Jeanine Kitchel, a former
journalist, escaped her hectic nine-to-five life in San
Francisco, bought land, and built a house in a fishing
village on the Mexican Caribbean coast. Shortly after settling in she opened a
bookstore. By this time she had become a serious Mayaphile and her love of the
Maya culture led her and her husband to nearby pyramid sites throughout
southern Mexico
and farther away to sites in Central America. In the
bookstore she entertained a steady stream of customers with their own Maya
tales to tell—from archeologists and explorers to tour guides and local
experts. At the request of a publisher friend, she began writing travel
articles about her adopted homeland for websites and newspapers. Her travel
memoir, Where the Sky is Born: Living in the Land of the Maya, and Maya
2012 Revealed: Demystifying the Prophecy, are available on Amazon. She has
since branched into writing fiction and her debut novel, Wheels
Up—A Novel of Drugs, Cartels and Survival, launched May 2018.
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Layla
always wanted to run the family business. But is she willing to kill for it?
When her
notorious drug lord uncle is recaptured, Layla Navarro catapults to the top of Mexico’s most powerful cartel. Groomed as his successor, Layla
knows where the bodies are buried. But not all the enemies. She strikes her
first deal to prove her mettle by accepting an offer to move two tons of
cocaine from Colombia to Cancun by jet. Things go sideways during a stopover in Guatemala whe Layla unexpectedly uncovers a human trafficking ring.
Plagued by self-doubt, she must fight off gangsters, outsmart corrupt
officials, and navigate the minefield of Mexican machismo. Even worse, she realizes
she’s become a target for every rival cartel seeking to undermine her new
standing. From her lush base in the tropics, she’s determined to retain her
dominant position in Mexico’s criminal world. If she can stay alive.
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We welcome you to My
Bookish Pleasures! Can you tell us how you got started writing fiction?
Hello, and thank you for
this interview. After I moved to Mexico in the late 90s, I started writing travel articles about Mexico when a website publisher walked into my bookstore in
Puerto Morelos (south of Cancun) and asked if I would do so. As a former journalist,
non-fiction was not a chore and the area I was in—the Yucatan Peninsula with its pyramids, beaches, jungles—was so beautiful it
was easy to write about. I wrote two non-fiction books, and since then I began
thinking I could reach a wider audience by writing fiction and still take on
some big ticket issues. That was the beginning of my fiction writing, with my
debut novel, Wheels Up—A Novel of Drugs, Cartels and Survival.
Describe your writing
process. Do you plot or write by the seat of your pants? When and where do you
write?
On Wheels Up, I was a
“pantser” as writing instructors say. I had an incredible story to tell about
the Mexico cartels and how their creeping dominance has overtaken a
country, and knowing little else about writing fiction, I just started typing.
Now, with the second book in the trilogy, Layla’s Law which comes out
late 2019, I am a plotter. The new idea came to me, and it made more sense to
plot the story out. I write a bit in the early morning at my desk now, but my
favorite time to write is between 2 and 6 pm. For some
reason afternoons are my best time.
Can you tell us about
your most recent release?
Wheels Up—A Novel of
Drugs, Cartels and Survival, tells the
tale of my Latina protagonist Layla Navarro, who catapults to the top of Mexico’s most powerful cartel when her notorious drug lord uncle
is recaptured. Groomed as his successor, she knows where the bodies are buried,
but not all the enemies. Since she’s light on “on the job” experience, she
steps into a cocaine deal that’s moving two tons of cocaine from Colombia to Cancun. Things go sideways in Guatemala when Layla unexpectedly uncovers a human trafficking ring.
Plagued by self-doubt, she must fight off gangsters, outsmart corrupt
officials, and navigate the minefield of Mexican machismo. She’s also become a
target for every rival cartel seeking to undermine her new standing. Her
struggle is to survive.
Of all your characters,
which one is your favorite? Why?
Layla Navarro, my Latina protagonist, is a strong-willed, competitive young woman
thrown into an impossible situation when her drug lord uncle places her in the
driver’s seat of Mexico’s most powerful cartel. As former cartel accountant, Layla
sat behind a desk for years and calculated profits until her uncle was put
behind bars. A far cry from running a cartel. When her older brother, the true
successor to her uncle’s dynasty, dies in an ambush, the job falls to her. Since
she’s next in line, she rises to the occasion. In Mexico, women have no power, so I thought it would be interesting
to give this woman all the power, to see how she handles it. She has
doubts of course, and her own personal demons, but she also has steely nerve
and she’s hell bent on finishing what she starts. She’s a nuanced, complicated
person, even sympathetic at times, in spite of her profession.
What was the most
challenging aspect of writing your book?
Figuring out the first four
chapters and how to keep up the thriller pace. Because I’m writing about
several characters and cartel operations, at first I found it daunting to not
explain how every character got to where they currently are in the book. I put
the question to my writers group and my BETA readers. Finally I had my ‘aha’
moment when I hired an editor. She knew just what I should do, and I followed
her lead. I promptly cut thousands of words, even two chapters, and the book
reads fast I’m told. I’ve saved all those take-aways and a prequel, Before
Wheels Up, comes out this fall, with all the back story I so much wanted to
tell my readers.
What projects are you
currently working on?
Wheels Up is a trilogy, and the second book, Layla’s Law,
will be out in 2019.
What advice would you offer
to new or aspiring fiction authors?
Press on! Writing is a full
time job, even if you’re already working a full time job! Carve out a daily
schedule, even if it’s just 30 minutes, and put words on paper. Writing begets
writing. The muse only shows up if you do!
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