-up on your books--dilemma--this one or your Agatha Christie one??

    Speaking of being behind in terms of time--you might say time is my obsession. It's what lead me to a career in archaeology, to writing historical fiction and historical suspense. And also to fantasy, where time can be manipulated any way you can dream of.

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    1. Well, the either/or on those two books are up to you. Death at Greenway is denser, immersive historical fiction, which it seems might be right up your alley. Wreck Your Heart is lighter, funnier, more joyful—the times might support you on this choice. I’m also interested in how time is represented in fiction, but mostly in “realistic” fiction. I love seeing a new way for time to be used to push the reader forward or backward without clunky, traditional flashbacks, which I don’t believe.

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  14. Lori, I've already told you I absolutely loved WRECK YOUR HEART. I don't think I told you I heard your voice as I read it. You WERE Dolly. And it was abso-freaking-lutely perfect.

    You are correct that we don't want to write the same book over and over. So I guess I'm always a little obsessed with how much I can torture my series characters before they have enough and refuse to talk to me!

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    1. Doll’s voice is probably, yes, pretty much mine. I was writing her quickly, trying to do a writing challenge, so I wasn’t self-editing or judging, just pouring myself out. And there she was. THANK YOU for reading her! Tell everyone! :)

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  15. Congratulations, Lori on your new novel, Wreck Your Heart. I look forward to reading your new novel.
    Is it Country Music and Bluegrass or is the main focus on Country Music? Were you a member of the Debut Authors newsletter about ten years? 16 years ago? with Lisa Alber? I met you at Bouchercon in San Diego when Susanna Calkins introduced us.

    The sentence "Time passing means we never cross the same river twice..." reminded me of a documentary, which I just watched this week. In the documentary, BECOMING, Michelle Obama was asked if she went back on track after leaving the White House, She said no, she goes on a New track and I am still thinking about that scene from the documentary.

    Your question about Obsession reminded me of something that I have been thinking about for a long time in terms of my novel writing. I've been obsessed with this historical event, which I plan to weave into my debut mystery novel. I am thinking about what I will write in the "Author's Note". Full disclosure: I read History at University so Research is my jam. It is true that I enjoy researching subjects that grab my attention.

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    1. That was me! I was in the Debutante Ball with Lisa and I’m friends with Susie! Nice to see you here! The focus is on a character who loves singing classic country—Patsy Cline is her muse. But that might be a bit of a cop-out, as she discovers. There’s some discussion of other artists, more contemporary artists, including Molly Tuttle, a bluegrass artist recording today. She’s great! I learned a lot about country music to write the book, but researching for fiction is a lot about how much you leave OUT. Thank you so much for commenting!

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  16. Morning, everyone, from CST. I just wanted to say again that I absolutely LOVED this book. It deserves every bit of the buzz and the starred reviews. I love the characters and the setting so much that I wish it wasn't a standalone, but I know Lori will come up with something just as great in her next book.

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    1. Agree! But what did you think of character Edith Maxwell? ;^)

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    2. I chuckled all the way through, Edith!

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    3. Thank you so much, Deb! I miss Dahlia, too. If TV came calling, you bet I could turn her into a series. But I sort of like my itinerant lifestyle as a writer. Gotta keep moving. Gotta keep things rock n roll, as Doll says. Thanks for hosting me today!

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    4. The character of Edith Maxwell gave me MAXimum opportunities for fun.

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  17. Congratulations on your new book, Lori! Adding it now (and all your others) to my TBR list. On of many, many great things about this JRW blog is ALL.THE.BOOKS! And new (to me) authors!
    Obsessions -reading, reading, reading…and trying to stay healthy and, as Heather Allende says, finding the good, especially in these crazy time.

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    1. Finding the good! That’s me, too. Finding the good and fighting against the bad. And reading. Writing books really cuts into your reading time, unfortunately, but I love sinking into a new-to-me author and catching up. Hope you like my work—thanks for giving it a try!

