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Suspense and Thrillers

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If you are an author of a mystery, suspense/thriller book and would like to lead a group discussion in a group read of your book, please send a private message to the owner of the group.

November's group read is The Gatekeeper led by the author, Michelle Gagnon
  • Category: Genres | Shelfari | Started August 2007

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  • Brad B

    November Book Discussion: The Gatekeeper by Michelle Gagnon (led by the author)

    Michelle Gagnon's new book The Gatekeeper comes out today in mass market paperback, so get your copy today! It should be available in most bookstores and on Amazon. Michelle's previous book Boneyard is also available free online for a limited time.

    Michelle will begin a discussion on The Gatekeeper shortly, so let's show our support for this talented author and get an inside scoop on some of her thought processes along the way!
    Brad B started this discussion 1 month ago. ( reply )

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  • IYamVixenBooks

    IYamVixenBooks 

    Can't wait!!!

    posted 1 month ago. ( reply )
  • Michelle G

    Michelle G 

    Hi Everyone-

    I thought I'd kick things off with some fun facts about the book, including the genesis of the idea.

    So a little over a year ago, I was having dinner with a friend who is a veteran FBI agent. We were discussing how his job has changed in the aftermath of 9/11. Somehow the conversation turned to domestic terror groups, like the one that spawned Timothy McVeigh.

    Through mouthfuls of pasta, he said, “You know what’s scary? Those groups have doubled in size in the past decade, but after 9-11 all the resources allocated to monitoring them were diverted to foreign terrorism. So there are twice as many of these guys out there, and no one is watching them. And now all these groups share the same agenda: they’re all anti-immigration. My biggest fear is that someone will manage to galvanize them.”

    Boom- that was the seed of the idea for THE GATEKEEPER.

    So my plot revolves around someone galvanizing them, kind of an American version of Osama bin Laden, who intends to commit the worst terrorist attack on American soil to serve his own ends.

    And what would constitute the worst sort of attack? A nuclear one, obviously. But when I started researching, I discovered that in the United States, we're actually quite adept at managing high level nuclear waste. Spent fuel rods and their ilk are carefully monitored within the country, consolidated at sites like Yucca mountain. And according to ICE, every single shipping container that enters this country undergoes a radiation check, which eliminated the possibility of having uranium smuggled in (although that has become a terrorist mainstay in films and TV series).

    However, I also stumbled across this fun fact. While the high level radioactive waste is carefully monitored, the low level stuff that might be used in a dirty bomb is actually loosely tracked. In fact, much of it isn't monitored at all.

    In fact, several sources of radiation, mainly from defunct medical and oil drilling equipment, are lost or stolen every year. As of 2008, U.S. companies reported losing track of almost 1,700 radioactive sources, an average of 430 a year. In Texas alone, between 1995 and 2001 more than one hundred and twenty-three items fell off the grid. Most were never recovered.

    That's an average of eight sources a week that no one can account for. And if just one of those fell into the wrong hands, it could be used to create a pretty nasty dirty bomb.

    The one fallacy in the book (as far as I know- hey, no book is perfect) is the job that one of my characters holds. He works as a DOD contractor, working on a project to consolidate those types of low level waste. And according to my research, no such safeguards actually exist. Scary, and worth sending a letter to your Congressperson.

    I live in California, where border issues are in the paper almost daily, even here in liberal San Francisco. It's a complex issue, which I tried to show as many sides of as possible in the book. There are no easy answers, so I didn't try to pitch one side or the other. What I tried to show was how effective hate can be at uniting people, and that's never a good thing.

    As part of my book release, I'm holding a drawing for a MacBook laptop computer. Entry is free, all you have to do is sign up for my newsletter (which comes out rarely, maybe a half-dozen times a year). For ten more entries, answer this question: "Which two characters (aside from Kelly Jones and Jake Riley) appear in both THE TUNNELS and THE GATEKEEPER?"

    posted 1 month ago. ( reply )
  • James M

    James M 

    The Gatekeeper makes me want to read Tunnels. I enjoyed the Gatekeeper and if you haven't read it and like fast paced action this book is for you.

    posted 1 month ago. ( reply )
  • Michelle G

    Michelle G 

    So glad you enjoyed it, James!

    posted 1 month ago. ( reply )
  • Brad B

    Brad B 

    Got my copy at the bookstore today - I'll be starting it soon.

    posted 1 month ago. ( reply )
  • Brad B

    Brad B 

    Had a workshop in NYC, so I figured I would start reading on the train. I got totally engrossed in the story and before I knew it, I was in Penn Station. On a rather odd note, my workshop was at the USS Intrepid - when I got back on the train, I was right around pg 58, where one of the characters actually mentions a family trip to the USS Intrepid - weird.

