A Chat with Nike Chillemi

First, a bit about Nike...
Nike Chillemi has been called a crime fictionista due to her passion for crime fiction. She is the founding board member of the Grace Awards and its Chairman, a reader's choice awards for excellence in Christian fiction. She writes book reviews for The Christian Pulse online magazine. Burning Hearts is the first book in The Sanctuary Point series, published by Desert Breeze. Goodbye Noel , the second book in the series released in December, 2011 and won the Grace Award 2011 in the Mystery/Romantic Suspense/Thriller category. Perilous Shadows, the third in the series released in July, 2012. She is a member of American Christian Fiction Writers (ACFW) and the Edgy Christian Fiction Lovers (Ning).
Nike, what drew you to write novels set in the 1940s?
I love the 1940s. The era had its own panache. There was a kind of natural glamour and sophistication to the period that didn't seem forced or egotistical. Ordinary women loved to dress up. The men were so debonair. I obtained my college degree from The Fashion Institute of Technology in NYC. I'm completely enthralled by the fashion, hair, and automobiles of the 1940s. It was also a pivotal time for our nation. So many American soldiers had fallen in the war. America seemed to be losing her innocence slowly but surely. Yet, in spite of great national and personal loss, Americans had great optimism then. There was a spirit of get up and go. I wanted to create characters who struggled with the issues that framed the America we live in today. What’s your favorite movie from the 1940s? Actor or actress from the 1940s?
Interestingly enough, in my newest release, Perilous Shadows, heroine Kiera Devane tells hero Argus Nye he reminds her of the actor who is my favorite from the golden age of cinema…Jimmy Stewart. That novel also has Kiera and Argus going to the movies. It's quite a humorous scene. The movie is Road To Riostarring Bob Hope and Bing Crosby and is a riotous film. Although Kiera and Argus go to the flick to have a respite from the murder case they're investigating, the scene pulls them deeper into the hunt for the killer. I also love Jimmy Stewart and the "Road" movies! What’s the most interesting thing you learned about this time period from researching your stories?When researching hero Lorne Kincade's backstory for the first novel in the series, Burning Hearts, I learned that French resistance fighters hid in the catacombs beneath Marseilles from the Vichy French and Nazis who had taken over France. Lorne appeared to be a simple motorcycle courier during the war, but in fact went on secret missions in France under the direct command of General Patton. I wrote a scene in that novel where now stateside, Lorne awakes sweating from a nightmare in which he and his wartime buddy race through the back alleys of Marseilles for the safety of the catacombs. In essence, Lorne has had a flashback in a dream.If you lived in the 1940s, what role would you see for yourself? Rosie the Riveter, ration-point-collecting homemaker, WAAC or WAVE, or daring spy?I think I would have been a WAAC or a WAVE, probably a WAVE because of my love of the ocean and the WAVEs were Navy. These women were considered part of the US Naval Reserves. Although WAVES only served stateside until the very end of the war when some shipped out to Hawaii, not yet a state. I would liked to have served in communications or intelligence. One necessary task in war time is poring through all the many newspapers published in the US looking for articles and/or advertisements that might be code from enemy collaborators or enemy agents. That is something I would have been interested in doing.That would be interesting! Nike's Books...



Published on September 20, 2012 04:00
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