Showing posts with label Mary Stanton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mary Stanton. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Meet Mary, Or is it Claudia?

Today it's my pleasure to welcome to Jungle Red Writers two of my favorite authors, who happen to look remarkably alike. Twins, separated at birth, you ask? Actually one person who manages to write two very different series. Her real name is Mary Stanton, and she writes the Bree Beaufort series of mysteries under this name, but she is better known as Claudia Bishop, writing the incredibly popular Hemlock Falls cozy mysteries. She is also my good friend with whom I have great fun in Florida every spring. And as you can see from her photo, she loves animals!
Rhys: Hemlock Falls has been around a long time. How many are there?
Claudia, who is also Mary:  I just signed a contract for the eighteenth. I am, to borrow a cant phrase from your heroine Georgie, a bit gobsmacked. Back in 1994, when I first signed with Berkley, I hadn’t planned to do more than one. I don’t seem to be able to shut myself up!
Rhys: Hemlock Falls is a small village in upstate New York. You grew up in Hawaii—and when you were a youngster, Hawaii was a territory and not even a state. Why did you decide on a small American town as a backdrop for murder?
Claudia: I thought upstate New York was hugely romantic, in the same way that all those Cotswold villages in English mysteries are romantic. I read a lot as a kid—and it was mostly the Golden Age writers; Christie, Sayers, Anthony Berkeley, Cyril Hare, Michael Innes—all those Oxbridgeans. Later on, I switched to Reginald Hill, Simon Brett, and Robert Barnard.
Rhys: The seventeenth book is out this month. Tell us about it.
Claudia: It’s titled DREAD ON ARRIVAL. Two competing antiques roadshow television shows come to the village. One is called “Your Ancestor’s Attic.” The other is “Pawn-o-rama.” The two hosts loathe each other on sight.  My amateur detectives are inn-keeper Sarah Quilliam and her gourmet chef sister Meg. They get pulled into the murder of the arrogant host of ‘Your Ancestor’s Attic. I had a lot of fun writing it.
Rhys: Let’s switch personae for a moment. As Mary Stanton, you also write a series featuring a young lawyer who discovers that her law practice consists of handling appeals cases for souls condemned to Hell. What on earth gave you the idea for such an unusual premise? And why angels?
Rhys: Hemlock Falls has been around a long time. How many are there?
Claudia, who is also Mary:  I just signed a contract for the eighteenth. I am, to borrow a cant phrase from your heroine Georgie, a bit gobsmacked. Back in 1994, when I first signed with Berkley, I hadn’t planned to do more than one. I don’t seem to be able to shut myself up!
Rhys: Hemlock Falls is a small village in upstate New York. You grew up in Hawaii—and when you were a youngster, Hawaii was a territory and not even a state. Why did you decide on a small American town as a backdrop for murder?
Claudia: I thought upstate New York was hugely romantic, in the same way that all those Cotswold villages in English mysteries are romantic. I read a lot as a kid—and it was mostly the Golden Age writers; Christie, Sayers, Anthony Berkeley, Cyril Hare, Michael Innes—all those Oxbridgeans. Later on, I switched to Reginald Hill, Simon Brett, and Robert Barnard.
Rhys: The seventeenth book is out this month. Tell us about it.
Claudia: It’s titled DREAD ON ARRIVAL. Two competing antiques roadshow television shows come to the village. One is called “Your Ancestor’s Attic.” The other is “Pawn-o-rama.” The two hosts loathe each other on sight.  My amateur detectives are inn-keeper Sarah Quilliam and her gourmet chef sister Meg. They get pulled into the murder of the arrogant host of ‘Your Ancestor’s Attic. I had a lot of fun writing it.
Rhys: Let’s switch personae for a moment. As Mary Stanton, you also write a series featuring a young lawyer who discovers that her law practice consists of handling appeals cases for souls condemned to Hell. What on earth gave you the idea for such an unusual premise? And why angels?
Mary, who is also Claudia: My little sister is going to smack me if I put this in print, but I was inspired to create Bree Beaufort when I sat in on a case my sister was litigating. Right before my eyes, my angelic baby sister turned into a fierce and formidable advocate. (Sort of like Ziva David on NCIS, only more articulate.) She’s been a lawyer for years, of course, I’d just never followed her around to see what she actually did.
As far as the supernatural stuff—I honestly don’t know how I came up with that. As Nora Ephron famously said when somebody asked her why she wrote Michael (a fabulous movie about a visit from the archangel), she doesn’t believe in them, but they are terrific fun to write about. I think of the Beaufort & Company novels as urban fantasy. The latest one is ANGEL CONDEMNED, and that was out two months ago.
Rhys: Do you enjoy writing urban fantasy? Any plans to go back to it?
