The Ring Of Truth


The question I'm most commonly asked (and I think the question most writers are most commonly asked) is where do I get my ideas. I probably know the genesis of 2/3s of my books; the other third is lost in the mists of time.

But of all the books I've written, The Ring Of Truth is the only one that started with an image. I'm not a visual person, and I'm certainly not a descriptive writer, but one day I pictured a room, and from that came the book.

At the time I wrote The Ring Of Truth, I was intrigued by the Big Lie, the kind of falsehood that starts out almost casually and takes on a life of its own. I'd been exploring various plot possibilities that hinged on a Big Lie, but for some reason or another, I couldn't make any of them work.

Now things get hazy in my mind about the origin of the book. Because for reasons I don't remember, and quite frankly can't even conceive, I decided the Big Lie in question would involve teenage girls and prominent politicians.

The teenage girls, I understand. That's who I write about. It's the politicians I have trouble with (well, I still have trouble with politicians, but for far different reasons).

When I came up with The Ring Of Truth, I was doing most of my writing for one publishing house and had an extremely comfortable relationship with my editor there. I approached her with the idea for the book and she gave me the okay. In retrospect, this was as loony on her part as it was on mine. But I gleefully wrote the book and she edited it and it got published.

A couple of things happened after that. The reviews (and they included a New York Times Book Review review, so the book was taken seriously) all thought the book was about sexual harassment. I guess sexual harassment was the hot topic of the day. But for me, it was just the McGuffin, the incident on which the various Big Lies would play out.

The other thing that happened was my realizing that not only did teenage girls have no interest in state politics, they didn't even know what a lieutenant governor was, so why should they care if some character or another claimed said lieutenant governor made a pass at her?

As you may have guessed, The Ring Of Truth was not my biggest selling book.

Now, I don't read my books after I've written them, so I haven't read The Ring Of Truth in 15 years. The reviews that I found for it said there were unexpected plot twists, but I'll have to take their word for it, since I don't remember what they are. I remembered the name of the heroine's best friend (Justine) but I didn't remember the name of the heroine (Sloan).

But what I remember most vividly is the image of the room and a mirror that sometimes reflects what's in front of it and sometimes doesn't.

The Ring Of Truth is now available on Kindle and on Nook.

Read it and let me know what the plot twists are!
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Published on March 26, 2012 08:44
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