
I’m so excited to connect with Jennifer K. Breedlove for today’s Wednesday post.
Jennifer is a composer, conductor, author, editor, and educator based in the Chicago area. A frequent visitor to Downeast Maine since childhood, she has a deep affection for the rugged beauty of Maine’s coastal islands and the people who call them home. Her debut novel, Murder Will Out, won the Minotaur Books/Mystery Writers of America First Crime Novel Award and was also a finalist for the Killer Nashville Claymore Award.
Jennifer and I will be sitting down together on June 30 at 7:00 p.m. at the Briar Patch to talk about MURDER WILL OUT, her writing process, and what she’s working on next.

GS: One thing that is immediately apparent in your book is the importance of the role of the setting. A mansion on an island in Maine. Did your novel start with the setting first or did that come later? In what ways does your Maine island setting impact character and plot? Where there any challenges you faced with your setting?
JKB: My novel is set on a fictional island, which meant I get to pull from all my favorite places and put them n
ear each other: Islesford Pottery and The Dock Restaurant from Little Cranberry. The village green from Bar Harbor with its shade trees and bandstand, only with more of a cozy local village vibe. Southwest Harbor’s Little Notch Bakery, especially from its early years when it was much smaller. (My fictional version of the bakery doesn’t appear in the final draft in the novel per se, but my brain knows it’s there on the Little North dock next to the gift shop.) And of course, Cameron House, standing in for the Gilded Age summer cottages that once filled the area.
My challenge, of course, is that however much I love the area, I am not a resident; I grew up in Maryland and have lived in my beloved adopted Chicagoland for more than thirty years. My family visited Maine every summer through my childhood, and eventually my parents retired up to the quiet side of Mount Desert Island and became permanent residents. That was when I got to shift from “tourist” to “visiting family,” meeting my folks’ friends, getting to know their church community, and experiencing the little towns in a different way. I’ve always loved this part of the world, the way the air and the ocean seem to make everything feel and taste a little different from anywhere else, and there’s this wonderful New England salt-of-the-earth practicality in the people I meet here. I visit whenever I can; I suppose some part of me hopes that one day Maine will invite me to move up and stay. (If I can handle Chicago winters, I imagine Maine’s would be manageable, right?)
GS: When I read your book, I was struck by the atmosphere. I won’t give away too many details, but this book is a mystery with ghosts. As I was reading, I kept wondering: Firstly, do you believe in ghosts? Secondly, how and when did you decide the haunted mansion was an important part of this story? Do you see the Cameron House as a character in addition to being part of the setting? Did you always know this story would have ghosts or did that come later?
JKB: People ask me ghost question a lot, and I love it and find it intriguing—I enjoy passing it back to my readers: do they believe in ghosts? That question elicits a treasure trove of great stories.
For me, the ghosts in the novel are about memory, and story, and continuity. We are shaped, like it or not, by those who came before us; the stories of our parents and grandparents and ancestors echo up and down our lives and histories. Sometimes they comfort us; sometimes they haunt us. With the spirits of Cameron House, I took that perspective and dialed it up to eleven: this ghostly gathering gives face and voice to the not-really-gone memory of the house, the family, and the island. When the stories don’t get passed down, when the secrets stay secret too long, the family begins to lose cohesion, the memories fade, and so do the ghosts…
(In answer to the first question, do I believe in ghosts?—I honestly don’t know. I don’t disbelieve in them. My approach to the supernatural has always been underlaid by the suspicion that “supernatural” is just another word for “natural but we don’t understand it yet.”)
GS: Willow comes from away and is conditionally welcomed by some people. Which seems about right. As somebody who has married into the great state of Maine, and as somebody who lives in Portland (I might as well live in Massachusetts), I often find myself saying, “But my husband’s family is from Eastport and his mom lives in Orrington.” How important was it for Willow to be from away? Did you ever think she could be somebody from the island itself? And her entourage of friends. Willow may be from somewhere else, but you give her a community. Which of these secondary characters do you like the best? Why?
JKB: Willow’s state as a geographical outsider mirrors her character, a shy young woman who’s never really felt like she fit in anywhere except the little cabin on Little North where she used to visit her godmother every summer. For her, coastal Maine is her heart’s home, because that’s where she spent time with the one person who truly understood her.
It’s the loss of her godmother that brings her back to the island, where she needs to find her way without Aunt Sue—but once there she is embraced, first cautiously and then whole-heartedly, by the four women who had become Sue’s “found family” on the island. I can’t begin to say which of these characters I like best—there’s some of me in all of them, and I’d be happy to be compared to any of them. Diana, the antique store owner, is the de facto “mom” of the group, constantly scanning to make sure everyone’s okay, taking the emotional temperature of the group, able to sniff out a lie at thirty feet; her young adult daughter Mac is the one who voices the thing no one wants to say out loud, as inconveniently and inappropriately as possible. Rina, who had been Sue’s fiancée, is volatile and quick to anger but will be your ride-or-die once she claims you as one of hers. And Catherine, the village librarian, is a logical and pragmatic research nerd who cuts to the center of every problem without being distracted by peripherals.
