Lisa Unger on Her New Thriller Darkness, My Old Friend


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This giveaway promotion expired on August 08, 2011.

Unlikely Friends
By Lisa Unger

A long time ago I stopped thinking of characters as creations of my imagination, and started to understand that they are more like people who I’ve met along my colorful, complicated, ever-changing fictional journey. They come to me as they are, with their own names, personalities and spirits. Sometimes I love them, sometimes I endure them, and sometimes I pity them. Always, I try to treat each of them with compassion and respect.

There have been a few to whom I have connected in profound and important ways. Most recently, I have had this experience with Jones Cooper. He first showed up in Fragile, married to the character that is the centerpiece of that book. Maggie is the lynchpin in Fragile; she holds everyone together.

But as the story wound on, Jones started to play a deeply significant role. And after the book was finished, he stayed with me. He had more to say to me. And I wasn’t ready to leave him.

This has happened to me before, of course, with Ridley Jones in Beautiful Lies and Sliver of Truth.

(I know: What’s with the “Jones” thing? I don’t really understand it myself. Sometimes you just have to obey your subconscious and hope for the best.)

But Ridley was a lot like me. She was a youngish writer. She had a white hot love affair with New York City. She was naïve, a little reckless, long on courage, somewhat short on common sense. I could relate to her, understand her. If we’d met in the real world, we’d be friends.

But Jones Cooper is a small town cop in his late forties. He has buried a terrible secret that he has carried since childhood, and it has influenced every decision he’s ever made about his life. He has a teenage son to whom he can’t connect, a marriage straining under the weight of deception, and he’s about to confront some ugly demons.

By the end of Fragile, he’ll have to walk away from the only career he has ever had or wanted and find a second act, a new path forward. In other words, he and I have nothing in common at all.

And yet, I feel hugely connected to him. Enough so that I’ve had to go on with him into Darkness, My Old Friend. At the end of Fragile, I left him so adrift, and with so many questions about his marriage and his future, that I just couldn’t stop thinking about him. And when that happens, I have no choice but to start writing.

I am having a similar experience with The Hollows, the fictional town where Jones and Maggie live. The Hollows is not unlike the kind of area where I grew up in New Jersey. But it’s not that place or any other place. It’s a fictional town, a character in and of itself.

Again, this place is nothing like my current “bipolar” existence – I divide my time between a sleepy beach town in Florida and New York City. And it should be noted that growing up in a place quite similar to The Hollows, I absolutely loathed it. I simply could not wait to escape the semi-rural suburb so far removed energetically from New York City that it might as well have been on the moon.

Yet, oddly, in the fictional world I kind of like it. There’s something spooky about The Hollows, something just a few degrees lighter than darkness. There are forces there that encourage paths to cross, secrets to be revealed, demons to be confronted.

It’s not supernatural, exactly. No, not quite. Let’s just say that, even though the surface appears peaceful and idyllic, there’s lot of potential for bad things to happen. And when those bad things happen, The Hollows is happy.

Dwelling in a town where I would never live by choice, exploring the life of a man with whom I have little in common, I couldn’t feel more at home. I understand and like Jones Cooper in a way that I can’t help but feel is special. He’s a little grouchy, somewhat (okay, deeply) cynical. He has a hero’s heart, can’t resist a damsel in distress. I find him endlessly amusing; he makes me laugh. He’s a good man at his core, but with a real connection – and an attraction – to the darkness within him, within everyone.

“I guess,” said my editor, “that inside you there’s a middle-aged, retired cop waiting to get out.” Maybe so.

I hope you feel as connected to Jones Cooper as I do, and that you understand him, even though he’s a difficult man in some ways to know. In Darkness, My Old Friend there are dark tunnels to explore, a glimpse into the unexplained, secrets to be exhumed, and old friends to visit.

In other words: Welcome back to The Hollows. The road is bound to be a rocky one – so buckle up.

lisa-unger-photoLisa Unger is an award-winning New York Times, USA Today and international bestselling author. Her novels have been published in over 26 countries around the world. She now lives in Florida with her husband and daughter. Her writing has been hailed as “masterful” (St. Petersburg Times), “sensational” (Publishers Weekly) and “sophisticated” (New York Daily News) with “gripping narrative and evocative, muscular prose” (Associated Press). Her newest novel, Darkness My Old Friend, is available for pre-order now and will be in stores wherever books are sold on August 9, 2011.

Visit Lisa online at LisaUnger.com, on Facebook, and on Twitter @LisaUnger.



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COMMENTS:

Amanda | August 5th, 2011

this book looks sooo good! I’m excited to read it!


Sounds interesting. . .


sounds awesome


this looks like my kinda book.


I have heard great things about this book before and have been meaning to read it. Sounds like a great story.


Amy Foster | August 5th, 2011

Sounds like an awesome read! Looking forward to it!


lesia lenoir | August 5th, 2011

sounds like my kinda story and book not wanting to put down


Brittney | August 5th, 2011

Love reading and this looks like a great book!


Celeste | August 5th, 2011

I really enjoyed Fragile. I can’t wait to read Darkness, My Old Friend.


robin dixon | August 5th, 2011

Wow! This looks awesome. Can’t wait to read it!!


Sounds like an interesting read!


Kim Hopper | August 5th, 2011

I would love to read this!


I hope I win this book! :) I’d love to read it!


Shelia Replogle | August 5th, 2011

I would like to read this book


Pattie | August 5th, 2011

Looking forward to reading this book. It reads like it
has plenty of mystery.


