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Victims Tell Their Story
Posted by Literary_Titan

The Buffalo Butcher: Jack the Ripper in the Electric City, follows a group of five prostitutes who band together to stop a murder who is praying on working girls in a city that turns a blind eye to their deaths. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
When I began to imagine a scenario in which Jack the Ripper—whose 1888 murders in London were never solved—came to Buffalo in 1901 and picked up again where he’d left off, I began to do my usual background research. And I read a lot of books about the Ripper and about other serial killers, in hopes, I suppose, of figuring out what made them tick. I quickly gave up on that, and decided that I would never understand the mind of a serial killer—nor really did I care to. But the thing that gave me the critical idea for my book—and what makes it different from other ‘slasher’ books—is that I found that in so many of these serial killer biographies, the authors (intentionally or not) seemed to adopt a kind of ‘hero-worshipful’ tone about the killers, going on in lurid detail about their exploits, criminal genius, ability to evade the law, and so on. And all this while the actual victims of their crimes were treated as so much stage-dressing, their entire lives reduced to the single moment of a terrible death at the hands of a madman. And frankly that made me sad. So I resolved to write my book differently—from the victims’ perspective. I wanted to let them tell their stories, and give them an opportunity to reclaim—and proclaim—their full humanity, which had been stolen from them, first by the procurers and pimps who lured them into vice, and then by a killer stalking them as so much prey. I’m proud of the result.
I love that the protagonists are women who are typically ignored, scorned, and blamed for their own troubles. What were some driving ideals behind their characters’ development?
Thank you for saying so! I love them, too, for that very reason. In The Buffalo Butcher, all of ‘decent society’, from the cops to the common citizens, considers these young prostitutes (my protagonists) as disposable, unworthy, morally defective creatures. Yet in truth these “working girls” are some of the most decent, genuine people you would ever like to meet. They’ve known poverty and exploitation, and have endured aconstant drip of scorn from their so-called betters. All their illusions about what life ‘ought to be’ have been stripped away—and yet through it all, they have maintained a full measure of human kindness, decency, and willingness to put it all on the line—even to the cost of their lives—for a friend. I like to tell stories about real people—and these young ladies are about as real as they come. As such, The Buffalo Butcher is no ‘cozy mystery’: it’s a gritty, unflinching look at a part of life that perhaps we’d all like to pretend doesn’t exist—but for the sake of my characters—and my love and respect for them—I could not in good conscience turn away from depicting the sometimes horrifying reality of their circumstances.
I find the world you created in this novel brimming with possibilities. Where did the inspiration for the setting come from, and how did it change as you were writing?
Being from Buffalo, New York, I’m fascinated with the history of the place, and its former centrality—once a kind of early Silicon Valley—in the economic and social history of the United States. And in 1901, the biggest world’s fair of all time, the Pan-American Exposition, took place in Buffalo, bringing eight million people to the city. No author could ask for a better setting! But here’s the more interesting part, the metaphor: the great Exposition ran for only one brief season, May through November 1901, and then all but a single building was torn down, and the glittering pleasure city reduced to rubble. Knowing that fate lends The Buffalo Butcher a slightly elegiac quality, which mirrors the lives, loves, and losses of the main characters. And, if I may add, this arc of rise and fall serves as a larger metaphor: as a young person, I witnessed my beloved hometown go through a similar decline and collapse—from boom to bust. But what is beautiful and triumphant, both in real life and I hope in the book—both for cities and with people—is that hope is never lost. Today Buffalo—a city that people once dismissed as a relic of the past—is once again on the rise, re-emerging refreshed and vibrant, and learning both to embrace its rich history and, at the same time, welcome a new and different future.
What is the next book that you are working on, and when can your fans expect it to be out?
Current of Darkness, the next installment of my Avenging Angel Detective Agency™ Mysteries, is to appear in April of 2024, and in it society sleuth Sarah Payne returns to confront a case of industrial espionage in early Niagara Falls . . . then, in October, my next off-series book, The Phantom of Forest Lawn, will be out. I’m pretty excited about both stories, and I hope readers will share my enthusiasm!
Author Links: Goodreads | Website | Instagram
Summer 1901, and the great Pan-American Exposition welcomes the world to Buffalo, New York—Queen of the Lakes . . . the Electric City. Eight million visitors throng the bustling boomtown—all of them looking for a good time.
While the Pan-American blazes bright, in its shadow lies a zone of darker pleasures: the Tenderloin District, a rabbit’s warren of saloons, brothels, and ask-no-questions hotels. In this sprawling vice quarter, fully as large as the Exposition itself, fairgoers can indulge their less innocent appetites.