Then, of course, there’s Finn, Sue’s wicked smart corgi. (Okay, If I’m honest, he’s probably my favorite.)
GS: You have a romantic thread woven through your story. You do that slow-burn romantic tension well. Nick definitely hits that grumpy and gruff with just the right amount of banter. How did you develop their relationship? Did the mystery plot or relationship come more easily?
JKB: I admit it: the whole “will they or won’t they” of Willow and Nick is as much a mystery to me as it is to readers—there is definitely a spark there, but I suspect they’ll need to circle each other warily for a good long time before either feels comfortable taking the next step. They knew each other as young teenagers and couldn’t stand each other back then—someday I’ll write the short story about how all that went down—and now they’re finding their way into trust-based friendship, which to me is an important first step to anything real or lasting.
I also liked the idea of twisting the stereotype of the Love Interest Hot Cop a little. He’s gorgeous, he’s tall and muscular, but he had horrible acne as a teen and is still shadowed by terrible self-esteem from those years. He’s on the police force in Maine, but you can still hear a little Texas in his voice from where he grew up, so he doesn’t quite “fit” either and has that in common with Willow. He watches Doctor Who and has weird taste in pizza. He gets tongue-tied and shy when women flirt with him. He listens more than he talks. Most importantly, he lets Willow be Willow, and doesn’t try to mold her into fitting his or anyone else’s expectations of her.
GS: I love talking to other writers about process. Firstly, let me just say, Wow. Your bio. You are very accomplished outside of writing. I’d love to know firstly, where your stories come from. And then what is your process? When and where do you write? How do you revise and edit? Beta readers? Writing groups? Tell me everything.
JKB: I suspect I’m a bit of a heretic about writing process and timing. Most of the writing advice I read seems to cry out with unwavering confidence, “pick a time and place to write, regularly, every day!”—but that doesn’t work for me. Sometimes I’ll be at my desk, sometimes I’m curled up on the couch with my laptop, and sometimes I go for long walks and dictate into my phone; I find dialogue spins out really easily that way. I’ll write in the morning, or in the afternoon, or after everyone else has gone to bed; as long as I hit my word count goal, it doesn’t matter to me when I do it. If I get stuck, I get up and change the circumstances: I’ll go to the library or a coffee shop, or I’ll switch to pen and notebook, anything to jog loose whatever’s caught in my brain.
I’m fortunate to have a fantastic writing group made up of myself and four other women; we meet online twice a month to read and offer critique and support of each other’s work. Their fingerprints are all over this novel, and I would never have gotten through without them. We came together through our similar approaches to story structure and ongoing editing, and one of my favorite things about our process is how each submitting writer gets to choose what to focus on for any particular day. For instance, I can say, “okay, this is a new scene where the group talks about what Catherine learned about the elderly billionaire; does the shape of the scene work? Is there too much info-dumping? Do you feel like it moves character and plot forward, and if not, how can I fix that?” and that is what they will address when we talk, not whether I used the best adjective to describe the weather. It is amazing and rare to have the freedom to share incomplete or unpolished prose with people who can tell whether the shape of a given scene is solid, without worrying about whether they’ll care if the writing itself is perfect. That takes real trust—to be able to accept the process together, knowing that the writing is going to be sort of clonky before it all smooths into place, and to be able to get deep into the architecture of the building without being afraid someone will criticize the shade of drywall you chose.
GS: Okay. Back to that bio for a minute. You are a composer. I want to know in what ways composing music is similar and different from writing haunted murder mysteries. Do you hear melodies before you write them?
JKB: Musical composition taught me a lot about structure and flow; it absolutely underpins the way I conceive of my prose writing as well. My composition process is not unlike my writing process, in that I tend to start with some structural core (or, since I mostly compose choral music, with a piece of text or poetry), scaffold the piece around that structure, and then go into sections and phrases and eventually note to note for line and beauty.
Of course I want to tell a good story, but I also want the prose to sing. That part is both the hardest and the most fun, I think, and every time I go back through the work with the metaphorical equivalent of increasingly fine grade sandpaper, it can sing a little more. Of course, then I read The Haunting of Hill House again, or Rebecca, and listen to Jackson’s or duMaurier’s exquisitely singing prose, and realize how far I still have to go.
GS: I’d love to hear a little about what you love most about writing and about what is most challenging for you.
JKB: I actually love every part of the process, for different reasons—plotting the perfect crime, figuring out who will solve it and how, dreaming up these characters and plopping them down in some amazing setting and setting them loose to surprise me and try to figure things out…and then going back and looking at the structure, shoring it up, balancing it so it hangs together, and then polishing the prose…
The hardest part for me, honestly, is shifting from one piece of the process to the next and knowing when it’s time to do that. One time I over-plotted a mystery, nailing down every red herring and clue and character arc. I sat and looked at this polished scene-by-scene outline, and I realized I had lost all interest in writing the book, because there was nothing left to discover. (I’ll still probably write it one day; I just need some distance.) Another time, I let myself abandon my outline too early and gleefully followed my nose down a couple of sub-plot detours; I realized, thousands of words later, that I’d written myself into an unredeemable plot-hole corner, and I had to back way up to find my way again.
