I am so happy to share with you this awesome debut novel and a new author that I will be keeping my EYE on. We have a giveaway, review and some questions answered by the author along with an update on what is happening in her world of writing. So come on in and sit a spell. Let us entertain you. ^_^
A psychological thriller that will not leave you in the dark, because you will be turning on every light in the house to keep the terror at bay. Even the cover creeped me out. lol
Too Dark To Sleep by Dianne Gallagher
Not only is this a story of a serial killer, but it is also a story of a woman’s descent into madness after the death of her child.
Maggie had tried to commit suicide and there was no doubt in anyone’s mind that she had meant business. The scars went from wrist to elbow. She entered the Darkness and could not seem to find her way back to the light.
She was approached to act as a consultant on the case she was working before she had tried to commit suicide. Two young women had been murdered, and she believed it was the same killer. Now there was a third.
She thought for some time, before she made the decision to take it on.
They teamed her up with a rookie, Nick Dublowski, who seemed to smile his way through life.
Would the case save her, or finish her off?
5 STARS – Would buy it for them (lol)
I won this book in a Giveaway on I Read A Book Once. I received the signed paperback and couldn’t help but start to read it immediately. I mean, look at the cover. And the title, so descriptive of the book. Thank you for the wonderful Giveaway.
Dianne Gallagher did an excellent job of making her psychological terror seem as if the dark were a physical being stalking Maggie. The details had chills running up and down my spine as I got up and turned on the lights. What was that flash out of the corner of my eye? I swear I keep seeing something. Goosebumps make the hair on my arms stand up as if by static electricity.
The suspense kept me engrossed in the book, unable to put it down.
I loved her description of Maggie:
“Everything about the woman should’ve read frail, but it didn’t. It was like looking at a knife blade in the sun. Cold. Hard. Sharp.”
I think the book did a great job of addressing depression, showing how it can dominate and take over a person’s life, leaving them feeling as if there is only one way out. BUT I don’t want you to think this book is only about depression.
It’s also about Maggie’s determination to make a serial killer pay for his crimes. It becomes her life’s mission, after he makes it personal. When you think it can’t get any deeper or darker, it does. It is a thriller of a highest caliber.
The ending blew me away. I would love to tell you about it, but you will have to read the book. If you like thrillers, this is one you don’t want to let pass you by.
This is Dianne Gallagher’s debut novel. If this is the beginning of her writing career, I can hardly wait to see what the future holds. Well done Dianne.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Dianne has learned one big lesson. Life is never a straight line.
Starting in theatre with a BFA from the University of Minnesota, Dianne focused on performance intially, but then discovered playwriting with several of her competition-winning plays being performed at the University. A move to Los Angeles gave her the opportunity to do a little screenwriting. While working on her own spec material, she formatted, edited, critiqued scripts… and even wrote a redux of that B-movie classic, The Crawling Eye.
Now in the Chicago area, Dianne has put her energy into novels. After increased success in ghosting and editing, she started writing for herself. The result is the debut novel, Too Dark to Sleep.
FAQS ABOUT DIANNE:
When do you write?
When I have time and ideas. I’m a ruminator, so I usually have to walk around with an
idea for a while before I put anything on paper. I’m also not as disciplined as I should be.
I’m easily distracted unless I’m burning with a really good story. Of course, I could make
myself write, but I’d just end up with a lot of useless pages. When the stars align and I’m
in the groove, I can pop out 20 or more good pages at a sitting and that’s the best kind of
writing.
What kind of research do you do?
For Too Dark to Sleep, I used Practical Homicide Investigations by Vernon
Geberth, Techniques of Crime Scene Investigation by Barry Fisher and David Fisher, the
DSM-IV, some forensic psychology articles and a variety of other sources including, early
on, a Chicago police officer. I also spent a fair amount of time researching the Outfit and
their role in Chicago. Once my head is filled with the hard core stuff, I basically put it
aside and just write. Research is great, but a compelling story is better. It’s awkward to
read something that sounds like someone quoting what they learned, so much of the
research I do never makes it specifically to the page. The idea is not to read the facts, but
read the affects the facts have on the story.
Where do your ideas come from?
For Too Dark to Sleep, it all started after a conversation in which one question stuck with
me. What would you do if you lost everything? The conversation lasted hours and I’m sure
too much wine was consumed, but one question was the seed. There was this great
character floating around in my head who needed someplace to go, so I put the two
together and things just kind of fell into place.
