Cheryl L. Hagedorn, Author of “A Senior Center Murder”
By Walt McElligott
As the editor of the Chicago Writers Association CLARION Newsletter, I had planned on interviewing Cheryl in June 2007. Happily, that plan coincided with Ms. Hagedorn’s online virtual book tour. I was very impressed when I first met Cheryl and more enamored of her when I read her new book.
As I have continued to add candles to my birthday cakes, I thought I might learn something important about my latter years by reading “A Senior Center Murder.” Until I discovered her book was not a “how to” for the elderly in nursing homes.
I delved further into “A Senior Center Murder” and was enthralled by Cheryl’s very different plot. She sets in motion murders by four elderly pinochle players at their Park Ridge Senior Center. Two men and two women seniors come to resent a zealous director who tries to redefine “active” and “passive” for the Senior Center populace. She tells the card players to get off their lazy “whats-its” and do something other than play pinochle.
In turn, they retaliate by providing eternal rest for their tormentors. To learn more, visit Cheryl’s website, Amazon.com, or BookLocker.com, to buy her book.
Chicago Writers Association: Cheryl, in the beginning, I had promised not to say more about “A Senior Center Murder”, but I found your book so mesmerizing, I’d like you to say a little extra about the suspense readers will find between the covers of your book.
Cheryl L. Hagedorn: The mystery within my first novel is whether the detective can discover who committed the crimes and if he will be able to convince the State’s Attorney that “old people” can be pushed to murder.
CWA: Another basic part of a good novel is “romance.” Have you created a love story within your murder mystery?
CLH: Of course! I developed a gentle romance between my thirty-seven year old detective, Stan Nevins and the curvaceous Senior Center director, Teresa Cusentino. Nevins’s other passions are for Jack Daniels, Stetsons and line-dancing. His relationship with Teresa plays out in the background while the director confronts her need to redefine “active” participation for the senior residents of PARK RIDGE Senior Center.
CWA: I think that’s a sufficient teaser for CWA members and other readers. However, for those who need more, where might they get an added jolt of your exciting novel?
CLH: Chapter excerpts may be read free at www.BookLocker.com. And my website has discussion questions for use by book clubs.
CWA: I note that you have a favorite traditional author. Would you share your thoughts with us?
CLH: Ah, you mean the enigmatic Emily Dickinson. Ms. Emily has her own special place in my heart, and I invite everyone to wander around in my collection of “Dickinson Stuff” online.
I’m particularly interested in the life of Theodora Van Wagenen Ward, one of the few women to tackle the task of trying to date Dickinson’s manuscripts. As soon as I finish with this fiction writing kick that I’m on, I’ll go back to Teddy’s biography. I’ve put 2½ years of research into it! For an idea of what the task of dating involved, I suggest readers visit my site.
CWA: Although you are presently a writer and researcher, I understand that you had a previous career in which you rose to the rank of lieutenant. Would you please explain to our readers?
CLH: In one of my former lives, I used to be a lieutenant (pastor) in The Salvation Army. I trained here in Chicago, on the corner of Broadway and Addison (just down the street from Wrigley Field). I had also been stationed at several appointments in Michigan, one of which was at working with teenage mothers-to-be. In Des Moines, Iowa, I was closely associated with the Adult Rehabilitation Center.
CWA: By any chance, was this Iowa Salvation Army experience the setting for your fictitious Park Ridge Senior Center and its 4 conniving pinochle players?
CLH: Sorry to disappoint you Walt, Park Ridge is a very real place, the childhood home of Hillary Rodham Clinton. It’s a northwest suburb of Chicago.
CWA: Your bio states that you received your Master’s degree in Writing from Chicago’s DePaul University in 2005. I believe that shortly after being degreed, you had quite a wonderful surprise enter your life.
CLH: While in graduate school as part of Composition Theory, I completed a project, which was all cartoons and had posted them on the internet. Someone notified me that one of the cartoons had subsequently been picked up by Harvard University as an illustration for a report on “Machine Learning Methods in High-Throughput Biological Data Analysis”!
CWA: Cheryl, Do you have an important lesson you’ve learned as a published author that you’d be willing to share with our readers?
CLH: Yes, and I confess that I should have known better, but the lesson I offer is this: don’t expect any reader to understand the book the way you do as the author. In my particular case, one reviewer found PARK RIDGE deeply psychological, while another said it was uproariously funny.
CWA: As a resident of Des Plaines, schooled in Chicago, would you please share the name of your favorite site in the Windy City?
CLH: I also paint watercolors so, hands down, my favorite place is the Art Institute of Chicago on Michigan Ave.
CWA: Are you working on another book you hope to have coming out soon? What might fans of the “Cheryl Hagedorn” experience be looking forward to in the near future?
CLH: I’ve finished a manuscript for my second book, Senior Games, and am currently searching for the right agent or publisher.
[For Cheryl and all CLARION readers, the Chicago Writers Association has an up-to-date list of Literary and PR Agents from across the U.S., with some foreign agents. Ed.]
A Senior Center Murder Facts
Published: July 26, 2006
Paperback: 216 pages
Language: English
Publisher: Booklocker.com, Inc
ISBN-10: 1601450230
ISBN-13: 978-1601450234
Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.5 x 0.7 inches
Weight: 8.8 ozs.
Purchase paperback ($14.95) or e-book ($8.95) at http://www.booklocker.com/books/2637.html
Author blog, Senior Center Murders
Author website at http://www.cheryltime.com/books/
Best book review at Midwest Book Review
God Bless All, Walter McElligott
Beecher, IL USA
Editor of Chicago Writers Association CLARION Newsletter
[NOTE: this interview will be published in The Clarion in July. I got permission to quote it early as part of my virtual book tour. Thanks, Walt!]