Author Laurie Hanan joins us
today to discuss her most recent novel, The
Rainbow Connection, a YA novel set in Hawai‘i. Laurie has a successful
mystery series, also set in Hawai‘i, featuring
mail carrier Louise Golden who gets tangled in mysterious situations she
uncovers on her mail route. With four Louise
Golden novels published, Laurie took a break to write a young adult novel.
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From a synopsis of The Rainbow Connection
by Laurie Hanan:
With
graduation looming, Emmy’s only friend in her new school goes missing. Brett’s
run off before. Her mother and even the cops figure she’s done it again. But
Emmy is convinced Brett can’t wait to begin college in the fall, and she would
never ditch her super-hot boyfriend. Something bad must have happened to her.
Emmy is determined to find out what.
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Gail: Thank you, Laurie, for
sharing some of your thoughts today on your latest book, The Rainbow Connection. After writing mysteries for so many years,
did that discipline allow for an easy transition into writing a young adult
story?
Laurie Hanan: Mahalo, Gail, for
inviting me to your blog!
I don’t
know if “easy” is a word I’d use for
transitioning to the Young Adult genre. It’s been a long time since I was
seventeen, and of course teens today live in a totally different world from the
one I grew up in. Developing an authentic voice for Emmy’s character took trial
and a lot of error before I felt I was even close. My teen years were painful. Imagining my own seventeen-year-old
self in the same tough situations Emmy faces, re-experiencing the raw emotions,
and sorting through what my thought processes might have been at that age, gave
me more than a few sleepless nights. I also paid close attention to my teenage
daughter and her friends, taking notes on their mannerisms and quickly jotting
down samples of their lingo.
But it was a natural and enjoyable
transition to take a peripheral character who I love in my Louise Golden series,
develop her personality even more, and give her a mystery of her own to solve.
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Her
search leads to a secretive religious group. Emmy suspects there is more to the
group’s simple lifestyle and ecstatic dance rituals than the peace and harmony
they preach.
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Gail: Your comments about re-experiencing raw emotions of teen years and sleepless nights reminded me of the Ernest Hemingway quote — 'There is nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed.'
In The Rainbow Connection, protagonist Emmy’s maturity has developed through
an array of responsibilities within the family, at school, and on the job. Can
some of her more questionable decisions that draw her into precarious situations,
such as the isolated meeting with Byron at a retreat for a secretive religious
group, be attributed to the still-developing reasoning of a teenager?
Laurie Hanan: Absolutely. Science shows us that a
teen’s brain is not fully developed. They tend to act on impulse, misjudge precarious
situations, and misread social cues and the emotions of others.
Emmy is impulsive, prone to exaggeration, at times irrational, and
makes choices that are downright dangerous. Being a teen necessarily makes her
an unreliable narrator. The reader is given insights into the missing girl only
through Emmy’s skewed remembrances of her, adding another layer of questions
about her disappearance.
Gail: You have taken the characters Emmy and her
brother from your mystery series and created a new storyline for them in the YA
genre. What, if any, details from their backstories play a role in or
contribute to the plotline of The Rainbow
Connection? How important is it for a writer to develop a character’s
backstory, in a series or a stand-alone novel?
Laurie Hanan: I will answer your questions out of order. When
writing a series of stand-alone novels, there can be a fine line between
including enough backstory to help readers understand the character, and throwing
in so much backstory it confuses the reader and bogs down the flow of events in
the new mystery. While each of my novels stands alone, reading the series in
order does offer a broader view of the characters’ development over the years.
In my fourth
Louise Golden mystery, Stairway to Heaven,
seventeen-year-old Emmy makes some
misguided decisions, resulting in her being kidnapped and held for ransom on a
small sailboat during a hurricane. Twelve-year-old Jackie is pulled into the
rescue efforts and ends up killing a man to save his sister. While these events
play no role in the plotline of The Rainbow Connection, the experiences do
bring about dramatic changes in both Emmy and Jackie, and permanently alter the
dynamics between brother and sister. I
originally included some of this backstory in The Rainbow Connection, but my editor felt it “belonged in a
different book.” I reluctantly agreed. So, I am currently working on a
novella-length recreation of the kidnapping and rescue from the perspectives of
Emmy and Jackie. I hope this will shed more light on how the traumatic events
affected the two kids.
Gail: This coming of age story has a missing person at
its center, supporting the idea that stories in all genres involve a mystery.
Having written mysteries, and now YA, did you develop a specific preference in
genre for future works, or will you continue with the YA series while adding to
your Louise Golden series?
Laurie Hanan: A big part of why
I write is to make my readers happy. Louise fans are clamoring for more time
with Louise, while Emmy’s new fans are pleading for the next Emmy Hanlin YA novel.
My hope is to continue writing more in both series.
I’m currently
working on another spinoff from the Louise Golden series, a humorous, classic
whodunit starring Louise’s eighty-something-year-old stepmother and her
geriatric neighborhood watch group.
Gail: Mahalo for sharing so much personal insight into your writing style and character development, Laurie. The information about backstory is especially educational. I look forward to reading your YA novella and the humorous geriatric mystery.
Laurie's books are available at Amazon.com in trade and e-book formats:
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