For Indigo, my agent at the time suggested I come up with something new, so he threw
out a few suggested hot topics. Honestly, it’s really hard to write to market, but one of the
ideas led me to a twist in the approach… which led me to days of research and nothing
even remotely interesting or fun to write… but it did give me an interesting new
protagonist. There’s nothing quite so frustrating as a good character with no place
to play. Then one day I was watching this, well, silly show about psychic kids… which led
to me stumbling across Indigo children… which led to reading a ton of books and articles
on various subjects that seemed kind of connected… then, things just kind of fell into
place.
How long have you been writing?
A long time. My first “novel” was in fifth grade. My teacher, Mr. Zimmerman, was very
supportive. I might have pursued writing more had I not gotten bitten by the acting bug. I
did competitive speech and drama all through middle school and high school, majoring in
theater in college. About a year in, I realized I was a competent performer, but nothing
amazing. I decided to enter the university’s one-act play competition and won three years
in a row. Thought about getting a masters in that area. However, much to my
chagrine, Charles Nolte, who was teaching at the time at the University of Minnesota and
who loved my plays, told me I was really a novelist… not a playwright. I tried to prove him wrong for many years. When my husband decided to go to film school in California, I tried my hand at screenwriting. When we moved back to the Midwest, I switched to editing, critiquing and ghosting fiction while we raised two kids. Then after some successes in the ghosting and rewriting field, I realized it was time to stop selling my work to my clients and start writing for myself. So here I am. Even though Too Dark to Sleep is my first novel… I’ve got a lot of writing under my belt.
Who do you read?
Oddly enough, I don’t read in my genre. I’m a huge sci-fi geek. Bradbury’s Illustrated
Man got me started at a very early age. I also love William Gibson, Larry Niven, Asimov…
you know the standards. Love the Year’s Best Science Fiction anthologies. When I need a
really good laugh, Christopher Moore is a huge favorite. Honestly, when I read, I read to
get away and to relax.
WIP
I’m working on the first book of a new (and slightly less noir) mystery series. Indigo should be ready for release later this year.
Synopsis:
A sleepy Illinois suburb is rocked when one of its children doesn’t come home. And not just any child. An Indigo child. Psychologist Sid Adler is contracted to interview the Indigo children and their families. And she’s sure here’s something even more dangerous than a child abductor lurking in the quiet town.
I’ve got about a hundred pages of the next Maggie Quinn book and hope to release that some time next year.
Feel free to stalk Dianne at the links below:
Website / Goodreads / Twitter / Facebook / Pinterest / LinkedIn
To purchase Dianne Gallagher’s debut novel, simply click on the cover below.
GIVEAWAY
Dianne Gallagher is offering for the Giveaway two signed paperbacks to domestic (US) winners and two signed ebooks (mobi, epub or pdf) to international winners.
Easy entry as always, just leave your email address and answer the question:
What would you do if you lost everything? I chose this question because it was Dianne’s inspiration for this book, Too Dark To Sleep.
Signed paperback winners: Daphne and Kristie
Signed ebook winners: Laura and Tamara
Congratulations and a big thank you to all you wonderful commenters!
Giveaway is Closed.
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Wow… what an intense question. I would like to think that I am a really strong person, and a survivor. I have gone through some difficult things in life, though thankfully, nothing that I would categorize as losing ‘everything’. I am not a mother (YET) so I am not 100% sure how it would feel to lose a child though I imagine it is the most devastating feeling. But I would HOPE that I would pick myself up, find a purpose that is greater than my grief, and survive.
Lily @ Bookluvrs Haven
I have not suffered that loss either. I like to think we are stronger than we give ourselves credit for and when or if the time comes, we will step up to the plate. Thanks for stopping by Lily and good luck in the giveaway.
Don’t think I could read this book, even though it sounds really good. I’m too much of a wimp and wouldn’t be able to sleep for the next month! Seriously! Even scary movie previews give me nightmares. So pathetic.
But, you write great reviews, Sherry, and tempt me to read it!!
Losing everything is too much to consider for me, so my lighthearted answer would be that I hope I would find Alex in his cabin to help me put back the pieces! But then, I think the answer to surviving is in that answer, you need to have someone in your life to turn to in a time of crisis.
That’s okay Taylor. I wouldn’t want to give you nightmares. LOL. I’m with you on Alex. Who doesn’t want a slightly tarnished knight in shining armor to help pick up the pieces? ^_^
If I lost everything? Wow, I’d have a melt down for sure since I love my kids to death and then I would keep myself busy doing anything and everything. Revenge? I want to say I would be a better person and not do that but heck, they are my kids. Happy thoughts, happy thought…..I hope I never have to go down that road. Thanks for the giveaway and great review, I have added it to my list and hope to read it soon.
