OUTER
PERIMETER
now available in a mass market edition

Greetings
Biography
My Novels
'Fatbrain' Interview
Sample Chapters:
Balefire
The Alchemist
Cheater
Prey
Wildfire
Double Blind
First Evidence
Outer
Perimeter
Literary Agent
Ordering
Links
Wondering ...?
Wildlife Images
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A Brief Personal History .....
By way of introduction, I'm one of those people who
thought he knew what he wanted to do fairly early in life ... which was to be a
biochemist. In retrospect, I have no idea why.
As it turned out, after graduating from Grossmont
(CA) High School, and spending an interesting year as part of the first freshman class at
U.C.S.D., I finally did manage to acquire a B.S. degree in biochemistry from the
University of California (Riverside campus). But thanks to a fateful judo accident (not to
mention an ultimately successful 2-year effort to con Gena, my best friend, into getting
married after I graduated, which meant I really needed a full-time job), I ended up being
hired as a deputy sheriff/criminalist with the Riverside County (CA) Sheriff's Department
.... which, in turn, led to night school in Los Angeles, a beautiful and delightful little
daughter, a transfer to the San Bernardino County (CA) Sheriff's Department Crime Lab, an
opportunity to set up a Scientific Investigation Bureau for the Huntington Beach (CA)
Police Department, a MS degree in criminalistics, 12 years of homicide/rape/robbery/
burglary crime scenes ... and then an opportunity to set up the first full service crime
lab for national and international wildlife law enforcement in (of all places) Ashland,
Oregon.
And along the way, I managed to write and sell a
fiction book.
The book was titled BALEFIRE, the story of a
professional terrorist sent out to destroy the city of Huntington Beach, CA (where, as you
may recall from the previous paragraph, I ran the PD crime lab), as a demonstration
against the coming 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles. To my utter amazement (and
realistically, thanks to Bantam's marketing), the book got on the NY list for a couple of
weeks ... and all of a sudden I was a real, honest-to-goodness fiction author.
Just like I was a real, honest-to-goodness cop and
forensic scientist.
Yeah, right.
You see, for the last 30 years or so, my cop buddies
have been cheerfully assuring me that I'm too much of a scientist to be a good cop. And my
scientist buddies have been equally persistent in assuring me that I'm too much of a cop
to be a good scientist. So much for the buddy system.
But in the process of trying to figure what I was
supposed to be doing with my professional career, such as it was, I discovered that
working crime scenes turns out to be wonderful training for 'getting into the skins' of
fiction characters. And forensic science offers a ready source of gory technical tricks
and twists to add to the plot. And it turns out that it really isn't all that hard to
write a fiction book. All you have to do is come up with a reasonable plot & set of
characters, find 600 hours or so of free time, force yourself to sit down in front of the
computer on a regular basis ... and then get lucky enough to find a cooperative publisher.
So I did the predictable husband/author thing, and
managed to con Gena into cooking most of the meals, and cleaning most of the house, and
shooing most of the horses and cows back into the pasture ... proceeded to write
six more 'thriller' novels [THE ALCHEMIST, DIGGER (which I rewrote as CHEATER), PREY,
WILDFIRE, DOUBLE BLIND, and FIRST EVIDENCE] ... and just recently finished the
eighth, titled OUTER PERIMETER.
Actually, it really wasn't quite as easy as I
described. The hard part was convincing Gena that writing these books would make us
moderately rich, which would mean --- in my version of the fantasy --- that we could
travel to far distant lands to research more books and she could hire someone to go find
the horses and cows. I figured she might buy the story because, as we all know, forensic
scientists are sworn to tell the truth.
Unfortunately, my dear wife is 1) a forensic
scientist herself, and 2) someone who recognizes bull???? when she sees/hears it (which
may have something to do with all that cow-shooing expertise). So I had to promise to
share the cooking, cleaning and cow-shooing duties, and help her weed her acre of peonies
in between book projects ... which has turned out to be a pretty continuous
project. Never realized that a couple of acres could grow so many weeds.
Gotta get going on that next book!
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