    Anyway, I'm about 100 pgs into it - its a fantastic page-turner so far, can't wait to get back to it.

    posted 3 weeks ago. ( reply )
  • Ladyslott

    Ladyslott 

    Yay - it's available for Kindle!! Just downloaded it. I've read The Tunnels, and The Boneyard and loved them both. I have had the pleasure of meeting Michele and she's a lovely person- don't know where these ideas come from - she looks so normal ;0)

    posted 3 weeks ago. ( reply )
  • Michelle G

    Michelle G 

    So happy to hear that the Kindle version is out, and that you're enjoying the book, Brad! That is an odd coincidence with the Intrepid.

    posted 3 weeks ago. ( reply )
  • SteveC

    SteveC 

    Just curious Michelle. My best friend's family name is Gagnon. You don't happen to have family in Norwich, CT do you?

    posted 3 weeks ago. ( reply )
  • Michelle G

    Michelle G 

    Legend has it that all the Gagnons in North America are descended from the same three brothers who came over from Normandy in the 1600s. So we're related somewhere down the line...

    posted 3 weeks ago. ( reply )
  • Judi P

    Judi P 

    Hello everyone!! just joined the group and was intrigued by this series, but I am the type who has to begin with the first book in the series so I just downloaded tunnels to my kindle. Should be starting it soon...

    posted 3 weeks ago. ( reply )
  • Michelle G

    Michelle G 

    Speaking of which, feel free to ask any questions you might have about Tunnels or Boneyard, too.

    posted 3 weeks ago. ( reply )
  • Brad B

    Brad B 

    Just finished today, I really have to say that I haven't read a book that fast in a really long time, the pace really kept me on my toes and made me want to keep reading, even when my eyes were so heavy with sleep and watering so badly that I could hardly see the pages anymore.

    But aaarrgghh! the ending! I really don't know what to think of it, what a way to keep a person on his toes even when the book is over. I guess I have to wait for the next book.

    posted 2 weeks ago. ( reply )
    show 1 reply
    • Mark W

      Mark W 

      I completely agree - I read this book with lightning speed trying to keep up with the pace of the book. And Michelle, you have to let us know, when is the next book scheduled to be released?

      posted 2 weeks ago. ( reply )
  • Michelle G

    Michelle G 

    Thanks, Brad, I'm glad you enjoyed it! All of your questions will be answered at the outset of the next book- and as a bonus for this forum exclusively, I'll send the opening chapters to anyone who is interested at the end of the month (with the caveat, of course, that they remain unedited and will likely change in the printed version).

    posted 2 weeks ago. ( reply )
  • BeckyL

    BeckyL 

    Oh, just got notification my copy is shipping -- guess I'll be reading it on a the plane to Charleston (or at least that's the plan, if I can wait). I always read your books on trips for some reason. Just works out that way!

    posted 2 weeks ago. ( reply )
  • Michelle G

    Michelle G 

    So should we discuss the ending? I have to say, in some ways it took me by complete surprise too. For each of the last two books,there was a closing chapter that ended up on the cutting room floor (so to speak) because upon re-reading, the scenes struck me as trite.
    For this book, I really didn't know how it was going to end until I wrote it-and in the end, after re-reading it, I felt like that particular ending was necessary. My personal pet peeve is when protagonists are put in peril book after book, but nothing terrible ever really happens to them. The end result is that as a reader, you stop fearing for them-the "James Bond" syndrome, if you will.
    I wanted to try to avoid that.

    posted 13 days ago. ( reply )
    show 3 replies
    • Brad B

      Brad B 

      I would love to discuss the ending. Its kind of funny what you said about it surprising you too. It is weird how the book almost gets away from you and it goes places that you really didn't realize it would go. An example that pops into my mind is from one of my favorite books: The Princess Bride, when William Goldman speaks about having to kill off Westley he sat down and cried because he knew no way to avoid it - then of course, the fun starts and the story eventually has a happy ending.
      The ending of your book is a great ending, but then of course it sets you up for your next book - no matter how you resolve the issue you set up - and as you said, it does make you worry for the characters, when you don't get into a comfortable "syndrome" knowing that your main character is going to be safe no matter what.

      posted 13 days ago. ( reply )
    • BeckyL

      BeckyL 

      Well you definitely succeeded in not letting up on the reader's concerns for the characters! Agh!

      I really enjoyed this one, by the way. I've enjoyed each of the books in the series so far, but this one was very different in the kind of cases Jones and Riley were working. Very exciting and very fast paced!

      posted 14 hours ago. ( reply )
    • Michelle G

      Michelle G 

      Thanks for saying so, Becky. And it's funny, I'm right at the ending of the next book in the series.Hope to finish it this week. And I have no idea right now what's going to happen.

      posted 12 hours ago. ( reply )
  • Michelle G

    Michelle G 

    Exactly, Brad! Another important issue for me was not to cast any of the women, especially Madison Grant, in too much of a "victim" role. I wanted them all to be proactive on whatever level they could personally manage. So even though she's a kidnapping victim, once she gets her wits about her Madison actively tries to change her situation. For me in some ways she had the most dramatic character arc in the book. She starts as a very self-involved young girl, and ends a changed person. Not necessarily for the better, mind you, but changed.

    posted 12 days ago. ( reply )
    show 1 reply
    • BeckyL

      BeckyL 

      I really loved Madison's character. I kind of expected to see more from her, though, after her MacGyver move with the DS and the satellite. She definitely stood out and was very memorable.

      posted 14 hours ago. ( reply )
  • Michelle G

    Michelle G 

    I wanted to keep her as realistic as possible. Somewhere down the line, I'd love to revisit her to see what she ends up doing with her life as a result of the experience.

    posted 12 hours ago. ( reply )
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