One of my most popular posts so far has been the review post from the Hungry Monster Book Review.
Click on link to see the original post.
I’m re-posting a 3 star review, and I am okay with it!
This is part two of that review.
It is an interview with the Hungry Book Monster.
*****
The Hungry Monster Book Review – Innocent Yet Provacative
Innocent Yet Provocative
Rude Boy USA is a story about organized crime set in 1960’s New York City. What intrigues you about this time period?
I am a big fan of Mad Men. I was born in 1977 so the two decades before I was born, I always thought that there were a lot of things that were still innocent yet provocative. I loved the style and was fascinated by the history of New York City. I moved to New York fifteen years ago, and it has changed so much from the 1960’s and 1970’s. I think that even with the crime and issues the city had back then, New York City seemed to have a lot of soul, perhaps some of it lacks today because the city is so commercial now.
The characters in this story are diverse and complex. What was your favorite character to write for? Was there a scene you felt captured the character’s essence?
I loved writing Celia/Bunny’s character. She is a twenty-something that is in the prime of her life, but like many women in her age group sometimes she makes questionable decisions. Over the remainder of the series she gets to grow a lot, be strong, make some bold moves, stupid mistakes and yet still allowed to be vulnerable. I also loved writing John and Ben’s characters. John was something that was virtually unheard of back then and creating a character that is not perfect yet at the very end you want to cheer for was fulfilling. Ben’s character is complex. In Rude Boy USA (which is book 1 in the series) you see the beginnings of his unraveling. By the time you get to the end of book 3 (which is released in September), you will have a full understanding of why he is the way he is. What you think about him in book one may change by the time you finish the series, no matter what he does.
I felt that Rude Boy USA touched upon a couple of social and racial issues of the time. Was it important for you to deliver a moral to readers, or was it circumstantial to delivering an effective thriller novel?
When I started writing the series, I knew that it would hit a nerve with some readers. I wanted to stay accurate to the time period the story took place in. In the early 1970’s we had television programs like All in the Family and The Jeffersons who took on topics of race head on and without much filter. Some things said in the book, in today’s world, would never fly because many people are offended by something, anything that rubs them the wrong way. It was a time before political correctness took precedence in the social conversation. I wanted this book to challenge some things that we are socially conditioned to believe. One woman seems evil, but it is only because she feels like she is losing control of things. The other woman seems perfect (because the guy who likes her sees her that way) until you look at some of the decisions she has made. The beauty of these characters in the story is that by the time the series ends, you will root for some but love all of them even though they have flaws. Rival families and race differences are expected for the time period, but I wanted to discuss the elephant in the room type of subjects. There are infidelity, class, entitlement and hierarchy issues happening in the story and sometimes discussing these things make people uncomfortable. I thought that glossing over things and putting a 2016 light in the series would be a disservice to the integrity of the story. In the sequels, the social issues change along with the time.
This book is set in 1960’s New York, and I felt that you captured that period well. What research did you do to make sure you portrayed that time in history accurately?
I interviewed a few people and picked up a few books and magazines. Old videos were also helpful.
What is the next novel that you are working on and when will that be available?
The sequel to Rude Boy USA is called BunnyWine, and the final book is The Tide is High. In BunnyWine, the setting is in the 1980’s and the main subject is still the gangsters, but the settings and circumstances change. We leave the era where the Mobster rules NYC and go into the period where they are hunted. In the Tide is High (Due September) we visit the aftermath of the gangster era and morph into politics. Most gangsters/mob bosses do not retire from the life, they just end up changing focus, and that is what happens here. A lot of the spirit of the life remains but the occupation changes.