Posted on Leave a comment

Release Day: The Dead Make No Mark

We are excited for the release of The Dead Make No Mark by Mark Atley!

Detective Valdez will stop at nothing to bring a killer to justice—even if it means losing a part of himself.

With the informant and his wife dying, the detective is in a race against time. He’s in pursuit of Kade Carradine, the man who murdered the informant in a bid to keep them quiet. Valdez recruits OHP Trooper Barbara Jones, who is eager to redeem herself after Kade steals her police cruiser and causes her suspension.

Meanwhile, Kade finds his back is to a wall, and it’s not just because law enforcement is closing in. After discovering his best friend plans to kill him now that the informant is out of the picture, he changes the game, acting as an agent of chaos in the ensuing power struggle with his crew.

The Dead Make No Mark is an ensemble crime drama focusing on what happens after the dead are buried and the police tape has been taken down. The end is just the beginning for Detective Valdez.

You can order this book  in all formats directly from our 4HP Website and receive 10% OFF using coupon code 4HP10!

Posted on

Writing Journey

I decided to become a writer early on in my life. I thought I wanted to work in comic books. If I can’t do something, I’m one of those people who gives me the drive to do it even more. I suffer from dyslexia and severe learning disabilities—ADHD as well now—so reading was always a challenge until I got older. I couldn’t read substantially until the 3rd grade. My love of reading took off when I started reading tie-in books for Halo and Star Wars. 

Conversely, I could always write. My mother and grandmother were both English teachers. My sentence structure and voice have almost always been there. During my reading journey, I began thinking, I could do this; I could write the words that take place in my head. Commas still baffle me. 

The adage is to write what you know. I know crime. I found my authorial voice while working in a jail. The first serious story I wrote involved one of my favorite character creations, which is probably the closest character to me in terms of autobiographical details and thoughts, and sadly, a character most people haven’t been introduced to, Paul-Wayne Collins. The story involved the investigation of a missing kid and a realization that the parents had done something to the kid. The crux of the story was the interview of the parent. The story was written while I worked overnight as a Detention Officer in the Tulsa County Jail. Somewhere during writing that story, my voice (as it is now) exploded onto the page. There was no turning back at that point.

I am now a detective for a suburb of Tulsa. I love learning and listening to people. They fascinate me. I like to know why something happens. 

In progressing through my career, I’ve become enthralled with empathy. 

When I finished The Olympian (my first novel), editor Jim Thomsen asked me, “Why do you write?” It only took me about fifteen novels (published and unpublished) to figure it out. Empathy.

As far as crime as a genre goes, I like to have my characters tell readers how they feel as opposed to me telling them in interior dialogue. Most authors could write great dialogue by turning interior thoughts into conversational scenes. Because I write characters through dialogue, and through character comes plot, it’s easier to stay in contemporary settings, as far as description and setting.

I also like the idea of crime happening around us. I daydream, and through daydreaming, I imagine a world happening around me that people usually don’t see. I like using “mundane” settings and set pieces to tell tense and exciting stories. I read once that many thriller writers do the global hopping/spanning narratives to give readers an escape. I chose to do the opposite to accomplish the same task.

I love the idea of not keeping anything from the reader and telling the story through multiple viewpoints. Still, in doing so, the reader gets to puzzle out the greater narrative—that’s where the mystery comes in.

I am not doing my job if I cannot kill off a character. If, at some point, I resist what the story is telling me to do versus my intention, I always go with what scares me and what the story is telling me to do. It knows better than I do. I don’t have a starting repeating character, but I do have some favorites that come and go in certain books. They’re safe until they are not. 

My first book, The Olympian, and the follow-up American Standard were both difficult but for two different reasons. The Olympian was difficult because it was my first book, and I tried to include too much. American Standard was difficult because I had not learned to let the narrative tell me the story versus forcing the narrative into a story. I learned much about that book, specifically explosive openings and avoiding flashbacks. I learned to tell a straight-line story. It’s more complicated than you think. Flashbacks should be limited, valued, and not used because you aren’t smart enough as a writer to include the information differently.

I write in the present tense because it works for me. I am a detective. I write in past tense all day long because detectives investigate crimes that have already happened. I would love to be able to write in the past tense in my novels, and I believe it would earn me a more significant readership; however, it quickly becomes work and not fun. Present tense allows me to have fun, write creatively, and use jump cuts.

I found I write in chronological order. Sometimes, a scene or chapter is written out of sequence, but for each scene to be truly important to the narrative, it must build upon what’s come before it. 

I usually start with two ideas smashed together and motivations for the characters I believe can best tell the story. Then I go from there. 

I find outlines limiting and draining and typically don’t stay with them for very long. Not because of anything I do. It’s the characters. They have a mind of their own and don’t like to be told what to do.

The best advice I’ve received about starting a novel is, what is it about? Mainly, what is the theme? What do you want the reader to take away from the experience? What are your characters’ motivations? Why are you doing this? Money and fame—do something different. Because you like talking to yourself and sharing those conversations with others—this is the only way you can do this without people looking at you funny.

As far as what people can expect as they read my work, simply this, they will be entertained. It is my only promise as a writer and my only goal. If readers get something else out of my writing, I’m thrilled, but as far as my goal as a writer…entertainment—I want the reader to finish the books with a satisfied smirk and think it was a journey.

Posted on

Series Catch-Up: Tulsa Underworld

Do you love to dive into an amazing series?

We have the ultimate thriller/crime series for you: 

There are 3 books so far in this series and a fourth about to launch for pre-order!

Check out book one Too Late To Say Goodbye here:

Grief is a bitch

When Tony Mora’s partner Clyde dies saving his life during a botched DEA operation, the loss throws him in a tailspin. Not that things were going so well before that. Between the married (albeit unhappily) co-worker carrying his baby and his dead partner’s widow putting the moves on him, Tony’s romantic relationships are a complete disaster.

Truth is, mid-level boss Franklin Hayes didn’t intend to shoot Tony’s partner. Business meetings can be tense, but they don’t have to end in a bloodbath. Unless that was the plan. With Tony on his trail, Franklin discovers he’s merely a pawn in the unraveling Siriano criminal organization, but he may be stuck in a power struggle well beyond his control.

Brimming with action, the alternating POVs in “Too Late to Say Goodbye” explore the depths of friendship and ambition. The novel answers the question: How far are people really willing to go for revenge?

You can order this book  in all formats directly from our 4HP Website and receive 10% OFF using coupon code 4HP10!