The most difficult thing for me, in a way, is shifting from the fine-grade edit of one piece to the rough text of the next; my sense of taste is still in “singing prose” mode, but drafting a new story is about “just get it out onto the page”; I just have to grit my teeth and do it. But again, I’m still new at this—as with anything, the more I write and the more errors I slam into headfirst, the more I learn how to do better the next time around. Anne of Green Gables is my hero: “But have you ever noticed one encouraging thing about me, Marilla?” she says. “I never make the same mistake twice.”
(Of course, Marilla then responds, “I don’t know as that’s much benefit when you’re always making new ones,” which is also, sadly, as true of me as it is of Anne.)
Thank you so much, Jennifer, for sharing your insights on writing, music, ghosts, mystery, and Maine.
If you’re in the Bangor area, join us on June 30 at 7:00 p.m. at the Briar Patch for a conversation about Murder Will Out, the inspiration behind it, and what’s next for this exciting new voice in mystery fiction.
We can’t wait to see you there!
I’m assured it’s more uplifting than it sounds. Stuart won the 2020 Booker Prize for SHUGGIE BAIN, another Scotland-set book you might want to consider if the sight of kilt-wearing, bagpipe-playing Scots marching through Boston in support of their World Cup football team moves you like it does me.
Set in the 1850s after Ireland was devastated by the famine known as the Great Hunger, LAND focuses on an Irish land surveyor and his realizations about the enduring power land has for those who lived and loved on it. The British can claim land and tax it, but its ownership remains with those who made their lives on Ireland’s remote west coast before and after the many depredations forced upon them by their colonial overlords. Again, my description falls short of conveying why I can’t wait to read it. As readers of this blog know, the west of Ireland holds a special and deep place in my heart, so I’m all in.
As is often the case, he’s in the doghouse with his bosses at the Maine Warden Service due to his deep-seated tendency to bend rules, not in a way that’s corrupt, because Mike is a deeply honorable man, but as a means to get to the truth. And after Mike’s long personal journey to maturity, his wife Stacey is about to give birth to their first child. STORM TIDE appears to have all of the elements that make this series a success, and I can’t wait to read it in a comfy outdoor chair some lazy afternoon.
A Maine man travels to the southern border to do what he can to support the families in crisis. Early reviewer Neela Vaswani, author of You Have Given Me a Country, said of Morse’s book: “I didn’t know it before I started reading, but I needed THIS FOREIGN LAND’s reminder: love, courage, and endurance are the only things that remain when everything else is stripped away.” That’s one powerful endorsement, especially if, like me, you’re looking for a book that, at its core, is about hope and courage.
in a class will be looking for the magic answer. What should they do to make the book a bestseller? I heard the answer, or at least a version of it, maybe thirty years ago from a talk Sue Grafton gave. She said there are no shortcuts and there is no magic. She told the room full of writers and aspiring writers that they should expect it to take at least five years to begin making money. I’ve always appreciated hearing the truth from editors, publishers, and other writers. It helps to keep my perspective when things are down and to stay modest when things are up. The truth is that there are no easy answers. Writing is learned on the job and, if you’re serious about being a writer, it’s a lifelong job.
requires sitting in the chair for hours when the finding the words or sorting out the plot is painful and painstaking. But there are those moments of flow, when the story comes almost faster than I can type. When it feels like magical writing, some entity telling the story through me. Yes. That’s magic. And there is always the fascination that comes from storytelling at all. What could be more magical than being able to create an entire world and fill it with people who usually do what we tell them and sometimes misbehave? What could be more magical than seeing the whole world as a venue for new ideas? For characters? For settings and dialogue?
Next week at Maine Crime Writers there will be posts by Kate Flora (Monday), Brenda Buchanan (Tuesday), Maureen Milliken (Thursday), and Dick Cass (Friday), with an interview with Jennifer Breedlove on Wednesday.

Kaitlyn Dunnett/Kathy Lynn Emerson here, today offering an excerpt from my 2008 Agatha-Award-winning non-fiction book, How to Write Killer Historical Mysteries. Unlike most how-to books, mine isn’t just my take on writing. It also includes numerous anecdotes and bits of advice from other published historical mystery writers and touches on several topics that came up over the course 2005-2007 in the Crime Thru Time (CTT) online discussion group.






This year, the Maine Historical Society hosted an afternoon pre-conference workshop for the Maine Writers and Publishers Alliance. Elizabeth DeWolfe (remember
Last week my husband and I went with my kids to the Little League Majors Finals at Loring Park. My kids watched the game from the fence. James and I talked to other parents and ate popcorn on the bleachers.
The Crime Wave Noir at the Bar was a lot of fun. Others might post about it, so I’ll keep it brief. We had 10 readers, five minutes apiece, a hotdog truck and cold brews and colder rain. At peak around 90 people listening and the amazing Jule Selbo and Matt Cost moderating.













