CHECK IT OUT
Novelists often are inspired by that with which they’re most familiar
-- a good reason numerous Orange County writers set their sagas in local
landscapes. If you enjoy finding hometown haunts in fiction, you may
appreciate mysteries and romances by local authors.
A surf shop near Newport Pier is the home of Matt Murdock, the private
eye introduced in Robert Ray’s ‘Bloody Murdock.’ Hired to probe the auto
death of a beautiful young woman, the savvy detective careens into the
Southern California pornography industry before bringing the case to a
satisfying conclusion. He reappears in local venues in five other Robert
Ray thrillers.
Local sites are a frequent backdrop in Balboa resident Dean Koontz’s
novels. The suspense writer dispatches two police detectives to haunts
from Irvine to Costa Mesa to Newport Beach in ‘Dragon Tears,’ his best
seller about the search for a demonic serial killer with paranormal
abilities.
A Crystal Cove cottage is the base for Fiddler, a former cop teamed
with beautiful, financial whiz Fiora in Ann and Evan Maxwell’s Fiddler
and Fiora detective series. The action involves international espionage
and Silicon Valley exporting in ‘Just Another Day in Paradise,’ the first
of the Laguna Niguel writing duo’s mysteries.
Mission Viejo writer Maxine O’Callaghan sets her Delilah West sagas
throughout Orange County. In ‘Hit & Run,’ the sassy detective is tied up
at a South Coast Plaza jewelry store. In ‘Set Up,’ she turns up in a
locked fishing shack near Newport Pier.
‘There’s something about a perfect climate that sets off anything
terrible that’s happened. With so much physical beauty, crime is a
tremendous contrast,’ Callaghan explains. ‘My heroine loves the area, but
it doesn’t prevent her from seeing the dark side, the warts.’
A Laguna hotel, Santa Ana church and Newport shores are a few of the
home venues visited in T. Jefferson Parker’s ‘Laguna Heat,’ ‘Pacific
Beat’ and ‘Summer of Fear.’ In ‘The Blue Hour,’ the Laguna Canyon
writer’s newest page-turner, a cancer-ridden cop teamed with a thirtyish
beauty search local turf and surf for a ruthless serial killer.
If mysteries of the heart appeal, check out ‘Hank & Chloe,’ Jo-Ann
Mapson’s romance about a middle-aged professor smitten with a struggling
waitress ensconced in local canyons. The mismatched pair find themselves
working with Navajo Indians in Arizona in ‘Loving Chloe,’ the Costa Mesa
author’s sequel.
While not the setting for his historical nonfiction, the Newport Beach
Central Library is a frequent haunt of local writer Irwin Gellman. In his
new work, ‘The Contender: Richard Nixon, the Congress Years, 1946-1952,’
the author graciously acknowledges reference staff for assisting with his
research ‘with the greatest skill and ingenuity.’
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams, in collaboration with
Susie Lamb-Hubbs.
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