Mary: I love reading well-written fantasy almost as much as I love reading mysteries. Right now, I’ve joined the millions of readers hooked on George Martin’s GAME OF THRONES. It’s a terrific challenge for me, though. I have an idea.  I’m hoping that I’ll be up to it.
Mary, who is also Claudia: My little sister is going to smack me if I put this in print, but I was inspired to create Bree Beaufort when I sat in on a case my sister was litigating. Right before my eyes, my angelic baby sister turned into a fierce and formidable advocate. (Sort of like Ziva David on NCIS, only more articulate.) She’s been a lawyer for years, of course, I’d just never followed her around to see what she actually did.
As far as the supernatural stuff—I honestly don’t know how I came up with that. As Nora Ephron famously said when somebody asked her why she wrote Michael (a fabulous movie about a visit from the archangel), she doesn’t believe in them, but they are terrific fun to write about. I think of the Beaufort & Company novels as urban fantasy. The latest one is ANGEL CONDEMNED, and that was out two months ago.
Rhys: Do you enjoy writing urban fantasy? Any plans to go back to it?
Mary: I love reading well-written fantasy almost as much as I love reading mysteries. Right now, I’ve joined the millions of readers hooked on George Martin’s GAME OF THRONES. It’s a terrific challenge for me, though. I have an idea.  I’m hoping that I’ll be up to it.
Rhys: These angel books are so different, so atmospheric that I look forward to any new fantasy that you write. Readers--do you like a touch of paranormal in what you read? Mary is here today to answer questions.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Mary Stanton on Angels and Goats



RHYS: My first interview as a Jungle Red Hot Babe is with fellow mystery writer, and my good friend, Mary Stanton, whom many of you will know as Claudia Bishop of Hemlock Falls fame. Mary/Claudia now divides her time between upstate New York, where she breeds these adorable goats, and Florida. She is a true workaholic, always juggling several books a year, but she took time to answer my questions:
RHYS: The mystery world knows you as Claudia Bishop. So who is Mary Stanton and why did you decide to write in that name?
MARY: Mary Stanton is the Real Me. I began writing twenty-some years ago under my given name, and I published fantasy. My first two novels were beast fables, like WATERSHIP DOWN, and the characters were horses. I then wrote a middle grade fantasy series called THE UNICORNS OF BALINOR for Scholastic. And I did a Saturday-morning-cartoon stint for a series about unicorns. When I turned to mysteries, both my Berkely editor and my then-agent agreed a name-change was in order. We didn't want to confuse the fantasy readers. So I morphed into Claudia Bishop.
RHYS: Tell us about your new series.
MARY: The series title is BEAUFORT & COMPANY, and the first in the series is titled Defending Angels.My heroine is Brianna Winston-Beaufort, a young lawyer who discovers that her vocation is to handle appeals for the dead. She's supported by a company of angels who help her address the difficulties that arise when she deals with the Celestial Court system and the prosecuting lawyers from Hell.
RHYS: What made you decide to write a paranormal story--have you always been fascinated with angels and demons? MARY: I'm not sure how I got into writing this series! I've read fantasy ever since I was a little kid and I love it. And in my own mind, Defending Angels is an urban fantasy, in the tradition of Neil Gaiman and Charles deLint. But yes, you're right, the marketplace does consider the Beaufort & Company series as paranormal mysteries. And the rich medieval tradition behind the concept of angels and demons was a pull for me, too.
RHYS: You create a wonderful picture of Savannah. Were you raised in the deep south?
MARY: I was SO anxious about getting Savannah right! And no, I'm not a Southerner. I'm not even a continental American. Although I was born in Florida, I grew up in Hawaii, at a time when we were still a territory and not a state. When I came to the continental United States as an undergraduate, I fell in love with incredible diversity of the continent--the South in particular.
RHYS: So what is next for Mary Stanton and/or Claudia Bishop?
MARY: Mary just finished Angel's Advocate, the second in the BEAUFORT & COMPANY series. Claudia is in the middle of the first of a new series titled THE GROUCHY GOURMET, Another Man's Poison. Both are for Berkely.
RHYS: Lastly a little game we play.
tell us four amazing or outrageous things, one of which is true.And I mean really outrageous that your fans would love to knowAnd then our readers will vote on which one is true.
MARY: How's about which one is false? All the outrageous stuff I can think of that I haven't done has to do with sex.
1. I can castrate a goat.
2. I won fifty dollars discriminating between five different vodkas in a blind taste test.
3. I got fired from my job as a night club singer because I can't dance.
4. I can talk to horses.
RHYS:So many thanks to Mary. Defending Angels is now in a store near you, and will make a great stocking stuffer! And let's see if we can decide which ourtrageous thing Mary is lying about!