Frank Spinelli's Blog - Posts Tagged "m-m-mystery"

A Perfect Year

What a perfect year it has been for me.

February 2022, Blind Eye Books published my first M/M Romantic Thriller, Perfect Flaw. A great experience because I got to collaborate with the editor, Nicole Kimberling. Talk about bad-ass boss. Plus, I got to do something I have never done before: write gay sex scenes. What fun!

Writing has always been therapy for me. I try to write every morning before I begin my real job, but there is an obsessive nature to my writing. The story becomes something I think about all the time. When I go to bed, I try to induce myself into dreaming where I left off, hoping my dreams will provide me with the solution I’m searching for. Crazy as that may sound; it works.

My writing is also based in science. That is critical. Being a doctor, I feel a degree of responsibility to tell stories that are scientifically sound. Much of what happens in Perfect Flaw is based on actual events and real science. There won’t be any fudging the science in any of my books.

Obviously, the science comes naturally to me, having been a physician for twenty years. Writing mystery does not. The best way to become a better writer is to read in the genre you wish to write. That brings me to my February M/M Romance Reads Challenge. One book a week for four weeks. I’m happy to report I read: Strange Medicine by S.C. Wynne, In Search of Saints by Harper Fox, Madison Square Murders by Carroll S. Poe and Renovated to Death by Frank Anthony Polito.

Check them out!

Strange Medicine (Dr. Maxwell Thornton Murder Mysteries, #1) by S.C. Wynne
In Search of Saints by Harper Fox
Madison Square Murders (Memento Mori, #1) by C.S. Poe
Renovated to Death by Frank Anthony Polito
 •  1 comment  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 22, 2023 11:52 Tags: cozy-mystery, m-m-mystery, m-m-romance

Balancing Truth in Fiction Writing: The Struggle is Real

The White Knight (The Dark Horse, #2) by Josh Lanyon Currently reading: The White Knight by Josh Lanyon and The Murder of Roger Ackroyd The Murder of Roger Ackroyd (Hercule Poirot, #4) by Agatha Christie by Agatha Christie.



May 2022, I was invited to be guest blogger for Josh Lanyon. This is a reprint of the blog I wrote.

Before I wrote my first gay romantic thriller entitled, Perfect Flaw, I worked on a memoir entitled, The First Year. A story about a young Italian doctor in New York who lands his dream job, working for a Park Avenue practice, only to become entangled in a murder investigation after a colleague, posing as a physician, kills a patient.

But I struggled writing about my first year in private practice because I did not want to disrespect the death of an innocent woman. Anyway, did I really need to write another memoir? I had already written Pee-Shy, which recounted my history of childhood sexual abuse by my scoutmaster who I brought to justice thirty years later. Writing a memoir is cathartic; it’s also grueling and painful. Reliving those years of abuse, revealing intimate details of my marriage, and exposing my family to that pain again after we had repaired our relationship opened old wounds. Plus, whenever someone I knew read Pee-Shy, they looked at me like I was that abused eleven-year-old boy, not a grown adult. Did I really want to do that to my husband, my family and myself again? No.

So, I put The First Year to rest in a file on my desktop. Years later, I thought, what if I didn’t write it as a memoir? Imagine a story about a young, Italian doctor who becomes ensnared by a seductive colleague and unwittingly makes mistake after mistake so that his life is upended after a woman is found dead? Sounds familiar? Yes, but the similarities to my real life end there.

Perfect Flaw is lifted from the headlines, but once I decided to write it as fiction – in fact, my editor, Nicole Kimberling, encouraged me to write it in the third person – I felt the lock of a metaphorical ball and chain release.

Now, I had license to do whatever I wanted to these characters. My job was not to relate my real experience but to paint my protagonist, Angelo Perrotta, into a corner and then figure a way to get him out of trouble. “Raise the stakes,” is a term I had heard so often by my writer friends, but I hadn’t understood what that meant until I was inventing a story, rather than just relating one. So, I raised the stakes and then kept raising them. I wasn’t so precious about the accuracy of the events because guess what? My book wasn’t a memoir anymore.

Perfect Flaw is based on something that happened in real life, yes, but it’s not about me. It’s about Angelo and his sexy cop boyfriend, Jason.

Still, because I am a doctor in real life, readers believe that much of what goes on in Perfect Flaw is drawn from my life, which took some getting used to. There is no escaping this trap. Readers fill in the blanks with theories about where Frank Spinelli ends, and Angelo Perrotta begins in the same way that I, myself, wondered how much Jack Torrance from The Shining was Stephen King.

We all write partially from personal experience, but also draw from other sources. We draw from our friends, family, and acquaintances. We draw from research and even from other stories to create a whole cast of characters. This is one of the reasons why writing fiction should have nothing to do with the writer’s sex assigned at birth or their gender identity or sexual orientation. Writers create the entire world of the novel, and every single character in it.

Still, now that I’ve moved away from memoir, I’m careful not to include too much of myself in my fiction.

Of course, I can’t help it.

My first rule is that I never include precious personal memories in my fiction because I must save those special moments for myself. Besides making stuff up is way more fun. I can’t think of a better job than creating vivid characters and then throwing them into peril. The second rule is to read while I write. Once I listened to an interview the author Jennifer Egan who said, write what you like and read the genre of what you want to write. No truer words have been spoken when it comes to writing.

https://www.frankspinelli.com/staten-...
1 like ·   •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 28, 2023 09:14 Tags: m-m-mystery, m-m-romance