Sleuth Slayer
Bruce & Jeffrey Burton
ISBN: 9781929763320
Pocol Press
Reviewed By Renee Washburn
Official Apex Reviews Rating: 
When
his friend and colleague, P. Jax Thornton III, alerts him to a recent
series of murders of noted mystery authors, Guy Davitt, a mystery
author himself, is hardly alarmed. The apparent circumstances
surrounding the deaths are hardly suspicious; in fact, the alcohol
poisoning of one - who just happened to be an alcoholic - was, well,
expected. Despite Jax's spiked paranoia surrounding the murders, Davitt
brushes his concerns aside with glib indifference.
That is,
until Jax himself dies suddenly in a horrific car crash; then, upon
closer inspection of what appears to be a tragic accident, Davitt
begins to notice intriguing signs of foul play. As a result, in typical
"inquisitive author" fashion, he begins to ponder the true motives
behind Jax's death, as well as the other authors who were recently
slain.
As he launches his own personal investigation, Davitt
soon comes to the grim realization that the murders have all been
lifted straight from the pages of mystery novels, info that serves as
both a blessing and a curse for him as he sloshes through the unsavory
worlds of privileged entitlement, business politics, and police
corruption in his quest for truth and ultimate justice. Most disturbing
of all, though, is Davitt's startling realization that his time to
solve the case is severely limited by none other than the fact that his
own name appears on the killer's list…if ever he needed his "writer's
instincts" to kick in, there's no better time than the present.
Sleuth Slayer
is an enjoyable read crafted by the superbly creative father-and-son
writing team of Bruce & Jeffrey Burton. A thoroughly well-written
tale of suspenseful intrigue, the Burtons' engaging story is both
intricately crafted and masterfully executed. In addition, the sardonic
wit laced throughout is a perfect counterbalance to the grimness of the
subject and its often heavy emotional undertones, offsetting the
overall pathos of the tale just enough.
The true appeal of Sleuth Slayer,
though, lies in the masterful way that the Burtons employ the tools of
their chosen genre. By including a number of false starts and
redirects, they ensure that the true identity of the killer remains a
secret until the very end – and even then the reader is surprised to
learn that the ultimate purpose of the murders is far from what you'd
expect of a typical serial killer.
Creatively inventive with tight prose and even tighter dialogue, Sleuth Slayer is a can't miss thriller-within-a-thriller. Highly recommended.
Official Apex Reviews Interview: Bruce And Jeffrey Burton (Sleuth Slayer)
Apex
Reviews: Bruce and Jeffrey, thanks for joining us for this interview.
We're looking forward to learning more about your book.
The storyline of Sleuth Slayer is truly unique and inventive. Where did you get the inspiration for the story?
Bruce
Burton: Very casually. Jeff marinated it in his brain's creative
juices. The instant he told me over a beer, I labeled it a
million-dollar premise and insisted it was so strong it deserved a full
novel.
Jeffrey Burton: Mystery writers have written serial
killer novels for generations because those kinds of books are great
fun to read—all sorts of cat and mouse, twists and turns, etc. I
thought that a nice twist on this premise would be that a serial killer
is stalking famous mystery writers.
AR: Is Guy modeled on a specific person, or is he an amalgamated mixture of different personalities?
BB:
Amalgamated mixtures—Guy and the rest. Jeff set Guy in motion and
established his parameters. I added lots of the rhythms and
"non-housekeeping details" of Jeff's one-time lifestyle in his bachelor
pad in St. Paul's Highland area, where his mildewed shower slowly
became a Petri dish.
JB: First off, that shower was a Petri dish
when I moved in. What do you expect for $300 a month? Guy's an
amalgamated mixture, a third-tier mystery writer who had once, some
years back, been second-tier. He's fighting writer's block, dodging an
angry agent, and generally squeaking along by the hair of his
chinny-chin-chin.
AR: You
manage to conceal the true identity of the killer, as well as the
motives for the killings, until the very end, and masterfully so. Was
this a difficult task to accomplish?
BB: Not difficult.
It played out quite logically from the character of each major player
as the piece evolved, and the traditional rules of the genre in which
Sleuth Slayer is immersed. When Jeff invented the ultimate final twist,
he couldn't stop laughing for days—nor could I—because it seemed so
hilariously organic to the book's fictional universe. Many readers have
favorably commented on this.
JB: We had an initial outline of
the general twists and turns that the novel would take. The difficult
part was seeding little clues throughout the book so the reader
wouldn't feel cheated at the end.
AR:
Throughout the book, you make many inside references to the world of
publishing, including the good, the bad, and the ugly aspects of it
all. What have been some of the reactions of your friends and
colleagues in the literary world to this?
BB: I suspect
the publisher grabbed the book rights precisely because of this "inside
baseball" aspect. A reader from Tucson recently told me she was equally
entertained and educated from that part.
JB: We've been blessed
with wonderful reviews (which reminds me: thank you, Renee, for the
kind, kind words). The St. Paul Pioneer Press put it pretty well by
stating that it's a "mystery that pokes gentle fun at the world of
mystery writing."