As heat and swarming crowds choke the city, the bodies of prostitutes begin turning up, slashed and mutilated by a pitiless hand—their flesh carved with strange symbols. Their gruesome murders are a final indignity worked on once-hopeful young women.
Some say the killings are the work of the Devil himself. Others hint that the Whitechapel Murderer, Jack the Ripper, has crossed the Atlantic to resume his bloody career. Yet the city’s power brokers—afraid of any publicity that would harm the Exposition—turn a blind eye to the victims.
As the bloody summer wears on, only one thing is clear: it’ll be up to the working girls themselves to stop the carnage. And in The Buffalo Butcher, five of them will stand together to confront the killer . . . and to reclaim their humanity.
An important new novel by Robert Brighton, acclaimed author of the Avenging Angel Detective Agency™ Mysteries.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, goodreads, Historical Literary Fiction, historical mystery, indie author, kindle, kobo, literary fiction, literature, mystery, nook, novel, Psychological Literary Fiction, read, reader, reading, robert brighton, story, The Buffalo Butcher: Jack the Ripper in the Electric City, Thriller & Suspense Literary Fiction, Women's Friendship Fiction, writer, writing
The Devolution of America
Posted by Literary-Titan

Shantyboat: American Dystopia follows two homeless men as they navigate a labyrinth of political and moral complexities, culminating in a dramatic struggle against a backdrop of deception, murder, and a multifaceted love story. How did you develop the idea for this novel?
As with the origins of other dystopian novels, such as those by Ayn Rand and Margaret Atwood, I looked at current trends—political and cultural in particular—and asked myself, “Where might these trends, attitudes, and actions lead?” In the case of Shantyboat, I only advanced the trends about fifty years and did so without the “benefit” of an apocalyptic event to show that a dystopia can be created gradually—in fact, is much more likely to occur that way. The result in the novel is the devolution of America into a totalitarian, one-party surveillance state. The change, as mostly explained by the character Rodney, is gradual but relentless once begun. I especially wanted to distinguish Shantyboat from other dystopian novels by keeping the focus on ordinary people trying to live what were once, for them, ordinary lives.
Your characters, Dale and Rodney, have a unique dynamic and complex moral compasses. What was your process for crafting these intricate personalities?
Actually, I don’t think that Dale and Rodney are unique. At least, I didn’t intend them to be. Most Americans take their freedom for granted, just as these two did, and probably none of us knows for certain how we would react if we lost it.
But Dale and Rodney do differ from one another in significant ways. Since readers spend so much time with these two characters, I knew they had to be markedly different—in appearance, character, and voice. Also, I had the problem of letting the reader know, bit by bit, just what has happened to America between our contemporary time and the future time in the novel. I chose to give that assignment as much as possible to Rodney rather than a third-person narrator because I wanted this information to arise naturally from the action in the story. So, I made Rodney a little older than Dale, a bit wiser, and more experienced. He has served in the U.S. Navy; he has attended college for a while; he knows more about history and is more alert to current events than Dale. Thus, he becomes the one to tell us what has happened to America.
Dale, by contrast, is more adept than Rodney at practical matters. He has earned a living as a handyman and then used his knowledge of carpentry to work in the Badgett Lumber Yard, the scene of much of the novel’s action. Also, his diction is simpler, more colloquial than Rodney’s. And he is more physically robust than Rodney, who is taller but also quite thin. It is his physical traits that seem to make him attractive to Delia.
An Athene-like character, Delia adds another dimension to the novel. She has a resourcefulness and craftiness that exceed those same traits in Dale and Rodney. She has found a way to turn the state’s controls against itself. Using this knowledge, she creates a home repair business consisting of small transactions, with Dale and Rodney as her mechanics, and manages the business in such a way as to stay below the state’s surveillance thresholds.
But all three also have common experiences that bring them together in a friendship sufficient to share the risks of building a shantyboat and later of starting a business together. What they share is the loss of their livelihoods and subsequent desperation. And that desperation is so great that it prompts them to commit crimes they would not otherwise have even contemplated.
Even more dramatic than the loss of their families, Dale and Rodney share the witnessing of a horrible crime in the novel’s opening scenes. Despite the implicit dangers, Dale and Rodney become determined to build their own shantyboat even though this necessitates their stealing the building materials.
The novel tackles heavy themes such as systemic injustice and moral ambiguity. What do you hope readers take away from the discussions and dilemmas your characters face?
