Nancy Jarvis talks about her favorite supporting character, Dave Everett.
1.) What made you
create this character?
I write cozy style
mysteries with a Realtor protagonist named Regan McHenry. She comes across the
occasional body selling houses---she and her husband even bought a house with a
partially mummified body in it---and she has friends and clients who sometimes
find themselves in a mess. She’s a bit of a meddler, but it’s not reasonable to
think she could stroll into the police station, sit down with a cop, and ask to
be filled in on what’s happening in a murder investigation she finds
interesting. Enter her best friend, Dave Everett.
His official title
is Santa Cruz Police and Community Relations Ombudsman. He used to be a cop
until he lost an eye in a shootout with a criminal. He was going to be forced
into an early retirement, but convinced
the police department that, since Santa Cruz police and the community at large
don’t always see eye to eye, they needed him to handle the media, public
relations, and help out with paperwork and anything else that could be done
from a desk.
He’s a meddler, too,
or rather a slightly bored ex-cop who seems to have his fingers in many law
enforcement pies and insinuates himself, at least verbally, into many
investigations, and through him, Regan can get information she needs.
2.) What makes this character special to you?
When I started
writing, all my characters began as people I knew; I began outlining them using
their real names. They quickly got renamed as they were developed and took on
their own personalities …all except for Dave, my real one eyed former cop
friend. He got a new last name and a new job, got blended with my twin cousins
who were cops and the local police officer who does media interviews, but Dave
is still the one I visualize as I write his character.
Although my real
Dave says he doesn’t sound at all like Dave Everett, he does. He and I don’t
tease one another the way Dave and Regan do, and I make up what I call his
“Daveisms,” but Dave really could say them . Here’s an example: “I think you’re
right about him being a bully, and bullies don’t usually make waves once they
run into bigger, badder dogs…I wouldn’t lose sleep over tinfoil momma’s baby
boy.” (You so could say something like that, Dave.)
I love writing him
and coming up with phrases he would use. Dave has evolved; he’s not my friend
any longer, but he really has become Regan’s best friend which makes him
special to me.
Dave will always
have a prominent place in Reagan McHenry real estate mysteries. In the book I’m just finishing writing, The Widow’s Walk League, I intended for
him to have a smaller role, but he wouldn’t stand for it. Sometimes he talks to
me as I write and demands more lines. He’s constantly frustrated by Regan’s
foibles---it’s worth it to let him have his way because it’s fun for me to
watch him get agitated.
Find out more about Nancy at her website.
Find out more about Nancy at her website.
1 comment:
Hi Neil,
Needless to say, I found your blog. Thanks for having Dave and me on it.
Nancy Lynn Jarvis
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