When nesting grounds at the Border Field Park bird preserve are torn to
shambles by eco-vandals, Rolly Waters is hired to follow the tracks left
behind. Feeling less than optimistic about finding the perpetrators, he
begins his due diligence, crossing paths with a local border vigilante,
a tormented vaquero, and an aging rock groupie. A menacing house call
from a scalpel-wielding orderly in pursuit of a prostitute named after
an 80’s pop hit confounds Rolly’s case even further. After police
detective Bonnie Hammond hands him a coroner’s report, he knows it’s
turned deadly.
Border Field Blues is the second volume in the Rolly Waters mystery series, following the critically-acclaimed Black’s Beach Shuffle. Amid family issues, band gigs, and personal temptation, the guitar-slinging detective rocks on, putting his sleuthing skills and his life to the test.
Border Field Blues is the second volume in the Rolly Waters mystery series, following the critically-acclaimed Black’s Beach Shuffle. Amid family issues, band gigs, and personal temptation, the guitar-slinging detective rocks on, putting his sleuthing skills and his life to the test.
Frequently
Asked Questions
1. What
inspired you to write Border
Field Blues?
The inspiration for Border Field Blues happened many years ago, when my wife and I first stumbled on Border Field State Park while out for a Sunday drive. It’s a rarely visited California landmark along the San Diego-Tijuana border in the most southwesterly corner of the continental United States. It was a rare combination of place – beautiful and forlorn. There was only a single rusty fence separating the border at that time, a flimsy chain link structure, where separated families met to pass food, money, and conversation through the rusted links.
I originally set the climactic action of my first Rolly Waters mystery, Black’s Beach Shuffle, there, but the location didn’t really fit the scope of the book, so I dropped it. I found a way to build the second book around the park, although the plot of Border Field Blues ended up a long way from where it originally began. I had the title figured out at least a year before I started writing it.
2. Border
Field Blues
is the second novel in the Rolly Waters mystery series. What can you
tell us about the first Rolly Waters mystery, Black’s
Beach Shuffle?
Believe
it or not, my first idea was to write a dark, detective/noir musical.
I’d been a musician for many years and had also worked in
professional theatre as a sound designer. That was my background.
Fortunately, I gave up on the musical idea pretty quickly. I knew it
had to be a novel.Black’s Beach Shuffle came out of my time working for MP3.com, a famous (or infamous, depending on your view) internet start-up that had the biggest technology IPO in history at the time it went public. Two years later, it lost one of the biggest copyright suits in history and about a year later was sold to Vivendi/Universal. I started outlining the book while I was still working there.
Many of the details of EyeBitz.com, the internet start-up in the book, were based directly on my experience at MP3.com and the whole environment of a well-funded tech start-up. We were a legitimate business, however. The inspiration for the criminal chicanery in the book came from a start-up called Pixelon. You can read about the company on Wikipedia – a complete disaster, and scam, from start to finish.
3. When
Border
Field Blues
begins, Rolly’s friend Max asks him for help finding the
eco-vandals who destroy a local bird preserve. Rolly is reluctant to
begin this investigation, which turns out to be much more than
eco-vandalism. How would you characterize Rolly as a private
investigator and as a person?
There
were two choices I made right away about Rolly. He was an
over-the-hill musician, a guy with solid guitar skills, who didn’t
quite make it to the big leagues due to personal problems and just
plain bad luck. I suppose this is partly my own story (although I
play keyboards), but I wanted his character to be a tribute to all
the people I played with over the years, some great, great musicians
who, for a variety of reasons, didn’t continue on as professionals.
And also for those who have continued on, scraping by, but still
playing professionally.My second choice was that Rolly would not be “hard-boiled.” He’ll never carry a gun. He’s soft around the middle. A high-school friend of mine who’d become a private investigator was really the inspiration for this character. He was one of the last people you’d imagine as a tough private-eye, at least according to classic noir and “Hollywood” versions. My friend explained to me that if he had a case that became threatening to him personally in any way, he was basically done – time to quit and turn it over to the police. But Rolly can’t do that. He’s too stubborn and prideful. And he hates it when somebody tells him he can’t do something.
Also, Rolly doesn’t surf. Tried it once; never again for him.
4. Both
Black’s Beach Shuffle and
Border Field Blues take
place in San Diego. How integral is San Diego to the Rolly Waters
mysteries and what made you choose it as the setting for the series?
I
was born in San Diego and I’ve lived here most of my life. I wanted
to capture some of the “other” side of San Diego, the part that’s
never in the tourist brochures, to give a feel for what it’s like
to live in America’s Finest City. It’s a great place. I love
living here, but we’re not just a bunch of beach bums and surfers.
I came across a contest recently, sponsored by one of the local
publications, asking people to describe San Diego in three words. I
came up with these: beautiful, intelligent, constipated.
5. Can you
describe some of the research you did when you were writing Border
Field Blues?
I
drove down to South County and the border a lot. I also drove and
hiked through parts of the Tijuana River Valley Regional Park. It’s
really an amazing place, so many different “streams” if you will,
flowing into it.The largest border crossing in the world is at the Tijuana-San Diego. It’s packed with traffic every single day, yet only a mile or two away is a natural bird preserve and a place where you can ride horses on the beach. But even at the border, the political issues are ever present, with its big iron fence that goes all the way out into the ocean. There are also many farms in the area. You can get some of the best strawberries you’ve ever tasted.
I also did a lot of research on the history of Border Field State Park. The story that Max tells about Pat Nixon’s visit is completely true. It’s amazing to think that a Republican first lady was extolling the virtues of “getting rid of this fence” forty years ago, especially compared to where we are now.
The last important piece of research I did was about the international trade in human smuggling. I don’t want to give away too much of the plot, but it’s mind-boggling how international the underground slave trade and sex trafficking has become and how many girls and young women are victims of it. A good place to learn more about this (and do something about it) is The Polaris Project (http://www.polarisproject.org/).
6. Are you
working on another Rolly Waters mystery? If so, what can you tell us
about it?
The
working title for my next book is Slab
City Rockers.
It plays off the desert area to the east of San Diego, taking for its
inspiration the real-life, off-the-grid community of Slab City, which
has its own concert stage, 24-hour library, and churches located in
the Anza-Borrego desert.
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