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    2. Lori, I’m off to the library to get what I can! And next time I’m at my local bookstore, The Silver Unicorn, I’ll check to see if they have some of your books and recommend them.

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    3. Thank you! The Silver Unicorn!! I love that name.

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  18. oh, congratulations on all the fabulous and well-deserved buzz and acclaim! And yes, if we are not obsessed with our books, they will never happen. I am thinking about mine all the time. All. The. Time. But I am fascinated especially by one thing today, Lori – – what did your editor mean when she said “no one does it like this?”

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    1. Hi, Hank! Thank you so much! We have to be obsessed—who else will be, if not us, first? It was my agent who said that. I had just turned back a round of edits and maybe I had gone all in, once again, using that opportunity to touch the manuscript one last time to really dig in. REALLY dig in. When I turned in the post-developmental edits to my editor on Wreck Your Heart, my editor asked if she could just dip in at certain sections to see what I had done and I had to break the news to her that she should consider it a new book and start from the beginning. I don’t know how to do it any other way!

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  19. And a musically related note on my very current obsession: Olivia Dean, the young English singer who won the Best New Artist Grammy. Some of you know that I have a recurring character in my books, a young English singer, Poppy Jones. Olivia sounds the way I've always imagined Poppy sounding!! She has a real voice, not a breathy little girl voice (which I am so over) and she has the stage presence I imagine for Poppy. And in a little goose-bumpy coincidence, the first song Poppy sings in the rehearsal studio with Andy Monahan in The Sound of Broken Glass is Paul Simon's Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes. Reading about Olivia last night, she was inspired to become a singer when a teacher showed her class a video of Paul Simon and the African group Ladysmith Black Mambazo singing Diamonds on the Soles of her Shoes.

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    1. I love this! I need to give Olivia Dean a listen! Poppy and Andy are two of my favorite characters in your books.

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    2. Life imitating art, imitating life, Debs! Gives me the shivers!

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    3. That's so cool Debs! Things are connected in ways we don't always understand.

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    4. What an incredible connection, Debs. I love Andy and Poppy. The Sound of Broken Glass was the first book of yours that I read and it hooked me! FFL (Fan for Life)

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    5. Wow, that's the kind of coincidence that makes us do a double take! And Poppy's such a greart character. You now have a resl face and a real voice for her.

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    6. I need to catch up with other genres of music now that my country-obsession days are (sniff) behind me. I always love the new artist categories in the music awards shows. My favorite is the Americana Music Awards—country, Americana, roots, brand new artists every year. It’s like Christmas! OK, maybe my country-obsessed days aren’t behind me.

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    7. I’m not familiar with Olivia Dean, I will give her a listen, and imagine Poppy being the one who sings! And I love “Diamonds in the Soles of her Shoes”! Also Ladysmith Black Mambazo, with or without Paul Simon.

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    8. Olivia is so joyous, as I imagine Poppy. Something we all need!

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  20. Congrats on the book. I get a lot of good reading recommendations on this blog and I'm adding your books to my list.

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  21. Congratulations on the newest book, Lori. It’s in my virtual pile, and I look forward to losing myself in it soon.
    Obsession?
    That’s my middle name.
    Currently the big one is being on time, especially to appointments with this and that doctor.
    This is utterly ridiculous, considering that I’ll most likely have to wait up to an hour when I get there.

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    1. Yep! I’ve had to be obsessed with doctors appointments, too. Cancer survivor here! It’s such a racket that everyone can be late except you. YOUR time isn’t valuable. Take a book!! You don’t mind half as much if you brought a good book.

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  22. Ooooh, I love Dahlia!! I've devoured this book and loved every inch of it. I do think that as writers, we can't help ourselves, we revisit the same themes over and over in different context. For me, it's the question: Who can you trust, and how can you know? Endlessly fascinating to me. Going now to listen to Lori's playlist....

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    1. Thank you, Hallie!! I do return to some of the same bigger themes. I guess that’s the trick to finding a new framework for your characters so that it doesn’t SEEM like the same themes every time? I find myself writing a lot about how rich men make trouble and everyone else pays for it. Hmm.

