A Storm of Doubts

About the Book

Book: A Storm of Doubts

Author: JPC Allen

Genre: YA cozy mystery

Release date: March 1, 2024

Her dad said nothing could hurt their relationship. But what if he isn’t her dad?

Summer gets off to a rocky start for twenty-year-old Rae Riley when the ex-wife of family friend Jason Carlisle claims their youngest child isn’t his and Rae’s con man uncle Troy returns to Marlin County, Ohio. Rae is already at odds with her father, Sheriff Walter “Mal” Malinowski, over her desire to help people in trouble. When she extends that help to Troy and Jason’s ex-wife, Ashley, she and Mal clash even more.

Then Ashley disappears, and Jason and his brother Rick are the main suspects. As Rae and her aunt Carrie, a private investigator hired to protect Jason’s kids, work to discover what really happened to Ashley, Rae wrestles with Troy’s insinuations that she may be calling the wrong Malinowski “Dad.”

 

Click here to get your copy!

 

About the Author

JPC Allen started her writing career in second grade with an homage to Scooby Doo. She’s been tracking down mysteries ever since. Her Christmas mystery “A Rose from the Ashes” was the first Rae Riley mystery and a Selah-finalist at the Blue Ridge Mountains Christian Writers Conference in 2020. Her first Rae Riley novel, A Shadow on the Snow, released in 2021. Online, she offer tips and prompts to ignite the creative spark in every kind of writer. She also leads workshops for tweens, teens and adults, encouraging them to discover the adventure of writing. Coming from a long line of Mountaineers, she’s a life-long Buckeye.

 

More form JPC

Readers Deserve a Reward

I may be unusual, or just plain weird, but thinking of my ending first is the common way I approach a new story. It seems to help me to know my destination before I set out on the adventure of writing a story. I can take any number of routes to reach my destination and wandering around and exploring detours is a lot of the fun of writing. But by keeping my destination in mind, I don’t get lost. Or at least, not easily.

The other thing I keep in mind about my ending is that it’s a reward for the reader. I’m relatively new to publishing and not well known. So when readers take a chance on one of my stories, I believe it’s my job to reward their risk with an atypical, satisfying ending. Now I do work hard to make the whole story satisfying with things like an attention-grabbing opening and tension-building scenes. But endings, I think, are special to readers. This is the part that lingers in their minds when they close the book–whether it’s a sense of satisfaction, like the pleased feeling you have after a delicious meal, or anger or exasperation because the ending let them down.

I work to make all parts of the ending satisfying–the climax, denouement or wrap-up, and the last lines. For the climax, readers of my mysteries deserve more than just the good guys solving the puzzle and catching the bad guy. I plan an action-packed, suspenseful climax that has readers living the final confrontation with the main character and it resolves itself in a way that, I hope, surprises readers.

Denouements are so critical to mysteries, when the detective explains how he solved the case. But they can also be deadly dull because the explanation needs to be thorough to meet the expectations of mystery fans. So in A Storm of Doubts, I split up the explanation–a lot of it is revealed during the climax, so I don’t bore readers by piling up a discussion of the solution in one chapter.

The final scene and last lines are areas I spend a good deal of thought on. Even if this scene was my inspiration for the entire story, how it plays in my head and how it plays on the page are two very different things. I also think the last scene and lines have a certain rhythm to them, like the final bars of a song. My job is make the scene round off the story without staying too long in it.

So when you read A Storm of Doubts, I’d love to know what you think of the ending. Because you do deserve a reward.

Blog Stops

Stories By Gina, May 4 (Author Interview)

Book Reviews From an Avid Reader, May 5

Artistic Nobody, May 6 (Author Interview)

Truth and Grace Homeschool Academy, May 7

Jodie Wolfe – Stories Where Hope and Quirky Meet, May 8 (Author Interview)

The Lofty Pages, May 8

Beauty in the Binding, May 9 (Author Interview)

Library Lady’s Kid Lit, May 10

Guild Master, May 11 (Author Interview)

Locks, Hooks and Books, May 12

A Reader’s Brain , May 13 (Author Interview)

For Him and My Family, May 13

Texas Book-aholic, May 14

For the Love of Literature, May 15 (Author Interview)

Debbie’s Dusty Deliberations, May 16

Vicky Sluiter, May 17 (Author Interview)

Giveaway

To celebrate her tour, JPC is giving away the grand prize package of all four books in the Rae Riley mystery series, a $25 Amazon gift card, and an Ohio tumbler with lid filled with buckeye candies!!

Be sure to comment on the blog stops for nine extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.

https://promosimple.com/ps/2b587/a-storm-of-doubts-celebration-tour-giveaway

Interview with JPC

Do you have a favorite scene in your newest release?

Wow, that’s tough. I really like to write scenes with just my main character, Rae Riley, and a suspect, when Rae weighs what the other character is saying. Is this character lying? Setting her up? What’s going under the surface of the spoken words? Those scenes snap with tension.

But probably my favorite scene is at the hospital when Rae and Mal have a quiet moment together. I’ve read that scene several times and just enjoy it.

What advice can you give to writers trying to break into the publishing world?

Get to know people in the industry. That’s the only reason I’m published. I joined the Ohio chapter of American Christian Fiction Writers and met other writers through it. Two authors from our chapter formed their own small publishing house and I had the opportunity to contribute short stories to two anthologies they published. They loved my Christmas short story and wanted to see any novels I wrote based on those characters. The Rae Riley Mysteries series was born. None of this would have happened if I hadn’t become friends with fellow writers.

If you could vacation anywhere, where would you go?

Another tough one. I’d love to see the Northern Lights. I’d also like to visit England. My ancestors are from there, and I’ve read so many stories set in England that I’d like to see the country.

What do you plan to work on next?

 I’m starting the next Rae Riley mystery, set in October and climaxing on Halloween. So far I have an inheritance lost for 70 years and the clues to its location are supposed to be hidden in a collection of the works of Edgar Allen Poe. And Bigfoot may be one the loose. But once I start writing, some of these factors may change because my ideas, which looked so good in my head, don’t play as well on the page.

Where can readers connect with you?

You can follow me at Amazon, Goodreads, Bookbub, Facebook, either on my author page or Rae Riley Mysteries page, and Instagram. To get my latest writing news first as well as exclusive stories and giveaways, sign up for my newsletter in the sidebar of this page.

11 Thoughts to “A Storm of Doubts”

  1. Roxanne C.

    I enjoyed reading about the author’s novel (pun intended) approach to writing, especially the part about thinking of her story’s ending first.

    1. jodiewolfe

      Chuckle. I often know the ending before I start writing. 🙂

    2. For me, ending are easy. Beginnings are hard.

    3. I find beginning much harder than endings

  2. MICHAEL A LAW

    This looks like an interesting novel. Thanks for sharing and hosting this tour.

    1. jodiewolfe

      Thanks for stopping by!

    2. If you like mysteries where you try to solve the mystery with the amateur sleuth, you’ll like “Storm”.

  3. Thanks for hosting a blog stop on my tour!

    1. jodiewolfe

      Great to have you here.

  4. Deborah D

    This sounds so good. You are a new author to me. I can’t wait to read your books.

    1. Hope you enjoy them! I write them for readers who like all the tropes of a mystery–cast of suspects, red herrings, a detective who notices odd little things–and quirky characters and their relationships.

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