An Interview with
Seelie Kay:
Q. Why do you write romance?
Because
I am fascinated by the games people play to find and secure a lasting
relationship, which is not always love. There’s the chase, the courtship, the
falling, the surrender. That’s what I try to capture in my stories.
Q. Do you prefer a certain type of romantic
hero?
I
adore smart, dashing gentlemen who aren’t afraid to live on the edge. They can
be a bad boy, a billionaire, a prince, or a secret agent. That hint of danger
just hooks me!
Q. Why did you write “Snatching Dianna?”
Actually,
for two reasons. First, when writing the
Kinky Briefs series, there were
certain couples I fell in love with: The
Sheikh and his American lawyer wife who sue terrorists on behalf of their
victims, the police chief (with a preference for handcuffs) and his criminal
defense attorney wife who seek to right wrongs, and the covert agent and his
law professor wife, who are smart, funny, and incredibly hot! Each of these
couples have wonderful relationships and incredible lives. And each and every
one of them is dedicated to preserving justice.
I
wanted their stories to continue. So, I created the Feisty Lawyers series.
Second, “Snatching Dianna” deals with a law student who is kidnapped by a slave
trafficking cartel. This plot permitted me to focus not only on the continuing
problem of slave trafficking, but also on the investigative issues behind
finding a missing adult. In this story, there is no evidence and no witnesses.
It’s takes a lot of investigative savvy to piece together seemingly unrelated clues.
I love complex puzzles and this story lets me go wild!
Q. Why slave trafficking? That seems like such
an uncomfortable subject.
My
book ends with this statement: Experts say that more than 3,000 people
around the world are sold, kidnapped, or forced into slavery each day, many of
them children. Even in the United States, men, woman, and children are snatched off the streets for the purpose of
human slavery. Slave traffickers do not discriminate by race, gender, religion,
education, or socio-economic status. Victims of slave trafficking come from all
walks of life, as do those who traffic in humans. It is a crime of
international proportions and one that requires committed international
cooperation.
As
a lawyer and a human being, I think it is a topic worth calling attention to.
Q. How does your former profession as a lawyer
impact your writing?
After
30 years, the law and the legal world are so firmly embedded in my brain that I
can’t flush them out. That has become the lens through which I view the world
and that naturally guides my characters and plots. Little peculiarities that I
have witnessed in lawyers and the law always work their way into my stories.
Q.
The cover of the book clearly says “Snatching Dianna” is part one in the
Feisty Lawyers Series. How many more
books can we look forward to?
At
this point, I’m not sure. In each book, I introduce new characters with
compelling stories, so it is difficult to predict how and when their stories
will be brought to a satisfactory conclusion.
However, the second book, “Infamy,” is in the queue, and I have a good
start on the third, “Cult.” There should be at least one more after that.
About Snatching Dianna
The hours
are counting down as investigators try to prove that Dianna Murphy has been snatched.
Unfortunately, without witnesses and solid evidence, all the police really know
is that she is missing.
When suburban Milwaukee law student Dianna Murphy
fails to connect with her roommate, there is no real evidence that she has been
snatched. Until Law Professor Janet MacLachlan, a former covert
secret agent, discovers a single clue, one that points to a taking by a slave
trafficking cartel. In a race against time, Janet recruits her husband, secret
agent Cade Matthews, small-town Police Chief David Manders and his wife,
criminal defense attorney Julianna Constant, and other law students to uncover
the truth. Can they prove she has been taken,
before Dianna disappears without a trace?
Romantic Suspense (Three Flames)
Excerpt:
After what seemed like hours in the
sweltering van, it lurched to a stop.
Dianna
heard a man bark orders. A door to the van opened and someone pulled the rope
from her feet, then removed her hood. She took a deep breath. A man grabbed her by the arm, forced to her
feet, and pulled from the van. Dianna stumbled when she hit the ground. The stones were hot and her feet were
covered by athletic socks, no shoes. Show
no weakness.
Dianna
immediately surveyed her surroundings. It was still night, but she was in a
well-lit courtyard. A large stone mansion stood in front of her. She looked to
her right, then her left. The courtyard was enclosed by a large stone fence, at
least eight feet high. A fortress. Fortunately, Dianna was a rock-climber. She
could rappel over the fence with the right equipment. All she would need was
something to serve as a pick, maybe a rope. A knife, a screwdriver, even a
fork. Keep your eyes and ears open. Be
ready.
A
large black man, dressed in a white suit and a maroon turban, walked out of the
front door and down the stairs. He stopped and flashed a malevolent smile. He
flung his arms wide and in a cultured baritone boomed, “Welcome to paradise,
ladies. I hope you enjoy your stay.”
Some of the guards laughed.
“Crikey,” Tillie muttered. “Sounds like
a blasted genie.”
Dianna
glanced sideways and for the first time, got a look at her new friend. She was
tall and thin, her body well defined. She looked strong and aware, almost
fierce. Her eyes seemed to be studying the place, taking everything in. She showed
no fear. Instead, she seemed interested. Something was off. Tillie did not act
like a victim as the others did. She was not cowed. Was she a cop? Or like
Dianna, someone who would not permit themselves to be broken?
There was only one thing of which Dianna
was certain. She had found a friend. A useful one.
Seelie Kay is a nom de
plume for a writer, editor, and author with more than 30 years of experience in
law, journalism, marketing, and public relations. When she writes about love
and lust in the legal world, something kinky is bound to happen! In possession of a wicked pen and an overly
inquisitive mind, Ms. Kay is the author of multiple works of fiction, including
the Kinky
Briefs series, The Garage Dweller, A
Touchdown to Remember, and The
President’s Wife.
When
not spinning her kinky tales, Ms. Kay ghostwrites nonfiction for lawyers and
other professionals. She resides
in a bucolic exurb outside Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where she shares a home with her son and
enjoys opera, gourmet cooking, organic gardening, and an occasional bottle of
red wine.
Ms. Kay is an MS warrior and ruthlessly
battles the disease on a daily basis. Her message to those diagnosed with
MS: Never give up. You define MS, it
does not define you!
Find
Seelie Kay Online:
Twitter: @SeelieKay https://twitter.com/SeelieKay
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/seelie.kay.77
Amazon
author page: https://www.amazon.com/Seelie-Kay/e/B074RDRWNZ/
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