I’m ending the week with author Ed Mitchell, as we chat about his
Gold Lust Series 3-in-1 bundle of books which are action-adventure
international thrillers: Gold Lust, Gold
Raid, and Gold Fire.
Bio:
Ed Mitchell was a foster child who later graduated from the
U.S. Military Academy at West Point. He went on to be an Airborne Infantry
Ranger, a RAND Corporation Fellow, an aerospace systems engineer, and a
community activist fighting to protect water resources in California. Along the
way, Ed became a national award-winning author by weaving his real-world
experiences from foxhole to space into his contemporary adventure/thrillers.
From private to Lieutenant Colonel, Ed served in Airborne,
Air Cavalry, Armor, and Mechanized Infantry units, including guarding the DMZ
in Korea and protecting nuclear weapons. Prior to the 1st war in Iraq, as the
Space-Ground Combat Analyst for U.S. Joint Space Command, Ed fought that war in
a simulator and analyzed the results for the command. Additionally, he spent
years working National Missile Defense and Homeland Security research and
development. Ed helped develop the prototype command launch center for the
Army’s Strategic Missile Defense units in Alaska and California. Later, as a
civilian Payload Integration Manager, he helped develop and test NMD kill
vehicles for Lockheed Martin and Boeing. As a writer, he is proud of being a
charter-founding member of the International Thriller Writers Organization.
Welcome, Ed. Please tell us about the
book bundle for the Gold Lust series.
A bundle of three thrillers for the price of one,
consisting of:
Gold Lust: Winner, best new fiction in the USA.
Awarded by the American Self-Publishers Association.
Gold Raid: Winner, best action adventure
thriller. Awarded by the San Francisco Bay Area Publishers Association
Gold Fire: As real as today’s headlines, threatening
an attack on the U.S. mainland using nuclear-tipped ballistic missiles.
The saga of Army hero Nolen Martin and stockbroker Maida
Collins stretches from a massive gold strike, to Washington D.C. senate offices,
and to terrorists threatening nuclear attack on the USA.
Nolen’s family and relationship with Maida are battered and
challenged as they attempt to outwit a powerful international mining
conglomerate, disloyal partners, and the Japanese Mafia. All determined to take
control of their gold vein and destroy them. After the public learns of Nolen’s
courage and character he is elected as an independent to the U.S. senate. There
he applies his count-terrorism and financial experience to help America hunt
down the son of Osama bin Laden who is threatening the world with stolen
Russian nuclear-tipped ballistic missiles. Senator Martin is branded a traitor
for negotiating with the terrorists, while behind the scenes he causes the
President to emplace a prototype missile defense to protect East Coast cities.
At the same time he pressures the FBI to send agent Cholo Cantera to team with
an Israeli counterterrorism unit to find the deadly weapons.
But time is running out. Not only for the country but also
for Maida and Nolen’s new baby. Little Georgia is losing her battle with an
unknown syndrome that doctor after doctor does not know how to cure.
What inspired you to write these books?
I’ve always been good at looking downstream and assessing
possible alternative situations. It’s a good skill for a military guy. So I
often consider contemporary situations and ask myself what if x, y, or z
happens? For example, the idea for the Gold Lust series of thrillers about an
Army counter-terrorist who resigns his commission to help his ailing foster
parents, came to me while attending the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey,
California.
After class one day, I was thinking how useless it was for
a terrorist to blow himself up in a market and kill a few people. It dawned on
me that if we ever faced a terrorist general who had the strategic, logistic,
and tactical skills trained into our military, then America would experience a
terrible day. I also realized a story about a mastermind turning on sleeper
cells in American would be informative and interesting. That’s when I began the
writing my series of thrillers.
Unfortunately while I was halfway through writing the third
book in the series, the 9/11 attack on New York City happened. I stopped
writing that story because I had assessed vulnerabilities in America too well.
I switched to another downstream threat that I felt could possibly happen: a
modern-day Pearl Harbor attack on America with nuclear-tipped ballistic
missiles. Now, Gold Lust is as real
as current headlines about North Korea threatening America with nuclear
destruction.
If you want to experience the difficulty of defending
American from inbound missiles, written by someone who helped develop the
National Missile Defense system, then read Gold
Fire.
Excerpt:
Chapter
1 — Advantage
August — Monterey,
California
I hope she’s okay? Nolen Martin escaped from
the noisy campaign hall into the dark, enclosed hotel veranda. He smiled
spotting his wife silhouetted at the window, studying the crescent of lights
sparkling along the shore and hills rising above Monterey Bay. Stepping behind
her he crossed his arms around her pregnant belly. “Maida, I love you,” he
whispered as he nuzzled the back of her neck, enjoying the sweet scent
lingering in her brown hair. “How are you feeling?”
“Big, bloated and unattractive. But very proud of you. You’ll make
a wonderful senator once the election is over in November.”
“You’re as attractive to me as the first day I saw you.”
“That doesn’t make me feel better. I was firing a shotgun at you
while you ran off screaming into the woods.”
“I did not scream.”
“It sounded like screaming.”