AR: Our reviewer made special mention of the wittiness of your writing style. Is this a typical hallmark of your storytelling?
BB:
Here's the inside scoop. We exchanged a least five full edits as we
struggled to meld Jeff's voice and mine into a single voice. During
this lengthy process, Jeff's penchant for twisted ironies—probably deep
in the Burton family gene code—triggered my own. During the edits, we
wound up playing co-authors' Ping-Pong as we sprinkled the book with
ironies and witticisms. Luckily for me, I stumbled across Chandler's
dictum about making all your analogies surprising bon bons for the
reader, and to get myself in the mood I would re-read a lot of Twain's
"A Pen Warmed-Up in Hell" and the Algonquin Roundtable stuff. But
Jeff's ironic wit just seems to bubble up from his psyche without a
need to prime the pump.
JB: I try to add some wit and dark humor to all of my writing. Our primary goal with Sleuth Slayer
was to make it an engaging mystery, a suspenseful page turner. But due
to the nature of the subject matter, we also wanted it to be a bit of a
satire on the mystery publishing industry. As such, the interplay
between Guy and Frances is a tad bit reminiscent of Nick and Nora
Charles in The Thin Man.
AR:
How do you craft your stories? Do you prepare outlines regarding your
characters and plot developments first, or does the book tend to unfold
on its own?
BB: We started with Jeff's million dollar
concept. Then the traditional rules for mystery writing (three
suspects; at least four milestone surprises; plausible police
procedures, etc.). We did a rough outline, from which we each glommed
onto initial writing segments of 50%. Then, during our multiple edits
we rearranged the segments, added transitions and sometimes full
chapters, sliced out or totally revised a few segments that no longer
fit the evolved animal. According to the ancient metaphor, every good
novel is given birth as an independent organism during the writing of
it. Without twisting the old metaphor completely out of shape, in our
case a father and son gave birth to a literary…hmm, let's not go there.
JB:
Yes, Dad, let's not go there. In terms of outlining, Dad came to visit
in the early stages, and we sat in a Panera Bread coffee shop one
afternoon O.D.'ing on caffeine. By the time the day was done, we had a
working outline from which we assigned each other certain storylines to
pursue. For the past dozen years or so, I've written predominantly
short stories. I'll have an idea, jot it down on a loose piece of
paper, and then toss it in a drawer. After it ferments awhile, I'll
pound out a draft and then edit it into shape. Dad has been kind enough
to edit all of my short stories. I've been real fortunate to have had
several dozen of my stories published in a wide variety of genre
magazines (mystery, horror, sci-fi) as well as a collection of my short
mystery and horror stories published as a collection a few years back
(Shadow Play, 2005).
AR: Who have been some of your chief writing influences?
BB:
Twain; Dickens; Shakespeare; Sophocles; Tennessee Williams; Ken
Follet's histories; Buckley's CIA novels; Bill Prosser; Richard
Epstein; Stephen Ambrose.
JB: Lately I've been on a steady diet
of mysteries and there is no one better than Michael Connelly, followed
very closely by John Sandford, Robert Crais, John Connolly, Greg Iles,
and Lee Child.
AR: Please share more with our readers about your publisher, Pocol Press.
JB:
Pocol Press is a well-established small publisher in Clifton, Virginia,
that has a stable of first-rate authors, such as Brian Ames, Mark
Doyon, and the four-time Pushcart Prize nominee Tom Sheehan. In
addition, Pocol Press is the Go-To publisher for books on 19th Century
Baseball. Dad and I are helping them branch off into mystery.
AR: What are your future writing/publishing plans?
BB:
Two law review research pieces currently underway; first draft of a
sequel to Sleuth Slayer, and a modern western about an aging John
McCain-type sheriff in Wyoming ranch country who's struggling to solve
a major rural murder case while getting his election year ears pinned
back by an opportunistic, extremely fluent, young female lawyer who's a
candidate for his job.
JB: I've been cranking out a slew of
short horror stories lately, but I'm also fleshing out a political
mystery/thriller that I plan to write later in the year.
AR: Where can people learn more about you, your writings, and your other efforts?
BB: My Visiting Professor's faculty bio will be posted at Charlotte School of Law during the 2008-2009 academic year.
JB: Please feel free to check out my website www.SomeHack.com for upcoming news on both my father Bruce and myself.
AR: Also, how can our readers contact you directly?
BB: bwburton@hotmail.com
JB: SomeHack@SomeHack.com
AR: Any final thoughts you'd like to share?
BB:
I'm nearly 70, and over the decades I've written or co-authored a
couple dozen scholarly legal research pieces with distinguished law
profs, which are great fun. But for the sheer joy of creating a
fictional universe in partnership with Jeff, it's been an old man's
unexpected pinnacle.
JB: It was a blast working on this project
with my father. A lot more fun than that backyard shed we cobbled
together 30 years ago or that one time we tried to fix the wiring on my
car and wound up in the ER.
AR: Thanks again, Bruce and Jeffrey, and best of continued success to you in all your endeavors!