Deborah | August 5th, 2011

Sounds like a great book. I’ve read none of hers.


Gayle Lin | August 5th, 2011

This is already on my to-read list. To win would be a big plus.


Kathleen Davis | August 5th, 2011

Lisa is one of the best authors that I have read in quite awhile. I love her stories, the characters, and the places they live. I do hope I win this book. I only can afford used books and have to wait awhile before I get to run into her books. Keep up the great job you are doing in your writing Lisa, and thank you for drawing me into the story.


I hope I win :) :)


Tonya L | August 5th, 2011

Sounds like a good book.


jennifer gabriele | August 5th, 2011

I would love to win a copy of the book.


Gina campbell | August 5th, 2011

I was just referred to your site by Hip2Save.com. I’m just getting back into reading after giving birth to my first baby. I hope I win!


Christi | August 5th, 2011

I would LOVE to win this book and have it be our “september” book for my book club!


Sue Hamilton | August 5th, 2011

I love mystery’s and I read a couple of books a week. I have never read this author before but would love to read it and I would buy her books if i like her. Please give me a chance.


Robin Sawvell | August 6th, 2011

Can’t wait to read it


I would love to read this book. I love to read just about anything. Looks very interesting.


Alexandria | August 6th, 2011

I am so hooked just by reading the article about it!! Sounds like a book that I would really enjoy, I HAVE TO READ IT!! & so should you!


missy mulholland | August 7th, 2011

I need a good book to read once the kids start back to school this month!! I’ll be an “empty-nester” from 8am-3pm Monday-Friday this school year :(


I want to read this one, and the first one!


Stacey | August 8th, 2011

I’m definitely intriqued after reading this article. Next stop, the bookstore to pick up “Fragile” so that I can get caught up on Jones’s life!


Maureen Sullivan | August 8th, 2011

I am just finishing Fragile, I love the story and an looking forward to this new book


Sylvia Mann | August 8th, 2011

I wpold love to read this one!!!


Michaela Gibbs | August 11th, 2011

I look forward to reading it :)


stephanie polonyfis | August 11th, 2011

can’t wait to read this book.. sounds so interesting..


sue hieber | August 12th, 2011

i want it, i want it, i WANT it!!!


sue hieber | August 12th, 2011

i really want to read this


Christine genek | August 17th, 2011

this book sounds amazing!


Diane Dicke | August 21st, 2011

Lisa Unger is one of my favorite authors and this looks like another good read from her.


Ann Musgrove | August 25th, 2011

I’m looking forward to receiving this as it looks like my kind of book!


The beginning had me hooked from the beginning. I’ve never read anything by Lisa Unger, but this excerpt has changed that. Exciting, dramatic movement throughout, with great “showing not telling” Magnificent. Must. Read. More.


If it’s written by Lisa Unger then I want to read it.


i LOVE Lisa Unger! I have been dying to read this book.


David Roth | September 29th, 2011

I generally review local authors who are either self published, Indie Writers or published by small imprints. The common link between them is that in most cases, you probably never heard of them. There are exceptions of course, and this is one of them.
Clearwater author Lisa Unger is a New York Times bestselling author whose books have been published in more than twenty-six countries around the world. Her newest mass market paperback is called Darkness, My Old Friend, e-ISBN 978-0-307-46519-1, © 2011 by Lisa Unger and Crown Publishing. I read the Kindle® version.
The story is resplendent with characters, from whom it is difficult to really pick the main protagonist. Is it retired detective turned handyman/dog walker/ investigator Jones (pronounced Jonas) Cooper? High school freshman and loner Willow Graves? Eloise, the local psychic? Could it be Michael, the bad boy come home to the Hollows to solve the mystery of his mother’s death while cleaning out the old homestead? Cole, whose mother ran away when he was a child, and whose step-mother has just followed suit?
I haven’t even considered the plethora of incidental and less important characters, or what may in fact be the most important character of all – the one that links all of them together: The Hollows itself, the small, seemingly perfect suburb to which they all have some kind of tie, and of which Jones says there is “Too much history there, like everything in The Hollows. Everything was tangled and connected across years and families.”
Agatha Christie’s fictional sleuth Hercule Poirot once said of a case in which he was involved, “There are too many clues here.” If Darkness, My old Friend has a singular flaw, to paraphrase Mssr. Poirot, it may be that “there are too many stories here”. By my count there are at least four major threads and three minor ones, and any of the major story arcs could easily provide the fodder for a standalone novel. Unger even gives at least three endings viewed from individual character’s perspective and leaves the door open for a couple of them to make a return visit.
I give Darkness, My Old Friend four stars because the author managed to confuse me with so many side issues and clutter that the murderer (did I mention that there was a murder buried – literally – in there somewhere?) caught me completely by surprise, something that doesn’t happen much after fifty-plus years of reading mysteries.


Barbara P | October 5th, 2011

This is a Great Book! I had read her previous book based in the same area and this one kept me riveted the whole way. LOVED it. Scary, intriguing and very well written. Good book.


Gloria D | October 24th, 2011

When I first started reading Darkness, My Old Friend, I thought it was going to be too dark and depressing, but in the end I coudn’t put it down. There were a lot of characters but Unger wove them all together effortlessly. I was hooked and wanted to find out what linked them together and what happened next. I felt Unger developed the characters in a way that I felt I was really getting to know them. This was what made it interesting for me.


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