“I was hollering at Digger to start the pickup. And I meant
afterward when I first spoke with you at your cabin. I’ll never forget how
those leotards molded to you.”
“Wrong day to try on a new mail order outfit a size too small. I
would have blushed at the way you ogled me if I had not been so angry at you.”
“You forced me to look up at you standing on the porch. I couldn’t
avoid noticing a beautiful shape and a face I wished I could wake up with every
day.”
“You stared.”
“Gave you back the gold we pulled from your stream and answered
all the questions you growled at me. That’s all. Nothing more.”
Maida turned to face him. “I liked how you stared.”
Nolen leaned down and kissed her lips until she slipped away. “I
can’t wait to have this baby,” she sighed. “Eight weeks after that and I can
return to jogging. I want to be able to look down and see my feet again.”
“I guess it’s time to tell you. Plus-size women turn me on.”
Maida softly punched Nolen’s bicep. “You’re wicked.” She cuddled
her cheek against his shoulder “Most of all I want the waves of nausea to stop.
Every time they return I worry I’m going to lose the baby.” She twisted a strand of her shoulder-length hair
around her finger.
“Let’s go inside.” Nolen answered. “I’ll say goodnight to the
crowd and we’ll slip upstairs to our room. You can rest while I massage your
back.”
“No. Stay and network with the locals. You need their votes. But I
appreciate how you always reassure me that I’m not ugly.”
“Votes are not as important as doing what the doctor ordered since
you’ve been sick so often. Anyway, running for senator is the stupidest thing
I’ve ever done. I can’t spell diplomatic and I’m not a good horse trader.”
“You mean you won’t sell your vote. That’s why I encouraged you to
run for office.”
Maida stopped speaking when the ceiling lights brightened. Turning
toward the doorway the couple saw Shirley May Hobalero. Tall, thin and
sparkling from numerous diamond rings, bracelets and dangling earrings, she
glided toward them in a shimmering white gown, disclosing the tantalizing
contours of her mature curves.
Maida
kissed Nolen on the cheek. “I knew it wouldn’t last. The world of politics has
tracked us down again.”
What exciting story are you working on
next?
The fourth book in my series is scheduled for release
December 1st. It is another international thriller. Hank Cameron,
cousin to a U.S. Senator, is the most hated and most hunted man in the Middle
East. Framed for stealing a religious relic that could enflame or end religious
warfare around the world, he is isolated in Jordan. A dead or alive bounty has
been issued for his capture. Agents of the Vatican, the Israeli Mossad, and
Muslim terrorists all want what he has. Where to hide? Who to trust? Can he
survive? Can the world?
To add to reader enjoyment with this book, I’m asking
readers to take five minutes to preview the book as if THEY are the publisher’s
trusted editor. Sitting in the editor’s inbox is the next book in my series. Their
task is to select one of the author’s recommended titles and assess how it and
the synopsis, and first grab, or turn off, the reader. Then pass their comments
to the publisher and author, while realizing they are betting their company’s
time, money, and future success on approving what’s submitted … or recommending
changes or … recommend killing the project. I’m eager to hear from readers. Please
click this link and begin previewing: https://booksbyedmitchell.com/category/preview-next-book/
When did you first consider yourself a
writer?
Fourteen years after I wrote the first word, sentence, and paragraph
of my first thriller I saw it on a shelf in a bookstore. Six months later, in
San Francisco I received the Best Fiction award from the American
Self-Publishers Association. But it wasn’t until I started hearing from
satisfied readers that I could call myself a writer. It made me smile when Carol D. said: “It’s your fault I
have a sunburn. I couldn’t put the last three chapters down and stayed in the
sun too long.”
Do you write
full-time? If so, what's your workday like? If not, what do you do other than
write and how do you find time to write?
My series is my time mistress. When my wife was alive and I
had a full-time day job I would steal away to a room to write late at night.
Now, I work every day on the book, and much of that effort is NOT writing. It
includes doing a publishing task, such as converting a manuscript into an
eBook. Or doing a marketing task such as interacting with book reviewers or
improving my author website or getting a blurb from an expert to add to the
back cover of the book. Time is also eaten when I prepare to write by
conducting research on a technical aspect that will appear in the next
thriller. Far more enjoyable is interacting with fans and readers on social
media or those who provide comments at my website.
But the fun begins after I stop myself from doing
everything else to write and edit a chapter.
What
would you say is your interesting writing quirk?
I can confidently say that the only quirky thing about my
writing is the hero is devilishly handsome, like me. More seriously, this is a
hard question to answer. I’m not sure readers will consider the following two
habits quirky. First, to quiet and focus my mind, I always turn on symphony or elevator
music. Second, after I’ve drafted a chapter I slowly read it out loud. This
helps we read the actual words and not what I planned to write. This editing
technique helps me find and eliminate errors.
As a child, what did you want to be when
you grew up?
A good guy. A soldier.
Anything additional you want to share
with the readers?
Most of my readers are surprised by the surprising twists
in my stories. I hope you are too. Please verify my claim by reading the first
chapter of any one of my thrillers on my
website.
Links:
Thanks for joining me
today, Ed.
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