Joani Ascher Interviews
Tuesday, August 15, 2006
Joani Ascher on Seeking Vengeance, Training Seeing Eye    Dogs and Baking Killer Cakes
All      of your book titles have the word ?Vengeance? in them. Are you a vengeful      person? :)
     Not really, although I do get even with people who annoy me by killing them      in my books. In
Vengeance Tastes Sweet, for example, I poisoned an      obnoxious caterer and in Vengeance Cuts Loose I got retribution for      a particularly offensive hair cut by having a hairdresser stabbed to death      with his own scissors.

How did you come up with the idea for your Wally Morris mysteries?

     The character of Wally grew out of the first mystery. I wondered who would      care that a young college student was murdered and a high school cheerleader      was missing. Wally, who always wants to make things right and to help out in      times of need, seemed perfect for the role. She always has a refrigerator      and freezer full of food, so she can provide meals for those in distress,      and she has a big heart, so she could understand the grief of the family who      lost a son. It helped that her younger daughter had caught the eye of the      local detective, Elliot Levine, because he was a lot more willing to share      information if it meant he could spend time with Wally?s daughter.


Oops?I thought Wally was a man.

     Wally is a woman. Her real name is Voltairine, but she rarely uses it.      People can learn more about both of us by going to    
www.joaniascher.com.

Your website has many pictures of handsome dogs you refer to as ?my      Seeing Eye puppies.? Do you train Seeing Eye dogs? And what about the      solitary cat pictured there?

     My family has been raising Seeing Eye puppies for twelve years. We don?t      train them, that?s for the trainers at Seeing Eye to do, but we raise them      to be civilized members of canine society. We take them on socialization      outings, so they become accustomed to the day-to-day things that a blind      person might encounter, such as trains, stores, public buildings, arenas,      shopping malls, and hotels for overnight trips. The more they get used to,      the easier it is for them to become guide dogs.

     Smudge, the cat, thinks he?s a dog. We adopted him a few weeks after      receiving our second puppy, Misty, who is one of the two who had career      reassignments to be our pets. Smudge personally endorses and helps train      each successive puppy in the fine art of living with a cat. He?s also good      at chasing away deer.


How does one go about training a Seeing Eye? Do you yourself need      special training?

     We attend meetings twice a month, where all the dogs work on a variety of      commands and behaviors, such as ignoring distractions, coming on command,      and other more complicated work. It?s amazing to see twenty or thirty dogs      in a room together without any barking or growling. There are many rules to      follow when raising one of these valuable animals, all designed to make a      successful guide dog when they are finished being trained. It is a 4-H      project, by the way, for the children of the club, and they can learn a lot      from it. There are many adult puppy raisers as well. By the way, most of the      names in my books were names of Seeing Eye puppies.


That's neat.

     You like to make theme cakes. What?s the coolest cake you?ve ever created?      Did you bake a cake in honor of getting published?

     When one of the library cataloguers retired I made a cake for her that      looked like a book. The title was GONE WITH THE ISBN or HOW TO RETIRE IN      STYLE. It was picture of a sandy beach, made with granulated brown sugar, a      lounge chair with umbrella, and a plane flying overhead with the first part      of the title trailing from it. The cake even had the correct Dewey decimal      number on the ?spine.?

     When I have a book coming out I invite all my friends to come celebrate. I      spend days baking all different kinds of cakes, pies, and scones and I cover      the dining room table with them. For my most recent book I made a flourless      ginger chocolate soufflé cake, a cappuccino cream cheese cake, a lemon pound      cake, a blueberry pie, an applesauce cake, cranberry orange scones, a dark      chocolate brown sugar bundt cake, and a cinnamon sour cream pound cake, all      from scratch. For the health nuts out there who are cringing from the carbs,      there were fruit and cheese platters.


Oh my gosh, I'm drooling now. Tell us about your latest mystery,
    Vengeance on High.
     Real estate tycoon Keith Hollis?s plans to develop the Grosvenor quarry      cause an uproar at the Fourth of July celebration. As the last ember falls      below the rim of the quarry, so does Keith. Wally?s former students were his      daughters so of course she gets involved. At the same time, Wally?s daughter      Rachel is friends with Keith?s estranged wife. There are numerous suspects      since many people were opposed to a residential development in the abandoned      quarry which had turned itself into a nature preserve. As the police are      getting nowhere, Wally must help out. Her special knack of getting people to      talk jeopardizes her life.


You have volunteered at local libraries for fifteen years. What?s      your favorite children?s book?

     After volunteering at the local school libraries for fifteen years, I took a      job in a public library when my youngest child went off to college. I work      in the children?s/young adult?s room and I process all the new books. There      are so many wonderful ones.

     I loved animal stories, mysteries, and science fiction as a child. To answer      your question, though, I?d have to say one of my favorites back then was
    A Wrinkle inTime, by Madeline L?Engle, but there are so many      more that I love now. One that had long term impact on me was Follow my      Leader, by James B. Garfield. It was what got our family into raising      Seeing Eye dogs thirty years later, after I gave the book to my daughter to      read.

You and your husband have lived and traveled many places. What was      your favorite?

     My favorite place is wherever my husband is. We?ve been living in Northern      New Jersey, just outside New York City where we grew up, for twenty-three      years and we both like staying in one place. As far as favorite places to      visit, that?s another hard question. We?ve had great vacations in England,      France, Israel, the southwest, the Pacific northwest, the Canadian Rockies,      Vancouver, Alaska, Hawaii, Charleston, Savannah, Washington, D.C., Death      Valley, and several other places in California. We had a wonderful time in      the Napa Valley, I think. I was so full of good food and wine that it?s hard      to be sure.


You love puzzles, especially Sudoku. Do you think it?s this that      compels you to write mysteries?

     Sudokus are a new entry in my puzzle mania. I love jigsaw puzzles so much      that I once did an entirely red one called Little Red Riding Hood?s hood.      Now that we have all these critters around, I don?t dare do a real one,      because I?d hate to get to the last piece and find out it?s been chewed.      Luckily for me there are jigsaw puzzles on the internet. I also do crossword      puzzles, cryptoquotes and other word puzzles. Writing mysteries is actually      like creating a puzzle more than solving one, and I?m the one responsible      for making sure the pieces fit together. If I have any left over, I just      call them red herrings.


Did you read mysteries as a child?

     Absolutely. Hardy boys, Nancy Drew, Cherry Ames, Sherlock Holmes, Agatha      Christie. I don?t know about back when I was a child, but nowadays there are      mysteries for every level of reading ability, and I think that?s great.      Creating new mystery readers is good for all of us.


What are you reading right now?

     In bed I?m reading
Metro Girl by Janet Evanovich, in the car     Death is a Bargain by Nora Charles, and in the family room I?m      finishing up the historical postscript of The Plot against America      by Philip Roth. I also read at work, but those books, since they are      children?s and young adult?s books, don?t take long to read.

Sounds like good reading. Thanks for sharing, Joani.

     Thanks for asking. It?s been fun.   
Click here to read an Avalon Books interview of Joani Ascher