Ed Protzel interview with Susan Sleeman
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December 14, 2020
Q: Let me start with asking you to tell us a little bit about yourself. Now, riding out the Coronavirus epidemic is the priority for my wife and me, as we FaceTime with our granddaughter far, far away in Portland, Oregon. Q: When did you first realize you wanted to be a writer? Q: What do you write and why this genre? Q: Do you base your characters on people you know or are they totally made up? Here are the main characters you’ll meet in the DarkHorse Trilogy. Do their lives correspond to mine? • Durksen (Durk) Hurst (aka DarkHorse): Part-Seminole; orphaned after the murder of his abolitionist father; raised by the Chickasaw. Grows up a visionary, idealistic schemer, who after befriending a group of escaped slaves in 1859, develops a grandiose plan to build their own plantation (which they call DarkHorse). But his flaws endanger them and himself. • Antoinette DuVallier: A sophisticate from New Orleans and Durk’s romantic partner who he cannot marry (for reasons revealed in Something in Madness). A strong, intelligent, far-seeing woman who carries heavy burdens of past tragedies. • Big Josh Tyler: Durk’s closest friend who had run his master’s plantation during slavery; the real leader of the DarkHorse partnership. • The Frenches: The widow Mrs. Marie Brussard French and her heir, Devereau French, owners of the FrenchAcres Plantation. No spoilers here; that would be telling. Q: Would you tell us about your current book release, SOMETHING IN MADNESS? Something in Madness begins in 1865, with Durk and his friends returning home from war to a devastated Mississippi, the sole survivors of a Union colored cavalry regiment. But instead of peace, they find unregenerate Confederates who reject emancipation still in charge. Undeterred, Durk opens a law practice to help disenfranchised freedmen — only to be threatened by powerful planters and nightriders. A black school is burned; a petition march to Jackson is terrorized. And when one of his friends goes missing, Durk is horrified to discover him being forced into brutal servitude. Clever Durk schemes to liberate them, but must contend with armed ruffians — and a rigged court system. Q: Where did the idea for this story come from? Plus, characters need obstacles to create a suspenseful story, and based on the research I’d done on Reconstruction, from Black Codes to vagrancy and anti-miscegenation laws, there were more than enough challenges for these characters. To find solutions to seemingly insurmountable problems, I had to invent plot twists, conspiracies, and a new villainous character. After all, the future of the country was a stake in what I viewed as a microcosm of the South at the time. Q: Would you share with us what you are working on now? My other venture outside the historical fiction genre was a futuristic suspense/thriller, The Antiquities Dealer, which was released in 2018. The story takes place in Israel and St. Louis, and involves the search by Muslim, Jewish, and Christian extremists for the surviving nail from the Crucifixion — which is tied to an attempt by a secret society to clone Jesus Christ. Murders, puzzles, and romance drive the suspense toward a surprising conclusion. Q: Tell me three things about yourself that would surprise your readers. Q: Milk or dark chocolate? Coffee or tea? Q: Favorite TV show or shows? |
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Ed Protzel has authored four novels, The Lies That Bind, Honor Among Outcasts, and Something in Madness (DarkHorse Trilogy), and the sci-fi suspense thriller, The Antiquities Dealer. A graduate of the University of Missouri-St. Louis with an M.A. in English, Ed lives in St. Louis.
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