
About the Book
Book: The Silver Lode
Author: Suzanne J. Bratcher
Genre: Mystery
Release Date: 2020
JEROME, ARIZONA:
Billion-dollar copper camp alive with rags-to-riches tales
Beneath the ghost town that clings to the side of Cleopatra Hill, a maze of abandoned mine tunnels conceals a vein of silver ore mixed with pure gold. Seventy years ago, the discovery of that silver lode caused a murder. Are more coming?
Historian Paul Russell is about to lose his job and the woman he loves. He doesn’t have time to search for the legendary silver lode. But when a student drops a seventy-year-old unsolved cold case on his desk, a murder connected to the silver lode, the mystery offers Paul the perfect opportunity to work with Marty Greenlaw and win her back.
As Paul and Marty search for the silver lode, suspicious deaths begin to happen. When Paul’s son disappears, the stakes become personal.
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About the Author
Suzanne J. Bratcher, Ph.D., delights in writing contemporary mysteries sprinkled with history. Her award-winning novels are set in the very real ghost town of Jerome, Arizona as well as the Four Corners states: New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado, and Utah. Bratcher lives in Phoenix, Arizona. When she’s not writing, she enjoys reading with her granddaughter, laughing at her rescue cat, and piecing colorful quilt scraps.
More from Suzanne
Author Interview
- What is your favorite genre of books? Mystery is mine go-to genre. Why?
I thought about why I love mysteries so much, and I think it’s because there’s always at least one person who is not what he or she seems. Many times there are multiple characters with a secret that drives their lives. Over the course of my life, I have often come up against people who are guarding secrets. Even though the secrets may not be as dramatic as the ones in a mystery story, they still muddy the water enough to make figuring out a problem harder than it needs to be.
- Are you a one project at a time author or do you have multiple projects going at once?
I have multiple projects going at once. Sometimes I have two projects: one I’m drafting and one I’m revising. When I get stuck on one, I switch to the other. Right now I’m working on a mystery in my folklore series and a non-fiction book about how to start a story from a setting instead of from the traditional plot or character. Occasionally, I have a third project knocking around in my head.
- How has your life experience helped in your writing journey?
I was an English teacher for 35 years. During those years I wrote professional articles, poetry, short stories, and two books about teaching writing to elementary school students. But I couldn’t seem to finish a novel. During the school year I used my skill as a writer to help, my students become better writers. My summers were spent either teaching summer school or taking classes towards the next degree in order to keep whatever job I had at the time. So I turned my attention to teaching writing. Eventually, I founded and ran a site of the National Writing Project. As I worked with teachers to learn how to model writing in different genres, I learned how to write myself. Without my Writing Project experience, I don’t think I would have developed enough confidence to try my hand at my hand at full length mysteries.
- Where do you find your greatest inspiration?
Oddly enough, settings inspire me. When I was a child, my family often took the train from our home in the Midwest to visit my grandparents in southern Illinois. As I looked out the window, I noticed the variety of houses we passed. I entertained myself by making up stories about the people who live there. To this day, whenever I am in a new place, I find myself imagining stories about the people I see around me. That’s what happened to me in Jerome, Arizona. A copper mining town that became a ghost town with fewer than ten residents living in its ramshackle houses during the 1950s. Later, in the 1970s, Jerome reinvented itself as an artist community. Today its houses and businesses are filled with people who have fascinating stories to tell. When I decided to get serious about my writing, I worked out a deal with the proprietor of the Jerome Grand Hotel to rent a room for a reduced rate midweek for 4 weeks. I took my laptop. During the day, I roamed the streets looking for stories. At night, I made lots of notes and scribbled first drafts of stories. So far that trip has inspired 3 published books—and 6 more in my head.
- Do you have extensive outlines when writing or do you write a book as you go? I write from complete outlines, though I wouldn’t call them extensive. I have to know the ending of my mystery before I can begin drafting. Writing a mystery is a bit like telling a story upside down and backwards. I need to know who the culprit is as well as the entire story in order to sprinkle clues for readers. My outline follows the three-act structure, so it captures the story in its entirety. I only plot scenes before I write them, not when I am planning the complete story line. This way the story can change as I go along. None of my finished books look like the first outline I made.
Blog Stops
Book Reviews From an Avid Reader, January 8
Simple Harvest Reads, January 9 (Author Interview)
Blogging With Carol , January 9
Bizwings Blog, January 10
Artistic Nobody, January 11 (Author Interview)
Babbling Becky L’s Book Impressions, January 12
Guild Master, January 13 (Author Interview)
Lily’s Corner, January 14
Fiction Book Lover, January 15 (Author Interview)
Debbie’s Dusty Deliberations, January 16
A Reader’s Brain , January 17 (Author Interview)
Texas Book-aholic, January 18
A Modern Day Fairy Tale, January 19 (Author Interview)
Books Less Travelled, January 20 (Author Interview)
Truth and Grace Homeschool Academy, January 20
History, Hope & Happily Ever After, January 21 (Author Interview)
Giveaway

To celebrate her tour, Suzanne is giving away the grand prize of a $50 Amazon Gift Certificate, a print copy of the book, and a bookmark!!
Be sure to comment on the blog stops for extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.
https://gleam.io/n6moC/the-silver-lode-celebration-tour-giveaway
Thanks for the fabulous interview.
Was there a scene that felt especially emotional or powerful to write?
Sounds fantastic