My intention was to show what happens when individual freedoms are lost to totalitarian rule. There are, unfortunately, more than adequate actual historical examples from the twentieth century at both ends of the political spectrum. The novel suggests these misfortunes could develop in our own country. When any government exists to preserve and advance itself rather than representing the interests of the people it is supposed to serve, then freedom gives way to conformity and slavery in various forms, such as judicial procedures that exist more for a demonstration of the state’s power than for the discovery of truth, surveillance of citizen activities by making them wear microchips in order to receive government services, use of digital money as a means for monitoring all transactions and providing a barrier to black marketing activities. We can see the means for these controls already coming into existence. At first, they are introduced as a convenience or safeguard for the citizens, but they quickly become a means of increased control for the state. We are potentially in that process with digital money right now.
Can you discuss any real-life events or personal experiences that influenced the narrative or themes of the book?
I grew up in the Mid-Ohio Valley, where the novel is set—specifically in Parkersburg, WV—and very well remember as a child seeing shantyboats along the banks of the Little Kanawha River there, a river that divides Parkersburg north and south before emptying into the Ohio River. People then (the 1940s and 1950s) often used shantyboats as a solution to the problems of homelessness and poverty. Other people simply wanted to live that way, free of the debt and taxes that come with home ownership. I’m sure this was true in many other river towns across the country. Probably, it still is. Thus, it seemed to me that a shantyboat made the perfect symbol for personal freedom to use in this novel.
Author Links: Facebook | Goodreads | Amazon
Read Shantyboat, a dystopian thriller, by the author of Trios: Death, Deceit, and Politics—both available from Wordwooze Publishing.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Carl Parsons, Contemporary Fantasy Fiction, Contemporary Literary Fiction, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, love story, murder mystery, mystery, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, Shantyboat: American Dystopia follows two homeless men as they navigate a labyrinth of political and moral complexities, story, thriller, Thriller & Suspense Literary Fiction, writer, writing
The Buffalo Butcher: Jack the Ripper in the Electric City
Posted by Literary Titan

In The Buffalo Butcher: Jack the Ripper in the Electric City, author Robert Brighton immerses readers in the vividly recreated world of Buffalo, New York, circa 1901, amidst the bustling backdrop of the Pan-American Exposition. As the city, aglow with the marvels of the Electric City, draws in millions of tourists, a dark narrative unfolds in the shadowy corners of the Tenderloin District, known for its less savory aspects.
Brighton skillfully weaves a tale of mystery and suspense as the city braces for a presidential visit, only to be shaken by a series of grisly murders within the red-light district. The victims, prostitutes, are found brutally mutilated, bearing cryptic symbols—a detail that adds a chilling layer to the narrative. Amidst fears of the impact this news might have on the city’s reputation, there is a palpable tension between the city officials’ efforts to suppress the news and the police’s urgent quest to apprehend the culprit. An intriguing subplot emerges as the women of the Tenderloin District, disillusioned by the city’s response, take it upon themselves to confront the serial killer. This twist not only propels the plot but also showcases the resilience and agency of these characters in a compelling manner.
Brighton delves deep into the theme of abuse, exploring its multifaceted impact on the characters. Through Helen, a central figure, the narrative poignantly illustrates a harrowing cycle of poor decisions and worsening circumstances, culminating in a profound portrayal of the psychological toll of abuse. The story is characterized by its meticulous attention to detail, both in character development and historical context. The author’s unflinching approach to the grittier aspects of each character’s journey adds depth and realism to the story. The pacing is particularly commendable; the story unfolds at a measured tempo, allowing readers to fully immerse themselves in the world Brighton has created.
The Buffalo Butcher: Jack the Ripper in the Electric City is a gripping novel and an emotionally resonant thriller that masterfully blends historical authenticity with suspenseful storytelling. Its exploration of mature themes like murder, prostitution, and drug abuse lends it a gritty realism, making it suitable for a mature audience with a penchant for mystery and historical fiction. This book promises to keep readers engrossed to its very last page.
Pages: 328 | ASIN : B0CKS7P2L8
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, goodreads, Historical Literary Fiction, historical mystery, indie author, kindle, kobo, literary fiction, literature, mystery, nook, novel, Psychological Literary Fiction, read, reader, reading, robert brighton, story, The Buffalo Butcher: Jack the Ripper in the Electric City, Thriller & Suspense Literary Fiction, Women's Friendship Fiction, writer, writing




