Showing posts with label Overture to Disaster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Overture to Disaster. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Left on the Cutting Room Floor

By Chester Campbell

The familiar saying about snips of film left out of the finished movie applies to segments of a book that don't survive the final edit. Overture to Disaster, the third book in my Post Cold War Political Thriller Trilogy, ended up way too long and had to be trimmed down. Even with the revisions, it still wound up the longest novel I've published at 511 pages.

The snip I've included below was part of the background for retired Air Force Col. Warren (Roddy) Rodman, one of the main characters in the book. He was the pilot of a Special Operations helicopter shot down during a mission into Iran to bring out a high-level defector. Though innocent of the charges against him, he was court-martialed and forced out of the career he loved. Here's the cut:

It gave him the same sensation he had felt during the first landing he had ever experienced in a small airplane, the event that had set him on an irreversible course toward a flying career. He was ten years old at the time. The plane was a four-place Cessna, and it made him feel that he could reach out and roll up the clouds like cotton candy, or, closer to the ground, snip off the spindly tops of the trees.

His father worked as an electrical engineer for a public power system in Texas. A company that made transformers had invited the senior Rodman on a hunting trip into northern Idaho. He had decided to take young Warren along. The remote Rocky Mountain lodge was nestled deep in a wilderness area that could only be reached by running the rapids on a rushing river, packing your way in by horseback, hiking or flying in a light plane capable of short takeoffs. Air, of course, was the preferred method for flatlanders.

The narrow dirt landing spot beside the meandering river looked like a dusty brown bandage strip from high above. A rugged, rock-faced 8,000-foot peak rose across the river. A range of hills not much lower flanked the makeshift runway. The spiraling descent fascinated him. He had lived and breathed flying ever since, pestering his father to take lessons at sixteen. Two years later, he organized a lobbying effort with the local congressman to assure getting an appointment to the Air Force Academy.

End of cut.

I hated  to leave out this segment as it concerned an actual experience. Back in the eighties, during my career as an association executive, I won a prize from one of the exhibitors at the American Society of Association Executives' convention. It involved transportation and a week for two at Harrah's Middle Fork Lodge, located on the Middle Fork of the Salmon River in the heart of Idaho’s Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness Area.

After the spiraling descent onto the riverside strip, we boarded a large rubber raft and floated through a section of rapids to the lodge. It was quite an experience. We were literally in the middle of nowhere. In another part of the book, I used the lodge andrip its isolation to keep Rodman's copilot out of touch until just before the court-martial.

The trip into the River of No Return Wilderness Area was one I'll never forget. It was one of man y personal experiences I've used in my books.

For a great review of Overture to Disaster, check my Mystery Mania blog.

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Overture to Disaster Goes Free

By Chester Campbell

I haven't commented on the final book in my Post Cold War Political Thriller Trilogy since a post back in September shortly after it came out in ebook format for the Kindle. I haven't done much in the way of promotion except an occasional tweet, and the results are obvious. It has registered few sales and has received no reviews on Amazon. I suspect one problem is that my loyal readers are all fans of PI whodunit mysteries. The political thrillers are a different breed, the action sweeping across continents, the characters dealing with complex motivations.

My friend Tim Hallinan began his review of the first book (Beware the Jabberwock) with the observation: "This is a change of pace for Chester Campbell, best known (to me, at least) for his Sid Chance PI novels." Happily he added: "Here he's working in the global intelligence thriller territory of Ludlum and Trevanian, but (I'm happy to say) with more character development."

Hallinan (author of the popular Poke Rafferty Bangkok thrillers and the Junior Bender humorous mysteries) concluded his review with: "Short chapters, great pacing, good characters, and high stakes. I really enjoyed this book." As busy as he is I've been reluctant to ask him for a review of the final book in the series.

So I've decided put my money where my mouth is and do a freebie promotion on BookBub for Overture to Disaster. Previous BookBub promos have resulted in lots of new reviews. I have my fingers crossed on this one.

If you'd like a free copy for the Kindle, check here March 10-12 to get yours.

Visit me at Mystery Mania


Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Epic Tale Needs Reviews

By Chester D. Campbell

The final segment on my post Cold War political thriller trilogy is about ready for the Kindle store. Titled Overture to Disaster, it's an epic tale that follows two widely divergent plot lines until they merge in Mexico. The story opens in 1991 just prior to the dissolution of the Soviet Union. One thread begins with a Soviet Army bivouac on a collective farm in the Ukraine where chemical weapons are to be displayed. The other takes place at the same time in Washington, where a secret Special Operations helicopter mission to Iran is ready to launch.

The fallout from the two events begins to surface a few years later for two of the central characters, a chief investigator for the city prosecutor in Minsk, Belarus and the former Air Force colonel who piloted the ill-fated rescue mission to Iran. They meet in Guadalajara as a diabolical plot by dissident Russians and world-order capitalists begins to unfold.

The book will appear first in the electronic version for the Kindle. Since I need some reviews to get it noticed on Amazon, I thought I would try something new. Any readers out there who would like to review Overture to Disaster can contact me by email (chester@ chesterdcampbell.com - after closing the space following @) and I'll send you an ebook copy, PDF or some other format.

The book is of epic proportions, running a little over 160,000 words, but my editor thinks this trilogy is my best work. You can decide for yourself.

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Writing Techno-Thrillers

Tom Clancy is the master of the techno-thriller. I was an avid reader of his books from the first, The Hunt for Red October. I enjoyed his use of technology, though at times it grew a bit tedious, such as his detailed description of the bad guys fashioning a nuclear bomb. I was impressed enough, though, that I put quite a bit of technology into my first manuscripts in the early nineties.

I found the genre required a great deal of research into a variety of subjects. I went to the Vanderbilt University Library and got a courtesy card after explaining that I was an author, though unpublished at the time. I spent a lot of hours going through the stacks and reading up on technical subjects, both in books and magazines. Much of the information I needed came from the Engineering section of the library.

I wrote three Post Cold War thrillers that required extensive research. The first, Beware the Jabberwock, now in the Kindle Store, was not as heavily dependent on techno business as the following books. It did include a high-tech security system for an island off the Florida coast, for which I got an assist from my brother, whose electrical engineering career included being director of engineering for the local electric utility. I also researched some technical aspects of aerial photography. In earlier times I had been intelligence officer for an Air National Guard tactical reconnaissance group.

The second book, The Poksu Conspiracy, involves South Korea and nuclear power generation, plus some nuclear weapons issues. I frequented the Vanderbilt Library extensively on these subjects, allowing use of the jargon for getting a nuclear power plant online. I solicited advice from my brother regarding a sophisticated electronic setup for detonating a bomb.

The third book, which turned out as long as a Clancy thriller, is titled Overture to Disaster. Like the first book, it begins in the fall of 1991 as the Cold War was ending. Following parallel plot threads, it tracks a Belarus police investigator seeking answers to his brother's death and the aftermath of an Air Force special operators mission to bring out an important defector from Iran. This required research into the MH-53J Pave Low III special operations helicopter. After writing the part about the mission, I sent it to an operations officer in a spec ops unit for critique. I also did extensive research into Soviet weapons and the use of nerve gas.

Overall, I found that writing techno-thrillers requires a dedication to technical research and finding people who can supply obscure information. It was a lot of fun twenty years ago, but I have since gravitated to whodunits that require a limited amount of outside digging. Those early novels wandered all around the globe. Now I stick mostly to the Nashville area, with a few excursions to places not too distant.

Chester Campbell

Visit me at Mystery Mania