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  23. Can't wait to read Wreck Your Heart, Lori! Sounds terrific. I go through all kinds of "kicks", all the time. Always find new-to-me authors and become obsessed with their books. And t.v. shows, I love to binge away when I enjoy a series, especially mysteries. Same with music - last year I "discovered" Lukas Nelson, Willie's son, and boy howdy! I also started an unholy/healthy alliance with honey-bbq potato chips and Chips Ahoy Chunky chocolate chip cookies, so unfortunately I'll be low-carbing again in the very near future if I want to fit into my clothes, argh.

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    1. Argh. Been there! Also, I’m so mad I didn’t use the word “kick.” It was sitting RIGHT THERE and here I am in a kick over cowboy boots. I love Willie AND Lukas!

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  24. This book sounds great, Lori!
    My obsessions change from time to time. I love reading everything I can find about a place I’m planning to visit, or have recently visited. Or just want to visit.
    My current obsession is watching stand-up comedians on all the different streaming services, because I need all the humor I can find right now, with the state of the world the way it is. I read and reread my favorite humorous mysteries. I read and reread humorous essays (think Dave Barry).
    I suppose you can say that I’m obsessed with staying sane these days!

    DebRo

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    1. THIS is the key right now. This is also my obsession. Trying to stay informed but not go so far as to sink into depression. If you need lightness and humor, now might actually be the right time to read Wreck Your Heart. I wrote it as a way to stay sane after treatment for breast cancer (I’m fine). Just needed to have some fun, and to let my readers have fun, too. It’s so important. Take care of yourself.

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    2. The book is now on my list!
      And I wish you continued good health!

      DebRo

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  25. This is so fascinating. My public persona tends to be reserved, so it is neat for me when one of my obsessions is so strong that it shines through and others can see it.
    A recent one was MurderBot - after binging all of the books, I started getting Tshirts. And stickers. On my water bottle, luggage, etc.
    I recently planned a trip to Scotland with my best friend. She is still working, so gave me some goals and I happily went down the rabbit hole of planning. Do you know how many castles-turned-hotels there are in the Scottish Highlands? I enjoyed looking at dozens of them, finding the perfect ones that offered nearby activities and afternoon tea.

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    1. Oh, that’s FUN stuff. I wish I was the kind of person who could get obsessed with travel planning. I’m not much of a researcher (despite having to do it for books, it’s not my normal state). Scottish castles turned hotels, though… I could get obsessed with that.

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    2. Lisa, I had a huge Murderbot obsession phase! I'm sure it will come back when the new book comes out and the second season of the TV series. (I still have an Alex Skarsgard obsession lol)

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  26. I like BOTH kinds of music: country AND western.

    I had to use the old joke. Honestly, Lori, I think I'm obsessed with how broad your interests and subjects are! I doubt anyone would imagine the same author who wrote the fabulous DEATH AT GREENWAY would later turn around and examine the life and misadventures of a hardscrabble singer. You've clearly found the answer to the eternal novelist's question of how to keep things fresh and interesting for both the writer AND the reader.

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    1. I LOVE THAT JOKE. Blues Brothers is how I heard it, and it’s (I believe) based on a Chicago pub called Carol’s, which has a sign that says it. (I have a sign that says it, too.) Thank you so much. I think it’s a lot about keep your own interest in a project long enough to accomplish what you meant to. In this world where our attention spans keep getting shaved down? How do you do it?? Or maybe because my attention span is glancing off topic after topic, I could never accomplish a series? Something to think about!

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    2. I was just thinking how much I'd love to see these characters again...

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  27. Ooooh! The Hub is a musician. He's going to LOVE Wreck Your Heart as will I. Yay!

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    1. Yay! I am not musical in the least but I LOVE to listen to music. And write to it. Thank you!

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  28. Loved, loved the book and especially Dahlia! I was delighted to see it featured in People

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