I can’t imagine it either. Wishing you luck. Happy Reading.
I think that if everything is taken from you, if you are to go on, you have to decide you’re going to use whatever is left to help someone else.
If I lost everything, it would probably push me over the edge! If the loss was material things, I could handle it. I have had ups and downs before. However, if it was my family, especially my children, it would be touch and go.
Yeah, material things are replaceable. Children would probably be the hardest? Thanks for stopping in Daphne. Good luck.
Numb, not want to live and still know that my life must go on. Read in the hopes that the experiences of other survivors would help me to start over, pick up the pieces, find new meaning to live and new purpose to life. So many have had to face this scenario. Why should I be any different?
I feel the human spirit has a will to survive. To carry on the species? Oh, heck, who knows, but survive we do.
When I think of that question I am trying to quantify….what is losing everything? Material things….home, car, clothes, etc
Family……spouse, child(ren), parents, etc.
Friends…..
Just losing one of these would be difficult and this list is by no means all inclusive to everything……….WOW
Got ya thinking. lol
I am not a very strong person and losing everything would probably destroy me or…..maybe I would discover that I stronger than I think I am. Really don’t want to test myself! It would be a tough road and I would have to seek out ways to give my life meaning again. Life is about love and loss….we all experience loss….can’t escape it!
Sometimes we surprise ourselves. Glad you stopped by Cathy.
As a mother the subject terrifies me and i usually avoid it but if it’s a good story written or filmed i find pressuring myself to follow it trying to feel what if… just like the way you think of something terrible happening and you knock on wood. Losing a child is probably like losing everything. What i’d do next depends if i had any more children, then i’d slap myself to get going in the best way for their favor. But if i would be left childless( knockin on wood) i’d probably destroy myself and my life and then start over again as another person.i do believe time mercifully or unmercifully makes as forget the best and the worst in our lives.
gsrelenerm@yahoo.gr
I always picture depression as a long dark tunnel. We can only hope to see that ray of light at the end that draws us forward.
If I lost everything, I wouldn’t have any purpose in my life. My family is my life.
Have to read this one. Thanks, Sherry.
Thanks Janna. Good luck. ^_^
When I went through a divorce it felt as though I had lost everything. In situation like that you are forced to keep on living. Things get better and in some cases become even more than what you thought possible. So for me, I would keep on keeping on even when it seems way too difficult to get out of bed and live!
Divorces are really tough. Cliches seem trite, but sometimes they are so true. Life goes on. Thanks Jannene for stopping by and good luck.
This is such and interesting question to consider. Some really thought-provoking answers from everyone. I think it’s always interesting to see how different people respond when considering this particular challenge. I’m a firm believer that extreme conflict reveals who we are or, more importantly, who we can potentially become. Good luck to everyone. And thanks, Sherry, for hosting this giveaway.
You are very welcome Dianne. Thanks for stopping by and sharing your thoughts with me and my readers. ^_^
That’s a loaded question! I like to think I could pick myself back up after losing my child, which is everything to me, but I’m doubtful. If I did manage to survive the loss, I hate to think what I would do or become.
This book sounds thrilling and your praise for it makes me so want to win!
Hi Laura, Good to see you again. Hope the internet is back up and running. I guess we never really know until it does happen, but I hope none of us ever have to find out what we would do. I am wishing you luck in the Giveaway.
It’s an almost impossible question to answer; because the deep emotions associated with that great of a loss are something I (thankfully) have never experienced.
However, when I try to imagine losing everything that matters to me I feel an intense amount of fear, loneliness, and exposure. I no longer have the things or people that make me feel safe and protected. I’m stripped of everything that I’ve carefully weaved together into my personal security blanket; and I am in complete despair.
I can only hope we never have to experience something like that. Thank you for sharing.
I would probably withdrawn from the would. Just going through the motions for a long while. Go walk about.
I like that you mention go walk about. Walking always seems to soothe me. Good luck Amy.
I know from the few deaths in my family that I would want to go into hiding until I could face the world again.
I think I would be like you. Thanks Tamara for stopping by and good luck in the giveaway.
What a tough question. At first I would be in seclusion grieving and trying to make sense of it all. I am a strong person so I would get back on my feet and start over.
I know it is a tough question and none of us really know what we would do. Thanks for stopping by and good luck.